A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 153: “Heroes and Villains” by the Beach Boys
Episode Date: September 13, 2022Episode one hundred and fifty-three of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “Heroes and Villains” by the Beach Boys, and the collapse of the Smile album. Click the full post to r...ead liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a sixteen-minute bonus episode available, on “I Had Too Much to Dream Last Night” by the Electric Prunes. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt’s irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ (more…)
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A history of rock music and 500 songs
By 100 Hicke
Episode 153
Heroes and Villains
By the Beach Boys
You have to get it out
This can be another
This could be considered a track
Not really though, we don't want to do that
This is a little intro, you know, to the album
Okay, this is the intro to the album.
Okay, this is intro to the...
the album, take one, and
we're going to definitely need a C-Sharm.
Brian,
direct, okay? All right, let's try
to really pull it off, good now.
Here we go. Before I start,
I'd just like to note that this episode
contains some discussion of mental illness,
including historical negative
attitudes towards it.
So you may want to check the transcript or skip
this one, if that might be upsetting.
In November and December
1966,
the film maker David Oppenheim,
and the conductor and composer Leonard Bernstein
collaborated on a TV film called Inside Pop, The Rock Revolution.
The film was an early attempt at some of the kinds of things this podcast is doing,
looking at how music and social events interact and evolve,
though it was dealing with its present rather than the past.
The film tried to cast as wide and that as possible in its 51 minutes.
It looked at two bands from Manchester,
the Hollies and Herman's Hermit,
and how the people identified as their leaders.
Herman, or Peter Noon, and Graham Nash,
differed on the issue of preventing war.
It'll stop.
What Donovan's trying to put over will stop wars dead.
I believe that you're right about Donovan,
saying that love is a great thing.
Now we have the power, we have the tolerance,
we can go in front of a television camera,
we can go on the air,
and we can say with definition that Hitler was wrong,
but Rockwell is wrong,
that people who hate Negroes are wrong,
right and we can get up there and shout it to the world Pete well I don't argue
you know what they do more of it that's what I'm saying we can we can stop
world wars before they ever started I disagree I don't believe that you know who start
world wars people that are over 40 people and it made a star of East Coast teenage singer
songwriter Janice Ian with her song about interracial relationships society's child
spends a significant time, as one would expect,
analysing the music of the Beatles,
and to a lesser extent the stones,
though they don't appear in the show.
Bernstein does a lot to legitimize the music
just by taking it seriously as a subject for analysis,
at a time when most wouldn't.
You know a remarkable song of theirs called
She Said, She Said?
Well, in that song, which goes nicely along in four,
there's again a sneaky switch to three-quarter time,
only this time it's not just for one moment,
bar, but for a whole passage.
She said you don't understand what I said.
I said, no, no, no, you're wrong when I was a ball.
Did you get it?
If not listen again to the Beatles this time.
You can't see it, obviously.
But in the clip that's from, as the Beatles recording is playing,
Bernstein is conducting along with the music, as he wore a symphony orchestra, showing where the beats are falling.
But of course, given that this was filmed in the last two months of 1966, the vast majority of the episode is taken up with musicians from the centre of the music world at the time, L.A.
The film starts with Bernstein interviewing Tandon Alma, a jazz-influenced songwriter who had recently written the big hit, along comes Mary, for the association.
down a whole group of people because of some of them you know well in addition to the
age I represent I represent a bourgeois family man I represent an institution like
the New York Philharmonic which I well I ever said the head of I represent
establishment if you wish in a way I hate that word and I don't like to think of
myself that way but that's something that you would naturally rebel against yes but I
don't find you rebuilding against me. I would like...
What was you going to do?
It featured interviews with Roger McGuin and with the protesters at the Sunset Strip
riots, which were happening contemporaneously with the filming.
I'm very happy about it. I feel, yeah, like there's some sort of guerrilla warfare,
psychological warfare going on, you know, and I feel like, you know, gorilla. I feel good.
But out here, on L.A.'s sunset strip, it's not guerrilla warfare, and it's not psychological either.
It's the real thing.
And here he is walking on a street communicating with his peers and the cop says you can't do it.
Get off the street.
Every weekend, hundreds of kids, lots of them long hairs, pour onto one plush mile of Sunset Boulevard called the Strip,
to make the scene, to dance and to hear the rock music.
Suddenly the authorities tried to clear them out.
Along with Frank Zappa's rather acerbic assessment of the potential of the youth revolutionaries.
If they'd stop taking drugs and stop kidding themselves with...
their fantasies.
And they'd straighten up a little bit,
grab themselves a little sense of responsibility.
I think everything will turn out all right,
as if they aren't killed off systematically beforehand.
And ended, other than a brief post-commercial performance
over the credits by the Hollies,
with the performance by Tim Buckley,
whose debut album, as we heard in the last episode,
had featured Van Dyke Parkes
and future members of the Mothers of Invention and Buffalo Springfield.
But for many people, the highlight of the film was the performance that came right before Buckley's,
film of Brian Wilson playing a new song from the album he was working on.
One thing I should note, many sources say that the voiceover here is Bernstein.
My understanding is that Bernstein wrote and narrated the parts of the film he was himself in,
and Oppenheim did all the other voiceover writing and narration.
But the Topenheim's voice is similar enough to Bernstein's that people got confused about this.
That particular piece of footage was filmed in December 1966,
but it wasn't broadcast until April the 25th, 1967,
and eternity in mid-60s popular music.
When it was broadcast, that album still hadn't come out.
Precisely one week later, the Beach Boys publicist Derek Taylor announced that it never would.
One name who has showed up in a handful of episodes recently,
but who we've not talked that much about is Van Dyke Parks.
And in a story with many, many remarkable figures,
Vandite Parks may be one of the most remarkable of all.
Long before he did anything that impinges on the story of rock music,
Parks had lived the kind of life that would be considered unbelievable,
were it to be told as fiction.
Parks came from a family that mixed musical skill, political progressiveness and achievement.
His mother was a scholar of Hebrew, while his father was a neuro-euro.
the first doctor to admit black patients to a white southern hospital,
and had paid his way through college leading a dance band.
Parks' father was also, according to the 33 and a third book on Song Cycle,
a member of John Philip Sousa's 60 Silver Trumpets.
But literally, every reference I can find to Sousa leading a band of that name
goes back to that book, so I've no idea what he was actually a member of,
but we can presume he was a reasonable musician.
Young Van Dyke started playing the clarinet at first.
and was also a singer from a very early age,
as well as playing several other instruments.
He went to the American Boy Choir School in Princeton to study singing,
and while there he sang with Toscanini, Thomas Beecham,
and other immensely important conductors of the era.
He also had a very special accompanist for one Christmas caroling session.
The choir school was based in Princeton,
and one of the doors he knocked on while caroling
was that of Princeton's most famous resident, Albert Einstein,
who heard the young boy singing Silent Night
and came out with his violin and played along.
Young Van Dyke was only interested in music,
but he was also paying the bills for his music tuition himself.
He had a job. He was a TV star.
From the age of 10, he started getting roles in TV shows.
