The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread

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21 März 2011 23:47 #828016 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread

Es gibt einen Hidden Track auf dem Album? :huh:
Das ist ja geil, ist mir noch nie aufgefallen; muss ich später mal nachschauen.

Zwei. Pro CD je einen......

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28 März 2011 20:33 #828311 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread
Und noch eine Auszeichnung, die Brian Wilson dieses Jahr erhält:


Brian Wilson to Receive the Chairman’s Award at 2011 NARM Convention

Marlton, NJ – March 28, 2011 – NARM, the music business association, announced today that Brian Wilson, one of the most iconic and influential musicians in the history of popular music, will be the recipient of the Chairman’s Award for Sustained Creative Achievement at the 2011 NARM Music Business Convention Awards Dinner Finale to take place at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles on Thursday, May 12.

“Since his first recordings with The Beach Boys, Brian Wilson’s influence on the evolution of rock music has been profound,” said Rachelle Friedman, Chairman, NARM Board of Directors. “He is undoubtedly one of the most important modern composers, and his work continues to resonate with people all around the world.”

Past recipients of the NARM Chairman’s Award include Cyndi Lauper, Daryl Hall & John Oates, BB King, Chicago, Carlos Santana, Garth Brooks, Billy Joel, Lena Horne, Frank Sinatra, Stevie Wonder, Smokey Robinson, Barbra Streisand, Liza Minnelli, and Fleetwood Mac.

Wilson was barely out of his teens in 1961 when he began to create some of the most beloved records ever, earning nine consecutive gold albums with his family group The Beach Boys, which featured such classics as "Surfer Girl," “In My Room,” “I Get Around,” “Don’t Worry Baby,” "Fun, Fun, Fun," “Help Me Rhonda” and "California Girls,” just to name a handful of the more than two dozen Top 40 hits Brian co-wrote, arranged, produced, and performed on with the band.

In 1966, Wilson produced three records in that landmark year that forever changed the course of popular music. The first was Pet Sounds; considered by many to be one of the greatest albums ever made. The album reached #10 on the American charts and featured four hit singles, including two Top 10 hits, a reworking of the folk standard “Sloop John B” and “Wouldn’t It Be Nice.”

Brian’s second studio masterpiece in 1966 was a track that he first cut during the Pet Sounds session, “Good Vibrations.” Released that fall, the song is considered a milestone in recording history, demonstrating the breadth of Wilson’s musical vision as well as how the recording studio could be both an artist’s garret and a key instrument in creating his art. The song was the Beach Boys’ first million-selling, worldwide #1.

Wilson then began to work on his third major production of ‘66, a new collaboration with an inspired poet, studio musician and burgeoning songwriter, Van Dyke Parks, on the recording titled SMiLE. Brian was nearly done with SMiLE when a combination of circumstances forced him to shelve it. For nearly 40 years, SMiLE became the most famous unfinished, unreleased album ever.

Yet, throughout the years, even as Wilson battled his personal demons and rode the roller coaster of professional ups and downs, he continued to produce intimate musical gems and continued to make beautiful music. In 1988, Wilson finally released his first solo album, which featured “Love and Mercy,” the beautiful “message” song that often ends his concerts, vintage compositions (“Melt Away,” “There’s So Many,” “Baby Let Your Hair Grow Long”) as well as his first extended piece since the SMiLE era, a “modular” suite called “Rio Grande”.

Wilson returned to the stage in 1999. In February 2004, Brian Wilson Presents… SMiLE was revealed to the world in a week of dramatic “dream-fulfilling” concerts at London’s Royal Festival Hall, and after a brief tour, Brian and his band recorded an all-new studio version of the songs. Brian Wilson Presents… SMiLE was released in September 2004. It topped many “Album of The Year” lists, went gold in the UK and earned Wilson his first Grammy Award. In 2007, Wilson received America’s highest artistic tribute, The Kennedy Center Honor.

In 2008, Brian Wilson released That Lucky Old Sun, an album Rolling Stone magazine praised as “Brian’s strongest new work in years.” A musical love letter from Southern California, That Lucky Old Sun shimmers with sun-dappled choruses and arrangements that swell and swirl as if carried by the Pacific tides. The album is narrated in transitional interludes spoken by Wilson as ‘That Lucky Old Sun,’ the storyteller. Cameos on life and the heartbeat of Los Angeles, the narratives propel the album’s musical story.

Released last August, Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin is an album of George and Ira Gershwin classics that has garnered rave reviews. In an unprecedented meeting of two musical geniuses, separated by 70 years, Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin makes history with “The Like in I Love You” and “Nothing But Love” – two new songs Wilson crafted from previously unpublished music by Gershwin. With imaginative arrangements of some of the most widely known and recorded music in history, the album features Wilson’s trademark stacked vocal harmonies and orchestrations that made Wilson a towering and revered figure in popular music.

