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DUBCC - Tha Connection => Outbound Connection => Topic started by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 05:52:49 AM

Title: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 05:52:49 AM
Man, he finally did it!  Brian finished "SMiLE", the most famous "lost" album of all time, re-recorded it, and it's in stores TODAY around the world.  Reviews & Articles are pouring in, and nearly without exception, it's being applauded as the masterwork of a genius; beautiful, haunting, and nothing short of what Brian called in 1967 "A Teenage Symphony To God"

I'll post a bunch of reviews, do yourself a favor and BUY THIS ALBUM!  It's currently sitting @ #1 on Amazon.com, here's hoping Brian does well with what he spent his entire life trying to perfect.

Hear it for free, here : www.smilethealbum.com

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Rolling Stone Magazine - 5 out of 5 stars

Never mind Pet Sounds. Good record, but a totem. That leaves three great Beach Boys albums. First comes a fun-fun-fun best-of: With the canonical Endless Summer deleted, settle for 2003's longer, less pristine Sounds of Summer. The other two are quickies that fit neatly on one must-own CD: Buy Smiley Smile/Wild Honey while EMI lets you.

Smiley Smile and Wild Honey get respect now, but in 1967 they peeved hard-core Pet Sounds fans, who were waiting gape-mouthed for Smile, described by those in the know as the American Sgt. Pepper -- proof that our Bea-boys belonged in the same league as their Bea-boys. But Brian went bonkers, Mike Love got busy, and we ended up with only "Good Vibrations" and "Heroes and Villains" -- stopgap singles that made it onto the belittlingly titled Smiley Smile -- and dribs and drabs thereafter.

Only you know what happened? Brian Wilson survived his saner brothers and rebuilt his career, which the completely rerecorded SMiLE is supposed to crown. Since much of Wilson's 2004 Gettin' In Over My Head could have been sung from a crypt, this seemed like a terrible idea. Instead, it's a triumph.

SMiLE began as a concert concept for Wilson's expert alt- rock road band, which by 2002 had exhausted Pet Sounds. Never completed, SMile existed only as a jumble of alternate versions, song fragments and ill-cataloged tapes. Sifting through these was a collaborator as crucial as lyricist Van Dyke Parks: keyboard player, harmony vocalist and "musical secretary" Darian Sahanaja. With Sahanaja and Parks jogging his memory, Wilson revised and composed until the best pieces formed a forty-seven-minute whole that started shortly before "Heroes and Villains" and climaxed with "Good Vibrations." While no symphony, it cohered and flowed. The sparer, simpler recorded version follows the pattern of the ecstatically reviewed live performances. Anchored by deft quotes and thematic repetitions, SMiLE is beautiful and funny, goofily grand. It's looser and messier than Sgt. Pepper and, one suspects, always would have been. But its sui generis Americanism counterbalances its paucity of classic pop songs. Not in the same league -- just ready to play a World Series.

Although Parks is a well-traveled arranger who must have left some marks on Wilson's music during their hash-fueled 1966-67 brainstorming sessions, his words do the talking. They're poetic in a manner Wilson has no gift for: now idiomatic, now archaic, now obscure, pervaded by images of fleeting youth and a frontier that stretches to Hawaii. Although stoned confusion and mild pastoral pessimism are endemic, the world they evoke is as benign as a day at the beach - yet less simplistic (and deceptive) than the Beach Boys' fantasies of eternal Southern California teendom. In this the lyrics are of a piece with the jokey songlets of Smiley Smile, where five SmiLE titles first surfaced, and the good-natured rock & roll recidivism of Wild Honey. What elevates them into something approaching a utopian vision is Wilson's orchestrations: brief bridge melodies, youthful harmonies more precise and uplifting now than when executed by actually existing callow people and an enthralling profusion of instrumental colors. Trombone, timpani, theremin and tenor sax brush by and disappear; a banjo shows its head; strings vibe around; woodwinds establish unexpected moods and pipe down.

That the pros who surround Wilson are up to all of this is gratifying but not startling. What the auteur himself had in him was more questionable. And that's the central miracle of this gift of music. Wilson's voice has deepened and coarsened irreparably. Although he hits the notes, he can't convey the innocence SMiLE's content seems to demand. But he can convey commitment and belief -- belief that his young bonkers self composed a work that captured possibilities now nearly lost to history. SMiLE proves that those possibilities are still worth pursuing.

ROBERT CHRISTGAU
(Posted Oct 14, 2004)
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 05:54:11 AM
The London Times: 5 out of 5 stars!

(http://images.thetimes.co.uk/TGD/picture/0,,150159,00.jpg)

Over the past 37 years, the Beach Boys’ Smile has become sanctified as rock’s great lost album, the record that — had it been released — would have irreversibly stretched the parameters of contemporary music. As any bookish fan will tell you, here was Brian Wilson’s masterpiece: an odyssey that took in generous tracts of American history, nursery songs, animal noises, woodworking tools, a few good jokes and some of the most epochally lovely tunes yet composed.

The reasons why the Beach Boys never released Smile are manifold, and generally hinge on Wilson’s disintegrating mental state at the time. As the countless bootleg versions of the album have illustrated, though, the overriding problem was more prosaic. Confronted with a clutch of transcendent tunes and dozens of equally good fragments, Wilson clearly couldn’t work out how to fit them all together. The fecundity of his genius had defeated him.

Smile, then, is less rock’s great lost album, more its great unfinished one. Revisiting those songs this year, Wilson and his collaborators finally designed the structure into which all these saturated melodies can fit.

Had Smile appeared in 1967, as planned, it would not have sounded like this. The re-recorded 2004 version is less hazy and more thrusting. The ethereal harmonies of the young Beach Boys have been replaced with heartier vocals, and it’s a pity that some of the original sessions weren’t salvaged and digitally redeployed.

But enough cavils. The 2004 Smile is still an astonishing achievement. Arranged into three movements, it hurtles from Plymouth Rock to Hawaii via Old West cantinas, compressing America’s history, geography and musical traditions into vivid, transporting sound pictures. The ambition of the project remains breathtaking, and the discipline evidently required to edit so many ideas into a coherent 47 minutes is one of its most impressive features.

And at its best — the second movement that encompasses Wonderful, Song for Children, Child Is Father of the Man and Surf’s Up — the exalted myth of Smile seems to have been realised fully. It is here that Wilson’s “teenage symphony to God” is at its most emotionally striking, as his cracked, seasoned voice addresses the innocence of youth, and the struggle to retain that innocence into maturity.

When he first sang these words in his twenties, they were poignant enough. Now, after nearly four decades of volatile psychological health, they sound immeasurably moving. The 2004 Smile may lack the hallucinogenic, revolutionary dimension it once promised. But its epic gestation has, if anything, only increased the profundity of this, pop’s first and greatest symphony.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,7948-1276007,00.html


Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 05:56:42 AM
New Music Express (NME) - 9 out of 10 stars, calls the album one of the greatest of the 21st century

Thought i'd type up the NME review for you lot:



"HAPPY DAYS

After 37 years of chin-stroking anticipation, get ready for 37 years of chin-stroking appreciation

Has there ever been a more eagerly anticipated album? Or a more hotly debated one? This is it folks, the Holy Grail of music geeks: The Beach Boys lost materpiece, SMiLE. Or at least, it almost is.


There is a "potted history" here which i can't be bothered to type up - it's nothing we don't already know anyway

Taking his touring band into the studio, he recorded this from scratch. Smile is 17 songs in 3 movements with melodic hooks repeated and rearranged throughout.. It has ambitions so far beyond pop that its embarrasing.

The first movement starts with Our Prayer / Gee. Part Gregorian chant, part barbershop quartet, it leads into a doo-wop that introduces some of the themes of second track Heroes And Villains. What a melody: a descending scale that seems implausibly long. That "you're under arrest" bit from the bootlegs.

Roll Plymouth Rock takes the H+V theme through a big band and a harmonica interlude and then introduces the timpani and bassline of Good Vibrations before reprising the Heroes them with electric harpsichord and Native American vocals.

The first movement ends with Cabin Essence (not, as often thought, Cabinessence, fact fans). The "doing doing" backing vocals, the ukelele, the "home on the range" and then the spiritual vocal harmonies take us to a primal gnostic space before returning us from the embrace of the divine to the tenderness of the rural idyll.

The second movement starts with a Wonderful that is neither as mawkish as the version on Smiley Smile nor as capricious as that on the bootlegs and takes us through Song For Children and Child Is The Father Of Man where Wilson sings, "Easy my child, it's just enough to believe / Out of the wild, into what you can conceive, you achieve". Segment closer Surf's Up is tearjerking. Wilson's age and frail voice has made its tale of lost childhood all the more poignant.

The final movement takes us through Vege-Tables (where the original chewed-carrot percussion came courtesy of Paul McCartney's molars) a delicate Wind Chimes with an unexpectedly groovy bassline, the terrifying Mrs O'Leary's Cow and the enchanting In Blue Hawaii in which Wilson exhorts God, or alcohol, to deliver him from night terrors and on to the calming beaches of paradise. Having finally finished his masterpiece, Wilson may yet find his Blue Hawaii. The album ends with a less frantic, more regal Good Vibrations.

You may now reach for the Kleenex.

Comparing Smile to pop music is like comparing the poster paint daubings of an infant to the vast canvasses of Velasquez. But Smile stands up with any of the great music of the 20th century. In its interweaved and repeated melodic strands it echoes Prokofiev's Kije Suite. In its appropriation of American folk it stands up there with the work of Gershwin and Copeland. In its sheer contemplative beauty it rubs shoulders with Miles Davis' Kind Of Blue.

Brian's a canny fella. Earlier this year he brought out a solo album so overwhelming in its mediocrity that any hopes we might have had about Smile were dashed. Now he's finished the year by realising his vision and delivering one of the greatest albums of the 21st century.

9/10

James Snodgrass"
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 05:59:22 AM
The Minneapolis Sun Times

Brian Wilson, "Brian Wilson Presents Smile" (Nonesuch)

There are two ways in which we must evaluate the legendary "Smile," popular music's most famous unreleased album (due on Tuesday): How would the Beach Boys' ambitious pop symphony have been viewed in 1967, when it was written (and aborted after 85 recording sessions), and how does it play after being re-recorded in 2004?

The short answer to the first question is daring, different and magnificent; to the second, curious, quirky and marvelous.

While it was conceived as a Beach Boys project, in the end it has become solely Wilson's; hence the title, "Brian Wilson Presents Smile." For this album, he stretched beyond conventional 1960s song formats and instrumentation to compose a singular work, not merely a collection of songs.

The pop wunderkind has created a stunning symphony of sounds -- part Beach Boys, classical, folk, children's music, circus music, jazz standards, choral music, barbershop harmonizing and church music. In short, "Smile" is a timeless, incomparably luxurious tapestry of American music.

This three-movement, 17-song masterwork can be appreciated just as a luscious musical opus. (It's a wonderful headphones album.) But Wilson, who was 24 in 1967, enlisted his friend Van Dyke Parks, then 23, to write lyrics for his "teenage symphony to God."