He played the youngest son in the 1953 sitcom Bonino,
about an opera singer,
which flopped because it aired opposite the extremely popular Jackie Gleeson show.
He would later also appear in that show
as one of several child actors
who played the character of Little Tommy Manicotti
and he made a number of other TV appearances
as well as having a small role in Grace Kelly's last film
The Swan with Alec Guinness and Louis Jourdan
but he never liked acting
and just did it to pay for his education
he gave it up when he moved on to the Carnegie Institute
where he majored in composition and performance
but then in his second year
his big brother Carson asked him to drop out
and moved to California.
Carson Parks had been part of the folk scene in California for a few years at this point.
He and a friend had formed a duo called the Steel Town too,
but then both of them had joined the folk group The Easy Riders,
a group led by Terry Gilkeeson.
Before Carson Parks joined,
the Easy Riders had had a big hit with their version of Mary Ann,
a calypso originally by the Great Calypsonian Roaring Lion.
They hadn't had many other hits, but their songs became hits for other people.
Gilkeeson wrote several big hits for Frankie Lane,
and the Easy riders were the backing vocalists on Dean Martin's recording of a song they wrote.
Memories are made of this.
Carson
One story
Of bled
Carson Parks hadn't been in the group at that point
He only joined after they'd stopped having success
And eventually the group had split up
He wanted to revive his old duo
The Steel Town 2
and persuaded his family to let his little brother Van Dyck drop out of university and move to California,
to be the other half of the duo.
He wanted Van Dyck to play guitar while he played banjo.
Van Dyke had never actually played guitar before, but as Carson Parks later said,
in 90 days he knew more than most folks now after many years.
Van Dyck moved into an apartment to joining his brothers, owned by Norm Botnick,
who had until recently been the principal viola player in a three,
film studio orchestra, before the film studios all simultaneously dumped their in-house orchestras
in the late 50s. So was a more understanding landlord than most when it came to the lifestyles of
musicians. Botnick's sons, Doug and Bruce, later went into sound engineering. We've already
encountered Bruce Botnick in the episode on the Doors, and he will be coming up again in the future.
The new Steeltown 2 didn't make any records, but they developed a bit of a following in the
coffee houses, and they also got a fair bit of session work, mostly through Terry Gilkeeson,
who was by that point writing songs for Disney, and would hire them to play on sessions for his
songs. And it was Gilkeeson, who both brought Van Dyke Parks the worst news of his life to that
point, and in doing so also had him make his first Major Mark on music. Gilkeeson was the one
who informed Van Dyke that another of his brothers, Benjamin Riley Parks, had died in what was
apparently a car accident. I say it was apparently an accident because Benjamin Riley
Parks was at the time working for the US State Department and there is apparently also some evidence
that he was assassinated in a Cold War plot. Gilkeeson also knew that neither Van Dyck nor Carson
Parks had much money. So in order to help them afford black suits and plane tickets to
and from the funeral, Gilkison hired Van Dyke's to write the arrangement for a song he had written
for an upcoming Disney film.
The bare necessities, the simple bare necessities,
forget about your worries and your stride.
I mean the bare necessities
or Mother Nature's recipes
that bring the bare necessities of life
wherever I wander,
wherever I wrong,
I couldn't be found of my big home.
The bees are buzzing.
The Steel Town 2 continued performing
and soon became known as the Steel Town 3
with the addition of a singer named Pat Paton.
The Steel Town 3 recorded two singles,
Rock Mountain, under that group name,
and a version of San Francisco Bay
under the name The South Coasters,
which have been unable to track down.
Then the three of them,
with the help of Terry Gilkeeson,
formed a larger group in the style of the new Christie Minstrels.
the Greenwood County Singers.
Indeed, Carson Parks would later claim that Gilkeeson had had the idea first,
that he'd mentioned that he'd wanted to put together a group like that to Randy Sparks,
and Sparks had taken the idea and done it first.
The Greenwood County Singers had two minor Hot 100 hits,
only one of them while Van Dyke was in the band,
the new Frankie and Johnny song,
a rewrite by Bob Gibson and Shell Silverstein
of the old traditional song Frankie and Johnny.
They also recorded several albums together, which gave Van Dyck the opportunity to practice his arrangement skills,
as on this version of Veracruz, which he arranged.
Sometime before their last album, in 1965, Van Dyke left the Greenwood County singers
and was replaced by Rick Jamard, who will also be hearing more about in future episodes.
After that album, the group split up, but Carson Parks would go on to write two big hits
in the next few years.
The first and biggest was a song he originally wrote for a side project.
His future wife, Gail Futt, was also a Greenwood,
county singer, and the two of them thought they might become folks' answer to Sonny and Cher,
or Nino Tempo and April Stevens. That obviously became a standard, after it was
standard after it was covered by Frank and Nancy Sinatra.
Carson Parks also wrote Cab Driver,
which in 1968 became the last top 30 hit for the Mills Brothers,
the 1930s vocal group we talked about way, way back in episode 6.
Meanwhile, Van Dyke Parks was becoming part of the sunset strip rock and roll world.
Now, until we get to 1967, Parks has something of a tangled timeline.
He worked with almost every band around L.A. in a short period,
often working with multiple people simultaneously,
and nobody was very interested in keeping detailed notes.
So I'm going to tell this as a linear story,
but be aware it's very much not.
Things I say in five minutes might happen after,
or in the same week as,
things I say in half an hour.
At some point in either 1965 or 1966,
he joined the Mothers of Invention for a brief while.
Nobody is entirely sure when this was,
and whether it was before or after their first album,
Some say it was in late 1965, others in August 1966,
and even the kind of fans who put together detailed timelines are none the wiser,
because no recordings have so far surfaced of Parks with the band.
Either is plausible, and the mothers went through a variety of keyboard players at this time.
Zappa had turned to his jazz friend Don Preston,
but found Preston was too much of a jazzer,
and told him to come back when he could play Louis-Louis convincingly,
asked Mac Rebinack to be in the band, but sacked him pretty much straight-off.
for drug use, and eventually turned to Preston again once Preston had learned to rock and roll.
Sometime in that period, Van Dyke Parks was a mother, playing electric harpsichord.
He may even have had more than one stint in the group. Zappa said, Van Dyke Parks played
electric harpsichord in and out. It seems likely, though, that it was in summer of 1966,
because in an interview published in Teen Beat magazine in December 66, but presumably conducted a few months
prior, Zappa was asked to describe the band members in one word each and replied,
Ray, Mahogany, Roy Asbestos, Jim Musillage, Del Acetate, Van Dyke Pinocchio, Billy, Boom,
I don't know about the rest of the group, I don't even know about these guys.
Sources differ as to why Parks didn't remain in the band.
Parks has said that he quit after a short time because he didn't like being shouted at.
While Zappa said, Van Dyck was not a reliable player.
He didn't make it to rehearsal on time and things like that.
Both may be true, of course,
though I've not heard anyone else ever criticised Parks for his reliability.
But then also Zappa had much more disciplinary and standards
than most rock band leaders.
It's possibly either through Zappa that he met Tom Wilson
or through Tom Wilson that he met Frank Zappa.