The Beach Boys’ original SMiLE album sessions have never been released. With the full participation of original Beach Boys Al Jardine, Mike Love, and Brian Wilson, Capitol/EMI has collected and compiled the definitive collection, The SMiLE Sessions, for worldwide release this year in multiple physical and digital configurations. The SMiLE Sessions’ global release date, complete track lists, and artwork will be unveiled soon.

Brian Wilson will perform Brian Wilson Reimages Gershwin on a cross-country tour of Canada and select U.S. cities in June, followed by European dates.

Registration for the NARM Convention is open now, and special rates for first-time independent retailers, individual members, and music business students are offered. The four-day event includes a Music Business Crash Course presented in collaboration with the American Association Of Independent Music (A2IM), an Entertainment & Technology Law Conference, a Townhall meeting for Artist Managers, a Musical Celebration sponsored by UMGD, special interest and genre-specific group meet-ups, an opening keynote interview with songwriter, producer and President of Creative at BMG North America Billy Mann, the Digital Think Tank update with keynote interview by Roger McNamee of Elevation Partners, special networking receptions sponsored by WEA, Rocket Science, and Sony Music Entertainment, and more.

All registrants of the NARM Convention are invited to attend the Awards Dinner Finale. Honorees at the event will include American Idol with an Outstanding Achievement Award celebrating the show’s 10th season; legendary songwriters Ken Gamble and Leon Huff for the Outstanding Achievement Award for Musical Collaboration; artist and advocate Annie Lennox for the Harry Chapin Humanitarian Award; John Marmaduke, Chairman of the Board, President & CEO of Hastings Entertainment with the Presidential Award for Sustained Executive Achievement; and Rachelle and Joe Friedman, founders of New York retail icon J&R Music & Computer World, with the Independent Spirit Award. Additional award recipients will be announced in the coming weeks.


About NARM:
Established in 1958, NARM (National Association of Recording Merchandisers) is the trade association for the business of music, providing the central platform for the discussion of industry-wide concerns, spearheading the implementation of initiatives to promote music commerce, and advocating for common interests. Members include companies and individuals from all aspects of music distribution, including physical, digital, and mobile outlets as well as gaming, applications, merchandise, video and more. NARM members have access to a variety of conferences, virtual seminars, networking opportunities, information and education resources. NARM is a non-profit organization based in Marlton, New Jersey. Visit us at www.narm.com .

NARM’s Annual Convention is the nexus of commerce and content, bringing together ALL aspects of the business for four of the most important days on the music industry calendar. The 2011 NARM Convention & Crash Course will take place Monday, May 9, through Thursday, May 12 at the Los Angeles Hyatt Regency Century Plaza.

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30 März 2011 21:54 #828388 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread
Im <a href=' www.examiner.com/beach-boys-in-national/smile ' target='_blank'>BeachBoysExaminer wirds jetzt wohl ein paar Artikel zu Smile und den Liedern geben. Hier ist Teil 1:


<!-- YOUTUBE begin --><div align="center"><object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value=" www.youtube.com/v/_lkk8Cku4p8&feature=player_embedded "> www.youtube.com/v/_lkk8Cku4p8&feature=player_embedded " type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350">





SMiLE remembered — Part 1; "Heroes and Villains"



By David Beard, Beach Boys Examiner
February 5th, 2011 2:35 am ET




Initially teased for a January 1967 release, again in the early 1970's, the late 1980’s and mid 1990’s, SMiLE has become the Beach Boys lost, albeit unfinished, masterpiece.

Upon the completion of 2004's Brian Wilson Presents SMiLE, Wilson and collaborator/lyricist Van Dyke Parks took the time to speak about some of the music and mystery behind the legendary music.

Today's focus is on "Heroes and Villains." Of the collaboration Wilson said, “I thought Van Dyke was very creative lyrically and he had very original and poetic lyrics. We implemented the American Indian religion.”

According to Parks, “‘Heroes and Villains’ began with Brian’s title. That immediately suggested a ballad of the golden West. We did that song – excepting the cantina section – in a sitting; it went very easily. We connected immediately, and that’s what sparked the enthusiasm to keep on working. It all came out quite by accident. That was the first song that we created. The other images that came beyond that simply tried to connect to that scene. ‘Bicycle Rider,’ for example, is the first playing card that was used in the rough and rowdy West when people were coming this way for fortune. That thought seemed to me to be a natural extension of an image from the cantina. That’s where people won and lost their fortunes: in a deck of cards. That was a very important ingredient in the Wild West. It’s that rough and tumble. I’m not sure what Brian’s or my intentions were, because so many years have past there’s so much nuance that’s lost. But it’s safe to say that we wanted to create an American fantasy.”

Wilson continues, “‘Heroes and Villains’ is all about the contamination of the white man in Indian society.&#8200;The whole first suite is a trip to the Old West.”

End of part one.