With the intellectual Parks' fanciful, allusive words, "Smile" spins an American tale of manifest destiny from Plymouth Rock to California and eventually Hawaii. The middle movement addresses the cycle of life: falling in love, having children and keeping a family together. The final movement deals with the elements: earth, wind, fire and water.

What does it all mean? Darian Sahanaja, Wilson's current musical director and the key player in resurrecting "Smile," says it's about birth and rebirth. If so, then "Smile" is a metaphor not only for itself but also for Wilson, the fallen and fractured genius of popular music.

Jon Bream
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 06:00:21 AM
The Minneapolis Star Tribune

Brian Wilson, "Brian Wilson Presents Smile" (Nonesuch)

There are two ways in which we must evaluate the legendary "Smile," popular music's most famous unreleased album (due on Tuesday): How would the Beach Boys' ambitious pop symphony have been viewed in 1967, when it was written (and aborted after 85 recording sessions), and how does it play after being re-recorded in 2004?

The short answer to the first question is daring, different and magnificent; to the second, curious, quirky and marvelous.

While it was conceived as a Beach Boys project, in the end it has become solely Wilson's; hence the title, "Brian Wilson Presents Smile." For this album, he stretched beyond conventional 1960s song formats and instrumentation to compose a singular work, not merely a collection of songs.

The pop wunderkind has created a stunning symphony of sounds -- part Beach Boys, classical, folk, children's music, circus music, jazz standards, choral music, barbershop harmonizing and church music. In short, "Smile" is a timeless, incomparably luxurious tapestry of American music.

This three-movement, 17-song masterwork can be appreciated just as a luscious musical opus. (It's a wonderful headphones album.) But Wilson, who was 24 in 1967, enlisted his friend Van Dyke Parks, then 23, to write lyrics for his "teenage symphony to God."

With the intellectual Parks' fanciful, allusive words, "Smile" spins an American tale of manifest destiny from Plymouth Rock to California and eventually Hawaii. The middle movement addresses the cycle of life: falling in love, having children and keeping a family together. The final movement deals with the elements: earth, wind, fire and water.

What does it all mean? Darian Sahanaja, Wilson's current musical director and the key player in resurrecting "Smile," says it's about birth and rebirth. If so, then "Smile" is a metaphor not only for itself but also for Wilson, the fallen and fractured genius of popular music.

Jon Bream
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 06:05:21 AM
Article from Paul Williams, one of the reporters who was in the studio with Brian recording it in the 60's.

(http://www.sdreader.com/ed/calendar/rv/music.jpg)

Columnated Ruins Domino


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"If he can't act upon it immediately and see it happening, it's not gonna work."

 Feature by Paul Williams
Photograph by Linda Eastman (the future Linda McCartney)
Published September 23, 2004

Twenty-six years ago, Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys -- "one of the few undisputed geniuses in popular music," according to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum -- was picked up by the San Diego police in Balboa Park, "under a tree with no shoes on," as recollected by a family member who came from L.A. to retrieve him. "His white pants [were] filthy, obviously a vagrant with no wallet, no money."
He was a millionaire vagrant, leader, and primary songwriter of "the most commercially successful American group of the sixties" (according to The Faber Companion to 20th Century Popular Music). And next week, on September 28, 2004, one of Wilson's crowning creations, Smile ("The most famous unheard album in pop history," according to the New York Times), will be released for the first time. This is where I come in. I've been writing about this album for 37 years (since I was a teenaged rock-magazine editor), I helped make it famous, and I have Smile and Brian Wilson to thank for the fact that I'm living in San Diego today.

Brian Wilson, millionaire vagrant and auteur of the brand-new Nonesuch album Brian Wilson Presents SMILE, was found in September 1978 "lying facedown in the gutter" in Balboa Park, "without any ID, mumbling over and over, 'I want to die' " (quotes from p. 254 of Wilson's 1991 autobiography, Wouldn't It Be Nice) as a result of the unfortunate combination of substance abuse and an undiagnosed severe bipolar condition. He subsequently spent six weeks detoxing in the Alvarado Community Hospital (now called Alvarado Hospital Medical Center, located close to San Diego State University).

Substance abuse was also a major factor (along with the bipolar condition, which, as in the case of Vincent van Gogh, may also have contributed significantly to the man's universally recognized expressive genius) in Wilson's inability to complete in 1966­1967 his most ambitious (and expensive) rock-music project, the Beach Boys album Smile. Smile was intended as a follow-up to the Beach Boys' 1966 album Pet Sounds, inspired by the Beatles' Rubber Soul and in turn acknowledged by Paul McCartney as the primary inspiration for the Beatles' landmark album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band...and as a follow-up to and musical extension of the Beach Boys' boldly experimental 1966 #1 single "Good Vibrations."

How Smile brought me to San Diego: I was at a Bob Dylan concert in Los Angeles in 1992, and during the intermission I ran into my friend, British singer-songwriter John Wesley Harding. Wes was with his producer Andy Paley, whom I knew as a close friend of and sometime songwriting collaborator of Brian Wilson. (In fact, when I'd last met Andy, he'd been putting together a box set of unreleased tracks and fragments from the unfinished Smile album on assignment from Capitol Records. That box set never materialized, alas, due to opposition from some of the other Beach Boys, who thought Brian had made a fool of them, having them grunt into microphones during his amphetamine-and-marijuana-fueled extravagantly experimental Smile sessions.) Anyway, while Wes and I gossiped about Bob Dylan, Andy spotted his friend, San Diego singer-songwriter Cindy Lee Berryhill, and called her over to join our gathering.

Cindy was then in an intense stage of the Brian Wilson fascination that most young rock musicians go through sooner or later (for example, John Lennon's son Sean, who in interviews a few years back was proclaiming the Beach Boys a more seminal rock band than the Beatles). She'd met Andy through her friend Domenic Priore, then a Carlsbad resident, who'd established himself as a writer and rock-and-roll maven by assembling and self-publishing a book about the legendary Smile album called Look! Listen! VIBRATE! SMILE!

I then and there forgave Domenic for reprinting my extensive Smile writings without permission or payment because this attractive young woman whose first album I'd heard and liked (another Dylan fan had sent me a tape of it) was very excited to meet me, as she had just been reading my long interviews/conversations with producer/Brian intimate David Anderle about why the Smile album was never completed. She gave me her phone number and suggested we get together to talk about Brian Wilson. A year and a half later, after I'd introduced her to Anderle (she was on a quest to meet all the major "Brian people") and to BW-fan and Warner Bros. Records president Lenny Waronker and to Smile coauthor Van Dyke Parks, I found myself moving from Northern California to Encinitas to live with Cindy. Today we're married and have a three-year-old child...and I still live in Encinitas.

That three-part interview/essay about Smile (and the fact that I was lucky enough to visit the Smile recording sessions as Wilson's guest) has brought me a lot of attention over the years (climaxing in bringing me a wife and child and a beautiful city to live in). When my first book was published in 1969, Rolling Stone wrote: "The long interview with David Anderle about Brian Wilson (itself worth the price of the book) is a short story, complete with beginning, middle, and end. The interview form becomes a sophisticated narrative device for telling the story of an artist's struggle with himself, his friends, and the limits of his art." And to my delight, I am often mentioned alongside composer/conductor Leonard Bernstein as one of the key voices early on calling the world's attention to the greatness of the Smile compositions and recordings. Of course, this was not such a happy accomplishment when Smile came to seem a sort of albatross for Brian, a legend he might never be able to live up to or escape.

But all that is in the past, now that Brian has gone back into the studio with his current band and has rerecorded Smile quite successfully and is proudly presenting it to the world on a record label best known for its classical music offerings. So now that the album, against all odds, is out and it is good and will bring happiness to most who listen to it, I can proudly share with you this 1997 pronouncement by Beach Boys historian and sometime Brian Wilson manager David Leaf, in his introduction to my book Brian Wilson & the Beach Boys -- How Deep Is the Ocean?: "While Paul Williams was not the first to put Brian Wilson 'on paper,' he may be the one to have most influenced virtually all the writers who fell in love with the artist."

There's a lot to fall in love with. But before I say more about that, I'd like to mention that Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys, symbols of Southern California to music lovers all over the world, have a significant connection to San Diego County that goes beyond acknowledging "Swami's" as a famous surfing spot in the lyrics to their first big hit, "Surfin' USA." That connection has to do with the fact that three of the five Beach Boys -- Brian, Dennis, and Carl Wilson -- were brothers and that, while they grew up in Hawthorne, just south of Los Angeles, their father, Murry Wilson, spent part of his childhood in Cardiff-by-the-Sea, where his parents settled when they came west from Kansas, and after Murry's grandfather's dreams of becoming a prosperous grape grower in Escondido fell through. So the California dream that inspired this family of Los Angelenos had strong roots in north San Diego County. The Wilsons, who would do so much to tell the world about Southern California beach and car culture, came to Hawthorne from Kansas by way of Escondido and Cardiff.

Smile, the newly recorded and just-about-to-be-released Smile, was always intended to be a Beach Boys album, but Brian's brothers Carl and Dennis are dead now, and the Beach Boys as such no longer exist, although there is still a touring group or two that performs under that name or a variation on that name. The musical legacy of the Beach Boys on record is kept alive by Brian, who, after all, wrote the music for most of the group's songs and produced and arranged most of their records. Brian Wilson, in the past nine years, has released two excellent solo albums (I Just Wasn't Made for These Times, 1995, and Imagination, 1998) and a seemingly uninspired one (Gettin' in over My Head, 2004). I say "seemingly" because I don't feel I've listened to it enough to be certain of my judgment. Maybe it will come to mean more to me if I listen to it more, if I take the time to find a way into it. He has also released several live albums that again I defer judgment on because I don't think I've listened to them enough. I can say that the live shows of his that I've seen and heard have been terrific. The music is good, the band is very good, and Brian's enthusiasm for performing is surprising and infectious. It's surprising because in the past Brian did not enjoy performing live and was notoriously uncomfortable onstage. This is a real turnaround that has happened for him in the past five years, and insofar as the new Smile is much better, much more enjoyable, and less self-conscious than I would have expected, I think primary credit must go to his current band and his relationship with them and his new relationships with his music and with his audience as a result of his breakthroughs as a performer.

I might not be the best person to tell you how good this new, long-awaited Smile album is or is not. After all, I've been in print proclaiming how great it would be for 37 years now; I might be pretty invested in proving I was right all along. And on the other hand, I heard those extraordinary tracks (recorded music without voices) Brian played for me in late '66, and I've heard the sublime pieced-together Smile songs that have been included on Beach Boys albums over the years ("Surf's Up," "Cabinessence," and half of the second disc of the 1993 box set Good Vibrations)... So I could get caught in comparing my memories of those delights with what I'm hearing now. No, the right person to assess this new album is your child or your friend's child between ages 4 and 14, who is almost certain to be grabbed and thrilled by the Beach Boys' (and Brian Wilson's) 1960s hits, as heard on discs 1 and 2 of that box set or on all sorts of greatest-hits compilations. Music that will live forever and speak across the ages. Is this new Smile more of the same?; different flavor but just as irresistible? I think it could be. But play it for a child if you want to know for certain.

