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The original California surfer musicians, the
Beach Boys are one of the most successful
and important American band of the rock music era. The
band was originally formed in 1961 in Hawthorne, CA,
by the three Wilson brothers: Brian (bass,
piano, vocals), Dennis (drums, vocals), and Carl (guitar,
vocals). Additional members were Mike Love
(vocals), a cousin of the Wilsons', and Al Jardine
(guitar, vocals). From the early beginning, the focus
of the group's music was Brian Wilson, who combined
a fascination with vocal harmony in the Four Freshmen
mold with a love of Chuck Berry-derived rock & roll.
Added to that was the subject matter of middle-class
teenage life in Southern California.
The result was massive popular success for the group
during the first half of the 1960s, starting with their
first chart entry, "Surfin' " in 1962. "Surfin' " was
released on a local record label. Subsequently, the group
signed to the major label Capitol Records, where they
stayed for the rest of the '60s. But their early recordings
have continued to turn up on one discount label after
another ever since. To date, the most complete and best-quality
version of the material is to be found on the 1991 DCC
album Lost and Found! (1961-62).
The Beach Boys' first Capitol single, "Surfin' Safari," was
released in June 1962 and became their first Top 40 hit. It was
followed in October by a debut album of the same name. Similarly,
in March 1963, Capitol released the single "Surfin' U.S.A." ,
which became the group's first Top Ten hit, and the Surfin'.
By this point, Brian Wilson, who was
composing nearly all of the material (with lyrics by
himself, Love, and others), had taken over production
of the group's records as well. Given the accelerated
recording schedule of the day, it was an awesome task
when coupled with his onstage performing duties. This
is illustrated by the release of the Beach Boys' fourth
album, the million-selling Little Deuce Coupe, less than
a month after Surfer Girl. The album featured a version
of their latest Top Ten hit, "Be True to Your
School."
The Beach Boys dominated the pop music
of 1963, but in early 1964, the Beatles arrived in the
U.S., followed by the rest of the British Invasion, and
the Beach Boys felt the competition keenly. Unlike most
American recording artists, however, the group did not
suffer a drop-off in popularity. In fact, 1964 was another
banner year for the Beach Boys, with the Top Ten singles "Fun,
Fun, Fun," "When I Grow Up (To Be a Man)," and "Dance,
Dance, Dance," as well as their first number
one single, the gold-selling "I Get Around",
and three more gold albums, Shut Down, Vol. 2 (Vol. 1
had been a various artists album), All Summer Long, and
their first number one LP, Beach Boys Concert.
(There was also a Beach Boys' Christmas Album.)
The strain of all that work caught up with Brian Wilson,
however, and at the end of 1964, he retired from onstage
work with the Beach Boys, retaining his composing and
producing duties. The group eventually settled on Bruce
Johnston (b. June 24, 1944) as his replacement.
The first product of this arrangement was the March
1965 album The Beach Boys Today!, which contained a version
of their next number one single, "Help Me, Rhonda," followed
four months later by the group's eighth straight gold
album, Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!) and its single,
the Top Ten "California Girls". Such
recordings gave evidence of the expansion of Brian Wilson's
musical imagination, which found him taking longer to
make records that were more ambitious than the group's
early teen anthems.
While Wilson prepared his next opus, Capitol's release
schedule was satisfied by The Beach Boys' Party! album,
released in September, featuring a hit cover of "Barbara
Ann." In March 1966, Wilson released "Caroline,
No," which was billed as a solo single and made the Top
40. But he did not launch a full-fledged solo career
at this time, instead completing the group's Pet Sounds
LP (May 1966), which featured the Top Ten hits "Sloop
John B" and "Wouldn't It Be Nice" and
was universally hailed as one of the greatest rock albums
of all time, though it did not sell as well as Beach
Boys albums usually did.
Wilson trumped it with the #1 gold single "Good Vibrations," released
in October. By this point, he was being hailed as a genius
in the media, as he prepared a new album tentatively
titled Smile. The album never appeared, however. A single, "Heroes
and Villains" (July 1967), offered tantalizing clues
to what would become a legendary unheard, unfinished
masterpiece. But Brian Wilson, whether because of the
pressure to top himself and compete with the Beatles
and others, internal disagreements within the group,
psychological problems, or drug abuse, ceded leadership
of the Beach Boys, and their next album, Smiley Smile
(September 1967), was produced by the group as a whole.
At the same time, the Beach Boys suffered a commercial
decline, and though they continued to release new albums
-- Wild Honey (December 1967), Friends (June 1968), 20/20
(February 1969) -- and singles through the end of the
decade, they ceased to be an important force in popular
music. In 1970, the group switched to the Reprise subsidiary
of Warner Bros. Records for a series of albums that sometimes
drew critical approval without restoring their commercial
appeal -- Sunflower (August 1970), Surf's Up (August
1971), Carl and the Passions: So Tough (May 1972), initially
packaged with a reissue of Pet Sounds, and Holland (January
1973).
The Beach Boys returned to prominence
in the mid-'70s on a wave of nostalgia and a potent concert
act that focused on their early hits. Capitol Records
had repackaged their catalogue repeatedly, but Endless
Summer, a June 1974 double LP compiling their early-'60s
work, amazingly topped the charts, becoming their first
gold album in seven years. In July 1976, the Beach Boys
released 15 Big Ones, their first new studio album in
more than three years and their first album in a decade
to credit Brian Wilson as producer. The album spawned
a Top Ten hit in a cover of Chuck Berry's "Rock and Roll
Music," but the group's commercial appeal, at least as
far as new recordings, was temporary. Subsequent albums
The Beach Boys Love You (April 1977) and M.I.U. Album
(September 1978) sold less well. Brian Wilson's "comeback" also
proved elusive after 1977.
The Beach Boys moved to their third
major label with the release of L.A. (Light Album) on
the Caribou subsidiary of CBS Records in March 1979.
But neither that album nor its follow-up, Keepin' the
Summer Alive (March 1980), did anything to change the
group's commercial status. In December 1983, Dennis Wilson
drowned. In June 1985, the group returned with The Beach
Boys, their first new album in five years, which marked
the end of their Caribou contract.
The Beach Boys recorded sporadically
thereafter. In 1987, they scored a surprising hit cover
of "Wipeout," co-billed with rap act the Fat Boys. In
1988, minus Brian Wilson, who finally launched a solo
career, they returned to number one with "Kokomo," from
the hit film Cocktail. In 1992, they released their first
new album in seven years, Summer in Paradise.
Especially with the dawn of the CD era, the extensive
repackagings of Beach Boys material have continued apace.
The year 1993 finally brought a five-CD boxed-set retrospective, Good
Vibrations: Thirty Years of the Beach Boys. In
1995, after the resolution of various legal issues, lead
singer Mike Love and Brian Wilson began working together
again, yet the partnership was quickly derailed due to
various tensions, and Wilson began collaborating with
Van Dyke Parks and working on a new solo album. The following
year, the Beach Boys released a collection of duets with
country artists titled Stars and Stripes, Vol. 1, and
in 1997 a long-delayed box set compiling material from
the now-legendary Pet Sounds sessions finally appeared.
Another collection of rarities, Endless Harmony, followed
in 1998 in the wake of Carl Wilson's cancer-related death
on February 6. |