But either way, Parks, like the Mothers of Invention,
was signed to MGM records in 1966,
where he released two solo singles, co-produced by Wilson
and an otherwise obscure figure named Tim Alvarado.
The first was number nine, which we heard last week, backed with Do What You Wanter.
At least one source I've read says that the lyrics to Do What You Wanter
were written not by Parks but by his friend Danny Hutton,
but it's credited as a Park's solo composition on the label.
It was after that that the Van Dyke Parks band,
or as they were sometimes billed, just the Van Dyke Parks,
formed, as we discussed last episode.
based around Parks, Steve Stills and Steve Young,
and they performed a handful of shows
with bass player Bobby Ray and drummer Walt Sparman,
playing a mix of original material,
primarily Parks songs,
and covers of things like dancing in the street.
The one contemporaneous review of a live show I've seen
talks about the girls in the audience screaming,
and how, when rhythm guitarist Steve Stillman
imitated the Barry McGuire emotional scene,
they almost went Whiggy.
but the Vandaike Parks soon split up
and Parks the individual recorded his second single
Come to the Sunshine
Around the time he also met
Brian Wilson for the first time
when David Crosby took him up to Wilson's house
to hear an ascertain of the as-yet-un-released track, Sloop John B.
Parks was impressed by Wilson's arrangement techniques,
and in particular the way he was orchestrating instrumental combinations
that you couldn't do with a standard live room set up,
the required overdubbing and close-miking.
He said later,
The first stuff I heard indicated this kind of curiosity for the recording experience,
and when I went up to see him in 65,
I don't even think he had the voices on yet,
but I heard that long rotational breathing,
that long flute-oastanato at the beginning,
I knew this man was a great musician.
In most of 1966 though,
Parks was making his living as a session keyboard player and arranger,
and much of the work he was getting was through Lenny Waranka.
Waranka was a second-generation music industry professional.
His father, Cy Waranker,
had been a violinist in the 20th century Fox Studio Orchestra
before founding Liberty Records.
the label which indirectly led to him becoming immortalised in children's entertainment,
when Liberty Records star David Seville named his Chipmunk characters after three Liberty executives,
with Simon being Cy Warenka's full forename.
The first release on Liberty Records had been a version of The Girl Upstairs,
an instrumental piece from the Fox film The Seven Year Rich.
The original recording of that track, for the film,
had been done by the 20th century Fox Orchestra,
written and conducted by Alfred Newman,
the musical director for Fox.
Liberty's sound-alike version was conducted by Newman's brother Lionel,
a pianist at the studio, who later became Fox's musical director for TV,
just as his brother was for film,
but who also wrote many film scores himself.
Another Newman brother, Emile, was also a film composer,
but the fourth brother, Irving, had gone into medicine instead.
However, Irving's son Randy wanted to follow in the family business,
and he and Lenny Warenker,
who was similarly following his own father
by working for Liberty Records
publishing subsidiary metric music,
had been very close friends ever since high school.
Warenker got Newman signed to metric music,
where he wrote,
They Tell Me at Summer for the Fleetwoods.
Newman also wrote and record
and recorded a single of his own in 1962,
co-produced by Pat Boone,
before deciding he wasn't going to make it as a singer
and had better just be a professional songwriter.
But by 1966, Warenka had moved on from Metrick to Warner Brothers
and become a junior A&R man,
and he was put in charge of developing the artists that Warner's had acquired
when they had bought up a small label, Autumn Records.
Autumn Records was a San Francisco-based label
whose main producer, Sly Stone,
had now moved on to other things
after producing the hit record
Laugh-Laff for the Bob Rummills.
The Bob Rummills had had another hit after that
and were the main reason that Warner's had board the label,
but their star was fading a little.
Stone had also been mentoring several other groups,
including the Tiki's and the Mojo Men,
who all had potential.
Warronker gathered around himself
a sort of brains trusted musicians
who he trusted as songwriting
writers, arrangers and pianists,
Randy Newman, the session pianist Leon Russell,
and Van Dyke Parks.
Their job was to revitalise the career of the Bo Brummels
and to make both the Tikis and the Mojo Men into successes.
The tactic they chose was, in Warenka's words,
Go in with a good song and weird it out.
The first good song they tried weirding out was in late 1966,
when Leon Russell came up with the clarinet-led arrangement of Paul Simon's
59th Street Bridge song Feeling Groovy for the Tikis,
who performed it, but who thought that their existing fan base
wouldn't accept something so different.
So it was put out under another name suggested by Parks.
Harper's Bizarre.
Warenke said of Parks and Newman,
they weren't old-school guys.
They were modern characters, but they had old-school values
regarding certain records that needed to be made,
certain artists who needed to be heard regardless.
So there was still that going on.
The fact that feeling groovy was a number 10 hit nationwide,
and Sit Down I Think I Love You made the top 30 on Western regional radio.
That gave us credibility within the company.
One hit will do wonders.
Two allows you to take chances.
We heard Sit Down I Think I Love You last episode.
That's the song by Parks' old friend Stephen Stills
that Parks arranged for the Mojo Men.
During 1966, Parks also played on Tim Buckley's first album, as we also heard last episode.
Shall I come and pass you by
Will I make you want to try?
And he also bumped into Brian Wilson on occasion
As they were working a lot in the same studios
and had mutual friends like Lauren Darrow and Danny Hutton,
and he suggested the cello part on good vibrations.
Parks also played keyboards on 5D by the Birds,
and on the Spirit of 67 album for Paul Revere and the Raiders,
produced by the Birds or producer Terry Moucher.
Parks played keyboards on much of the album,
including the top five hit, Good Thing.
But while all this was going on,
Parks was also working on what would become the work for which he was best known.
As I've said, he'd met Brian Wilson on a few occasions,
but it wasn't until summer 1966 that the two were formally introduced by Terry Melcher,
who knew that Wilson needed a new songwriting collaborator,
now Tony Asher's sabbatical from his advertising job was coming to an end,
and that Wilson wanted someone who could do work that was a bit more abstract
than the emotional material that he had been writing with Asher.
Melcher invited both of them to a party at his house on Cello Drive,
a house which would a few years later become notorious,
which was also attended by many of the young Hollywood set of the time.
Nobody can remember exactly who was at the party,
but Parks thinks it was people like Jack Nicholson and Peter and Jane Fonda.
Parks and Wilson hit it off,
with Wilson saying later,
he seemed like a really articulate guy,
like he could write some good lyrics.
Parks, on the other hand, was delighted to find that Wilson,
like Les Paul, Spike Jones, all of these sounds that I liked,
and he was doing it in a proactive way.
Brian suggested Parks write the finished lyrics for good vibrations,
which was still being recorded at this time,
and still only had Tony Ash's dummy lyrics,
but Parks was uninterested.
He said that it would be best if he and Brian collaborate together
on something new from scratch, and Brian agreed.
The first time Parks came to visit Brian at Brian's home,
other than the visit accompanying Crosby the year before.
He was riding a motorbike.
He couldn't afford a car
and forgot to bring his driver's licence with him.