Smile 2004 is a triumph, I think. These were always good songs that Van Dyke Parks and Brian Wilson wrote, albeit that the jilted lover, Brian Wilson's cousin and heretofore primary lyricist, Mike Love, is on record as saying, " 'columnated ruins domino,' what the fuck is that supposed to mean?" Mike's point was that Van Dyke and Brian were going to lose the universality, the appeal to a mass audience, that had made the Beach Boys millionaires. But he missed Van Dyke's point, which is that Beach Boys music is both as highbrow and as lowbrow as J.S. Bach and that if you call a song "Surf's Up" and return gracefully to that phrase, you can have it both ways. This, after all, was the song that had won over Leonard Bernstein, a man who presumably had never hung ten or watched from the shore as someone else did.

What makes it a triumph? The beauty of the melodies and of the language and the way melodic and verbal motifs weave in and out through the whole tapestry of music and of American history. The way the phrase "child is father of the man" has become so central to this rendering of Smile, as though it were a celebration of Brian's rebirth thanks to living with his adopted infant daughters. The richness of the music pictures and the word pictures blended together here. The excellence of Brian's singing on the album, in spite of his 62 years of hard living. The profound Mozart-like simplicity achieved in this composition for voices and instruments. The remarkable lack of self-consciousness in this work and these performances despite the history of the album/composition...

In our famous conversation about Smile that appeared in three parts in my magazine Crawdaddy!, David Anderle said, summing up our discussion of Smile and why the glorious, ambitious album was never completed in 1966 and 1967, "It has to happen immediately with Brian, the idea comes to the mind and he understands it instantly. If he can't act upon it immediately and see it happening in front of his eyes, it's not gonna work. That's what happened with Smile." So it wasn't just the drugs and Brian's mental/emotional condition and the doubts of the other Beach Boys, though those were delaying factors...

And how, after all these years and against all odds, has he managed to put Humpty Dumpty together again? To me it is clearly the result of the man's, the artist's, rebirth as a performer. Onstage it happens immediately: you play the music and the audience receives it and responds. Brian had this experience and obviously found it very fulfilling when he went on tour in 1999 with his new band and again the following year when he performed his masterpiece, Pet Sounds, live at the Hollywood Bowl and in Europe and Japan. A hard act to follow...but he did have another masterpiece, the legendary unrecorded Smile, waiting in the wings, and he decided to perform it in England, where his most adventurous music had always been warmly appreciated. Having performed Smile live successfully and to a warm response took the edge off it. Now he could go into a studio not feeling that he had something to prove or some kind of impossibly challenging task ahead of him. He could sing and perform in the moment, as one does onstage, knowing that the musicians with him understood this and him and his music. Now it was free to happen immediately. The result is, as I say, a triumph. One that will certainly serve to seal Brian Wilson's place among the great composers of the western world, a man with a body of work that will live and move listeners forever.

And it's not only about surfing. It's also about surviving, which is where Brian's Balboa Park experience -- a low point in his life -- comes into it. On the new album, on Smile, Van Dyke Parks and Brian Wilson via "Surf's Up" claim surfing as a universal metaphor, as most San Diegans could have told them it is.

And I'll mention, because though it shouldn't be necessary to know this, it could add to the album experience to learn that songs 11 through 16 on the new album are the remains of a composition known as the "Four Elements Suite." "Vega-Tables" and "I'm in Great Shape" are the earth, "Wind Chimes" is air, "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow" is fire (one of the factors that originally made it difficult for Wilson to complete Smile was his conviction that this piece of music in its original form was responsible for a fire that broke out near the recording studio), "In Blue Hawaii" is water, and (I think) "On a Holiday" represents the interface between water and air.

Get the album, let your kids hear it, and if you want more, you can't go wrong with the box set Good Vibrations. This is your chance to hear tomorrow's classical music today. And if it seems light and popular, that of course is exactly what Mozart was in his era.

How did Brian Wilson of Beverly Hills end up in a gutter in Balboa Park? you might be wondering. It's a typical Southern California story. According to his autobiography, Brian was talking with "a nicely dressed man" in a hotel bar in Century City. The man "was a salesman, and his mom and dad had a place in San Diego where he sometimes stayed." So they drive south, and the next day Brian walks to a local bar where people buy him drinks and then he goes for a hike in the park. It sounds like a scene from "Heroes and Villains" as performed on the new Smile album.

It's a wonderful record, I tell you. I haven't changed my tune. Neither has Brian, though he's not drinking now. The album was named from an American Indian saying, "The smile that you send out comes back to you." I'll testify to that.

Brian Wilson will perform Smile at Spreckels Theatre on Saturday, October 30.


Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 06:06:44 AM
Entertainment Weekly - Grade : "A"

Beach Party
Brian Wilson's latest was worth the (37-year) wait.
by Chris Willman

Once, Todd Rundgren recorded an exact replica of "Good Vibrations", just because he could. Now Brian Wilson's recorded his own note-for-note "Vibrations" copy--a few rewritten lyrics or extended passages notwithstanding--with a better excuse: He's painstakingly duplicating an entire 1967 Beach Boys album that never quite actually existed. SMiLE got consigned to the trash heap, and became the holy grail of rock projects, after other band members openly groused about its wigginess. But though it remained legendarily incomplete, several classic numbers ("Heroes and Villains", "Surf's Up") did see daylight, and lesser scraps have been widely bootlegged. Hearing its original architect re-create this treasure trove of lost-and-found material with ringers (Wilson's touring band almost does the Beach Boys better than the Beach Boys), you may wonder if this is SMiLE-mania--not the real SMiLE, but an incredible simulation!

But screw all that, because the mirth and beauty of the work trump any concerns about reassemblage. As "finished" by Wilson and lyricist Van Dyke Parks, SMiLE fulfills its 37-year promise, detailing what'd happen if you threw Stephen Foster's parlor folk, Aaron Copland's orchestral Americana, the Four Freshmen, some kiddie pop, and a sound-effects record into an acid-laced blender. With a new melodic idea occurring every 45 seconds on average, it's a gorgeous trip back to a time when anything seemed possible, rendered only slightly melancholy through a four-decade filter of diminshed musical expectations. Purists will suggest SMiLE was better off as myth, but I'll take this version of the story where Shubert not only gets to finish his eighth symphony, but tours and sells t-shirts behind it.

Grade: A
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 06:10:58 AM
Sunday Times - London - 5 out of 5 stars

BRIAN WILSON
Smile
Nonesuch 7559798462




I assume we all know the story: Smile was destined to be the Beach Boys’ follow-up to Pet Sounds, but Brian Wilson suffered a breakdown and the project was aborted, becoming pop’s great “lost” album. Now, 37 years later, Wilson has re-recorded the entire album, working with his original collaborator, Van Dyke Parks, and his own current band. There are no Beach Boys on this Smile. So how do we approach such a singular artefact? If we owned the many bootlegs, we could quibble over the track listing. Or we could admire Wilson’s courage, but moan that he shouldn’t have messed with our fantasies by making the album real. But why should we be so churlish? Smile’s journey through myriad American musical styles means that it was never bound to the time of its (intended) release, so it hasn’t actually dated. It stands alone and apart. If you only know the Beach Boys’ big hits, you might feel nervous about jumping into Smile’s three extended musical suites; but you can embark on this unique musical voyage safe in the knowledge that the more idiosyncratic territories are balanced by magnificent pop songs, including Heroes and Villains, Surf’s Up, Wonderful and Good Vibrations. And yes, the oooh-bop-bops on that track still send shivers up the spine. Five stars
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 06:16:37 AM
Interview from the Springfield Republican

'Smile' the 'Holy Grail' of rock'n' roll
Sunday, September 26, 2004
By KEVIN O'HARE
kohare@repub.com


He called it "a teen-age symphony to God."

That was 37 years ago, when Brian Wilson - feeling the pressure of worldwide anticipation but deep personal torment - decided to put one of the most eagerly awaited albums in the history of pop music on the shelf, half-finished and in shambles.

The "symphony" was called "Smile" and it was slated to be the follow-up album to "Pet Sounds," the 1966 masterpiece Wilson had created for his band, The Beach Boys. He'd quit the road by that time, opting for long, arduous hours of studio craftsmanship, while the rest of the Beach Boys traveled across the globe, singing their songs of fast cars, surfing and beach babes amid the endless summers of sun and fun.

Inside the studio, Brian Wilson's world was filled with darkness, despair, drug abuse and depression.

Now, in one of the most unfathomable stories of this or any year, the ongoing rehabilitation of Wilson has taken another huge step forward, as the once-reclusive genius has capped a decade-long comeback by doing something he once said he'd never do - he's finished "Smile."

The album, which has been partially re-written and completely re-recorded in the studio, is being released Tuesday by Nonesuch Records. It's remarkable to hear it in its entirety, especially after listening to scattered bits that appeared on Beach Boys' albums through the years, as well as on bootleg copies that only added to the set's mythic status.

What's even more amazing is how well Wilson has made it flow.

The album is pretty darned fabulous.

Speaking by phone from Beverly Hills recently, the 62-year-old Wilson was proud, relieved and at peace concerning "Smile," which to many hard-core fans is more than just the final piece in a puzzle, it truly is rock's "Holy Grail."

For years, Wilson wouldn't even talk about "Smile," in interviews or anywhere else.

"I just had bad memories about it from the drugs I was taking," Wilson said.

He was reportedly ingesting vast amounts of hashish at the time, acting increasingly bizarre and zoned out so much that he resorted to such madcap antics as insisting all his backing musicians wear fire helmets during a "Fire" segment ("Mrs. O'Leary's Cow") while recording "Smile."

He recalled that exact moment in 1967 when he abandoned the project.

"We were recording the fire segment. We even put a fire in the middle of the studio," Wilson said. "And a half-hour later I heard a building down the street burned to the ground. I thought that our doing the fire segment was responsible for it burning down. That's when I finally broke down and shelved the album."

It probably didn't help that his fellow Beach Boys felt Wilson had gone off the deep end with the project, which their leader had been working on from the late summer of 1966 until May of 1967.

"Mike (Love) and Carl (Wilson) didn't like it at all," Brian Wilson recalled. "Alan (Jardine) and Dennis (Wilson) were just sort of like neutral about it. But Mike and Carl were very, very against it."

All these years later, it seems hard to believe that anyone could be against an album that was anchored on one end by "Heroes and Villains," held up in the middle by the beyond-brilliant combination of "Child is Father of the Man," and "Surf's Up," and which closes with "Good Vibrations," the latter released by the Beach Boys in 1966 as a single - a precursor to "Smile."

"Heroes and Villains," along with a few other re-worked cuts from the scrapped sessions, subsequently appeared on the disappointing Beach Boys' album "Smiley Smile" in late 1967. "Surf's Up," served as the title song to the 1971 album that remains one of the Beach Boys' most underrated recordings. But the entire "Smile" album had never been completed and put into its proper context until now.

