| THE BEACH
BOYS (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
The Beach
Boys are a pop and rock music group formed in Hawthorne, California
in 1961, who are widely considered to be one of the most influential
bands in rock and pop music history. They have recorded dozens of
Top 40 hits (including four US #1 singles), many best-selling
albums, and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
1988.
The original group comprised singer-musician-composer Brian Wilson,
his brothers Carl Wilson and Dennis Wilson, their cousin Mike Love,
and friend Al Jardine. Many changes in both musical style and
personnel have occurred in their sometimes-stormy career: Brian
Wilson’s mental illness, drug addiction and eventual withdrawal from
the group; the deaths of Dennis Wilson in 1983 and Carl Wilson in
1998; and continuing legal battles among surviving members of the
group.
The Beach Boys officially broke up in 1998 shortly after Carl
Wilson’s death, however Mike Love and Bruce Johnston maintain the
rights to the name and continue to tour with their own band as The
Beach Boys.
===History===
==Early years==
The group was formed in 1961 in Hawthorne, California under the
leadership of Brian Wilson, and included his brothers Carl and
Dennis, their cousin Mike Love and school friend Al Jardine.
The early inspirations of the group were the Wilsons’ musician
father, Murry, and the close vocal harmonies of groups such as The
Four Freshmen. The group performed initially as The Pendletones,
after the Pendleton woolen shirts popular then. Although surfing
motifs were very prominent in their early songs, Dennis was the sole
actual surfer in the group. He suggested to his brothers that they
do some songs celebrating his hobby and the lifestyle which had
developed around it in Southern California.
At first Murry Wilson, by many accounts a hard-driving man, steered
The Beach Boys’ career, engineering their signing with Capitol
Records in 1962. In 1964 Brian Wilson fired his father after a
violent confrontation in the studio. Over the next few years they
became increasingly estranged; when Murry died some years later,
Brian and Dennis did not attend the funeral.
The Beach Boys’ early material focused on the California youth
lifestyle (e.g., “All Summer Long”, “Fun, Fun, Fun”), cars (“Little
Deuce Coupe”) and of course surfing (“Surfin’ U.S.A.”, “Surfin’
Safari” and many others). Although their music was bright and
accessible, these early works contained remarkably sophisticated
musical ideas. During this period, Brian Wilson rapidly progressed
to become a melodist, arranger, and producer of world-renowned
stature. Their early hits made them major pop stars in America and
other countries, although their status as America’s top pop group
was challenged in 1964 by the emergence of The Beatles, who became
The Beach Boys’ major creative rival.
Like The Beatles, the Beach Boys showed very fast development during
the mid-‘60s, drawing upon the innovations of songwriters and
producers such as Burt Bacharach and especially Phil Spector. They
produced the enduring classic “California Girls” in 1965, a banner
year for popular music which also saw similarly advanced singles by
The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Byrds, and James Brown. But it
was the Beach Boys’ role to create a myth of American freedom and
dreams of adolescence, and increasingly, to articulate a dread of
what lay after adolescence.
==Brian’s innovations and personal difficulties==
During 1964 Brian Wilson began to suffer from anxiety attacks, and
withdrew from touring to concentrate on song writing and record
production. Glen Campbell served as Wilson’s replacement on tours,
until his own career success required him to leave the group. Bruce
Johnston was asked to locate a replacement for Campbell; having
failed to find one, Johnston subsequently became a full-time member
of the band, first replacing Wilson on the road, and then
contributing his talents in the studio.
Wilson’s growing mastery of the recording studio and his
increasingly sophisticated songs and complex arrangements reached an
early peak with the acclaimed LP Pet Sounds (1966). Classic singles
from that album, “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” and “God Only Knows” showed
Wilson’s growing skill as a composer, arranger and producer. “God
Only Knows” is said to have been the first pop single ever released
in the U.S. to have the word “God” in the title (because of which
many radio stations in the U.S. refused to play it.) “Caroline, No”
also taken from Pet Sounds, was issued as a Brian Wilson solo
single, the only time Brian was credited as a solo artist during the
early Capitol years.