He was stopped by a police officer
who thought he looked too poor to be in the area,
but Parks persuaded the police officer
that if he came to the door,
Brian Wilson would voucherced for him.
Brian got Van Dyke out of any trouble
because the cop's sister was a Beach Boys fan,
so he autographed an album for her.
Brian and Van Dyke talked for a while.
Brian asked if Van Dyke needed any of,
to help his work go smoothly. And Van Dyck said he needed a car. Brian asked what kind.
Van Dyke said that Volvos were supposed to be pretty safe. Brian asked how much they cost.
Van Dyke said he thought they were about $5,000. Brian called up his office and told
them to get a check delivered to Van Dyke for $5,000 the next day, instantly earning Van Dyke's loyalty.
After that, they got on with work. To start with, Brian played Van Dyke a melody he'd been working on.
a melody based on a descending scale starting on the fourth.
Parks told Wilson that the melody reminded him vaguely of Marty Robbins' country hit El Paso from 1959,
a song about a gunfighter, a canteener and a dancing woman.
I fell in love with a Mexican girl.
Nighttime would find me in Rose's canteeno.
Music would play and finino would whirl.
I heard the night were the eyes of Felina.
Wilson said that he had been thinking along the same lines,
and thought maybe it should be called Heroes and Villains.
Parks started writing, matching syllables to Wilson's preconceived melody.
I've been in this town so long that back in the city I've been taken for lost and gone
and unknown for a long, long time.
As Parks put it, the engine had started, it was very much ad hoc, seat of the pants, extemporaneous values were enforced, not too much pre-commitment to ideas, or if so, equally pursuing propinquity.
Slowly, over the next several months, while the five other Beach Boys were touring, Brian and Van Dyke refined their ideas about what the album they were writing, initially called Dumb Angel, but soon be titled Smile, should be.
For Van Knight Parks, it was an attempt to make music about America and American mythology.
He was disgusted as a patriot with the anglophilia that had swept the music industry since the arrival of the Beatles in America two and a half years earlier,
particularly since that had happened so soon after the deaths both of President Kennedy and of Parks' own brother,
who was working for the government at the time he died.
So for him, the album was about America, about Plymouth Rock, the Old West, California,
and Hawaii. It would be a generally positive version of the country's myth, though it would, of course,
also acknowledge the bloodshed on which the country had been built. As he put it later,
I was dead set on centering my life on the patriotic ideal. I was a son of the American
revolution and there was blood on the tracks. Recent blood, and it was still drying. The whole
record seemed like a real effort toward figuring out what manifest destiny was all about. We'd come as
far as we could, as far as Horace Greeley told us to go, and so we looked back and tried to make
sense of that great odyssey. Brian had some other ideas. He had been studying the E. Ching and
Subood, and he wanted to do something about the four classical elements, and something religious.
His ideas were generally rather unfocused at the time, and he had far more ideas than he knew
what to usefully do with. But he was also happy with the idea of a piece about America,
which fit in with his own interest in Rhapsody and Blue,
a piece that was about America in much the same way.
Rhapsody and Blue was an inspiration for Brian primarily
in how it weaved together variations on themes,
and there are two themes that between them
Brian was finding endless variations on.
The first theme was a shuffling between two chords,
a fourth away from each other.
Where these chords are both major,
that's the sequence for fire.
For the Who ran the Iron Horse section of Cabinessence,
For vegetables,
vegetables I'm going to chat down, my vegetables I love you most of all, my favourite
vegetable of them home
I jump up and down and hope it's...
And more.
Sometimes this would be the minor supertonic and dominant seventh of the key,
so in C there would be D minor to G7.
That's the bicycle rider chorus we heard earlier, which was part of a song known as Roll Plimuth Rock or Do You Like Worms?
But which later became a chorus for heroes and villains.
But that same sequence is also the beginning of wind chimes.
The Wahaloo Le section of Royal Plymouth Rock.
And others, but most interestingly, the minor key rearrangement of You Are My Sunshine as You Were My Sunshine.
I say that's most interesting
because that provides a link to another
of the major themes which Brian was ringing
every drop out of, a phrase known as
how dry I am, because of its use under those words
in an Irving Berlin song, which was a popular
barbershop quartet song, but is now best known as a signifier
of drunkenness in Looney Tunes cartoons.
The phrase is a common one in early 20th century
music, especially folk and country,
as it's made up of notes in the pentatonic scale.
It's the fifth, first, second and third of the scale in that order.
And so it's in the melody to This Land is Your Land, for example,
a song which is very much in the same spirit of Progressive Americana,
in which Van Dyke Parks was thinking.
This land is my land,
from the California to the New York Island,
and the redwood forest to the Gulf Stream waters.
This land was made.
It's also the start of the
Wall in that ribbon of highway
I saw above me
That endless skyway
It's also the start of the original melody of
You Are My Sunshine
You are my sunshine
My only sunshine
You make me happy
When skies are grey
You'll never know dear
How much I love you
Brian rearranged that melody when he stuck it into a minor key,
so it's no longer How Dry I Am in the Beach Boys version.
But if you play the How Dry I Am notes in a different rhythm, you get this,
which is the start of the melody to He Gives Speeches.
Play those notes backwards, you get.
Do that and add on to the end a passing sixth and then the tonic,
and then you get,
which is the vocal counter melody to he gives speeches.
And also turns up in some versions of heroes and villains.
And so on.
Smile was an intricate web of themes and variations,
and it incorporated motifs from many sources,
both the Great American Songbook
and the R&B of Brian's youth spent listening to Johnny Oates's radio show.
There were bits of G by the Crows,
of 12th Street Rag, and of course, given that this was Brian Wilson, bits of Phil Spector.
The backing track to the verse of heroes and villains
owed more than a little to a version of Save the Last Dance for Me
that Spector had produced for Ekin Tina Turner,
while one version of the song Wonderful contained a rather out-of-place homage
to Etta James and The Wallflower.
As the recording continued, it became more and more Robert.
that the combination of these themes and variations was becoming a little too much for Brian.
Many of the songs he was working on were made up of individual modules that he was planning to splice together
the way he had with good vibrations, and some modules were getting moved between tracks,
as he tried to structure the songs in the edit. He'd managed it with good vibrations,
but this was an entire album, not just a single, and it was becoming more and more difficult.
David Anderley, who was heading up the record label the group were looking at starting,
would talk about Brian playing emacetates with sections edited together one way,
and thinking it was perfect and obviously the correct way to put them together,
the only possible way, and then hearing the same sections edited together in a different way,
and thinking that was perfect and obviously the correct way to put them together.
But while a lot of the album was modular,
there were also several complete songs with beginnings, middles, ends and structure.
even if they were in several movements.
And those songs showed that if Brian could just get the other stuff right,
the album could be very, very special.
There was Heroes and Villains itself, of course,
which kept changing its structure but was still based around the same basic
melody and story that Brian and Van Dyck had come up with
on their first day working together.
There was also wonderful, a beautiful, elusive song
about innocence lost and regained.