When Wilson abandoned "Smile" he also all but abandoned life, building an infamous sandbox in his living room for his piano, gaining a tremendous amount of weight, and spending most of his time in bed while falling deeper and deeper into psychological distress.

"The drugs I was taking slowly deteriorated my creative process," Wilson says now.

His recovery took decades. But with a lot of help from his wife, Melinda, as well as his management and friends, Wilson began resurfacing and, in the 1990s, teamed with the great L.A.-based power-pop band The Wondermints, led by Darian Sahanaja. Wilson started playing live again with an expanded musical lineup. D uring the March 2001 "All Star Tribute to Brian Wilson" at New York's Radio City Music Hall, he even performed "Heroes and Villains."

At a restaurant in L.A., surrounded by his wife and his management, he was finally coaxed into giving "Smile" another try.

"They had a gut instinct that the world was finally ready for it," Wilson recalled. "So I figured I'd give it a shot. We listened to the original tapes from 1967 and then created a third movement for it. Then Darian Sahanaja and I put all 30 segments together in sequence."

As Wilson and co-writer Van Dyke Parks (who was also brought in to help finish the project) see it, "Smile" tells a story of a journey across the U.S. from one end - "Roll Plymouth Rock" - to the other - "In Blue Hawaii." It ends with "Good Vibrations," and while the new version of that song is exceptional, it does contain some different lyrics than the more-familiar hit.

"We used Tony Asher's original lyrics, not Mike Love's lyrics," Wilson said.

There's apparently no love lost between Wilson and his cousin Love, the latter who still tours under the moniker of The Beach Boys, along with former Beach Boy Bruce Johnston.

Has Love heard the new "Smile"?

"No," Wilson said. "We haven't talked for about 10 years now. And after Carl died (in 1998) things even got worse."

Wilson doesn't sound thrilled with Love's continued touring under the Beach Boys' name, but he'd rather talk about why he re-recorded "Smile," instead of doing what some Beach Boys' devotees advocated - just patching together the old tapes.

"I wanted to get better musicianship," he said dryly. "My musicians are better than the original musicians that did it. They're playing sharper notes, clearer beats and the rhythm was right. The sound was better. All that made for a better 'Smile' album."

When the work was finished, he admitted feeling an immense weight off of his shoulders.

"I was so relieved I actually cried in the studio," Wilson said. "Because I was so relieved that we got it done. It was quite an emotional experience for me."

Together with his band, he premiered the piece on stage in London earlier this year.

"I was scared to death," Wilson said of the first night. "I didn't know how it would go over. Remember when Gershwin premiered 'Rhapsody in Blue' in 1924? That's how this was for me in 2004 in London. I was very nervous. But we got a standing ovation after the first concert and the next five (concerts). I was very proud of how it was accepted."

The British press hailed it, with The Guardian referring to "Smile" as "The grandest of American Symphonies" and The Daily Telegraph saying "the music echoed everything from Philip Glass to Kurt Weill to Chuck Berry ... Leonard Bernstein said Brian Wilson was one of the greatest composers of the 20th Century. He was not wrong."

Now Wilson brings "Smile" to the U.S., not only with the CD release, but also with a tour that runs into early November.

And the once-reclusive artist says he's feeling better every day.

"I was pretty mentally in a bad state of mind there for awhile. But I'm starting to get back into it ... I'm exercising again, I'm running and I'm going to buy an exercise machine that costs $15,000. In four minutes of exercise it's the equivalent of a half-hour of aerobic exercise - in just four minutes. It builds your body up to give you endurance."

After the band returns from an Australian leg of the tour in December, Wilson wants to work on "a rock'n' roll record inspired by Phil Spector's records."

He's already got seven songs penned for the project including, "You Could Make A River Flow," "Heaven," and "I Saw Her Again Last Night."

Spector, famed producer known for his "wall of sound" studio techniques, is facing charges in connection with the alleged murder of a woman at his West Coast mansion.

"I haven't talked to Phil in 20 years," Wilson said. "I understand he had an accident with a gun or something."

There's also been some speculation about Wilson working more with Paul McCartney, who has stated that "Pet Sounds" was an inspiration for the Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" album, which was released in 1967. McCartney appeared on a relatively lackluster duet with Wilson on the latter's "Gettin' In Over My Head," album earlier this year.

"We haven't talked about it really at all lately," Wilson said. "I'm gonna call him in a few weeks and ask him about it (collaborating again)."

But for now, he's enjoying "Smile."

"It was a sentimental experience to recreate 'Smile,'" Wilson said. "I hope people in all the different cities we play enjoy it, and appreciate all the hard work that went into learning 'Smile' for them. I'm very proud of it."
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 06:17:32 AM
The Detroit Free Press - 4 out of 4 stars

PUT ON A HAPPY FACE: In the dustbin for more than 30 years, Brian Wilson's 'Smile' is finally finished and released -- brilliantly

September 26, 2004

BY TERRY LAWSON
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

Remember Doonesbury's Andy Lippincott, the AIDS patient who refused to die until the Beach Boys' pop masterpiece "Pet Sounds" was released on CD?

Brian Wilson
'Smile'
FOUR STARS
out of 4 stars

(Nonesuch)

He might still be around if he had even the vaguest inkling that Wilson someday would actually finish its follow-up "Smile," without doubt the most legendary lost album in history. In what may be the most unimaginable comeback in pop history, Wilson, following a three-decade, often-exploited battle with mental illness, has followed his brilliant concert performances of "Pet Sounds" with a fine live album and a credible studio record. And now we get this reconstruction of "Smile," which was famously saddled with the sobriquet "a teenage symphony to God" in a legendary magazine story before the project was abandoned more than 30 years ago in a drug and dislocation breakdown from which Wilson has never altogether recovered.

Fragments have been officially released, and some of the songs, including the unlikely hit "Heroes and Villains," and "Surf's Up," the impressionistic art ballad that led Leonard Bernstein to declare Wilson a master composer, intended for the record were released on the substituted "Smiley Smile" and later Beach Boys albums. Bootleg reconstructions from the studio sessions have floated around for years. But with much help from his original collaborator Van Dyke Parks and his simply remarkable touring band, "Smile" has been re-imagined, and is one of those rare things in life that turns out to be nearly everything it was cracked up to be: An original, idiosyncratic and unabashedly American song cycle that deserves its oft-made comparison to the work of Aaron Copland, as well as to that of late '60s Lennon and McCartney.

For Wilson fans, the familiarity of most of this material makes initial enjoyment easier. (I've been listening, thanks to a friend, to a bootleg of the first live performance of the album for months, making it even easier for me.) Yet anyone with open ears will be hard-pressed to argue that the anticipation was all based on hype, or that the music isn't brilliant. Parks (presumably) has tied together once-random pieces of music with passion and precision employing orchestral links to take us on a time-suspended train trip of a Carl Sandburg America -- where even impenetrable lyrics like "And sunny down snuff I'm alright" become poignant and meaningful, and the abstract harmonies of "Wind Chimes" provoke summer dreams far removed from surfing and hot-rod fantasies, but oddly dependent on them as well.

Through studio magic or force of will, Wilson's vocals are beautiful and heartbreaking. And while it would be professional of me to find some fault with some overly ornate arrangements or too-precious word-smithing, it's just not in my heart. I love this music. It makes me smile. In Stores Tuesday.

Brian Wilson and his band will perform "Smile" and other songs at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4 at the Michigan Theater, 603 E. Liberty, Ann Arbor. 734-668-8397. $42.50-$85.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Shallow on September 27, 2004, 08:26:26 AM
Well there's no denying this guys perfection of harmonies. Obviously, a great album.


Keep in mind though that if you don't like Pet Sounds you won't like this. This album is perfect for the fans, unfortunately I don't see it attracting too many new fans. Brian Wilson is an aquired sound, you either feel it or you don't. If you do it's the greatset thing you'll ever hear, if you don't it good at best.

Personally I like it. I was under the impression that it was recorded years ago, and he just now decided to put it together and release, but it appear that he resung the vocals recently, and his voice in the lead vocals isn't what it used to be, not that it's bad, but it's just not the same. Good Vibrations sounds a little off (however it's still incredible), but every thing is intact (and in some instances better) musically. I think is he had gotten a vocalist to sing the album it could have taken off. Timberlake comes to mind. Not that I think for a second that he's make it better, but I do think it would help both Justin's career and the exposure of the album. Elton John would be nice over some tracks too. Of course if they did that they'd be dissappointing a lot of hard core fans that have been waiting for it.

The track names are little goofy as usual, but that's most likely because they have a deeper meaning. Trauma, if you could explain them to me, I'd appreciate it.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Suga Foot on September 27, 2004, 08:46:43 AM
I'll probably pick this up, I gotta see what all the fuss is about.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 03:55:05 PM
I think if you continue to listen to the album, eventually you'll realize that Brian Wilson's voice, @ age 62, is at this point in his life at least 5 times better than any vocals Justin Timberlake has ever recorded.  He sings falsetto, that's weird as fuck, nobody sings like that, and it's just strange sounding.  I believe it's an aquired taste, though... his vocals on this album are nothing short of incredible, in my opinion.

Anyways, um... the song titles? Yeah, they're kind of strange.  The entire album represents America, and the contrast between the America Brian has known, in California, in his mind, in his music, and the America that exists, and Brian's love for both of them.  So lets see.. we've got

"Prayer" - he named this prayer, because he thought @ the time music was going to become spiritual, not in a god, Jesus, Muhammad sense, but in a music is from God so therefore beautiful music glorifies God sense.  He meant, music should be positive, and touch your soul.  He came in the studio one day, with this beautiful acapella song written, but it didn't have any words.  It's intranscribable, it's just the sound of voices singing... again... with no words.  On the original studio tapes, he calls it "a little prayer to start the album with".

"Gee" - is the dit diddy dit, how I love my girl part.  It's called "Gee" because it's a line lifted from a song called "Gee" that was out in the 50's? So it's a cover song, but it's only 1 line (the scratchy old record sounding part).

"Heroes & Villians" - This represents Brian's judgement of the people surrounding him when he wrote the song, The Heroes in his life were basically his drug buddies, and the Villians were his family and wife.  The lyricist, Van Dyke Parks, who worked with Brian thought the music Brian wrote for it sounded like a western song, so he made the song have a lot to do with the old west... again, representing a period in America, that we glorify in our minds, but had some villianous overtones (killing the indians, etc.).  Heroes, and Villians

"Roll, Plymouth Rock" - The pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock to settle America.  Rock & Roll is what Brian does.  Roll, Plymouth Rock, Roll Over... show us what's under you, Rock, Roll, Plymouth Rock, the Pilgrims, etc. it's all about the settling of America.  Some of the lyrics of the song say things like "Once, Upon, The Sandwich Isles.... " and talk about the British settling Hawaii.  Other lyrics mention steamliners (modern ships, what Brian would remember) leaving Cheering, Beaded Indians behind her (How the Indians thought the people on the ships meant them good, so they Cheer with their Beads they've been given for their land, etc.)... This song is about the settling of America.

