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I Know There's an Answer

"I Know There's an Answer" (alternately known as "Hang On to Your Ego") is a song by American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1966 album Pet Sounds. Written by Brian Wilson, Terry Sachen, and Mike Love, the song was inspired by Wilson's experience with the drug LSD and his struggle with ego death. Musically, it is distinguished for its colorful arrangement, unorthodox structure, and bass harmonica solo. The instrumentation also includes guitars, tambourine, tack piano, banjo, clarinets, flutes, electric keyboards, and timpani. Wilson, Love, and Al Jardine trade the lead vocal, for which the melody spans two octaves.

"I Know There's an Answer"
Song by the Beach Boys
from the album Pet Sounds
ReleasedMay 16, 1966 (1966-05-16)
RecordedFebruary 9 – c. April 17, 1966
StudioWestern, Hollywood
GenrePsychedelic pop
Length3:08
LabelCapitol
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Brian Wilson
Licensed audio
"I Know There's an Answer" on YouTube
Audio sample

The subject matter was unusual for rock music of the era. Originally titled "Let Go of Your Ego", Love refused to sing the first draft of lyrics, recalling that they had promoted the use of LSD. After voicing his objections, Wilson allowed him to revise the song's message to be about finding meaning within oneself and allowing others to live as they wish, despite having reservations against those who abuse LSD as a form of escapism.

Love was not granted an official writing credit for his contributions to both "I Know There's an Answer" and "Hang On to Your Ego" until 1994. An earlier mix of the song, featuring the group singing the "Hang On to Your Ego" lyric revision, was released as a bonus track on the album's 1990 CD reissue. Session highlights were released on the 1993 box set Good Vibrations. Further highlights from the vocal sessions were released on the 2016 box set reissue of Pet Sounds.

Cover versions of "I Know There's an Answer" have been recorded by artists such as Sonic Youth and the Pixies' Frank Black, the latter using the "Hang On to Your Ego" lyric.

Background edit

 
According to journalist Tom Nolan in 1966, Wilson felt he "can't go along" with LSD advocates such as Timothy Leary (pictured), noting that they "talk a lot, but ... don't really create".[1]

Originally conceived as "Let Go of Your Ego",[2] the song was first written by Brian Wilson and Terry Sachen; the latter had been hired as the band's road manager in January 1965.[3] Wilson was inspired to write the song following his experience with the drug LSD (or "acid").[4][5] Loren Schwartz, a talent agent who supervised Wilson's first LSD trip, recalled that Wilson had achieved "full-on ego death" through the drug.[6] Explaining Sachen's background, Schwartz wrote that Sachen had met Wilson through Wilson's younger cousins. "Terry ingratiated himself with Brian by supplying him with marijuana, hashish and tempting him with other substances."[7]

LSD first became a widely available street drug in early 1965.[8] Wilson was fascinated by the drug at the time, having had what he called a "religious experience" on the occasion that he used it,[9] but was less enamored with many of the so-called "acid heads".[1] His 2016 memoir, I Am Brian Wilson, stated of the song: "People took [acid] to get away from themselves, but that wasn't the right way to take it. It was supposed to make you go deeper into yourself. I wanted to remind people that they could survive everything best if they remembered who they were."[10][nb 1]

Having predated Wilson's collaboration with Tony Asher for the Pet Sounds album,[12][13] it is one of the five (of 13) tracks on the LP that the pair did not write together.[14][nb 2] Asher recalled, "Brian startled me one afternoon by saying 'Oh listen—I just wrote a song with Terry.' I listened to it and said to myself, 'You mean I'm not writing all the songs for the album?' ... I didn't feel betrayed—I was just surprised."[15]

Controversy and rewrite edit

 
Mike Love took issue with the original draft of lyrics, titled "Let Go of Your Ego", and requested a rewrite

The song was rewritten after Mike Love voiced objections to the lyrics.[16][17] Love stated in a 1993 interview that he found the original lyrics "so totally offensive [and] nauseating" that he refused to sing them.[18] He told Wilson that he was strongly opposed to drugs such as LSD and did not wish for the Beach Boys to be associated with its culture.[19] In his recollection, he was aware of the fact that Wilson had experimented with LSD and knew that the "prevailing drug jargon [suggested] that doses of LSD would shatter your ego, as if that were a positive thing... I wasn't interested in taking acid or getting rid of my ego."[20] He said, "The people that I'd seen indulge in those things exhibited behaviors and mannerisms that left much to be desired."[16]