The album’s meticulously layered harmonies and inventive
instrumentation (performed by the cream of Los Angeles session
musicians known as The Wrecking Crew) set a new standard for popular
music. It remains one of the more evocative releases of the decade,
with a distinctive strain of melancholy and nostalgia for youth. The
album is still widely regarded as a classic and Paul McCartney has
named it one of his favorite albums of all time, (with “God Only
Knows” as his favorite song) often saying that it was a major
influence on The Beatles’ album, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club
Band. Despite the critical praise it received, the album was poorly
promoted by Capitol Records and failed to become the major hit Brian
had hoped it would be (only reaching #10). Its failure to gain wide
recognition hurt him deeply.
Because of his withdrawal from touring, Wilson was able to complete
almost all the backing for the album while the Beach Boys were on
tour in Japan. They returned to find a substantially complete album,
requiring only their vocals to finish it off. There was some
resistance from within the band to this new direction. Lead singer
Mike Love is reported to have been strongly opposed to it, partly
because he feared the band would lose its audience if they changed
their successful formula, and partly because he personally disliked
the new material, which he famously criticized as “Brian’s ego
music.” At Love’s insistence, Brian changed the title of one song
from “Hang on to Your Ego” to “I Know There’s an Answer”. Another
likely factor in Love’s antipathy to Pet Sounds was that Wilson
worked extensively on it with outside lyricist Tony Asher rather
than with Love, even though Love had co-written the lyrics for many
of their earlier songs and was the lead vocalist on most of their
early hits. It should also be stated that Love, as recently as
February 2008 in a top British music magazine, denies emphatically
that he was opposed to Brian’s new directions. Quite the contrary,
contributing the lyrics to the classic form of Good Vibrations which
certainly seemed to usher in flower power. He really is tired of
this view of him as being Brian’s nemesis. He could see Brian was
destroying himself and that was what he feared.
Seeking to expand on the advances made on Pet Sounds, Wilson began
an even more ambitious project, originally dubbed Dumb Angel. Its
first fruit was “Good Vibrations,” which Brian described as “a
pocket symphony”. The song became the Beach Boys’ biggest hit to
date, and a US and UK # 1 single in 1966 — many critics consider it
to be one of the best rock singles of all time. In 1997 it was named
the “Greatest Single of All Time” by Mojo music magazine, in 2000,
VH1 placed it at number 8 on their “100 Greatest Rock Songs” list,
and in late 2004 Rolling Stone magazine placed it at number 6 on
their “500 Best Songs of All Time” list. It was also one of the more
complex pop productions ever undertaken, and was reputed to have
been the most expensive American single ever recorded, costing a
reported $16,000 — more than most pop albums of that time — with
sessions stretching over several months in at least three major
studios.
In contrast to his work on Pet Sounds, Wilson adopted a modular
approach to “Good Vibrations” — he broke the song into sections and
taped multiple versions of each at different studios to take
advantage of the different sound of each facility. He then assembled
his favorite sections into a master backing track and added vocals.
The song’s innovative instrumentation included drums, organ, piano,
tack piano, two basses, guitars, electro-theremin, harmonica, and
cello. The group members recall the “Good Vibrations” vocal sessions
as among the most demanding of their career.
Even as his personal life deteriorated, Wilson’s musical output
remained remarkable. The exact nature of his problems was a topic of
much speculation. He abused drugs heavily, gained an enormous amount
of weight, suffered long bouts of depression, and became paranoid.
Several biographies have suggested that his father may have had
bipolar disorder, and after years of suffering, Wilson’s own
condition was eventually diagnosed as schizophrenia.