"Barnyard" - This song begins with a train... it represents the advancement of the settlers across the plains, you can hear the music and the beat sounding like a train, and the whooo hooo oooh oooh's in the background that sound like a train's whistle.  Brian's lyrics are about life on the farm, just as life would have been like back in the day in the time period of America he's talking about.

"Old Master Painter/You Are My Sunshine" - These are BOTH Covers... Old Master Painter is the short, 25 or so second orchestral piece before he sings, and then "You Are My Sunshine" is a famous old western/country song, fitting with the theme of course... Brian sings it here in the past tense, "You Were My Sunshine"... again, fitting in with the whole things you remember being different from reality, slightly tainted, etc.

"Cabinessence" - This song sums up the experience, or the ESSENCE, of living in a Cabin in the days of the frontiersmen.  He's singing to his wife "I'll give you a Home, On the Range" etc... There's a repeating "WHo Ran The Iron Horse?" chant, again referring to the building of the railroads, there's lines saying "Have You Seen the Grand Coulee working on the Railroad", and near the end, "Over and Over, the Crow Cries Uncover The Cornfield" which expresses the crow's or the bird's discontent in what Humans are doing to the land as they settle it, and also refers to farmers growing Corn, something very American, etc.

Then there's a slight pause, as Movement 2 starts, which is all about Life, and Rebirth, and the Loss of Innocence...

"Wonderful" is a euphanism for a Girls' virginity.  You'll never hear the song the same way again, lol.  It's talking about a sweet young girl who meets a 'nonbeliever" and "A boy bumped into her Wonderful"... and how her parents still love her, etc.  This is possibly the most Beautiful song he's ever written, with the exception of "Surf's Up"...

Next is "Song For Children" - for years, people thought this song was called "Look", and that it was simply an outtake never used, since part of the melody shows up, Canibalized, near the end of the released version of "Good Vibrations".  Brian intended for the melody to repeat, however, and this song was always a central part of his album! Everyone's thought for years it was just throwaway material, amazing.  Brian is all about Children, and this song is playful, beautiful, has an incredibly enchanting melody, has a hard driving 'verse' section, and features near the end beautiful vocals saying things like "Maybe not one... Maybe you too,... are wondering... wondering Who? Wonderful Me... Wonderful You..." just incredibly well written, and ties in with the theme of this movement, of growing up, and losing your innocence, wonderful me, wonderful you, Wonderful is the first song in the movement, lost of innocence, Song For Children... it just all flows back and forth.

"Child is the Father" - in "Song For Children" he starts this refrain that goes "The Child Is the Father Of The Son" and "The Child Is The Father Of the Man", and then this song is the full on "Child, The Child, The Child, is the Father Of The Man" section you hear so strongly, with Brian saying things like "Easy My Child" & offering the advice he's learned.  "Child Is the Father Of The Man" is a concept; what you are as a child, dictates, or fathers, what you will be as a man.  The Child, in a man, dictates what kind of father he will be to his son.  The Child is the Father Of the Man, The Child Is The Father Of The Son.  The "Sun" and the "Son" are puns meant to tie in with Brian's whole "Fun in the Sun" image as the founder of the Beach Boys.

This song disolves into a masterpiece, "Surf's Up"

"Surf's Up" is a metaphor for life, of course... surfers often say that Surfing itself is a metaphor for life, and years earlier, Brian had contended "Catch a Wave/And You're Sitting on Top of the World"... Surfer's wait and wait for that perfect wave... they miss waves... they fuck up and wipeout... and when they DO catch a wave, they're sitting on top of the world, but only momentarily, as eventually the wave comes crashing down, and your left lying in the Surf.  "Surf's Up" at a casual glance is another Beach Boys title, but the song, and the title, are all about how we grow up, and just LIFE.  "Columnated Ruins Domino!" is the 'hook' of the song, and it's so beautifully harmonized, it sounds like God himself descended from heaven to sing it.  It's incredible.  Possibly the most beautiful line ever recorded, in my opinion.  This is how MOZART wrote.  This is timeless, classic, universal stuff.  @ the end of the song, you're greeted with the refrain from "the Child Is the Father Of The Sun", as well as the lines about "A Childrens Song" and some of the harmonies from "Wonderful", tying all 4 songs together to close out the 2nd movement.

The third movement is the famous movement that troubled Brian so much, and he never was able to complete, until now.  It's extremely fragmentary, and the most daring of the three movements.  He intended for this, the final movement, to represent the 4 elements: Fire, Earth, Wind, and Water. 

"I'm in Great Shape/I Wanna Be Around" - Brian was on a health kick, and these two titles tied together play off of that, and the lines "Eggs & Grits & Lickety Split! I'm In The Greatest Shape Of The Agriculture" tie this into the earth theme, as well as his general theme of healthiness.  This quickly segues into "I Wanna Be Around" an old standard, that Frank Sinatra and others had recorded... "I wanna be around/to pick up the pieces/when somebody breaks your heart"... at the end of this song, it segues into

"Workshop" - the oddest of the songs, it features a low lying melody with Brian & the rest of the band sawing wood, hammering nails, beating things, chopping things, and just building and working on something.  It's not hard to imagine he's rebuilding his broken heart from the previous song.

This takes us full into "Vegatables", which Brian wrote for Children to want to eat their vegatables, which of course are healthy for you.  Nevermind that at the time, Brian was living off of candy bars and Milkshakes, I applaud his efforts.  Kids, DO love this song, too, so he achieved what he set out to do.  The vegatables vibe also ties into the Earth Element, and the farming/americana theme of the entire album.

Straight away we're into "On a Holiday" a whimsical song he wrote about a Pirate, who decides to take a vacation.  The 'vibes' are begun here, in this song (a vibraphone!), and repeat into the next song.  "On a Holiday" was also long considered to be just junk he wasn't going to use on the album, but oh no no.  This song is the first to represent "Air" as one of the elements, with the Vibraphones sounding like whistles, wind chimes, etc... it's a very light song, and mentions "Waikiki" in certain parts, again tying in with the America theme, and then has elements of the "Rock, Rock, Roll, Plymouth Rock Roll Over!" chant from "Roll Plymouth Rock"... with a "Long Long Ago"  we're straight into

"Wind Chimes" which begins with a little bit of "Whispering Winds" another song Brian wrote during this period, and of course both of these songs represent the Air element.  "Hanging down from my window, those are my windchimes.. on a warm afternoon the little breeze tinkles my windchimes... now and then, a tear rolls off my cheek"... simply a BEAUTIFUL song.   Brian sounds great on this song.  It's sad, but melancholy @ the same time... there's also a "BAH, DAH DAHHHH" loud section that repeats, breaking up the gorgeous melodies of the wind chimes, which leads us, and foresees the fire to come...

"Mrs. O'Leary's Cow" famously kicked over the lamp that started the chicago fire, and this song is the cow that starts Brian's tour de force, "Fire"...You can hear the whistles and bells of a fire engine as it frantically races to the scene of a fierce fire...

"Fire" is represented by a string section, and was originally recorded with the strings wearing fireman's hats in the the studio, as well as a small fire Brian set so they'd smell smoke.  The chanting in the background is meant to suggest souls tolling away in Hell, and the 3 basslines all represent the frantic fury of the fire.  The drum set represents the fire fighters all scuffling to fight the fires, and one by one, they are "beat out" by the drums, you can even hear the toms "Snap Snap!" at the end to put the last bass line out.

this leads us to "Blue Hawaii", which starts with the famous "Water Chant" Brian recorded in the bottom of a swimming pool, and Brian's newly added vocal line "Is It Hot As Hell In Here, Or Is It Me? It Really Is A Mystery!" which is meant as a glance back @ the trouble he's had over his life, much of it revolving around the insanity represented by the previous song, "Ms. O Leary's Cow".  Blue Hawaii is a gorgeous song, "I lose a dream, when I don't sleep, I'm slumbering."... Then he sings about Hawaii, Hawaii lay beyond the sea... Oh, I could Use a Drop To Drink Right Now... Take Me To A Luau, now, and Lay before me holy, holy cow" LOL Of course the song is about Hawaii, the perfect symbolism of Brian's America from his mind, Brian's "Fun in the Sun" personified as a beautiful state, settled by the British, and forever embedded in every American's mind as paradise.  @ the end of this , he revises the "Prayer" from the beginning of the album, leading us straight into

"Good Vibrations".  When Brian was a child, he came upon a dog barking at him, but the dog liked his mom... Brian asked his mother why, and she told a 7 year old Brian "He must pick up my Good Vibrations" and explained to him that dogs must be able to pick up good or bad vibrations from people.  Brian never forgot it, and wrote this song, about the Vibrations between us... it represents his 5th element!  "I, I bet I know what she's like... and I can see how right she'd be for me... It's WEIRD, how she comes in so strong... and I wonder what she's picking up from me?"

The song has additional melodies and sections not found in his original version, even though they were recorded @ the time, he didn't put them in the single mix... the lyrics are also from the original version he recorded with Tony Asher, and are more 'psychedelic' than the watered down lyrics Mike Love wrote for the song.

Breathtaking. 
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 04:02:50 PM
The Philadelphia Enquirer - 4.5 out of 5 stars

Lost and now found, Wilson's 'Smile' beams

By Tom Moon

Inquirer Music Critic

In the last two decades, new music from Brian Wilson has meant a trip in the time machine.

As he has slowly returned to music after a long exile of substance abuse and incapacitating mental illness, the rock pioneer has written songs that emulate the sun-dappled innocence of his enduring Beach Boys odes.

He has copied the keening, caramel-creme California harmonies, affirmed a post-Eisenhower ideal of courtship, and used new recordings (including this year's Gettin' In Over My Head) to hark back to the hookcraft he honed in the early '60s.

The efforts have been technically impressive - several years ago, Wilson assembled a touring band of Beach Boys obsessives who help him re-create every last "Sloop John B" shoop. But those efforts have also been a little sad: The nostalgia merchant in him wants desperately to beam everyone to the idealized realm of "Wouldn't It Be Nice," while the musician in him knows that this going backward is futile.

His latter-day records offer isolated moments of great beauty, but they're time-capsule moments, impressive for their resemblance to other long-ago peaks. They're oddly ritualized, sometimes empty throwbacks.

So there's reason to be apprehensive about the new Brian Wilson Presents Smile (Nonesuch ), due out Tuesday, Sept. 28. It's Wilson's re-creation of a project he and lyricist Van Dyke Parks began shortly after the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds astounded the world in 1967. Intended as a break with his past, Smile was more ambitious and less linear than anything Wilson had done, and he abandoned the work, in apparent frustration, just before it was to be released.

Since then, Smile has existed mainly as a mythic footnote, one of the great "lost" projects in rock history. Some of the songs from the sessions - "Heroes and Villains," "Cabinessence," "Good Vibrations" - were singles, and turned up on subsequent Beach Boys albums. But the work was intended to be a whole, and even the bootlegged versions that have been commonly available were incomplete, or not presented in what became Wilson's final sequence.