© David M. Beard/Endless Summer Quarterly (all rights reserved)

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03 Apr. 2011 13:34 #828563 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread
Zwar schon zwei Jahre alt, aber ich hab hier zufällig ein ausnahmsweise richtig gutes Interview mit Brian Wilson gefunden, in dem er über die Art, wie er Lieder schreibt spricht und über spezielle Stücke im Einzelnen. Kein Skandal-Gerede oder so, sondern wirklich nur über Musik:


<a href=' www.americansongwriter.com/2009/01/brian-wilson-gods-messenger/ ' target='_blank'>God's messenger



BRIAN WILSON: God’s Messenger
By Ken Sharp January 2nd, 2009 at 12:30 pm




With his wondrous songs extolling the simple joys of sun, sand, surf-and more introspective fare examining the psychic heartbreak of life-Brian Wilson is recognized as one of the most important songwriters of the last century. From the elegant simplicity of “Surfer Girl” and the elastic, pure pop bounce of “I Get Around,” to the r&b-fueled mini-pop symphony of “Good Vibrations” and the sprawling, impressionistic introspection of “Surf’s Up,” Wilson has composed some of the most beautiful, moving and melodically rich songs in popular music. His new album, That Lucky Old Sun, is yet another shining example of his consummate songwriting mastery.

“Surfer Girl” is still one of your favorite songs; why does that song still stand up for you?
It was the first song I’d ever written in my whole life. I wrote that back in 1961, and it still stands up because it’s such a pretty tune. It’s one of the prettiest ones I ever wrote. I really love the bridge. I came up with the melody in my car [sings melody of verses], and then I went to the piano and finished it off. “Surfer Girl” came together in about an hour from start to finish-music and lyrics. When you write music in your head, as opposed to at a piano, it comes out a little different.

At what point did you recognize you had talent as a singer and songwriter?
When I was around 18 or 19, right around the time I wrote “Surfer Girl” and “Surfin’.” That’s when I started to realize I could be a good falsetto singer. And as a songwriter, as soon as Gary (Usher) and I wrote “409&#8243; and “In My Room,” I knew I was gonna be a good songwriter.

“In My Room” is a special song for you; where was your special room in your house?
We had a music room that used to be a garage. My dad turned it into a music room. It didn’t turn into a music room until I was about 14. We had a jukebox in there, and there was a piano and a Hammond B-3 organ in there too. Gary and I worked in that music room. He was on guitar, and I was on piano…and we wrote “409&#8243; and “In My Room.”

Were there any songs that you wrote which had a simpler demo, and once it was finished, it far exceeded your initial vision?
Yeah, that happened with “Good Vibrations.” We recorded the song at four studios over a period of six weeks. We wanted to try different sounding studios to see what would work. “Good Vibrations” evolved over time. We edited elements of the song together from all those different studios to create the finished version. It started out to be sort of a rhythm and blues track…then it turned into a real sophisticated pop record with a cello, in kind of a Phil Spector sort of style. It’s a symphony in itself. Derek Taylor, who was the Beatles and Beach Boys press agent, called it a pocket symphony. I knew it was gonna be a hit.

Does the tag of being labeled a “genius” add extra pressure when you are trying to create or record?
Because of people calling me a genius, I feel pressured to write original melodies. Trying to get a song up to the standard that’s expected of me is a tough job. Today, songs don’t come as fast for me, like they did in the ‘60s. Inspiration for songs doesn’t come as quick either, but now and then I’ll hit on something big. It’s like you’re going along on the sea shore, and you’re picking up all these shells, and all of a sudden you find a great big beautiful shell. That’s like songwriting. You just tap into a great big song and go “Whoa!”

Some say songwriting is a young man’s game; do you believe that to be true?
I think I’ll always write great songs whenever I write. I just don’t know how often I’ll write. But when I do write I’ll continue to write great songs. I work on that piano there [points to a piano in music room]. It’s a Steinway. If I get in a songwriting rut, I keep at it until I’m done. I keep working at it and working at it until I’m done with my project. I won’t stop. I keep motivated because I make myself motivated. I work each day on the piano a little bit. Sometimes I don’t try to write…but at least to play the piano each day is important…to stay in touch with my piano and play in my favorite keys.

What are some of your favorite keys to play in?
E, B, E-flat and C-sharp.

Do you have a favorite piano chord?
E-major 7th. It’s just a beautiful chord.

What song took you the longest to write?
“Good Vibrations” took about six weeks to write. “God Only Knows” took about a half hour to write. I started playing chords and knew it was going to be a good song. I knew it was special when it was done.

Do you writer better songs happy or depressed?
I write songs when I’m happy better. When I’m depressed I can’t write a song. I feel a little better after I play the piano for a while.