Al Jardine recalled that "Brian was very concerned" and asked the rest of the band for their opinions: "To be honest, I don't think we even knew what an ego was ... Finally Brian decided, 'Forget it. I'm changing the lyrics. There's too much controversy.'"[21] Love said that "Brian didn't balk" at his proposed lyric changes. "Maybe he cared, maybe he didn't. He never said anything to me directly."[16][22] In a 2007 interview, Wilson said he "didn't mind" changing the lyrics, "But you know what? The ego of the band was Mike. He was the ego guy."[23] When the song was published, Wilson neglected to credit Love as a co-writer. In 1994, Love successfully sued for writing credits on 35 Beach Boys songs, including "I Know There's an Answer".[24][25][nb 3]

In retrospect, Jardine said of the dispute, "It's funny...Now, it seems like no big deal; it just seemed like it at the time."[21] Conversely, Bruce Johnston felt it was not "one of my favorite songs. I remember recording it as 'Hang On To Your Ego,' and it just never, ever felt right to me either way. I was more interested in the harmonicas and the double bass."[26]

Lyrics edit

The song was renamed to "Hang On to Your Ego". At this juncture, the lyrics referenced acid-induced ego death[17] and advised users of LSD to be wary of the drug's effects on the mind.[16] The narrator also expressed a frustration with the self-centeredness of others[27] and urged those who use psychedelics as escapism—like himself—to "hang on to" their ego, even though he believes that they are unable to.[28] In the interpretation of author Donald Brackett, the song warned against "losing touch with one reality through effortless chemistry while coming closer to another one through the determined effort of talent", in other words, "don't let your identity be melted away during your search for enlightenment. It's an artificial paradise, [the narrator] cautions, since as Jack Kerouac once remarked, enlightenment wasn't built in a day!"[29]

Wilson's then-wife Marilyn attributed an autobiographical quality to the piece. Like most songs on Pet Sounds, she believed that Wilson was writing about his frustrations relating "to life and how people think ... musically or intellectually or whatever".[30] Asked if "Hang On to Your Ego" was based on his struggles in maintaining his ego, Wilson responded: "Yeah. I had taken a few drugs, and I had gotten into that kind of thing. I guess it just came up naturally."[5] He later said that it had been "an inappropriate lyric. ... I just thought that to say 'Hang on to your ego' was an ego statement in and of itself, which I wasn't going for, so I changed it. I gave it a lot of thought."[31]

After being renamed again, now as "I Know There's an Answer", the song was altered to describe the protagonist's hesitation to tell the self-centered how they can improve their lifestyle.[27] In the verses, "how can I come on when I know I'm guilty" was modified to "how can I come on and tell them the way that they live could be better".[27] Elsewhere, in the choruses, "Hang on to your ego, hang on but I know that you're going to lose the fight" was changed to "I know there's an answer, I know but I have to find it by myself".[28] Most of the other lyrics stayed the same,[27] and despite concerns over the song's drug references, the key line "they trip through the day and waste all their thoughts at night" was kept.[2][28]

Love said that his revisions were an attempt to reflect the more "positive message" of "finding yourself".[16] Wilson supported this message; asked in an interview about what the "answer" in the song was, he responded, "Your self. There is an answer for you."[31] Although the narrator expresses pity for "uptight people" who "trip through the day", he leaves them alone to live as they wish.[32] According to musicologist Philip Lambert, the revision introduced contradictions:

If the message is to "seek answers within", then the song's opening line, "I know so many people who think they can do it alone" (which Mike didn't change), no longer makes sense as an argument to be refuted. In fact, the new message contends, those people are right, they can do it alone, by recognizing their self-worth and realizing their unexplored potential.[28]

Composition edit

"I Know There's an Answer" is structured in a verse/refrain/verse/refrain/bridge/refrain pattern. Unusually, the verses are divided by an eight-bar A section ("I know so many people ...") and a six-bar B section ("I know there's an answer ...". According to music historian Charles Granata, "The coupling of an eight- and a six-bar passage to create a fourteen-bar verse is rare (most verses are eight, twelve, or sixteen bars long); in this case, the listener isn't aware of the verse's compositional irregularity because the tune is so well-written."[2]

The song is in the key of B[33] and its lead melody spans two octaves.[28] Inverted chords are used just as they are in other Pet Sounds compositions.[34] Unlike other tracks on Pet Sounds, which modulate their respective keys down a minor third, the brief key change in "I Know There's an Answers" ascends a minor third (on the lyric "now what can you tell them").[35] Granata identified the "aah, di-di-di-di-da" backing vocals and Love's "ba doo-be-doo-be-dooooo" vocal break as the album's "most striking bit of doo-wop".[36]