This sumptuously orchestrated new version of Smile, which spreads its 17 tracks into three parts, corrects all that even as it invites new questions.

If Wilson hasn't been convincing creating fresh pieces modeled on the old, how can he expect to sell a scattered series of song fragments, with defiantly nonsensical lyrics, that baffled some friends and earned him the ridicule of his bandmates when it was created? What makes anyone think that something considered indulgent in its day will somehow seem less so when dusted off and brought into the ever-more-cynical present?

It takes about 30 seconds into the new recording for those questions to be rendered irrelevant.

Smile opens with an a cappella vocal ensemble soaring above the trees, transporting the wordless "Our Prayer/Gee" to some hallowed place of worship by the sea. Occupying center stage is the familiar close-knit Beach Boys harmony, only it's more grandiose. More adult. The intertwined voices rise up, a feast of chordal "ohhs" and "ahhs" resolving in unexpected ways. But these are not defrosted versions of the master's 1967 scribblings; what comes out is a timeless natural wonder - a sound as majestic as a mountain, resonating for the ages.

Smile is full of those disarming, powerful moments. Wilson was 24 when he wrote this music, and despite the near-universal acclaim showered on his multitracked masterpiece, Pet Sounds, he was withdrawing into himself, composing at a piano in a sandbox in his living room while ingesting drugs and, if the accounts of those around him are credible, zoning out.

What he came up with was a curious art statement, an attempt at escaping what he considered the confining cliches of the Beach Boys with lyrics that were oblique riddles and idle curiosities. That wasn't the only change: Instead of recurring verse-chorus forms (a la "I Get Around"), his new songs were intricate pieces with many sections, each notable for its own jaw-droppingly beautiful melody.

He called those compositions, best typified by "Good Vibrations," "teenage symphonies to God," and that's accurate: They're episodic marvels, moments of cooing quiet followed by fireworks. The fragments are each beautiful in isolation, yet become magnified when put together, a succession of impossibly uplifting recurring motifs, each reaching higher than the last.

Though Wilson patterned the current arrangements on the original tapes, the new work extends his text - not just with marimba and tympani and other orchestral trappings, but also through the very character of his voice, which now exhibits a touch of experience.

He might have started out trying to duplicate something, but eventually Wilson took the iconic sounds he'd created long ago - vocals inextricably linked with the Friday night cruise and the surfin' safari and being true to your school - and gave them a resonance beyond the endless summer.

Smile echoes the feeling of limitless possibility running through all the great Beach Boys singles, then adds a new dimension - every now and then a slightly puzzled 62-year-old man peeks through the serene plushness, his voice hardened just enough to keep these breezy reveries close to Earth.

There are many marvels inside Smile. It's laudable that Wilson revisited the work, and amazing that his rhapsodic themes not only endure, but blossom so vividly in this sublime, carefully sculpted atmosphere.

Almost every one of the melodic motifs - with the exception of the gimmicky "Vega-Tables" and "I'm in Great Shape" - is the equal, in terms of sheer grace, of the sprawling orchestrations and outsized sonic tableaus. Even pieces we know by heart, such as "Good Vibrations," become elevated by the small touches - cellos rather than surf guitars handle the surging triplets, executing with a precision and force that sends the rhythm careening ever forward.

You might end up preferring the original version that blasted from the speakers at the pool all these years, but this one is essential listening all the same - as a quintessential expression of youth recast by experienced hands, an auteur's rare second chance to realize a vision that once slipped out of his grasp.

It does what Wilson's latter-day efforts haven't - it sends out good vibrations that aren't a carbon-copy echo, but exist on their own, entirely different frequency.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 04:06:00 PM
The Atlanta Journal Constitution - "A"

Brian Wilson: 'Smile'

By NICK MARINO
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/27/04

Today, Brian Wilson delivers an artifact from the 1960s, a long-lost album as tied to that decade's cultural history as Woodstock and the Zapruder film.

Since the '60s, Wilson's unfinished "Smile" record has represented the unfulfilled promises of that most promising time. The music was an acid casualty, a hallucinatory pop song cycle abandoned when its drug-addled creator crumpled under the weight of his aspirations.

The Beach Boys' leader wanted to make the ultimate pop record, a "teenage symphony to God." Now, more than 37 years later, he finally has.

Wilson's completed and newly recorded "Smile" is no mothballed relic — it is a fresh and dazzling work, shiny as a toy fire engine. Although the record's playful spirit rekindles the psychedelic sensibility of its pinwheel-eyed original era, Wilson's sophisticated songcraft and pristine production make it sound ultramodern.

"Smile" builds on the Beach Boys' 1966 masterpiece "Pet Sounds," itself an ultramodern album. But where "Pet Sounds" songs compressed their ideas into fluid melodic lines, the grandest "Smile" songs — "Heroes and Villains," "Cabin Essence," "Surf's Up," "In Blue Hawaii" and "Good Vibrations" — expand into multipart mini-epics that dramatically and repeatedly reinvent themselves.

Listening to these tunes is like watching leaves change color in warp speed.

Stitching the key tracks together is an assortment of silly and imaginative short works. One song, lasting 58 seconds, is overrun with barnyard animal noises. Another integrates the sound of a siren. Another rhapsodizes about vegetables.

"Smile" is an omnivorous record. It finds ways to include snippets of "You Are My Sunshine" and the jazz standard "I Wanna Be Around." It uses drills, mallets and whistles as instruments. It has, even without Wilson's late brothers or the Beach Boys' surviving founders, towering harmonies.

The record's climactic final track is the immortal "Good Vibrations," seemingly unimprovable in the familiar Beach Boys version. But Wilson's "Smile" version has an additional vocal passage near the end, giving the song — and this remarkable, redemptive album — a spine-tingling extra dimension.

This is the sidebar that will appear in the paper:

CD REVIEW
Brian Wilson
"Smile."
Nonesuch Records.
17 tracks.
Grade: A
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 04:07:12 PM
All Music Guide Review - 4.5 out of 5 stars
Review by John Bush

The white whale of '60s record-making, the Beach Boys' aborted SMiLE album gradually gained a legend that not only inflated its importance and its complexity, but gave creedence 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, of 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 closest 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 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 worked them into a live show, then an 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 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).Since Wilson himself was previously the most opposed to SMiLE appearing in any form, it's a considerable shock that this new recording justifies even half of the promise that fans had attached to it. Everything that Wilson and his band could control sounds nearly perfect. Every instrument, every note, and every intonation is nearly identical to the late-'60s tapes; one has to wonder whether vintage hand tools weren't acquired for "Workshop" and Paul McCartney wasn't flown in to add chewing noises to "Vega-Tables." (The players did, however, book time at one of Brian's old haunts, Sunset Sound, and utilized a '60s tube console to record their vocals.) No, the harmonies here aren't the Beach Boys' harmonies, and Brian's vocals aren't the vocals he was capable of 37 years ago, but they're excellent and (best of all) never distracting. Aside from the technical acumen on display, Wilson has also, amazingly, found a home — the proper home — for all of the brilliant instrumental snippets that lent the greatest part of the mystery to the unreleased SMiLE. Van Dyke Parks' new (or newly heard) lyrics fit into these compositions, and the work as a whole, like hand in glove. (The former instrumentals include "Barnyard"; "Holiday," which is here called "On a Holiday"; "Look," which is now "Song for Children"; and "I Love to Say Da-Da," which is now part of "In Blue Hawaii.") Most surprisingly, nearly all of this thematic unity was accomplished by merely reworking the original material already on tape, which proves that Wilson was never very far from finishing SMiLE in 1967. (It's very likely that the gulf was psychological; SMiLE had few supporters among Brian's closest friends and family.) Hopefully, Capitol is readying a Smile Sessions box set to release all of the vintage material, but it's clear that nothing they dig up from the vaults will be able to match the unity displayed by this attractive new recording of SMiLE. It's up to the standards of anyone who's ever scoured the bootlegs to create a SMiLE tape, and it beats them all, which is the highest compliment. So, if you've never been burdened with a friend's SMiLE tape before, count yourself lucky that Brian Wilson's is the first you'll hear. And if you have heard a few, prepare to listen to them much less religiously.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 04:08:38 PM
Rave review from MSNBC

By Gary Krakow
Columnist
MSNBC
Updated: 3:13 p.m. ET Sept. 27, 2004It’s taken nearly forty years to get to this point. Back in 1966, one of rock ‘n’ roll’s young stars wanted to make an album that would knock everyone’s socks off. A rock opera named ‘Smile’.  Something to compete with the British invaders — specifically the Beatles. Remember, we’re talking 1966: a time when LBJ was president, Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy were still here and TV shows like ‘Bonanza’, ‘Red Skelton’, ‘Batman’ and ‘Family Affair’ were all the rage.

 
The Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson wanted to use the same recording techniques he pioneered on his album ‘Pet Sounds’ — recording intricate parts of songs then editing them together into one coherent masterpiece. 

Armed with the music he wrote, and lyrics by Van Dyke Parks, Wilson began recording what was to be known as Smile 38 years ago. The publicity about the recording project was amazing. All the rock magazines of the times were competing for the latest details. The buzz was overwhelming. It was impossible to avoid at the time.

But there were other forces at work. Wilson’s nervous breakdown and the subsequent decades of regeneration have been well documented. ‘Smile’, and the recording sessions became legend — the most famous album never to be released.

And after the ‘Smile’ session tapes were shelved some of the songs did manage to escape — including mega hits ‘Good Vibrations’, ‘Surf’s up’ plus ‘Heroes and Villains’. Others graced the next few Beach Boys albums in the late ’60s such as the fragmented ‘Smiley Smile’ and ‘20/20’.  But the public was never able to hear the entire album that Wilson had in mind.

Until now. About a year ago, Brian Wilson started to pick up the pieces. He and Van Dyke Parks got back together and finished ‘Smile’. Wilson, who’s been recording/performing his material again decided to try to produce a live version of 'Smile' with his current band. 

So, on February 20 of this year, he performed Smile live in London at Royal Festival Hall. The standing ovations seemed to last forever. British newspapers hailed it as pure genius. It was now time to record it for posterity.

The music
That’s the history behind Tuesday’s release, but no one can prepare you for what this album sounds like. Don’t forget, this is basically what was going through Wilson’s mind nearly 40 years ago — as filtered through his mind today. There’s lots of revisionist stuff inside — but somehow it all works beautifully.

The rock opera has 17 songs divided into three parts — each anchored by an original 'Smile' session hit from the 60s: ‘Heroes and Villains’, ‘Surf’s up’ and ‘Good Vibrations’. There are other favorites included like ‘Vege-tables’ (originally recorded without the dash in the title), ‘Our Prayer’ and ‘Wind Chimes’.