And there was Cabinessence,
a song which referenced yet a...
another classic song, this time Home on the Range, to tell a story of idyllic rural life
and of the industrialisation which came with Westwood expansion. The arrangement for that song
inspired Van Dyke Parks to make a very astute assessment of Brian Wilson. He said later,
He knew that he had to adhere to the counterculture, and I knew that I had to. I think that he
was about as estranged from it as I was. At the same time, he didn't want to lose that kind of
ghost sensibility that he had. He was doing stuff that nobody would dream of doing. You would never,
for example, use one string on a banjo when you had five. It just wasn't done. But when I asked him to
bring a banjo in, that's what he did. This old style Plectrum thing, one string, that's gauche.
Both Parks and Wilson were both drawn to and alienated from the counterculture, but in very
different ways, and their different ways of relating to the counterculture created the creative
tension that makes the smile project so interesting. Parks is fundamentally a new deal
Libville, and was excited by the progressive nature of the counterculture, but also rather worried
about its tendency to throw the baby out with the bathwater, and to ignore the old in pursuit of
the new. He was an erudite, cultured, sophisticated man, who thought that there was value to be
found in the works and attitudes of the past, even as one must look to the future.
He was influenced by the beat poets and the avant-garde art of the time, but also said of his
folk music period, a harpist would bring his heart with him, and he would play and recite a story
which had been passed down the generations. This particular legacy continued through Arthurian
legend, and then through the Middle Ages, and even into the 19th century. With all these
songs, half of the story was the lyrics, and the folk songs were very interesting.
They were tremendously thought-driven songs. There was nothing confusing about that. Even when
the Kingston trio came out, and Brian has already admitted his debt to the Kingston trio,
Tom Dooley, the story of a murder-most-fowl, MTA, an urban nightmare. All of this thought-driven
music was perfectly acceptable. It was more than a teenage romantic crisis. Brian Wilson,
on the other hand, was anything but sophisticated. He is a simple man in the best sense of the
term. He likes what he likes, doesn't like what he doesn't like, and has no pretensions whatsoever
about it. He is, at heart, a middle-class middle-American brought up in suburbia, with a taste
for steaks in hamburgers, broad physical comedy, baseball, and easy listening music.
Where Van Dyke Parks was talking about thought-driven music, Wilson's music, wow, thoughtful,
has always been driven by feelings first and foremost.
Where Parks is influenced by romantic composers like Gottschalk,
but is fundamentally a craftsman, a tradition list,
a mason adding his work to a cathedral
whose construction started before his birth
and will continue after his death.
Wilson's music has none of the stylistic hallmarks of romantic music,
but in its inspiration it is absolutely romantic.
It is the immediate emotional expression of the individual,
completely unfiltered.
When writing his own lyrics in later years,
Wilson would come up with everything from almost haiku-like lyrics like,
I'm a leaf on a windy day, pretty soon I'll be blown away,
how long will the wind blow until I die,
to, he sits behind his microphone, Johnny Carson,
he speaks in such a manly tone, Johnny Carson,
depending on whether at the time his prime concern was existential meaninglessness
or what was on the TV.
Wilson found the new counterculture exciting,
but was also very aware he didn't fit in.
he was developing a new group of friends,
the hippest of the hip in L.A. counterculture circles.
The singer Danny Hutton, Mark Voulman of the Turtles,
the writers Michael Vossy and Jules Siegel,
Seenster and Record Executive David Anderley,
but there was always the underlying implication
that at least some of these people regarded him as,
to use an ablest term, but one which they would probably have used,
an idiot, savant,
that they thought of him,
as his former collaborator Tony Asher would later
uncharitably put it, as a genius musician but an amateur human being.
So, for example, when Siegel brought the great postmodern novelist Thomas Pynchon to visit Brian,
both men largely sat in silence, unable to speak to each other. Pynchon because he tended to be
a reactive person in conversation and would wait for the other person to initiate topics of
discussion, Brian because he was so intimidated by Pynchon's reputation as a great East Coast
intellectual, that he was largely silent for fear of making a fool of himself.
It was this ghostness, as Parks eventually put it, and Parks was understanding that this was actually
a quality to be cherished in the key to Wilson's art, that eventually gave the title to the most
ambitious of the complete songs the duo were working on. They had most of the song, a song about
the power of music, the concept of enlightenment, and the rise and fall of civilizations. But
Parks hadn't yet quite finished the lyric. The Beach Boys had been off on tour for much of
Brian and Van Dyck's collaboration and had just got back from their first real tour of the UK,
where Pet Sounds had been a smash hit, rather than the middling success it had been in the US,
and good vibrations had just become their first number one single. Brian and Van Dyke played the song
for Brian's brother Dennis, the Beach Boys drummer, and the band member most in tune with Brian's
musical ambitions at this time.
Dennis started crying
and started talking about how the British audiences had loved their music
but had laughed at their on-stage striped shirt uniforms.
Parks couldn't tell if he was crying because of the beauty of the unfinished song,
the humiliation he had suffered in Britain, or both.
Dennis then asked what the name of the song was,
and as Parks later put it,
although it was the most gauche factor,
and although maybe Brian thought it was the most dispensable thing,
I thought it was very important to continue to use the name
and keep the elephant in the room, to keep the surfing image,
but to sensitize it to new opportunities.
One of these would be an eco-consciousness.
It would be speaking about the greening of the earth,
Aboriginal people, how we had treated the Indians,
taking on those things and putting them into the thoughts that come with the music.
That was a solution to the relevance of the group,
and I wanted the group to be relevant.
Van Dyke had decided on a title,
serves up.
As the group were now back from their tour,
the focus for recording shifted from the instrumental sessions to vocal ones.
Parks had often attended the instrumental sessions
as he was an accomplished musician and arranger himself
and would play on the sessions,
but also wanted to learn from what Brian was doing.
He stated later that some of his use of tuned percussion in the decades since,
for example, has come from watching Brian's work.
But while he was also a good singer, he was not a singer in the same style as the Beach Boys,
and they certainly didn't need his presence at those sessions.
So he continued to work on his lyrics and to do his arrangement and session work for other artists,
while they worked in the studio.
He was also, though, starting to distance himself from Brian for other reasons.
At the start of the summer, Brian's eccentricity and whimsy had seemed harmless.
Indeed, the kind of thing he was doing, such as putting,
his piano in a sandbox so he could feel the sand with his feet while he wrote,
seems very much on a par with Maureen Cleave's descriptions of John Lennon in the same period.
They were two newly rich, easily bored young men with low attention spans and high intelligence,
who could become deeply depressed when understimulated, and so would get new ideas into their
heads, spend money on their new fads, and then quickly discard them.
But as the summer wore on into autumn and winter, Brian's behaviour became more
bizarre, and to Parks' eyes more distasteful.
We now know that Brian was suffering a period of increasing mental ill health,
something that was probably not helped by the copious intake of cannabis and amphetamins
he was using to spur his creativity. But at the time, most people around him didn't realise
this, and general knowledge of mental illness was even less than it is today.
Brian was starting to do things like insist on holding business meetings in his swimming pool,
partly because people wouldn't be able to spy on him, and partly because
he thought people would be more honest if they were in the water.