==The story behind “Smile”==
Shortly after completing “Good Vibrations,” Wilson met session
musician and songwriter Van Dyke Parks, and in late 1966 they began
an intense collaboration that resulted in a suite of superb new
songs for the Beach Boys’ next album, which was originally going to
be titled Dumb Angel but was renamed Smile. Using the same methods
as on “Good Vibrations,” recording began in late 1966 and carried on
into early 1967. Although the structure of the album and the exact
running order of the songs have been subjects of endless speculation,
it is apparent that Wilson and Parks intended Smile to be a
continuous suite of songs that were linked both thematically and
musically, with the main songs being linked together by small vocal
pieces and instrumental segments that elaborated the musical themes
of the major songs.
But some of the other Beach Boys — especially Love — found the new
music too difficult and too far removed from their established
style; another serious concern was that the new music was simply not
feasible for live performance by the current Beach Boys lineup. Love
was bitterly opposed to Smile and was particularly critical of Parks’
lyrics; he has also since stated that he was becoming deeply
concerned about Wilson’s escalating drug intake. The problems came
to a head during the recording of “Cabinessence,” when Love demanded
that Parks explain the meaning of the closing refrain of the song,
“Over and over the crow cries uncover the cornfield.” After a heated
argument, Parks walked out and his partnership with Wilson came to
an abrupt end.
Many factors combined to focus intense pressure on Wilson as Smile
neared completion, including mental instability, the pressure to
perform against fierce opposition to his new music, the relatively
poor response to Pet Sounds, Carl Wilson’s draft resistance, and a
major dispute with Capitol. Matters were complicated by his reliance
on both prescription and illegal drugs, particularly marijuana and
amphetamines, which only exacerbated his underlying mental health
problems.
Just weeks before The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
was released, Smile was shelved. Over the next 30 years the legends
surrounding Smile grew, until it became the most famous unreleased
album in the history of popular music. Some of the tracks were
salvaged and rerecorded at Brian’s new home studio in drastically
scaled-down versions. These were released, along with the completed
versions of “Good Vibrations” and “Heroes and Villains”, on the 1967
LP Smiley Smile, which would prove to be a critical and commercial
disaster for the group.
Despite the cancellation of Smile, interest in the work remained
high and versions of several major tracks — including “Our Prayer”,
“Cabinessence”, “Cool, Cool Water”, and “Surf’s Up” — were assembled
by Carl Wilson over the next few years and included on later albums.
The band was expecting to complete and release Smile even until
1972, when it became clear that only Brian would ever be able to
make sense out of the endless fragments that were recorded. A
substantial number of original tracks and linking fragments were
included on the group’s 30th anniversary CD boxed set in 1993. Smile
itself, in its original conception, did not surface until Wilson and
Parks completed the writing and Brian rerecorded it as a solo
project in 2004.
==Mid-career brings changes==
Following their peak popularity with the song Good Vibrations was a
period of declining commercial success, with Smiley Smile and
subsequent albums doing poorly on the US charts (although they fared
better in the UK). Their image problems were not helped by the
criticism that followed their withdrawal from the bill of the 1967
Monterey International Pop Festival as a result of Carl’s draft
problems, an event that would undoubtedly have been crucial in
establishing their new sound had they been able to present their new
material there.
The 1967 album Wild Honey, regarded by many critics as a classic,
features exuberant upbeat songs written by Brian and Mike, including
the hit “Darlin’”, and a cover of Stevie Wonder’s “I Was Made to
Love Her”. Friends (1968) is a quiet, tuneful, and largely acoustic
album, influenced by the group’s adoption of the practice of
Transcendental Meditation. The title single, however, backed by
Dennis’ songwriting debut Little Bird, was their least successful
since 1962. This was followed by the single “Do It Again”, a return
to their earlier “fun in the sun” style, which was moderately
successful in the US, but went to #1 in the UK.