Some of the songs’ most famous lyrics have been revised. There’s a new verse in the middle of ‘Heroes and Villains’. And, when you hear the fist verse of ‘Good Vibrations’ (I-I love the colorful clothes she wears. And she’s already workin’ on my brain. I-I only looked in her eyes, but I picked up something I just can’t explain”) you know you’re listening to the 2004 version.

‘Smile’ recounts little slices of life in American history. There’s probably lots of hidden meaning in the lyrics. I’ll leave that to the historians. On the other hand, there are some lyrics that are easy to figure out. Let’s take the background vocals on the song ‘Cabin Essence’ — where the singers sing what is basically a sound effect: “Do-ingg, do-ingg, do-ingg, do-ingg.” Not high art — but they serve the purpose.

What I can tell you is that the album is beautifully recorded. Wilson’s love of Phil Specter’s Wall of Sound recording technique is perfectly realized in this disk. There are layers upon layer of sound — and all of them easily discernable. Strings, horns, voices, sound effects all come together in a magnificent work.

Wilson recorded this new version of 'Smile' in the same studio used for the original ‘Good Vibrations’ and ‘Heroes and Villains’ sessions Studio one at Sunset Sound in Hollywood. The originally sound console, wired with tubes instead of transistors, was used to record the vocals. Sound quality here is pretty amazing.

So is Brian Wilson’s singing voice. This guy can really belt out the tunes when he has to — and the falsetto is still there. Pretty good for a guy in his early 60s. He’s a role model for all baby boomers. Even though Brian didn’t sing lead on all the ‘Smile’ originals he’s made each and every song his own.

Overall, ‘Smile’ is well worth hearing — and owning. I know there’s a revisionist trend that's popular now that deconstructs many songs/rock groups from the past. In many cases what they have to say is valid. Some of the hit music from the past really stinks. But, not this album.

Thirty-seven years after its anticipated release, ‘Smile’ is nothing more or less than advertised: at times it’s beautiful, thoughtful, rocking and even silly at points. As a whole it really is an American masterpiece. Wilson and Parks have done a wonderful thing, bringing this music to the public. I’m grateful that they never gave up hope.

Wilson and his band are going to be performing 'Smile' live in a limited number of venues in the next few weeks. I hope to be among those lucky few who will get to hear it. I hope you are too.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: white Boy on September 27, 2004, 04:10:31 PM
wait.. so he just remade good vibrations??? wich 1 is better
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 04:23:55 PM
As a single, the original is better.  This one isn't meant as a single, it's meant as a bookend to end the album, and tie the third movement together.  It has an extra melodic line added towards the end, as well, to cast a mellow, sentimental vibe over the song and the album. 
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Shallow on September 27, 2004, 04:36:52 PM
Vocally I think the original Good Vibrations is better, but musically I gotta go with the new one.

As for the Timberlake remark, I meant from a business stand point. I feel if a hot new artist was connected to this album it could take off. Timberlake could never do falsettos like that. Brian could still do the background voices though, and the notes that Justin can't reach properly. You can tell in Brian's voice that he sounds a lot older. Then again maybe it's the drugs. I remember hearing Sinatra in his later days and he still had it. So who knows what makes the voice different.


Thanks for the title references!
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Westcoastin' on September 27, 2004, 04:53:12 PM
do you expect anyone to read all of those damn reviews you jus put up ? We got it man, you like the guy.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Shallow on September 27, 2004, 04:59:40 PM
do you expect anyone to read all of those damn reviews you jus put up ? We got it man, you like the guy.

Well you aren't forced to read them. However some people might want to read them, and Trauma made them available.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: NobodyButMe on September 27, 2004, 05:26:28 PM
do you expect anyone to read all of those damn reviews you jus put up ? We got it man, you like the guy.


lolllll
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 09:08:12 PM
No, I'm just posting them as they come in, it's really pretty incredible, don't you think? Isn't it refreshing to you, even as cynically cool as you are, that something that's been hyped for 40 years has lived up to that hype? Isn't it refreshing, to all of us, that a man who's seen more demons than most of us ever will has overcome all of them and returned to his most shining moment?


* gets ready to post more great reviews
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 09:08:48 PM
FHM Us review - Calls it one of the 'best albums ever recorded'

Brian Wilson
SMiLE
SMiLE is certainly the most long-awaited album in pop-music history. More than 37 years in the making, it’s Brian Wilson’s 2004 version of the unreleased Beach Boys 1967 follow-up to their critically acclaimed Pet Sounds. And, even aged all of its 37 years, SMiLE is one of the best albums of all time. Wilson once described it as his “teenaged symphony to God.” and it’s hard to find a better description: SMiLE is the pinnacle of the psychedelic, avant garde concept that pop music could be so much more than just music. SMiLE is a tribute to growing up in America, to experiencing the earth’s elements and to love. Its melodies weave in and out in a dreamlike wave that Abbey Road would be jealous of. Even after all this time, and even though Wilson’s voice sounds as though it has finally aged after 62 years, the brilliance and scope of SMiLE—now finally realized—stacks up with the best albums ever recorded. It’s that good.

(Keith Whamond)
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on September 27, 2004, 09:10:13 PM
USA Today - 3.5 stars out of 4

(http://images.usatoday.com/life/_photos/2004/09/28/inside-brianwilson.jpg)

Wilson's 'Smile' shines after 37 years
By Edna Gundersen, USA TODAY
Smile, the most celebrated pop album you've never heard, finally reaches stores today, more than 37 years after its intended release date. While no piece of music could live up to nearly four decades of hype and speculation, Brian Wilson's fabled opus (* * * ½ out of four) delivers on its original promise of beauty, sophistication and audacity. (Related story: Read up on the week's other new albums)
 
The material has a muddled provenance. Wilson, the Beach Boys' creative strength and personnel minefield, completed two-thirds of Smile in 1967 with his collaborator, lyricist/arranger Van Dyke Parks. The undertaking, envisioned as an expansion on the studio leaps in 1966's Pet Sounds, was abandoned after Wilson suffered a breakdown and his bandmates dismissed the unfinished work as lunacy. With the exception of euphoric single Good Vibrations, the recordings were shelved be- fore The Beatles released their ambitious Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (inspired by Pet Sounds), leaving many to wonder whether Smile might have rivaled what is widely regarded as rock's finest album.

With that sort of conjecture knocking at the vault door, Smile took on mythic proportions, even as some tunes leaked out legitimately (Surf's Up, Heroes and Villains) and in bootlegs.

Wilson, whose confidence and productivity have risen in recent years following long battles with mental illness, constructed Smile's final passages with Parks after they listened to the original tapes in 2003. He meticulously replicated the 1967 Smile with an eight-piece string and horn section and his 10-member touring band, including Darian Sahanaja, the vocalist/keyboardist who maneuvered Wilson toward resurrecting the project. Produced and arranged by Wilson, Smile is both old and new, fresh and retro, grand and naive, with sublime orchestrations and silly animal noises.

Wilson's imperfect musical triptych is at times messy, spasmodic and lyrically loopy. At 62, he sings in a voice that's poignant but coarse. And as concept albums go, the themes are fairly cloudy. The richly layered, symphonic textures that were a revelation at the dawn of multi-track technology are now so commonplace that the studio wizardry is no longer Smile's striking feature.

But the music is glorious and surprisingly coherent considering the lack of self-contained songs and the conjoined remnants of psychedelic rock, doo-wop, sunny pop and esoteric noodling. The beautiful melody in Wonderful and the spine-tingling harmonies in Wind Chimes help build Smile's delightful kaleidoscope of sound. Maybe not Pet Sounds and not quite the "teenage symphony to God" that Wilson foretold. But close enough. Wilson offers a lopsided Smile, handcrafted by a fragile mortal who summoned enough musical genius in his tortured psyche to outwit the demons that crushed him nearly 40 years ago.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Westcoastin' on September 28, 2004, 09:27:21 AM
No, I'm just posting them as they come in, it's really pretty incredible, don't you think? Isn't it refreshing to you, even as cynically cool as you are, that something that's been hyped for 40 years has lived up to that hype? Isn't it refreshing, to all of us, that a man who's seen more demons than most of us ever will has overcome all of them and returned to his most shining moment?


* gets ready to post more great reviews
lol...cynically cool.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: jeromechickenbone on September 28, 2004, 03:55:53 PM
trauma, i'm glad you're bringing some exposure to brian wilson.  A lot of people (mostly young) don't have a fraction of the appreciation for the beach boys as they should.  Having said that...


Shallow - Do you realize that if this album featured Justin Timberlake, it would be highly regarded as one of the biggest desicrations in the history of mankind? I mean, sure, you could add timberlake, and it may get more exposure (again, mostly to the young).  I have the sneaking suspicion that Brian isn't shooting for a hot album that TRL is going to eat up.  He's setting out to complete something he couldn't quite get his head around.  I mean shit, if your complaint is that this album should have featured SOMEONE ELSE TO PERFORM THE VOCALS, i'd have to say you're a RETARD. I try not to get personal with people, but damn that is easily one of the stupidest things i've ever read on this forum. and that says something.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: NobodyButMe on September 28, 2004, 04:16:05 PM
^^ it's true. even though i can hardly stand trauma, i still picked up this album and honestly, i wouldn't know shit about this guy if it weren't for the 890+ threads that trauma has started on this board.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: eS El Duque on September 28, 2004, 04:52:28 PM
dude, my dad has this..i was like "wtf" lol....so i might give it a listen sometime soon!
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: white Boy on September 28, 2004, 05:07:15 PM
on my first listen... very iffy... amazing music.. his voice sounds too "old" like an old granpa singin.. and some of the song are a lil silly.. ill give it a bunch more listens and see wat i think
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Shallow on September 28, 2004, 05:54:39 PM



Shallow - Do you realize that if this album featured Justin Timberlake, it would be highly regarded as one of the biggest desicrations in the history of mankind? I mean, sure, you could add timberlake, and it may get more exposure (again, mostly to the young).  I have the sneaking suspicion that Brian isn't shooting for a hot album that TRL is going to eat up.  He's setting out to complete something he couldn't quite get his head around.  I mean shit, if your complaint is that this album should have featured SOMEONE ELSE TO PERFORM THE VOCALS, i'd have to say you're a RETARD. I try not to get personal with people, but damn that is easily one of the stupidest things i've ever read on this forum. and that says something.


All I'm saying is Wilson's voice isn't what it used to be. I only said Timberlake for the exposure. I don't know if Wilson would want exposure or not, but neither do you. Timberlake came to mind because he's the only guy in the pop spotlight today that I think would have been doing the same kind of pop in the 60s as the Beach Boys. Let's face it, the Beach Boys before Pet Sounds were a huge pop boy band (I didn't mean that in a bad way), and Timberlake fit's the image. Do I think that Timberlake would sing it better than Wilson? No, but this is a "teen" album and a younger sounding voice would suit it better. Do I think there are better singers out there than Wilson? Of course there are. Timberlake may not be one of them, but they are out there. It would not be such a travesty for Wilson to let someone else do the vocals. Jim Steinman had Meatloaf do it for a great album. Can you imagine what "Bat Out Of Hell" would have been like if Steinman sang it himself? I feel if Wilson were to take that type of role in today's market he could last a long time, and help the state of the industry. Wilson in a mentor song writer role could be a great thing. He just doesn't have the voice he used too, or his Beach Boys anymore.