A bass harmonica solo, played by session musician Tommy Morgan, is featured during the instrumental break.[37][nb 4] Morgan later commented, "Brian used instruments imaginatively. Not many people used bass harmonica at the time—Brian certainly used it before the Beatles. My solo ... was improvised, but whenever I played as part of the bass line, I played exactly what Brian told me to play."[37]

In Lambert's estimation, "This is one of Wilson's most vibrant instrumental conceptions, featuring organ, tack piano, harpsichord [sic], banjo, guitar, and bass harmonica. More so than any other song on the album, this one celebrates instruments and instrumental colours."[38] Session musician Carol Kaye commented, "Brian's putting us all on here with this royal 'blues' start and finally pretty song with its many facets of moods. He truly experimented on this." [39]

Recording edit

 
Al Jardine sang lead on "I Know There's an Answer"

Wilson produced the backing track for "I Know There's an Answer" (then slated and logged as "Let Go of Your Ego") on February 9, 1966 at Western Studio.[2] With the exception of an overdubbed banjo, played by Glen Campbell, the track was recorded live with an orchestra of 15 musicians.[40] Before one of the takes, Wilson jokingly referred to the song as "Let Go of Your Libido", mispronouncing "libido",[41] after which he asked if anyone had heard the 1959 comedy album How to Speak Hip.[42] He recorded a guide vocal for the track later that day.[20]

Vocal overdubs followed a week later, by which time the song had been renamed to "Hang On to Your Ego".[2] As the session began, Love struggled to sing the song and repeatedly mocked the lyrics, at one point singing the opening lines in the style of comedian Jimmy Durante and actor James Cagney. Jardine similarly encountered issues singing the vocals to Wilson's satisfaction and remarked, "Hey, Brian. This is a little tricky. ... I cannot hack this without your help. I mean it. I'm mentally destroyed."[12] Love continued to joke around and distract Jardine, causing Wilson to lose his patience and shout through the studio intercom, "Hey, you guys. Don't fuck around. Please, we've got to do it, Mike. Come on. ... Guys, let's cut this fucking thing!"[43] After Jardine's 14th take, Wilson announced that he had been satisfied with the performance, although Jardine felt that Wilson may have been "just accepting it". Jardine's vocal takes ultimately ran up to 18.[44]

On February 16, Wilson completed a mono mix of "Hang On to Your Ego".[45] The group later rerecorded the vocals to accommodate the song's reconfiguration as "I Know There's an Answer".[16] Except for the chorus, the final vocals were recorded on or around March 3 at Western. Further overdubs to the track, including the chorus vocals, were likely tracked on April 17 at Western.[40]

Critical reception edit

Reviewing the Pet Sounds album upon its release, Record Mirror's Norman Jopling wrote that "'I Know There's An Answer' is a bell-like item and starts off Ronette-ishly. Prominent bass, dramatic vocal work. Like 'Don't Talk', there's a strong hymnal flavour on this one, but the only complaint is that the backing dominates the vocals. Sax break [sic], which is very unusual on Beach Boy records, and tambourines galore at the end."[46]

Retrospectively, music journalist D. Strauss remarked that "I Know There's an Answer" demonstrated how Pet Sounds made the Beach Boys "the first major rock group to look music trends firmly in the eye and declare that rock really didn't matter . Rock is supposed to be about, you know, fucking, and Brian Wilson was recording a song ('I Know There's an Answer') that was originally entitled 'Get Rid of Your Libido.' [sic]"[47] Consequence writer Ben Kaye described "I Know There's an Answer" as an "ode to finding yourself", while praising the harmonies and the song's unique place within the band's catalogue.[48] In 2015, Mojo ranked it as the 20th-greatest Beach Boy song, describing it as a "fried treatise on how LSD separates the turned-on 'us' from the uptight 'them'."[49] The same year, the French edition of Rolling Stone magazine ranked it the band's 19th greatest song.[citation needed]

Personnel edit

Per band archivist Craig Slowinski.[40]

The Beach Boys

Session musicians (later known as "the Wrecking Crew")

Technical staff

Frank Black version edit

"Hang On to Your Ego"
 
Single by Frank Black
from the album Frank Black
Released1993 (1993)
Recorded1992
Length3:23
Label
Songwriter(s)
  • Brian Wilson
  • Terry Sachen
Producer(s)
Frank Black singles chronology
"Los Angeles"
(1993)
"Hang On to Your Ego"
(1993)
"Frank Black"
(1993)
Music video
"Frank Black - Hang On To Your Ego (Official Video)" on YouTube