As Brian’s health deteriorated in the late 1960s and early 1970s,
his song output diminished and he became increasingly withdrawn from
the group. To fill the void, the other members of the group began
writing songs, and Carl gradually took over leadership of the band,
developing into an accomplished producer. To complete their contract
with Capitol Records before signing with Reprise, they produced one
more album, 20/20 (1969), primarily a collection of leftovers (including
some from “Smile”), cover songs, and several new songs by Dennis.
One of Denny’s songs, “Never Learn Not to Love”, featured lyrics by
Charles Manson originally titled “Cease to Exist”. Besides “Do It
Again”, the album included their cover of The Ronettes’ “I Can Hear
Music”, their last top 40 hit for seven years.
Their first two Reprise LPs were Sunflower (1970) and 1971’s Surf’s
Up, featuring new songs by Brian and all the group members, plus
selections from the aborted “Smile” project. According to the liner
notes for the 2004 version of Smile, Reprise expected the legendary
album to be completed and released as part of the new contract, but
this was never to be; however, these albums included some of their
most evolved and complex music since the “Smile” period.
The addition of Ricky Fataar and Blondie Chaplin in 1972 led to a
dramatic departure in sound for the band. Carl and the Passions - So
Tough was an uncharacteristic mix including several songs
unrecognizable as the Beach Boys. Although it includes the classic
“Marcella”, many consider the album among their poorest efforts.
Continuing with Fataar and Chaplin, Holland (1973) was more
successful. The album’s lead single “Sail On Sailor,” a brief return
to the collaboration between Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks, was
one of the more emblematic of Beach Boys songs. Although it did not
produce any top-40 hits, Holland’s was popular on free-form
FM-radio, and includes several classics including Al Jardine’s
“California Saga/California”.
In the summer of 1974 Capitol, in consultation with Love, released a
double album compilation of the Beach Boys’ pre-Pet Sounds hits,
entitled Endless Summer. Helped by a sunny, colorful graphic cover,
it caught the mood of the country and surged to #1 on the Billboard
album chart, becoming their first gold record since “Good
Vibrations”, and stayed on the album chart for three years. The
following year another compilation, Spirit of America, also did well.
These sales performances demonstrated that the classic Beach Boys
sound was back in fashion.
In 1975, the Beach Boys staged a highly successful joint concert
tour with Chicago, with each group performing some of the other’s
songs, including their previous year’s collaboration on Chicago’s
hit “Wishing You Were Here”. Beach Boy voices were also heard on
Elton John’s 1974 hit “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me”, but
following Holland, the group produced no new music until 1976.
==Brian’s return==
15 Big Ones marked the return of Brian Wilson as a major force in
the group. This album includes several new songs composed by Brian,
and several of his arrangements of favorite old songs by other
artists, including “Rock and Roll Music” (which made #5), “Blueberry
Hill”, and “In The Still of The Night”. Brian and Mike’s “It’s OK”
was a return to their earlier “fun-in-the-sun” style, and was a
moderate hit.
In 1977 the Beach Boys released the LP Love You, a collection of 14
songs mostly written by Brian alone, including more “fun” songs (“Honkin’
Down the Highway”), a mature love song (“Let’s Put Our Hearts
Together”) - a quirky mix ranging from infectious to touching to
downright silly. Although not a commercial success, the album has
since gained the status of a classic within the Beach Boys’ oeuvre.
Brian’s contributions diminished over the next several albums until
he again virtually withdrew from the group. Although he appeared
sporadically with them in concert, he contributed little to their
performances or recordings. Despite a much-publicised “Brian’s Back”
campaign in the late ’70s, most critics believed the group was past
their prime. Many expected that Brian would one day become the
latest in a long line of celebrity drug casualties.
==Deaths of Dennis and Carl Wilson==
In the late 70s Dennis Wilson also began to suffer increasingly from
drug and alcohol abuse, and some of the group’s concert appearances
were marred when he and other band members showed up onstage drunk
or drugged. The band was forced to publicly apologize after a
shambolic performance in Sydney in 1979 during which several members
of the group appeared to be drunk. In spite of his own frequent
drinking, Dennis Wilson managed to release his first solo work,
Pacific Ocean Blue, and to launch the now famed work-in-progress
Bambu, with friend and musician Carli Muñoz.