Do you believe the songs that come quickest, where you don’t know where they come from, are the best ones?
The ones that aren’t the hardest, right, they’re the best… “You’re So Good to Me” was written in 20 minutes. I knew it was special. The songs that come the fastest are the ones I like the most. “California Girls” took about an hour and a half. The record was made with a good introduction. It’s just a special 12-string guitar sound. I wrote the opening of the song on piano. “Love And Mercy” took about two…three hours to write. I had a little mini bottle of wine, I drank it down and got a little buzz, and I wrote it. [Sings "love and mercy/that's what you need tonight."] It sure has a lot of feeling in it. I knew it was a special song because it had just the right chords, the right melody and the right lyrics. It all went together. It’s the song I close the show with. I think it’s a very special love song, and it’s very nice to play.

Is it better to finish a song off in one sitting?
Not necessarily. What’s most important is the very first part of a song, which has to start off with a bang, and then you develop it. With that very first part of a song, you have to be really careful with it because that’s what people will first be listening to…and they’re gonna wanna hear an inspired melody. You need to hit them with something they like-that they think it’s cool. It’s becoming harder to come up with songs.

Why?
I’ve written so many songs that it’s very hard to come up with anything new. Sometimes I’ll think it needs a different approach, and I’ll try a new melody. Music comes a lot easier than lyrics. Music is the best part. I get an inspiration and run to the piano and work out ideas. The good songs come very quickly.

From a chord perspective, who did you glean the greatest influence?
Burt Bacharach, Phil Spector and Chuck Berry-those are the three people who really inspired me. Bacharach inspired my approach with chords, Motown inspired the bass notes and Phil Spector inspired the harmony and echo on the drums. He taught me a lot about how to make use of instruments. I knew about guitars and pianos and organs and bass and drums, and he taught me to blend things together so you could have leakage. Chuck Berry inspired the rhythm and the lyrical thoughts.

Where did your unique approach to using a different bass note against a chord, which you employ on songs like “Caroline No” and “Surf’s Up” come from?
That came from listening to Burt Bacharach. On songs like “Walk On By” and “This Guy’s in Love with You” he inspired me [chordwise] and taught me how to use different bass notes against chords to come up with a different color of sound. He inspired me to go in that direction. He was into going from a minor 7th to another minor 7th.

How do you manage to balance craftsmanship with pure inspiration?
The two work together. When you’re inspired, you write a lot better than when you’re not inspired. Music is beautiful. Whenever you play music, you feel better. And whenever you write a song, you feel ten times better when you’re done writing it. “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” was one of my most inspired songs. “Ding Dang” (from The Beach Boys Love You) is another inspired one. I wrote that with Roger McGuinn. Other inspired ones were “The Warmth Of The Sun,” “Don’t Worry Baby,” “I Get Around” and “God Only Knows.” All those songs came very naturally and very fast.

Select a few songs that you wish you had written.
I wish I had written “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling.” It was such a great record; nobody could believe it. I think what makes that song is the background track, the chord pattern, the melody, the lyrics and The Righteous Brothers’ voices. I liked Bill Medley better than Bobby Hatfield. His voice had a good sound to it. I did a version of “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling” with The Beach Boys, but we never released it. I did it all by myself. I did the track, the piano…all the instruments and voices all by myself. Also, “Here I Am” by Burt Bacharach…Dionne Warwick did it. It’s got a great melody and harmonies. I also wish I had written “Be My Baby.” I like Phil Spector’s music. I like the background track and the melody of “Be My Baby” and Ronnie’s voice very much. Ronnie did a version of “Don’t Worry Baby.” I think she did a great job. It was a very warm and loving lead. The Ronettes were my favorites of Phil’s because of Ronnie’s voice.

What did Spector’s records teach you?
Spector’s records taught me about getting a bigger sound, using two basses and echo on the drums. He taught me little techniques of production. I also really like what Spector did with “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling” and “Just Once In My Life.”

Which songs of yours carry the Spector touch?
Well…”Heroes And Villains.” It had the big heavy bass drum…just experimenting with all different instruments. I mainly worked in the studio with the Wrecking Crew to achieve what I wanted. I worked with Hal Blaine, Carol Kaye, Billy Strange and Ray Pohlman. They were very receptive to my ideas. They inspired me to reach higher ground.

Back in the day, how would you present songs to The Beach Boys?
I had to sit in my room and work for hours and hours on songs, and then I would play my songs to Mike, Dennis, Al, Carl and Bruce to see if they enjoyed it. Pet Sounds was an example of something advanced and creative and experimental that I played for them-that they didn’t like. Later on they liked it. But at first, when they first heard it, they didn’t like it. They thought it was too away from the surf song kind of things. They thought it was too experimental. I thought I had said all I could say with the surf songs, at that time.

How would you choose which Beach Boys would sing your songs?
I would just choose them appropriately by the sound of their voices and the appropriate melody for their voices. The stuff that fit was voic…songs like “Heroes And Villains” and “Caroline No.” That song, to me, is a tearjerker, very like “Hey Girl” by Freddy Scott. It’s a tearjerker. It wasn’t written about anyone. It just used the name Caroline.