Credited to his moniker Frank Black, Pixies member Charles Thompson recorded a cover version of "Hang On to Your Ego" that was issued as a single from his first solo album, Frank Black (1993). It was one of the first tracks recorded for the LP, which had originally been planned as a covers album.[50] His bandmate Joey Santiago guested on lead guitar.[51] Pixies biographer John Mendelssohn remarked that Thompson's rendition "could be played in actual discotheques – the kind in which men in tight-fitting shirts with extremely pointed collars try to persuade women with big hair and ankle bracelets to have sex with them – without there being a stampede for the exits!"[52]

The music video for the song was created on a budget estimated between $60,000 and $65,000. It was the second music video directed by They Might Be Giants' John Flansburgh and featured cameo appearances from Tony Asher and Charles' younger brother Parker Thompson. According to a contemporary report, "The video treatment for 'Hang On to Your Ego' juxtaposes the concept of not loving yourself too much against images of people caught in the act of self-loving, says Flansburgh. The clip combines hi-tech, pop-art effects with a low-tech video portrait inspired by amateur public-access shows."[53]

Wilson's 2016 memoir briefly references this cover version, stating only that "Someone played me a song once by Frank Black. He was in the Pixies, a band I don't know very well, and then he had some solo albums. On one of them he did a cover of 'I Know There's an Answer' where he put the original lyrics back in ..."[4] In 2012, Thompson's version was ranked at number 10 on Paste magazine's list of "The 25 Best Beach Boys Covers".[51]

CD single track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Hang On to Your Ego"Wilson, Sachen3:23
2."The Ballad of Johnny Horton"Thompson4:22
3."Surf Epic"Thompson10:12
Total length:17:57

Other versions edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The memoir goes on to say that he had only taken LSD once to this point.[11]
  2. ^ It is also one of only two tracks that Wilson wrote with a collaborator other than Asher, sharing the distinction with "I'm Waiting for the Day".[14][12]
  3. ^ Love was also awarded credit for "Hang On to Your Ego", which, if counted, would boost the number to 36.[25]
  4. ^ During the session, Wilson instructed Morgan to "wail on that baby for the instrumental break. ... Try to wail. Do a thing—you know."[37]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Nolan, Tom (November 27, 1966). "The Frenzied Frontier of Pop Music". Los Angeles Times West Magazine.
  2. ^ a b c d e Granata 2003, p. 105.
  3. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 82, 114.
  4. ^ a b Wilson & Greenman 2016, p. 179.
  5. ^ a b "Interview with Brian Wilson". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  6. ^ Carlin 2006, pp. 174–175.
  7. ^ Daro, Lorren (May 28, 2012). "BRIAN AND LSD". Collapse Board. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  8. ^ Granata 2003, p. 55.
  9. ^ Granata 2003, p. 55–56.
  10. ^ Wilson & Greenman 2016, pp. 179–180.
  11. ^ Wilson & Greenman 2016, p. 169.
  12. ^ a b c Badman 2004, p. 114.
  13. ^ Lambert 2007, p. 236.
  14. ^ a b Granata 2003, p. 80.
  15. ^ Granata 2003, p. 103.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Granata 2003, p. 104.
  17. ^ a b Love 2016, p. 132.
  18. ^ "Good Vibrations? The Beach Boys' Mike Love gets his turn". Goldmine. September 18, 1992.
  19. ^ Love 2016, pp. 105, 131–132.
  20. ^ a b Elliott, Brad (August 31, 1999). "Pet Sounds Track Notes". beachboysfanclub.com. Retrieved March 3, 2009.
  21. ^ a b "Comments by Al Jardine". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  22. ^ Fusilli 2005, p. 89.
  23. ^ Holdship, Bill (January 2007). "The Beach Boys: The Making of Pet Sounds". Mojo.
  24. ^ Doe & Tobler 2009, pp. 22, 25.
  25. ^ a b Doe, Andrew G. "Album Archive Part 2: 1966-1973". Bellagio 10452. Retrieved November 10, 2020.
  26. ^ "Comments by Bruce Johnston". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  27. ^ a b c d Fusilli 2005, p. 90.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Lambert 2007, p. 237.
  29. ^ Brackett 2008, p. 35.
  30. ^ "The Observers: Marilyn Wilson". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  31. ^ a b Valania, Jonathon (August–September 1999). "Bittersweet Symphony". Magnet.
  32. ^ DeRogatis 1996, p. 36.
  33. ^ Lambert 2008, p. 116.
  34. ^ Lambert 2007, p. 238.
  35. ^ Lambert 2007, pp. 237–238.
  36. ^ Granata 2003, p. 35.
  37. ^ a b c Granata 2003, p. 150.
  38. ^ Lambert 2008, p. 128.
  39. ^ "Carol Kaye". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  40. ^ a b c Slowinski, Craig. "Pet Sounds LP". beachboysarchives.com. Endless Summer Quarterly. Retrieved April 5, 2021.
  41. ^ Albanese, Paul J. (2002). The Personality Continuum and Consumer Behavior. Quorum Books. p. 183. ISBN 978-1-56720-558-9.
  42. ^ Chapman, Rob (February 2002). "Brian Wilson: Unfinished Symphony". Mojo.
  43. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 114–115.
  44. ^ Badman 2004, p. 115.
  45. ^ Badman 2004, p. 117.
  46. ^ Jopling, Norman (July 2, 1966). "The Beach Boys: Pet Sounds (Capitol)". Record Mirror.
  47. ^ Strauss, D. (December 8, 1997). "Pet Sounds : It's Not Rock 'n' Roll, But We Like It". The New York Observer.
  48. ^ Kaye, Ben (2016-05-31). "The Beach Boys premiere alternative mix of "I Know There's an Answer" -- listen". Consequence. Retrieved 2023-01-03.
  49. ^ "The Beach Boys' 50 Greatest Songs". MOJO. April 24, 2015. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  50. ^ Wild, Matt (October 3, 2013). "Sifting through the many solo albums (and names) of Frank Black/Black Francis". The A.V. Club.
  51. ^ a b Stiernberg, Bonnie (April 26, 2012). "The 25 Best Beach Boys Covers". Paste.
  52. ^ Mendelssohn, John (2009). Gigantic: The Story Of Frank Black And The Pixies. Omnibus Press. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-85712-116-5.
  53. ^ Russell, Deborah (March 8, 1993). "Artist Takes Vid Crew on 'Ego' Trip". Billboard.