Trauma, I'd like to hear your view on this.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: AlerG on September 28, 2004, 06:10:49 PM
someone post the album to download in the downloadiing section, peace.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Don Jacob on September 28, 2004, 09:26:18 PM
i just bought a double stack marshall amp today (1700 bucks) so i couldn't pick it up

but next pay check i got

in living color season 2 and this album to buy.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 02, 2004, 09:07:47 PM



Shallow - Do you realize that if this album featured Justin Timberlake, it would be highly regarded as one of the biggest desicrations in the history of mankind? I mean, sure, you could add timberlake, and it may get more exposure (again, mostly to the young).  I have the sneaking suspicion that Brian isn't shooting for a hot album that TRL is going to eat up.  He's setting out to complete something he couldn't quite get his head around.  I mean shit, if your complaint is that this album should have featured SOMEONE ELSE TO PERFORM THE VOCALS, i'd have to say you're a RETARD. I try not to get personal with people, but damn that is easily one of the stupidest things i've ever read on this forum. and that says something.


All I'm saying is Wilson's voice isn't what it used to be. I only said Timberlake for the exposure. I don't know if Wilson would want exposure or not, but neither do you. Timberlake came to mind because he's the only guy in the pop spotlight today that I think would have been doing the same kind of pop in the 60s as the Beach Boys. Let's face it, the Beach Boys before Pet Sounds were a huge pop boy band (I didn't mean that in a bad way), and Timberlake fit's the image. Do I think that Timberlake would sing it better than Wilson? No, but this is a "teen" album and a younger sounding voice would suit it better. Do I think there are better singers out there than Wilson? Of course there are. Timberlake may not be one of them, but they are out there. It would not be such a travesty for Wilson to let someone else do the vocals. Jim Steinman had Meatloaf do it for a great album. Can you imagine what "Bat Out Of Hell" would have been like if Steinman sang it himself? I feel if Wilson were to take that type of role in today's market he could last a long time, and help the state of the industry. Wilson in a mentor song writer role could be a great thing. He just doesn't have the voice he used too, or his Beach Boys anymore.

Trauma, I'd like to hear your view on this.

Well, you're looking at it from a totally different perspective than Brian is.  Brian is on the level of Paul McCartney, they've got immense fortunes (hundreds of millions of dollars in Brian's case, probably a billion dollars in Paul's case)... they don't make music for exposure, they make music for themselves.  Sure, it's great if it sells well, but the only reason Brian Wilson is releasing music right now is because it's what he does.  To be a productive member of society, to feel good about himself, to think he's worth something, to inflate his self esteem, he produces, writes, arranges, and sings beautiful music.  He's 62, and a multi, multi, multi millionaire.  He's won every award there is to win, he's pretty much universally considered one of the greatest composers of pop music ever, he's written some of the biggest hits of all time... so Justin Timberlake isn't even in the conversation when you're talking about Brian.

On top of that, this album represents an immensely troubled period in his life, which he never, ever recovered from.  The events surrounding this album (or really, the events in Brian's life from around the time period he was working on this album) basically nearly killed him.  He even said on his webpage recently, that he just felt so happy and relieved to finally complete the album and get it out.  It's more about Brian than it is about sales or proving anything, he just wanted to finish the album for his own reasons. 

Brian doesn't even listen to modern music.  He wouldn't even know who Justin Timberlake is.  His music sounds like it's straight out of the 60's, he never left there... so Justin Timberlake on the most famous unreleased album of all time, which has a myth and legend 37 years long?  Never, he would be compromising everything that he stands for or represents if he did that. 
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 02, 2004, 09:10:42 PM
i just bought a double stack marshall amp today (1700 bucks) so i couldn't pick it up

but next pay check i got

in living color season 2 and this album to buy.

Man, I went to an auction the other night, and they brought out this old Garner Banshee amp, looked really old, and it was from some canadian company I'd never heard of (garner).  I bought it for 9 bucks, and carried it to the back... it's a TUBE amp, take it home, change the fuse, plug in a guitar, and I've got vintage 60's tube reverb popping out of it for 9 bucks.  I'll bet it's worth a couple hundred! Deal of the month, and I get a lot of deals. 
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 02, 2004, 09:11:34 PM
someone post the album to download in the downloadiing section, peace.

Hi AlerG!
  I don't think it's been ripped or anything, but you can listen to the entire album whenever you want at www.smilethealbum.com

Enjoy
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 02, 2004, 09:12:11 PM
on my first listen... very iffy... amazing music.. his voice sounds too "old" like an old granpa singin.. and some of the song are a lil silly.. ill give it a bunch more listens and see wat i think

Basically, he is an old grandpa singing, and the songs ARE silly, lol.  That's Brian Wilson!
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 02, 2004, 09:12:36 PM
^^ it's true. even though i can hardly stand trauma, i still picked up this album and honestly, i wouldn't know shit about this guy if it weren't for the 890+ threads that trauma has started on this board.


Gotcha!
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: eS El Duque on October 02, 2004, 11:42:14 PM
my dad wont let me listen to his, he hasn't even opened it up!!! so i had to buy it...its sold out everywhere her ein canada
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 03, 2004, 04:43:10 AM
I believe most of the stores slept on it, when I went in Circuit City, they only had 5 copies, and I had to go get them out of the case they were shipped in myself, lol.  I went and looked on the shelf, nothing... so I went and found the case they had on the cart and hadn't put out yet. 
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: mauzip on October 03, 2004, 04:44:44 AM
I believe most of the stores slept on it, when I went in Circuit City, they only had 5 copies, and I had to go get them out of the case they were shipped in myself, lol.  I went and looked on the shelf, nothing... so I went and found the case they had on the cart and hadn't put out yet. 

i'm downloading this now... you made me curious
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: bez on October 03, 2004, 05:19:28 AM

(http://images.usatoday.com/life/_photos/2004/09/28/inside-brianwilson.jpg)



He's a peeping Tom.
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 03, 2004, 03:33:00 PM
Brian has now managed to get the first ever SIX star review from Musik Express Magazine, lol.  6 out of 5.

"The best psychedelic pop album in the world, bigger than Pet Sounds and maybe the the best ever."
– Musik Express Magazine (Germany)six stars (best usually is 5 stars)

"Comparing Smile to pop music is like comparing the poster paint daubings of an infant to the vast canvasses of Velasquez. But Smile stands up with any of the great music of the 20th century. In its interweaved and repeated melodic strands it echoes Prokofiev's Kije Suite.  In its appropriation of American folk it stands up there with the work of Gershwin and Copeland.  In its sheer contemplative beauty it rubs shoulders with Miles Davis' Kind Of Blue. One of the greatest albums of the 21st century."  – New Music Express

"There is a remarkable consistency about Smile's complex tapestry of delights. Wilson can rest secure in the knowledge that he's finally delivered the masterpiece that's surely the long playing equal of that still awe inspiring 'Good Vibrations'. Genius? You bet. Brilliant".
– MOJO (4 stars)

"This new studio recording sounds far more timeless, or out of time, than nostalgic. This Smile is beautifully performed and sung [... and] is as organic as Wilson wanted for the original. The music has an originality that sounds remarkable even now. Listening to this piece of genius again reassures me that spending £162 to see all three performances of Smile wasn't so crazy after all."
– The Wire

"The cumulative effect is almost overwhelming - sad, lush, startling, tragic and beautiful. What's ironic is that it makes far more sense now than it might have done 37 years ago." 
Time Out

"It is, frankly, wonderful. So brimming with ambition and musical intelligence that its timelessness is a given. One of the most creatively accomplished, wonderfully mind-boggling items in the rock canon."
– Observer

"Now pop's one true 'great lost masterpiece' has been completed. Only a cloth-eared fool could remain unmoved. And given the album's ambitious theme it's as timely now as it was in 1967."
– i-D

"The album is worth the wait - it gives you musical courage. Wilson's an extraordinary writer.  He pushed popular music to whole new levels. It's fantastic."
– Roger Daltrey

"Complex and intense but of such beauty, this is as good as we could have hoped for."
– Music Week

"Mind-blowing. It unfolds in its original, and never before complete, sequence as a thing of rare beauty and cumulative power. As wondrous and as complex as the claims made on its behalf for all those years."
– Observer - Music Monthly

"The breadth of Brian's reference points is similar to the Beatles. They wrote about England and growing up in Liverpool, while he sings about 20th century Americana. They are songs of such pathos and must be among the most beautiful ever written." Peter Blake


Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 04, 2004, 09:17:53 PM
Early predictions have the album landing @ #7 on the U.K. Charts, and #10 on the U.S. Billboard charts.  Wow, that's much, much better than I thought it would do. 
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 05, 2004, 11:15:01 PM
There was a GREAT show on SHOWTIME tonight called "Beautiful Dreamer: Brian Wilson and the Story of SMiLE" it was a 2 hour documentary FULL of performances and candid interviews with Brian, his band, his family, his friends.  It was awesome, Brian sang old songs, they had old footage of him singing and recording in the studio, they had behind the scenes of him rehearsing for this tour with him looking fucking PETRIFIED, I felt so bad for him, during a whole week of vocal sessions he just sat there looking disturbed, at one point, he says "I have to get out of here", left, and checked himself into a hospital, lol.  He just looked so petrified and scared, and when he did, he looked exactly like he did in the footage they just showed from 1966.  Check Showtime to see if you can catch a re-run or record it on your DVR or something, incredibly fascinating. 
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: I`m Wayne Brady bitch! on October 17, 2004, 08:53:29 AM
a good album yeas , greatest of all time ? No . The album sounds over-produced and messy at parts , I was a little dissapointed with it
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: white Boy on October 17, 2004, 08:56:14 AM
i think this shit is overated as fuck.. its musically dope.. but on every song its like a competition to see how many intruments he can play..his voice aint shit.. the lyrcis are wack.. i cant listen to that corny shit.. i think its legend makes it more spectacular than it really is
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: I`m Wayne Brady bitch! on October 17, 2004, 09:20:49 AM
Yeah I feel you , it seems that they have tried too hard instead of let it flow naturally , you know ?
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: white Boy on October 17, 2004, 09:23:01 AM
^ yea.. plus.. its uninspired.. like usually an artist feels a certain way.. and writes his emotions.. dope intresting songs come out.. but this was the oposite.. i like Pet sounds a FUCKLOAD more than this
Title: Re: Nearly Unanimous 5 Star Reviews For Brian Wilson's "SMiLE" - Out Today!
Post by: Trauma-san on October 17, 2004, 01:48:34 PM
Hmm; I totally disagree.  I think it's one of the most inspired works I've ever heard, I love his vocals, it's well written, and nearly perfectly produced.  I never said it was the greatest album of all time.  It is ONE of the greatest albums of all time, though.  Ce'st la Vie