Why was it released as a Brian Wilson solo single?
Because I wanted it to…I asked the company to put it out because I thought it could be a hit, but it wasn’t.

If “Caroline No” had become a big hit, would you have left the Beach Boys and pursued a solo career?
No, I just wanted to do that one. “Caroline No” fit my voice more than the other guys in The Beach Boys because it was a high pitched voice for my high falsetto. I used my imagination whenever falsetto was appropriate…I would go as high as I thought I should. I was proud of my ability to sing falsetto.

You wrote a terrific song with your dad, Murry, that the Beach Boys recorded…one of the band’s best…”Breakaway.”
My Dad came up to me with the idea. He was watching The Joey Bishop Show, and they said, “We’re gonna break away for a minute, and we’ll be right back.” He said he got the idea from that show. He came over to my house in Bel Air, sat down at the piano and plunked and plunked and plunked…and we finally got the song written. That’s one of my favorites too; it’s a beautiful song-great song.

Are you as competitive today with other artists as you were the ‘60s?
No, not today. I’m not as competitive with people. I kind of get into my own little world and write. Back in the ‘60s, I was competitive with The Beatles. They pushed me and inspired me to be much better. I got inspired by their psychedelic creativity and their good musicianship. I remember in the ‘60s I would go, “I gotta try and beat Spector…I gotta try and beat Phil Spector!” I’d get on these kicks, and I’d go in the studio and try to outdo him…but it never happened. It was fun trying. I had a lot of fun trying.

Didn’t Paul McCartney play you a song from Sgt. Pepper before it was released, asking for your opinion?
Yes. He played me and my wife a song called “She’s Leaving Home” one time in the studio before it came out. I was thrilled to death to hear it. He asked me if we liked it, and I told him we loved it. When I heard it on Sgt. Pepper, I loved it. I thought it was great.

Many people cite Pet Sounds as a landmark Beach Boys album; besides that record, what Beach Boys LP do you feel has been overlooked?
Summer Days and Summer Nights and The Beach Boys Love You are two of my favorites. Summer Days and Summer Nights has a really good horn sound to it, really good rockin’ tracks…really good rock and roll music. The Beach Boys Love You had a lot of really nice stuff on it. “Ding Dang” was my favorite from that. [starts singing "Ding Dang"]. I wrote that with Roger McGuinn. He wrote [starts singing "I love a girl/I love so madly/I treat her so fine"...]. He wrote that. I also like “The Night Was So Young.” “Johnny Carson” is another favorite. It was just a song about Johnny Carson. I used to watch his show all the time.

What songs move you to tears?
When I first heard “Too Much Heaven,” I was very moved by it…the harmonies…and I cried when I heard it. It was emotional for me. It’s like an evergreen; it never grows old in my head. I first heard the Bee Gees music in the ‘60s, early ‘70s. I always liked the Bee Gees very much. “How Deep Is Your Love” is another one that I think is really great…I turn the radio up a little bit when it comes on. Another emotional one for me is Rosemary Clooney’s version of “Come On To My House.” That brought tears to my eyes. I liked her sweet, loving voice. I also liked “Hey There” by Rosemary Clooney. I like The Doobie Brothers’ “What A Fool Believes.” A song by The Four Freshmen, “It’s A Blue World,” made me cry. As far as putting together harmonies, they were real influential to me. I learned to make four part harmonies from them. I had to work at it, and I finally got it.

Lastly, can you select a few lesser known Brian Wilson songs that deserve rediscovery?
Yeah, there are a few… “The Night Was So Young,” “Ding Dang” and “Wild Honey.” I also like “I’ll Bet He’s Nice.” That’s a nice one.

Share some brief comments about some of your hits: “Don’t Worry Baby.”
I wrote that with Roger Christian and it took me two days to write it. I started out with the verse idea and then wrote the chorus. It was a very simple and beautiful song. It’s a really heart and soul song, I really did feel that in my heart.

Some say it’s about a car and others say it’s about a girl, who’s right?

It’s both. It’s about a car and a woman.

“The Warmth Of The Sun.”
That song was inspired by the assassination of John F. Kennedy. The day he was killed Mike (Love) and I went into my office where I had a piano and wrote a song in his memory. That came quickly.

“Help Me Rhonda.”
We did two versions of “Help Me Rhonda.” We did one with the ukulele and we did one with guitars. We chose to use the guitar version. I heard myself singing lead on it originally and then I turned it over to Al. I produced the Beach Boys so I decided who would sing lead. I just had a sixth sense about who should sing what songs. Some of the songs I wrote specifically for Mike, Al and Carl to sing.

“California Girls.”
I came up the introduction first. I’m still really proud of that introduction. It has a classical feel. I wrote the song “California Girls” in the same key as the introduction. It took me some time. I wanted to write a song that had a traditional country and western left hand piano riff, like an old country song from the early ‘50s. I wanted to get something that had kind of a jumpy feeling to it in the verses.