There were also events like the recording session,
where Wilson paid for several session musicians
not to play their instruments,
but to be recorded while they sat in a pitch-black room
and played the party game lifeboat
with Jules Siegel and several of Wilson's friends,
most of whom were stoned and not really understanding
what they were doing while they got angrier and more frustrated.
Alan Jardine, who, unlike the Wilson brothers,
and even Mike Love to an extent,
never indulged in illegal drugs,
has talked about not understanding why,
in some vocal sessions,
Vryne would make the group crawl on their hands and knees
while making noises like animals.
As Parks delicately put it,
I sensed all that was destructive,
so I withdrew from those related social encounters.
What this meant, though,
was that he was unaware that not all the Beach Boys
took the same attitude of complete support
for the work he and Brian had been doing,
that Dennis Wilson, the only other group member he'd met at this point, took.
In particular, Mike Love was not a fan of Parks' lyrics.
As he said later, I called it acid alliteration.
The lyrics are far out,
but do they relate like surfing USA, like fun, fun,
like California girls, like I get around, perhaps not.
So that's the distinction.
See, I'm into success.
These words equal successful hit records,
those words don't. Love has taken a lot of heat for this over the years, and on an artistic
level that's completely understandable. Parks' lyrics were, to my mind at least, the best the Beach
Boys ever had. Thoughtful, intelligent, moving, at times profound, often funny, often beautiful.
But while I profoundly disagree with love, I have a certain amount of sympathy for his position.
From love's perspective, first and foremost, this is his source of income.
He was the only one of the Beach Boys to have ever had a day job.
He'd worked at his father's sheet metal company,
and didn't particularly relish the idea of going back to manual labour
if the rock star gig dried up.
It wasn't that he was opposed to art, of course.
He'd written the lyrics to good vibrations,
possibly the most arty rock single released to that point, hadn't he?
But that had been commercial art.
It had sold.
Was this stuff going to sell?
Was he still going to be able to feed his wife and kids?
Also, up until a few months earlier, he had been Brian's principal songwriting collaborator.
He was still the most commercially successful collaborator Brian had had.
From his perspective, this was a partnership, and it was being turned into a dictatorship
without him having been consulted.
Before it had been, Mike, can you write some lyrics for this song about cars?
Now it was, Mike, you're going to sing these lyrics about a crow uncovering a cornfield.
And not only that, but Mike had not met Brian's new country.
collaborator, but knew he was hanging around with Brian's new druggy friends, and Brian was
behaving increasingly weirdly, which Mike put down to the influence of the drugs and these new
friends. It can't have helped that at the same time the group's publicist Derek Taylor was
heavily pushing the line, Brian Wilson as a genius. This was causing Brian some distress. He didn't think of
himself as a genius, and he saw the label as a burden, something it was impossible to live up to.
but it was also causing friction in the group,
as it seemed that their contributions were being dismissed.
Again, I don't agree with Mike's position on any of this,
but it is understandable.
It's also the case that Mike Love is, by nature,
a very assertive and gregarious person,
while Brian Wilson, for all that he took control in the studio,
is incredibly conflict-avoidant and sensitive.
From what I know of the two men's personalities,
and from things they've said
and from the session recordings
that have leaked over the years,
it seems entirely likely
that Love will have seen himself
as having reasonable criticisms
and putting them to Brian clearly
with a bit of teasing to take the sting out of them
while Brian will have seen Love
as mercilessly attacking and ridiculing
the work that meant so much to him
in a cruel and hurtful manner
and that neither will have understood at the time
that that was how the other was seeing things.
Love's criticisms
intensified. Not of everything. He's several times expressed admiration for heroes and villains,
and wonderful. But in general, he was not a fan of Parks' lyrics, and his criticisms seemed to
start to affect Brian. It's difficult to say what Brian thinks about Parks' lyrics, because he has
a habit in interviews of saying what he thinks the interviewer wants to hear, and the whole subject
of smile became a touchy one for him for a long time. So in some interviews, he has talked about
how dazzlingly brilliant they are, while at other times he seemed to agree with love.
saying there were Van Dyke Park's lyrics, not Beach Boys' lyrics.
He may well sincerely think both at the same time,
or have thought both at different times.
This came to a head with a session for the tag of Cabin Essence.
Love insisted on having the line over and over the crow flies uncover the cornfield,
explained to him,
and Brian eventually decided to call Van Dyke Parks and have him come to the studio.
Up to this point, Parks had no idea that there was anything controversial.
so when Brian phoned him up and very casually said that Mike had a few questions about the lyrics,
could he come down to the studio, he went without a second thought. He later said,
the only person I had had any interchange with before that was Dennis, who responded very favourably
to heroes and villains and serfs up. Based on that, I gathered that the work would be approved.
But then, with no warning whatsoever, I got that phone call from Brian, and that's when the whole
house of cards came tumbling down. Parks got to the studio where he was confronted by an angry Mike
love, insisting he explained the lyrics. Now, as will be, I hope, clear from everything I've said,
Parks and Love are very, very, very, very different people. Having met both men, albeit only
informal fan meeting situations where they're presenting their public face, I actually find both
men very likable, but in very different ways. Love is gregarious, a charmer, the kind of man who would
make a good salesman, and who people use terms like alpha male about. He's tall and has a casual
confidence that can easily read as arrogance, and a straightforward sense of humour that can sometimes
veer into the cruel. Parks, on the other hand, is small, meticulously well-mannered and well-spoken,
has a high, precise speaking voice,
which probably reads as effeminate
to the kind of people who use terms like alpha male,
and the kind of devastating intelligence
and southern US attention to propriety,
which means that if he wanted to say something cruel about someone,
the victim would believe themselves to have been complimented
until a horrific realisation two days after the event.
In every way, from their politics to their attitudes to art versus commerce,
to their mannerisms, to their appearance.
Mike Love and Van Dyke Parks are utterly different people
and were never going to mix well.
And Brian Wilson, who was supposed to be the collaborator for both of them,
was not mediating between them, not even expressing an opinion.
His own mental problems had reached the stage
where he simply couldn't deal with the conflict.
Parks felt ambushed and hurt.
Love felt angry, especially when Parks could not explain
the literal meaning of his lyrics.
Eventually, Parks just said,
I have no excuse, sir, and left.
Parks later said,
that's when I lost interest,
because basically I was taught not to be where I wasn't wanted,
and I could feel I wasn't wanted.
It was like I had someone else's job,
which was abhorrent to me,
because I don't even want my own job.
It was sad, so I decided to get away quick.
Parks continued collaborating with Wilson
and continued attending instrumental sessions,
but it was all wheel-spinning.
No significant progress was made on any songs after that point in early December.
It was becoming clear that the album wasn't going to be ready for its planned Christmas release,
and it was pushed back to January.
But Brian's mental health was becoming worse and worse.
One example that's often cited as giving an insight into Brian's mental state at the time
is his reaction to going to the cinema to see John Frankenheimer's classic science fiction horror film,
seconds. Brian came in late, and the way the story is always told, when he was sat down,
the screen was black, and a voice said from the darkness, Hello, Mr. Wilson.
