Description
The white whale of '60s record-making, the Beach Boys' aborted SMiLE album gradually gained a legend that not only inflated its rumored importance and complexity, but gave credence to an odd notion — that completing it, then or ever, was impossible. In truth, SMiLE should have been released and forgotten, reissued and reappraised, and finally remastered for the digital era and ushered into the rock canon ever since Brian Wilson halted work on it in May 1967 (after an exhausting 85 recording sessions). Instead, it languished in the vaults and remained the perfect record — perfect, ofmore… course, because it had never been finished. Reports that the recording of "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow" had caused a nearby building to burn down and whispers of "inappropriate music" gave it the character of a monster, one that cursed all those who approached it and claimed the heart and mind of its major participant. Wilson's love of "feels" — short passages of cyclical music that could be overdubbed and rearranged countless times — had made 1966's "Good Vibrations" the ultimate pocket symphony, but had also quickly spiralled into the instability that consumed him during its follow-up, "Heroes and Villains," projected to be the centerpiece of SMiLE.
Happily, a new recording of SMiLE by Brian Wilson reveals the record as nothing more (or less) than a jaunty epic of psychedelic Americana, a rambling and discursive, playful and affectionate series of song cycles. Infectious and hummable, to be sure, and a remarkably unified, irresistible piece of pop music, but no musical watershed on par with Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band or Wilson's masterpiece, Pet Sounds. For the first time ever, the program for SMiLE was compiled, after Brian Wilson first listened to the original recordings with his musical midwife, Darian Sahanaja of the Wondermints (which has long functioned as Wilson's live backing band), and then worked them into a live show and album recording. The work that evolved divides into three sections: SMiLE begins with Americana, which takes the dream of continental expansion from the old Spanish town saga of "Heroes and Villains" to the landing at Plymouth Rock and, finally, the end of the frontier at Hawaii; it continues with a Cycle of Life that progresses from the virginal grace of "Wonderful" to the simultaneous peak and decline of the creative life on "Surf's Up"; and ends with an environmental cycle called The Elements, which includes "Vega-Tables," (Earth), "Wind Chimes" (Air), "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow" (Fire), and "In Blue Hawaii" (Water).... Read More...
| 1 |
Our Prayer/Gee |
| 2 |
Heroes and Villains |
| 3 |
Roll Plymouth Rock |
| 4 |
Barnyard |
| 5 |
Old Master Painter/You Are My |
| 6 |
Cabin Essence |
| 7 |
Wonderful |
| 8 |
Song for Children |
| 9 |
Child Is Father of the Man |
| 10 |
Surf's Up |
| 11 |
I'm in Great Shape/I Wanna Be |
| 12 |
Vega-Tables |
| 13 |
On a Holiday |
| 14 |
Wind Chimes |
| 15 |
Mrs. O'Leary's Cow |
| 16 |
In Blue Hawaii |
| 17 |
Good Vibrations |
Info:
- Category:
- Music > Albums
- Case Type:
- CD
- Release Type:
- Retail
- Comments:
- 1 read add
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Cover Info:
- Title:
- Brian Wilson - Smile (2005) Retail CD
- Part:
- Front
- Dimensions:
- 2750 x 2750 px
- Size:
- 696 KB
- Downloads:
- 197 (0 today)
- Uploaded:
- 01/03/09 by musicworld
- Quality Rating:
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- Currently /5 Stars.
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