“When I Grow Up (To Be A Man).”
“When I Grow Up (To Be A Man)” was inspired about what it was gonna be like to grow up. Will I like the things then as I did now? I wrote that in my early twenties. As I look back on that I am happy with my life now and I didn’t think I would be.

“Please Let Me Wonder.”
I wrote that at my apartment in West Hollywood. As soon as I finished I felt I had to record it so I called up my engineer, Chuck Britz, and woke him up. “Please Let Me Wonder” was recorded at 3:30 in the morning. I drove to the studio in the middle of the night and recorded it. That song was done as tribute to Phil Spector’s music. It definitely a good straight ahead feel to it.

“God Only Knows.”
Tony Asher and I tried to write something very spiritually. It’s got a melody similar to the song (recites lyric to “The Sound Of Music”), “I hear the sound of music…” (Sings lyrics to “God Only Knows”) “I may not always love you…” It was similar to it. Tony came up with the title “God Only Knows.” I was scared they’d ban playing it on the radio because of the title but they didn’t.

“Darlin’.”
I was writing more in a soul/r&b bag. The horns were conceived as a Phil Spector kind of a horn thing. “Darlin’ was for Three Dog Night (Author’s note: the band was called Redwood at the time) They recorded it and said, “No, you can have it” so I gave it to Carl to sing. That song took about a week to write.

“Do It Again”
“Do It Again” was written at Mike’s house in Beverly Hills. He and I wrote that song together in about 45 minutes. It came very fast. He came up with that lyric so fast I couldn’t believe it.

“This Whole World.”
“This Whole World” was written in about an hour-and-a-half. One night about two-in-the-morning I got up and went to my white Baldwin organ and I was playing around and thinking about the love of this whole world and that’s what inspired me to write the song.

“Breakaway.”
I wrote it with my father. He heard Joey Bishop say on TV, “We’ve got to breakaway but we’ll be right back.” And that’s how he got the idea for a song called “Breakaway.” He wrote some of the music but I wrote most of it and he wrote most of the lyrics. That’s a beautiful song. I think it might be one of my most underrated songs.

“Surf’s Up.”
That was written with Van Dyke Parks in 1966 and it was done on drugs. We took speed pills. “Surf’s Up” was probably the worst vocal I ever sang.

“‘Til I Die.”
That was written to try and tell people how small I felt. “Til I Die” was more or less an achievement in sound. That song was recorded in 1970. After it was done I took a certain part of where I was singing and I made a mono tape loop and put my voice on the tape loop. I sent the loop into an echo chamber. I went into the echo chamber and listened to my voice in a circle and walked out of there in another world.

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08 Apr. 2011 14:21 #828968 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread
Für die Erdbebenopfer wird es eine spezielle Beach Boys-Veröffentlichung geben mit "neuem" Material:

<a href=' www.examiner.com/beach-boys-in-national/...?fb_comment=31739831 ' target='_blank'>BeachBoysExaminer



In this exclusive, Al Jardine tells Beach Boys Examiner about the upcoming release that he and the rest of The Beach Boys are releasing to support the Japanese Red Cross’s disaster relief efforts.

Q: Tell everyone about the new single you are releasing to benefit the Red Cross and the Japanese disaster relief efforts.
Al Jardine: The idea is to release a nice little 7” vinyl on Record Store Day with the A side being “Don’t Fight The Sea” and the B side being “Friends” (A Capella) by The Beach Boys for the Japanese disaster relief. Isn’t that cool? I’ll be going up to San Francisco on April 16 to play a couple of songs for a Japan relief concert in Japantown, then I’ll be going over to Berkley to Amoeba Records and I’ll be doing an acoustic set just to celebrate the single’s release. It should be very special because I’ll be hand delivering some of these myself. The single should have a very nice vibe to it. We’re going to transfer from tape to vinyl; it will be very cool.

They’ll be available for the next three months through the record stores, my website and TheBeachBoys.com website. The single will be packaged in a white sleeve and the first 1,000 pressed will be on white vinyl with a red label to replicate the Japanese flag. It’s gonna’ be cool man! Brian, Mike, Bruce and I have signed about 90 of them. It’s certainly gonna’ be a nice little collector’s item, and 100% of the money will go to the Red Cross. Universal is distributing it. Everyone has pitched in on the cost. The singles pressed after the initial 1,000 will be on black vinyl.
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Q: Even though you’re overseeing this release, would you say that this is a current day Beach Boys release in support of the disaster relief?
AJ: Yeah. It was Rob Christie’s idea to do “Friends” on the flip side because he felt that the song’s message was a beautiful statement to make… "Let’s be friends." I liked the idea because the vocals are underappreciated. Everybody’s behind it 100%, that’s the nice thing part. It’s a total group effort, and we’ll be working more together like this as we approach our 50th anniversary. It’s very encouraging, we’re making plans. I’m looking forward to seeing how things evolve after the release of SMiLE…that will be a nice to offer too. We still have to get that done and move forward from there.