In 1980, the Beach Boys played a Fourth of July concert on the
National Mall in Washington, D.C. before a vast crowd. This
tradition continued for the next two years, but in 1983 Secretary of
the Interior James Watt banned the group from playing on the Mall,
saying that rock concerts drew “an undesirable element”. This drew
howls of outrage from the many of the Beach Boys’ American fans, who
stated that the Beach Boys sound was a very desirable part of the
American cultural fabric. First Lady Nancy Reagan apologized, and in
1985 the group appeared on the Mall again. The group most recently
appeared on the Mall in 2005 for the Fourth of July concert.
Dennis Wilson’s problems had escalated in the early 1980s, and he
accidentally drowned in late 1983 while diving from his boat as he
drunkenly tried to recover items he had previously thrown overboard.
Despite Dennis’s death, The Beach Boys soldiered on, and they
enjoyed a resurgence of interest later in the 1980s, assisted by
tributes such as the David Lee Roth version of “California Girls”.
In 1987, they played with the rap group The Fat Boys, covering the
song “Wipe Out” and filming a video for it. They scored their first
#1 in 22 years with the 1988 song “Kokomo,” which was featured on
the soundtrack of the hit Tom Cruise movie Cocktail and which became
their biggest-selling hit ever. In 1996 they guested with Status Quo
on a re-recording of Fun, Fun, Fun, which was a British Top 30 hit.
Members of the band appeared on sitcoms such as Full House (starring
sometimes drummer John Stamos) and Home Improvement in the 1990s, as
well as touring occasionally, but their declining career contrasted
dramatically with the massive public interest and rabid critical
praise that followed Brian’s gradual return to touring in the 1990s.
The critically acclaimed documentary I Just Wasn’t Made For These
Times, important in restoring Wilson’s reputation, saw him
performing for the first time with his now adult daughters, Wendy
and Carnie, and included glowing tributes to his talents from a host
of major music stars of the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s.
Tragedy struck the Wilson family again in 1998 when Carl Wilson died
of lung cancer. Although Love and Johnston continued to tour as The
Beach Boys, no other original members accompanied them. Their tours
remained popular, even as they came to be viewed primarily as a
nostalgia act. Meanwhile, Brian Wilson and Al Jardine each
separately pursued solo careers with their new bands.
==Setting aside differences==
On June 13, 2006, the major surviving Beach Boys (Brian Wilson, Mike
Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston, and David Marks) all set aside
their differences and reunited for a celebration of the 40th
anniversary of the album Pet Sounds and the double-platinum
certification of their greatest hits compilation, Sounds of Summer:
The Very Best of the Beach Boys, in a ceremony atop the Capitol
Records building in Hollywood. Plaques were awarded for their
efforts to all major members, with Brian Wilson accepting for his
late brothers Carl and Dennis. Wilson himself implied there is a
chance that all the living members (having not performed together
since the late 1980s) will reunite again.
==Personnel changes through the years==
From the start, The Beach Boys have undergone many variations in
composition, being represented by fill-ins as often as not. Wilson
neighbor David Marks appeared on their first four albums and was a
member from 1962 to 1963 as a temporary replacement for Jardine, who
had left the group to pursue a career in dentistry. Marks rejoined
the band in 1997, during Carl Wilson’s last illness, and remained
with them for two years.
Glen Campbell toured for several months with the group in 1965, as a
touring replacement for Brian, who had played bass in concert.
Campbell was subsequently replaced by Bruce Johnston, who later
became a permanent member. During the mid-1970s drummer Ricky Fataar
and guitarist Blondie Chaplin joined the band.