Bibliography edit

  • Badman, Keith (2004). The Beach Boys: The Definitive Diary of America's Greatest Band, on Stage and in the Studio. Backbeat Books. ISBN 978-0-87930-818-6.
  • Brackett, Donald (2008). Dark Mirror: The Pathology of the Singer-songwriter. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-99898-1.
  • Carlin, Peter Ames (2006). Catch a Wave: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson. Rodale. ISBN 978-1-59486-320-2.
  • DeRogatis, Jim (1996). Kaleidoscope Eyes: Psychedelic Rock From the 1960s to the 1990s. Fourth Estate. ISBN 1-85702-599-7.
  • Doe, Andrew; Tobler, John (2009). "The Beach Boys – Pet Sounds – May 1966". In Charlesworth, Chris (ed.). 25 Albums that Rocked the World. Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0-85712-044-1.
  • Fusilli, Jim (2005). Beach Boys' Pet Sounds. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4411-1266-8.
  • Granata, Charles L. (2003). Wouldn't it Be Nice: Brian Wilson and the Making of the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds. Chicago Review Press. ISBN 978-1-55652-507-0.
  • Lambert, Philip (2007). Inside the Music of Brian Wilson: The Songs, Sounds, and Influences of the Beach Boys' Founding Genius. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4411-0748-0.
  • Lambert, Philip (March 2008). "Brian Wilson's Pet Sounds". Twentieth-Century Music. 5 (1). Cambridge University Press: 109–133. doi:10.1017/S1478572208000625. S2CID 162871617.
  • Love, Mike (2016). Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-698-40886-9.
  • Wilson, Brian; Greenman, Ben (2016). I Am Brian Wilson: A Memoir. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-82307-7.

External links edit

  • Hang On To Your Ego (Sessions) on YouTube
  • I Know There's An Answer (Instrumental Stereo Mix) on YouTube
  • The Beach Boys - I Know There's An Answer (Vocal Session/Audio) on YouTube
  • Hang On to Your Ego on YouTube
  • Hang On to Your Ego (Alternate Version) on YouTube
  • The Beach Boys - I Know There's An Answer (Alternate Mix/Audio) on YouTube