That moment does not seem to correspond with anything in the actual film, but he probably
came in around the 24-minute mark, where the main character walks down a corridor,
filmed in a distorted, hallucinatory manner, to be greeted,
Oh, there you are, Mr. Wilson.
Come in, please.
Would you close the door?
Please, sit down.
My name is Ruby.
I've been assigned to go over the circumstances of your death with you.
But as Brian watched the film, framed by this,
he became distressed by a number of apparent similarities to his life.
The main character was going through death and rebirth, just as he felt he was.
Right after the moment I just excerpted, Mr. Wilson has shown a film,
And of course Brian was himself watching a film.
The character goes to the beach in California, just like Brian.
The character has a breakdown on a plane, just like Brian,
and has to take pills to cope.
And the breakdown happens right after this.
You are alone in the world,
absolved of all responsibility,
except to your own interest.
Isn't that marvelous?
A studio is in Malibu, California.
Quite luxurious, very private.
You'll make your own adjustment in your own way, in your own time.
A studio in California, just like where Brian spent his working days.
That kind of weird coincidence can be affecting enough in a work of art
when one is relatively mentally stable, but Brian was not at all stable.
By this point he was profoundly paranoid,
and he may have had good reason to.
be. Some of Brian's friends from this time period have insisted that Brian's semi-estranged,
abusive father and former manager, Murray, was having private detectives watch him and his brothers
to find evidence that they were using drugs. If you're in the early stages of a severe
mental illness, and you're self-medicating with illegal drugs, and people are actually spying
on you, then that kind of coincidence becomes a lot more distressing. Brian became convinced that
the film was the work of mind gangsters, probably in the pay of Phil Spector,
who were trying to drive him mad and were using telepathy to spy on him.
He started to bar people who had until recently been his friends from coming to sessions.
He decided that Jules Siegel's girlfriend was a witch, and so Siegel was no longer welcome,
and what had been a creative process in the studio degenerated into noodling and second-guessing himself.
He also, with January having come and the album still not delivered, started doing side projects.
some of which, like his production of tracks for photographer Jasper Daly,
seem evidence either of his bizarre sense of humour,
or of his detachment from reality, or both.
As 1967 drew on, things got worse and worse.
Brian was by this point concentrating on just one or two tracks,
but endlessly reworking elements of them,
he became convinced that the track fire had caused some actual fires
to break out in LA and needed to be scrapped.
The January deadline came and went with no sign of the album.
To add to that, the group discovered that they were owed vast amounts of unpaid royalties by capital records,
and legal action started, which meant that even were the record to be finished,
it might become a pawn in the legal wrangling.
Parks eventually became exasperated by Brian.
He said later, I was victimised by Brian Wilson's buffoonery,
and he quit the project altogether in February after a row with Brian.
He returned a couple of weeks later out of a sense of loyalty, but quit again in April.
By April, he'd been working enough with Lenny Warenker that Warrinker offered him a contract with Warner Brothers as a solo artist,
partly because Warner's wanted some insight into Brian Wilson's techniques as a hit-making producer.
To start with, Parks released a single to dip a toe in the water, under the pseudonym George Washington Brown.
It was a largely instrumental cover version of Donovan's song, Colours,
which Parks chose because after seeing the film Don't Look Back,
a documentary of Bob Dylan's 1965 British tour.
He felt saddened at the way Dylan had treated Donovan.
That was not a hit, but it got enough positive coverage,
including an ecstatic review from Richard Goldstein in the Village Voice,
that Parks was given carte blanche to create the album he wanted to create,
with one of the largest budgets of any album released to that date.
The result was a masterpiece and very similar to the vision of smile that Parks had had,
an album of clever, thoroughly American music, which had more to do with Charles Ives than the British invasion.
But Parks realised the album, titled Song Cycle, was doomed to failure,
when at a playback session, the head of Warner Brothers Records said,
Song Cycle, so where are the songs?
According to Parks, the album was only released because Jack Holtzman of Elektra Records was also there
and took out his chequebook and said he'd released the album if Warner's wouldn't.
But it had little push,
apart from some rather experimental magazine adverts,
which were, if anything, counterproductive.
But Warrinker recognised Parks's talent,
and had even written into Parks's contract
that Parks would be employed as a session player at scale
on every session Warrinker produced,
something that didn't actually happen,
because Parks didn't insist on it,
but which did mean Parks had a certain amount of job security.
Over the next couple of years, Parks and Waranka co-produced the first albums by two of their colleagues from Warenka's Brainstrust, with Parks arranging.
Randy Newman
and Ray Kuda
Warenka would refer to himself, Parks, Kuda and Newman as the Arts and Crafts Division of Warners.
And while these initial records weren't very successful, all of them would go on to bigger things.
Parks would be a pioneer of music video,
heading up Warner's music video department in the early 70s,
and would also have a staggeringly varied career over the years,
doing everything from teaming up again with the Beach Boys
to play accordion on Kokomo,
to doing the string arrangements on Joanna Newsom's album,
Ease, collaborating with everyone from Guteau to Skrillhex,
discovering Rufus Weimright,
and even acting again, appearing in Twin Peaks.
He also continued to make massively embarrassing,
inventive solo albums, releasing roughly one every decade, each unique and yet all bearing the
hallmarks of his idiosyncratic style. As you can imagine, he is very likely to come up again
in future episodes, though we're leaving him for now. Meanwhile, the Beach Boys were floundering
and still had no album, and now Parks was no longer working with Brian, the whole idea of
smile was scrapped. The priority was now to get a single done, and so work started on a new
finished version of heroes and villains.
structured in a fairly conventional manner
using elements of the smile recordings.
The group was suffering from numerous interlocking problems at this point,
and everyone was stressed.
They were suing their record label,
Dennis's wife had filed for divorce,
Brian was having mental health problems,
and Carl had been arrested for draft dodging,
though he was later able to mount a successful defence
that he was a conscientious objector.
Also, at some point around this time,
Bruce Johnston seems to have temporarily quit the group,
though this was never announced.
He doesn't seem to have been at any sessions
from late May or early June through mid-September
and didn't attend the two shows they performed in that time.
They were meant to have performed three shows,
but even though Brian was on the board of the Monterey Pop Festival,
they pulled out at the last minute,
saying that they needed to deal with getting the new single finished
and with Carl's draft problems.
Some are all of these other issues almost certainly fed into that,
but the end result was that the Beach Boys were seen to have admitted defeat,
to have handed the crown of relevance off to the San Francisco groups.
And even if Smile had been released, there were other releases stealing its thunder.
If it had come out in December, it would have been massively ahead of its time.
But after the Beatles released Sergeant Pepper,
it would have seemed like it was a cheap copy,
though Parks has always said he believes the Beatles heard some of the smile tapes
and copied elements of the recordings,
though I don't hear much similarity myself.
But I do hear a strong similarity in My World Fowldown by Sagittarius,
which came out in June,
and which was largely made by erstwhile collaborators of Brian,
Gary Usher produced, Glenn Campbell sang lead,
and Bruce Johnston sang backing vocals.
Brian was very concerned after hearing that
that someone had heard the smile tapes,
and one can understand why.