A side: “Don't Fight The Sea” (with Al Jardine, Brian Wilson, Mike Love & Bruce Johnston, with a vocal from Carl Wilson)
B side: “Friends (A Cappella)” unreleased Beach Boys from 1968 [available exclusively on this release]

Thebeachboys.com
Aljardine.com

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09 Apr. 2011 13:58 #829020 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread
Und nu ein <a href=' www.lehighvalleylive.com/entertainment/i...918239821.xml&coll=3 ' target='_blank'>Interview mit Mike Love

Zu Reunion und Smile sagt er ebenfalls ein wenig....





The Beach Boys' Mike Love discusses group's 50th anniversary and return to Easton's State Theatre
Saturday, April 09, 2011
By DUSTIN SCHOOF
The Express-Times

After five decades in the music industry, The Beach Boys singer Mike Love says he's still picking up good vibrations.

"It's remarkable how long we've been doing it," Love, 70, says over the phone from his home in California. "There is nothing greater for an artist -- I don't like that term so much for a singer or musician -- there's nothing better for a guy or girl who likes to sing or play an instrument to be able to do that I'm blessed to have a career last so long."

The group will bring its 50th anniversary tour Sunday to the State Theatre Center for the Arts in Easton.

"It's a nice theater," Love says. "It really is a nice community. We've always done well there. There is a good group of people who show up and seem to like what we do, which is why they keep coming back."

The group will be joined by actor and frequent collaborator, John Stamos. Stamos has been behind the kit for The Beach Boys on numerous occasions since 1985. Stamos also directed the band's music video for their song, "Hot Fun in the Summertime" and provided vocals on the song, "Forever," off the group's 1992 album, "Summer in Paradise."

"He brings a lot of energy, he's a really good drummer," Love says of the "Full House" star. "He's a showman. He's very theatrical, duh, and he's a huge Beach Boys fan and he loves to come out and we love to have him. I'll tell you what, the girls sure like it when he comes out."

Catching the wave

Love says he is still surprised that what started out as a hobby blossomed into a career that has been filled with hit albums, singles (36 Top 40 hits in the United States alone) and other accolades.

"It makes you want to do the best job you can, to replicate those original songs to the best level you're able to," Love says. "We have a great band. Bruce Johnston has been with us since '65. We have a lot to be thankful for and grateful for and appreciative of. It's all really nice to be able to contemplate 50 years doing this."

The Beach Boys released their debut album, "Surfin' Safari," on Oct. 1, 1962. The album contained the title track and "409" and featured what would become the band's signature harmony-driven style -- influenced, Love says, by doo-wop and groups such as the Everly Brothers and The Four Freshman.

"In high school (founding member and Love's cousin, Brian Wilson) became obsessed with The Four Freshman and broke them down and taught us all the parts," Love says.

Themes of cars and surfing became prevalent early on, which Love attributes to the group's success and global popularity.

"We identified the subject matter of what was going on in southern California," Love says. "We were the first to make songs with lyrics about surfing and the flip side of our single records back in the day, in the '60s, were car songs. So we identified things going on in southern California. The lifestyle, we put in the music. It caught on incredibly around the world."

The band would go on to release a string of hit albums throughout the 1960s. Songs such as "I Get Around," "Fun, Fun, Fun," "Surfin' USA," "Surfer Girl," "Little Deuce Coupe" and "California Girls" would become staples on radio stations around the world.

"It's been amazing. We've had records in Spain and all over the place," Love says. "I used to look at the foreign charts and go, 'Wow. 'Surfing USA' is No. 1 in Israel. Go figure."

The Beach Boys' critical and commercial acclaim culminated with "Pet Sounds" in 1966. The album -- which included "God Only Knows" and "Wouldn't It Be Nice" -- was praised by critics and is widely considered one of the best and most influential pop albums of all-time.

"'Pet Sounds' was a groundbreaking album," Love says. "The tracks were beautiful."

It was during this time Love recalls being invited to a UNICEF gala in Paris in 1967. Marlon Brando, Elizabeth Taylor, George Harrison and John Lennon were among those in the audience, Love says.

"Afterward Marlon Brando said to me, 'Do you want to go get breakfast?' I thought yeah, but where do you want to go?" Love says, with a laugh. "It was just a phenomenal embassy party George Harrison was there with girlfriend at the time, Patty Boyd."

Love also recalls a trip to India in which Paul McCartney played him the main riff to what would become The Beatles' hit "Back in the USSR" -- the Fab Four's response to the Beach Boys' "California Girls." Love says he liked the guitar lick but offered McCartney a suggestion.

"I suggested talking about girls in the middle of the song, which he did," Love says.

Love says there was a tremendous amount of respect between the two groups, despite both vying for chart positioning throughout the '60s.

"It was like a friendly competition," Love says. "There was a mutual admiration. I know Paul McCartney sat in on a session Brian was doing called 'Vegetables.' It was a silly song way, it was out there, but it's fun. There was some great interplay and competition and rivalry."

