Music Review: Beach Boys - Pet Sounds

Beach Boys coming to Prince George

Glen Campbell's Session Work in Film

GREAT AMERICAN COUNTRY "The movie began with music from the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds album, in which Glen played acoustic guitar, and took the viewer on a ride through songs by such 1960s pop staples as the Ronettes, the Mamas & The Papas, Nancy Sinatra and Jan & Dean."

SMiLE Tour, Kansas City, Starlight Theatre, Thursday, August 25, 2005

Kansas City, Starlight Theatre, Thursday, August 25, 2005

Jeff Foskett and Brian Wilson, after-show, August 25, 2005

Tickets, Kansas City, Starlight Theatre, Thursday, August 25, 2005

SMiLE Tour, Chicago, Auditorium Theatre, Saturday, October 2, 2004

Backstage Pass

Tickets, Chicago, Auditorium Theatre, Saturday, October 2, 2004

Taylor Mills, after-show, October 2, 2004

Nick Walusko (Nicky Wonder), after-show, October 2, 2004

Music Review: Beach Boys - Beach Boys Party!

Music Review: The Beach Boys - The Beach Boys Today!

Music Review: Beach Boys - Summer Days (And Summer Nights!)

Brian Wilson & Kim Gordon

Taken from "Kim Gordon Chronicles Vol. 1" (Nieves 2005)

Mike Rubin: Neu!: Hinter Der Musik: Extended Remix version

Time Capsule: Denny Jailed In Tucson

AZ STAR "The charges were quickly dropped, but not before Dennis Wilson spent time at the Pima County jail early in the morning of April 24, 1978. The Beach Boys' drummer was arrested after their performance at McKale Center the night before. The mother of a 16-year-old Sabino High School junior alerted police that her daughter had been with Wilson in his hotel room. Empty beer bottles were found in his room during the police search. Wilson was charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The case was dropped when the family refused to press charges."

Beach Boys 1978 Concert got a mixed review

Music Review: Beach Boys - Beach Boys Concert

Beach Boys Box Classic Singles, Brian Wilson Tours

Mike Love Speaks To Uncut Magazine

Looking back, do you feel you've had an unfairly bad rap as the guy who told Brian not to "*** with the formula"?

Well, it's an outright lie. I mean, I wrote the words to 'Good Vibrations' for a start. And with Pet Sounds, I named the album and I went with Brian to play it for Karl Engemann at Capitol, and he turned to us after listening and said, "Gee, guys, can't you do something more like 'California Girls' or 'I Get Around'?" It was Capitol that was resisting the change, not me. We all worked very hard on Pet Sounds. That album was saying, "Okay, it's one thing to talk about a girl or a surfboard, but now you're talking about emotions and feelings and something a bit more subtle". I think that "Mike Love's the bad guy" stuff comes from writers who weren't there. And there's another component to it, which is that during that time Brian and Dennis and Carl began to experiment with drugs whereas Alan and Bruce and myself did not. So there was a bit of a Them and Us situation, and some of the people who were around Brian would be sort of negative about us. So I think that's where a lot of it stems from.

Were you as hostile towards Van Dyke Parks as he has always claimed?

Well, I asked Van Dyke what a particular set of lyrics meant and he said, "I haven't a clue, Mike". I termed some of his lyrical contributions "acid alliteration". Some of the stuff was brilliant and great and phenomenal, but I looked at things from an objective commercial point of view. Whether it's a strength or a weakness, I said, "Is it going to relate to the public to the degree that they can identify with the message and the lyrics?" From a purely artistic point of view I can appreciate some of the lyrics. For instance on 'Heroes and Villains', the line "What a dude'll do"... was very clever. Van Dyke was brilliant at taking something and, in an alliterative way, putting that into the song to go with Brian's musical contribution. But see, 'Good Vibrations' was No. 1, but 'Heroes and Villains' went to No. 50 or something. [Actually, it went to No. 12 in the US and No. 8 here in the UK.] My point of view was often misunderstood as being negative about the art of it all, whereas I liked to see artistry and commerciality merge.

What might have been different if SMiLE had come out in the way it was intended to?

I don't know the answer to that, because it was shelved by Brian. And there again was a case of Mike Love being blamed for that album not coming out at that time, which was absolutely erroneous. Brian had a breakdown and we did Smiley Smile instead, which was his own drug-rehab album. It's a trippy little record, from the dynamics of 'Heroes and Villains' to something like 'Wind Chimes'. We'll never know what the influence of SMiLE might have been, though it would obviously have been good to come out with something so unique and different. As for the SMiLE album Brian did [in 2004], I'd have preferred him to come to me and say, "Hey, let's finish the SMiLE album and pull out the original tapes", but he didn't choose that path.