know, there, answer, alternately, known, hang, your, song, american, rock, band, beach, boys, from, their, 1966, album, sounds, written, brian, wilson, terry, sachen, mike, love, song, inspired, wilson, experience, with, drug, struggle, with, death, musically,. I Know There s an Answer alternately known as Hang On to Your Ego is a song by American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1966 album Pet Sounds Written by Brian Wilson Terry Sachen and Mike Love the song was inspired by Wilson s experience with the drug LSD and his struggle with ego death Musically it is distinguished for its colorful arrangement unorthodox structure and bass harmonica solo The instrumentation also includes guitars tambourine tack piano banjo clarinets flutes electric keyboards and timpani Wilson Love and Al Jardine trade the lead vocal for which the melody spans two octaves I Know There s an Answer Song by the Beach Boysfrom the album Pet SoundsReleasedMay 16 1966 1966 05 16 RecordedFebruary 9 c April 17 1966StudioWestern HollywoodGenrePsychedelic popLength3 08LabelCapitolSongwriter s Brian WilsonTerry SachenMike LoveProducer s Brian WilsonLicensed audio I Know There s an Answer on YouTubeAudio sample source source filehelp The subject matter was unusual for rock music of the era Originally titled Let Go of Your Ego Love refused to sing the first draft of lyrics recalling that they had promoted the use of LSD After voicing his objections Wilson allowed him to revise the song s message to be about finding meaning within oneself and allowing others to live as they wish despite having reservations against those who abuse LSD as a form of escapism Love was not granted an official writing credit for his contributions to both I Know There s an Answer and Hang On to Your Ego until 1994 An earlier mix of the song featuring the group singing the Hang On to Your Ego lyric revision was released as a bonus track on the album s 1990 CD reissue Session highlights were released on the 1993 box set Good Vibrations Further highlights from the vocal sessions were released on the 2016 box set reissue of Pet Sounds Cover versions of I Know There s an Answer have been recorded by artists such as Sonic Youth and the Pixies Frank Black the latter using the Hang On to Your Ego lyric Contents 1 Background 2 Controversy and rewrite 3 Lyrics 4 Composition 5 Recording 6 Critical reception 7 Personnel 8 Frank Black version 9 Other versions 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksBackground edit nbsp According to journalist Tom Nolan in 1966 Wilson felt he can t go along with LSD advocates such as Timothy Leary pictured noting that they talk a lot but don t really create 1 Originally conceived as Let Go of Your Ego 2 the song was first written by Brian Wilson and Terry Sachen the latter had been hired as the band s road manager in January 1965 3 Wilson was inspired to write the song following his experience with the drug LSD or acid 4 5 Loren Schwartz a talent agent who supervised Wilson s first LSD trip recalled that Wilson had achieved full on ego death through the drug 6 Explaining Sachen s background Schwartz wrote that Sachen had met Wilson through Wilson s younger cousins Terry ingratiated himself with Brian by supplying him with marijuana hashish and tempting him with other substances 7 LSD first became a widely available street drug in early 1965 8 Wilson was fascinated by the drug at the time having had what he called a religious experience on the occasion that he used it 9 but was less enamored with many of the so called acid heads 1 His 2016 memoir I Am Brian Wilson stated of the song People took acid to get away from themselves but that wasn t the right way to take it It was supposed to make you go deeper into yourself I wanted to remind people that they could survive everything best if they remembered who they were 10 nb 1 Having predated Wilson s collaboration with Tony Asher for the Pet Sounds album 12 13 it is one of the five of 13 tracks on the LP that the pair did not write together 14 nb 2 Asher recalled Brian startled me one afternoon by saying Oh listen I just wrote a song with Terry I listened to it and said to myself You mean I m not writing all the songs for the album I didn t feel betrayed I was just surprised 15 Controversy and rewrite edit nbsp Mike Love took issue with the original draft of lyrics titled Let Go of Your Ego and requested a rewrite The song was rewritten after Mike Love voiced objections to the lyrics 16 17 Love stated in a 1993 interview that he found the original lyrics so totally offensive and nauseating that he refused to sing them 18 He told Wilson that he was strongly opposed to drugs such as LSD and did not wish for the Beach Boys to be associated with its culture 19 In his recollection he was aware of the fact that Wilson had experimented with LSD and knew that the prevailing drug jargon suggested that doses of LSD would shatter your ego as if that were a positive thing I wasn t interested in taking acid or getting rid of my ego 20 He said The people that I d seen indulge in those things exhibited behaviors and mannerisms that left much to be desired 16 Al Jardine recalled that Brian was very concerned and asked the rest of the band for their opinions To be honest I don t think we even knew what an ego was Finally Brian decided Forget it I m changing the lyrics There s too much controversy 21 Love said that Brian didn t balk at his proposed lyric changes Maybe he cared maybe he didn t He never