Rolling along

In the years since, the group has faced a number of setbacks and tragedies -- including the deaths of Love's cousins, founding Beach Boys members Dennis Wilson in 1983 and Carl Wilson in 1998; Brian Wilson's erratic behavior in the late '60s and subsequent mental health issues; legal squabbles with founding member/guitarist Al Jardine (Love and Jardine eventually reconciled, with Love appearing on Jardine's 2010 solo album, "A Postcard From California") and the departure of Brian Wilson as full-time member in 1988.

"We've been very fortunate (we've) come across our share of challenges like anybody else."

But Love is grateful that the group continues to draw fans spanning multiple generations.

"Audience appreciation of what you're doing counts up for a heck of a lot," Love says, with a laugh. "Here you are 45 to 50 years later and children like it as well as adults as well as seniors To have a couple thousand people come together and enjoy your stuff is incredible and a blessing."

Love says he remains close with Wilson. The two recently attended a Los Angeles Lakers game to watch Love's nephew, Kevin Love, a forward for the Minnesota Timberwolves.

"Our relationship goes back to the level of DNA," Love says. "We've known each other all our lives, really. The chemistry there transcends a lot of things."

Love says he's discussed the possibility of recording new music with Wilson. But he says nothing has been set in stone regarding a full-blown reunion tour with Wilson and Jardine.

"It will be nice to see if we can take it up where we left off, especially in light of the 50th anniversary," Love says. "We're supposed to have a meeting next week to see what's up, so that's a likelihood, but nothing's been calendared."

This year will also see the long-awaited, completed release of "Smile." The album was originally intended to be the follow-up to "Pet Sounds." But it was abandoned and shelved due to Brian Wilson's declining mental health at the time.

"Smile" will contain two discs of completed Beach Boys material that was thought to be lost by fans (although many of the completed tracks have circulated as bootlegs).

"I'm very interested in listening to it," Love says. "I know one thing for sure: the tracks are amazing. We did a lot of hard work (on it)."

Exposed Editor Dustin Schoof can be reached at 610-258-7171 or dschoof@express-times.com. Talk about entertainment at lehighvalleylive.com/forums.

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17 Apr. 2011 12:43 #829695 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread
Hier ein Artikel zu der "Don't fight the sea"-Single, deren Erlöse den Erdbeben- und Tsunamiopfer in Japan zukommen.



<a href=' www.upi.com/Entertainment_News/Music/201.../UPI-47871302932005/ ' target='_blank'>Beach Boys release song for Japan relief



Beach Boys release song for Japan relief
Published: April 16, 2011 at 1:33 AM


LOS ANGELES, April 16 (UPI) -- Former members of the Beach Boys say they are releasing a new record to raise money for the Red Cross relief effort in Japan.

The island nation was devastated by a massive earthquake and tsunami last month and the Red Cross has been providing aid to those affected by the disaster.

In response to the tragedy, musician Al Jardine and his former Beach Boys bandmates, Brian Wilson, Mike Love and Bruce Johnston, are releasing a two-song record featuring the environmentally conscious collaboration "Don't Fight the Sea" -- which appears on Jardine's 2010 CD, "A Postcard from California" -- as well as an unreleased Beach Boys a capella mix from a 1968 recording of the song "Friends."

"We felt that the song had a nice basic message of friendship," Jardine said in a statement Friday. "I also like the idea of that song, because the vocals are a bit underappreciated. So this release was a perfect place to showcase the idea of harmony and friendship. Everybody is behind it 100 percent, that's the nice part."

The Beach Boys released their last studio album, "Stars and Stripes Vol. 1," in 1996.


© 2011 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

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17 Apr. 2011 17:53 #829701 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread
Und hier kann man die Cover der Good Vibrations/Heroes & Villains-Single sehen, die es in limitierter Auflage als 78er gibt und gestern beim Record Store Day veröffentlicht wurde.

<a href=' www.hhv.de/index.php?rid=233612&cid=1126...ngeLanguage&lang=en# ' target='_blank'>hhv.de


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18 Apr. 2011 10:31 #829708 von Earth Boy
Earth Boy antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread

Hier ein Artikel zu der "Don't fight the sea"-Single, deren Erlöse den Erdbeben- und Tsunamiopfer in Japan zukommen.

Wann ist mit der Veröffentlichung zu rechnen?

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18 Apr. 2011 19:03 #829722 von DumbAngel
DumbAngel antwortete auf The Beach Boys - 50.Jubiläumsthread

Wann ist mit der Veröffentlichung zu rechnen?

<a href=' www.nme.com/news/the-beach-boys/56176 ' target='_blank'>Morgen

Hab aber noch keine Ahnung, wie einfach das in Europa zu erwerben is. Sprich, ob man es aus den USA bestellen muss oder auch hier vertrieben wird



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