When heroes and villains finally came out,
it was a great single,
but only made number 12 in the charts.
It was fantastic but out of step with the times,
and nothing could have lived up to the hype that had built up around it.
Instead of Smile, the group released an album called Smiley Smile,
recorded in a couple of months in Brian's home studio,
with no studio musicians,
and no involvement from Bruce, other than the previously released singles,
and with the production credited to The Beach Boys, rather than Brian.
Smiley Smile has been unfairly dismissed over the years,
but it's actually an album that was ahead of its time.
It's a collection of stripped-down versions of smile songs
and new fragments using some of the same motifs,
recorded with minimal instrumentation.
Some of it is on a par with the smile material it's based on.
Some is, to my ears, far more beautiful than the smile versions.
And some has a fun goofiness,
which relates back to one of Brian's discarded ideas for smile.
That it be a humor album.
she had left. I tried to salvage what I could and threw it in a sack.
She made it beeline to a room and grabbed all kind of juice.
She started pouring it on her head and thought it growing back.
The album was a commercial flop. By far the least successful thing the group had
released to that point in the US, not even making the top 40 when it came out in September,
though it made the top 10 in the UK. But interestingly, it wasn't a critical flop.
at least at first. While the scrapping of smile had been mentioned, it still wasn't widely known.
And so, for example, Richard Goldstein, the journalist whose glowing review of Donovan's colours
in the village voice had secured Van Dyke Parks the opportunity to make song cycle,
gave it a review in the New York Times, which has written as if Goldstein at least believes
it is the album that had been promised all along, and he speaks of it very perceptively.
And here I'm going to quote quite extensively, because the narrative about this album,
has always been that it was panned from the start and made the group a laughingstock.
Smiley Smile hardly reads like a rock cantata,
but there are moments in songs such as With Me Tonight and Wonderful
that soar like sacred music.
Even the songs that seem irrelevant to a rock hymn are infused with stained glass melodies.
Wilson is a sound sculptor,
and his songs of all harmonious litanies to the gentle holiness of love,
post-Christian perhaps, but still believing.
Windchimes, the most important piece on the album,
is a fine example of Brian Wilson's organic pop structure.
It contains three movements.
First, Wilson sets a lyric and melodic mood,
in the late afternoon you're hung up on wind chimes.
Then he introduces a totally different scene,
utilising passages of pure, wordless harmony.
His two and a half-minute hymn ends with a third movement
in which the voices joined together in an exquisite round,
singing the words,
Whisper and Winds,
Set My Wind Chimes the Tinkle in.
The voices fade out slowly,
like the bittersweet afternoon in question.
The technique of montage is an important aspect
of Wilson's rock cantata,
since the entire album tends to flow as a single composition.
Songs like heroes and villains are fragmented
by speeding up or slowing down their verses and refrains.
The effect is like viewing the song through a spinning prism.
Sometimes, as in fall breaks and back to winter,
subtitled W. Woodpecker Symphony,
The music is tiered into contrapuntal variations on a sliver of melody.
The listener is thrown into a vast musical machine of countless working gears,
each spinning in its own orbit.
That's a discussion of the album that I hear when I listen to Smiley Smile,
and the group seemed to have been artistically happy with it, at least at first.
They travelled to Hawaii to record a live album,
with Brian, as Bruce was still out of the picture,
taking the Baldwin organ that Brian used all over Smiley Smile with them,
and performed rearranged versions of their old hits in the Smiley Smile style.
When the recordings proved unusable, they recreated them in the studio,
with Bruce returning to the group, where he would remain,
with the intention of overdubbing audience noise and releasing a faked live album.
The idea of the live album, to be called Laid in Hawaii, was scrapped,
but that's not the kind of radical reimagining of your sound that you do
if you think you've made an artistic failure.
Indeed, the group's next album, Wild Honey, which came out in late 1967,
is very much a successor to Smiley Smile in its stripped down sound,
but with a set of songs that have a certain amount of influence from the soul music
that Carl and Mike were now listening to.
The singles from Wild Honey were moderately successful,
and it looked like the group were going to reinvent themselves,
but then the critical consensus changed.
First there was Jules Siegel's article on Smile,
titled Goodbye Surfing, Hello,
God, which had been intended for the Saturday evening post, but had itself gone through endless
delays, and which eventually came out in Cheetah magazine, roughly a month after Smiley Smile came
out, and which became the first draft of history, as far as Smile was concerned, telling the
story not of an album scrapped and reworked, but of Icarus soaring too close to the sun while his
bandmates pulled the feathers off. It reinforced all the genius stories that Wilson had found so
upsetting, while implicitly making any new music that actually got released, pale in comparison
to a mythical album that had never been finished, and which could take on any shape the listener imagined.
Meanwhile, Jan Wenner wrote an article in his new magazine, Rolling Stone, a magazine which
explicitly sided with San Francisco in the war between Frisco and L.A., and which over the years would
contribute to almost all the L.A. bands being critically sidelined or forgotten in the US, no matter how good
they'd been, dismissing all the hype about the group and about Brian's genius, and arguing that
they were only a moderately good pop band and not even that good live, and should stick to the
fun stuff they knew and not try to play with the big boys. And more or less overnight,
these two views became the sum total of American critical opinion of the Beach Boys. A mainstream
opinion that dismissed them as frothy lightweight has-bens who'd made a few good singles but had been
overtaken, and a more hipsterish underground version that said that Brian Wilson was a genius,
but he had been sabotaged by his bandmate, and the proof of that genius had never been released,
so he'd best just take it on trust. Neither required any acknowledgement of any work the group
might do in the future, any capacity of progress or relevance for them, or any reason to engage
critically with any new work they did. Brian Wilson was permanently cast as either an overrated
dilettante who believed his own press,
over tragic victim sabotaged by his family,
his bandmates, either way, as talentless hacks.
And as anyone who has tried to talk about the Beach Boys online knows,
that dual consensus remains largely in place today,
irrespective of any actual qualities of the music.
At least for the moment, though,
the group was still on a commercial and critical upswing in the UK,
at a time when critical reputations were much less coupled than they are now,
And when Mike and Bruce decided to drop in at the Beatles' Christmas launch party for their new film,
Magical Mystery Tour, they were treated as honouring guests and invited to jam on stage with,
depending on which version of adventure believe, either John Paul and Mingo, the Bonzo Dog Dudar Band,
or some combination of all of the above.
And they had a new mutual acquaintance.
A few days before, at the instigation of Dennis Wilson, the Beach Boys had met up with the Maharishi,
who the Beatles had started seeing a couple of months earlier.
Dennis himself didn't remain impressed with the Maharishi for long
and went off looking for another guru to follow,
but Mike Love became a devoted follower, as he is to this day,
and two months later, Mike Love would join the Beatles and Donovan
on a retreat with the Maharishi in Rishikesh in India.
What nobody could know at the time was that the songs the Beatles would write on that retreat
would intersect horribly in unpredictable ways,
with Dennis Wilson's search for a guru.
ways which would ultimately lead back to the House on Cielo Drive, where Brian and Van Dyke first agreed to collaborate.
But that, I am glad to say, is a much darker story for another time.
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