said anything to me directly 16 22 In a 2007 interview Wilson said he didn t mind changing the lyrics But you know what The ego of the band was Mike He was the ego guy 23 When the song was published Wilson neglected to credit Love as a co writer In 1994 Love successfully sued for writing credits on 35 Beach Boys songs including I Know There s an Answer 24 25 nb 3 In retrospect Jardine said of the dispute It s funny Now it seems like no big deal it just seemed like it at the time 21 Conversely Bruce Johnston felt it was not one of my favorite songs I remember recording it as Hang On To Your Ego and it just never ever felt right to me either way I was more interested in the harmonicas and the double bass 26 Lyrics editThe song was renamed to Hang On to Your Ego At this juncture the lyrics referenced acid induced ego death 17 and advised users of LSD to be wary of the drug s effects on the mind 16 The narrator also expressed a frustration with the self centeredness of others 27 and urged those who use psychedelics as escapism like himself to hang on to their ego even though he believes that they are unable to 28 In the interpretation of author Donald Brackett the song warned against losing touch with one reality through effortless chemistry while coming closer to another one through the determined effort of talent in other words don t let your identity be melted away during your search for enlightenment It s an artificial paradise the narrator cautions since as Jack Kerouac once remarked enlightenment wasn t built in a day 29 Wilson s then wife Marilyn attributed an autobiographical quality to the piece Like most songs on Pet Sounds she believed that Wilson was writing about his frustrations relating to life and how people think musically or intellectually or whatever 30 Asked if Hang On to Your Ego was based on his struggles in maintaining his ego Wilson responded Yeah I had taken a few drugs and I had gotten into that kind of thing I guess it just came up naturally 5 He later said that it had been an inappropriate lyric I just thought that to say Hang on to your ego was an ego statement in and of itself which I wasn t going for so I changed it I gave it a lot of thought 31 After being renamed again now as I Know There s an Answer the song was altered to describe the protagonist s hesitation to tell the self centered how they can improve their lifestyle 27 In the verses how can I come on when I know I m guilty was modified to how can I come on and tell them the way that they live could be better 27 Elsewhere in the choruses Hang on to your ego hang on but I know that you re going to lose the fight was changed to I know there s an answer I know but I have to find it by myself 28 Most of the other lyrics stayed the same 27 and despite concerns over the song s drug references the key line they trip through the day and waste all their thoughts at night was kept 2 28 Love said that his revisions were an attempt to reflect the more positive message of finding yourself 16 Wilson supported this message asked in an interview about what the answer in the song was he responded Your self There is an answer for you 31 Although the narrator expresses pity for uptight people who trip through the day he leaves them alone to live as they wish 32 According to musicologist Philip Lambert the revision introduced contradictions If the message is to seek answers within then the song s opening line I know so many people who think they can do it alone which Mike didn t change no longer makes sense as an argument to be refuted In fact the new message contends those people are right they can do it alone by recognizing their self worth and realizing their unexplored potential 28 Composition edit I Know There s an Answer is structured in a verse refrain verse refrain bridge refrain pattern Unusually the verses are divided by an eight bar A section I know so many people and a six bar B section I know there s an answer According to music historian Charles Granata The coupling of an eight and a six bar passage to create a fourteen bar verse is rare most verses are eight twelve or sixteen bars long in this case the listener isn t aware of the verse s compositional irregularity because the tune is so well written 2 The song is in the key of B 33 and its lead melody spans two octaves 28 Inverted chords are used just as they are in other Pet Sounds compositions 34 Unlike other tracks on Pet Sounds which modulate their respective keys down a minor third the brief key change in I Know There s an Answers ascends a minor third on the lyric now what can you tell them 35 Granata identified the aah di di di di da backing vocals and Love s ba doo be doo be dooooo vocal break as the album s most striking bit of doo wop 36 A bass harmonica solo played by session musician Tommy Morgan is featured during the instrumental break 37 nb 4 Morgan later commented Brian used instruments imaginatively Not many people used bass harmonica at the time Brian certainly used it before the Beatles My solo was improvised but whenever I played as part of the bass line I played exactly what Brian told me to play 37 In Lambert s estimation This is one of Wilson s most vibrant instrumental conceptions featuring organ tack piano harpsichord sic banjo guitar and bass harmonica More so than any other song on the album this one celebrates instruments and instrumental colours 38 Session musician Carol Kaye commented Brian s putting us all on here with this royal blues start and finally pretty