Though not official members, The Beach Boys’ supporting band has
featured many notable musicians over the years. Keyboard player
Daryl Dragon, later famous as half of the pop duo Captain & Tennille,
toured with the band, along with his future wife Toni Tennille.
Carli Muñoz, who had been playing percussion with the band since
1970, in 1971 replaced Daryl Dragon as keyboard player until 1981.
Jeff Foskett joined the touring band in 1981 as a guitarist and
vocalist and remained with the group until 1990, Foskett is
currently a member of Brian Wilson’s group. Billy Hinsche, of Dino,
Desi, & Billy fame, was also a longtime member of the supporting
band throughout the ’70s, ’80s, and ’90s. Daryl Dragon’s brother
Dennis Dragon was a percussionist for the group in the early ’70s.
Bobby Figueroa was a drummer and percussionist for the Beach Boys in
the 1970s and 80s. Mike Meros was a longtime keyboard player for the
group, leaving in 2001 to join Alan Jardine’s Endless Summer Band (Meros
passed away in late 2007). Mike Kowalski was a longtime drummer for
the band, starting his Beach Boys tenure in 1969, and continuing
with the group throughout the ’70s, ’80s,’ 90s, and ’00s, only to
leave in 2006. Ed Carter played guitar and bass for the group from
1969 through the late 1990s. Carter joined Al Jardine’s Beach Boys
Friends and Family in 1999.
Some of the changes in The Beach Boys’ organization were less formal.
They enjoyed a casual collaboration with fellow Southern
Californians Jan and Dean. Much to the consternation of other band
members, Wilson composed “Surf city” and gave the song, without
compensation, to Dean Torrence. Jan and Dean, at the time not nearly
as popular as The Beach Boys, recorded the song and scored their
first number one single, long before the Beach Boys reached the same
milestone. Years later, Torrence happened upon the studio where the
Beach Boys were recording their “Beach Boys’ Party!” album. He
joined in the singing, and can be heard singing harmony in the
“Barbara Ann” cut from that album.
Despite the deaths of two original Beach Boys, the band continues to
this very day, one of the busiest bands on the circuits. Love and
Johnston have often hinted at a new Beach Boys studio album, but as
of 2008, there have been no new releases, excluding compilations.
To the surprise and delight of fans around the world, Wilson has
mounted several major tours under his own name with a band
containing members of The Wondermints (Darian Sahanaja, Nick Walusko,
and Probyn Gregory) and led by former Beach Boys guitarist Jeff
Foskett plus other supporting musicians (Scott Bennett, Taylor
Mills, Jim Hines, Paul Mertens, Nelson Bragg, Bob Lizik). Their
note-perfect live performances of the entire Pet Sounds album earned
some of the most glowing concert reviews of Wilson’s career, with
some commentators calling the shows “the concert of a lifetime”. In
2003 and 2004, he and Van Dyke Parks reunited to complete the
unfinished sections of Smile, and in 2004 Wilson and his band toured
the world performing a live concert version of the album. They then
recorded a new studio version of Smile using vintage recording
equipment and including sessions at the fabled Sunset Sound Studios
in Hollywood, where some of the original recordings were made.
In September of 2007, Wilson debuted a new work entitled That Lucky
Old Sun, co-written with Van Dyke Parks and band member Scott
Bennett, at the Royal Festival Hall in London. Wilson plans to
record and release That Lucky Old Sun as a studio album in 2008.
Jardine toured for a while with the Beach Boys Family & Friends (which
for legal reasons quickly became Alan Jardine Family & Friends Beach
Band), featuring his sons Matt and Adam, Wilson’s daughters Carnie
and Wendy, former Beach Boys sidemen Ed Carter , Bobby Figueroa, and
Carl’s brother-in-law Billy Hinsche, among others. Jardine now tours
as the Endless Summer Band which includes his two sons, Hinsche, and
several other performers including members of the pop/rock band
Tripsitter.
Official site:http://www.thebeachboys.com |