song with its many facets of moods He truly experimented on this 39 Recording edit nbsp Al Jardine sang lead on I Know There s an Answer Wilson produced the backing track for I Know There s an Answer then slated and logged as Let Go of Your Ego on February 9 1966 at Western Studio 2 With the exception of an overdubbed banjo played by Glen Campbell the track was recorded live with an orchestra of 15 musicians 40 Before one of the takes Wilson jokingly referred to the song as Let Go of Your Libido mispronouncing libido 41 after which he asked if anyone had heard the 1959 comedy album How to Speak Hip 42 He recorded a guide vocal for the track later that day 20 Vocal overdubs followed a week later by which time the song had been renamed to Hang On to Your Ego 2 As the session began Love struggled to sing the song and repeatedly mocked the lyrics at one point singing the opening lines in the style of comedian Jimmy Durante and actor James Cagney Jardine similarly encountered issues singing the vocals to Wilson s satisfaction and remarked Hey Brian This is a little tricky I cannot hack this without your help I mean it I m mentally destroyed 12 Love continued to joke around and distract Jardine causing Wilson to lose his patience and shout through the studio intercom Hey you guys Don t fuck around Please we ve got to do it Mike Come on Guys let s cut this fucking thing 43 After Jardine s 14th take Wilson announced that he had been satisfied with the performance although Jardine felt that Wilson may have been just accepting it Jardine s vocal takes ultimately ran up to 18 44 nbsp Hang On to Your Ego mono mix from February 16 1966 source source Excerpt from an early mix of Hang On to Your Ego that featured a more complex vocal arrangement Brian sang the guide vocal 28 Problems playing this file See media help On February 16 Wilson completed a mono mix of Hang On to Your Ego 45 The group later rerecorded the vocals to accommodate the song s reconfiguration as I Know There s an Answer 16 Except for the chorus the final vocals were recorded on or around March 3 at Western Further overdubs to the track including the chorus vocals were likely tracked on April 17 at Western 40 Critical reception editReviewing the Pet Sounds album upon its release Record Mirror s Norman Jopling wrote that I Know There s An Answer is a bell like item and starts off Ronette ishly Prominent bass dramatic vocal work Like Don t Talk there s a strong hymnal flavour on this one but the only complaint is that the backing dominates the vocals Sax break sic which is very unusual on Beach Boy records and tambourines galore at the end 46 Retrospectively music journalist D Strauss remarked that I Know There s an Answer demonstrated how Pet Sounds made the Beach Boys the first major rock group to look music trends firmly in the eye and declare that rock really didn t matter Rock is supposed to be about you know fucking and Brian Wilson was recording a song I Know There s an Answer that was originally entitled Get Rid of Your Libido sic 47 Consequence writer Ben Kaye described I Know There s an Answer as an ode to finding yourself while praising the harmonies and the song s unique place within the band s catalogue 48 In 2015 Mojo ranked it as the 20th greatest Beach Boy song describing it as a fried treatise on how LSD separates the turned on us from the uptight them 49 The same year the French edition of Rolling Stone magazine ranked it the band s 19th greatest song citation needed Personnel editPer band archivist Craig Slowinski 40 The Beach Boys Al Jardine lead verse and harmony vocals Mike Love lead verse opening line and backing bass vocals Brian Wilson lead chorus and backing vocals overdubbed keyboard either harmonium or electric organ Carl Wilson backing vocals Session musicians later known as the Wrecking Crew Hal Blaine tambourines Glen Campbell 12 string electric guitar overdubbed banjo Al de Lory tack upright piano Steve Douglas clarinet Jim Horn alto flute Paul Horn alto flute Bobby Klein clarinet Barney Kessel 12 string electric mando guitar Larry Knechtel Hammond B3 organ Jay Migliori bass clarinet Tommy Morgan bass harmonica Ray Pohlman electric bass guitar Lyle Ritz upright bass Julius Wechter timpani Technical staff Chuck Britz engineerFrank Black version edit Hang On to Your Ego nbsp Single by Frank Blackfrom the album Frank BlackReleased1993 1993 Recorded1992Length3 23Label4ADElektraSongwriter s Brian WilsonTerry SachenProducer s Eric Drew FeldmanFrank BlackFrank Black singles chronology Los Angeles 1993 Hang On to Your Ego 1993 Frank Black 1993 Music video Frank Black Hang On To Your Ego Official Video on YouTube Credited to his moniker Frank Black Pixies member Charles Thompson recorded a cover version of Hang On to Your Ego that was issued as a single from his first solo album Frank Black 1993 It was one of the first tracks recorded for the LP which had originally been planned as a covers album 50 His bandmate Joey Santiago guested on lead guitar 51 Pixies biographer John Mendelssohn remarked that Thompson s rendition could be played in actual discotheques the kind in which men in tight fitting shirts with extremely pointed collars try to persuade women with big hair and ankle bracelets to have sex with them without there being a stampede for the exits 52 The music video for the song was created on a budget estimated between 60 000 and 65 000 It was the second music video directed by They Might Be Giants John Flansburgh and featured cameo appearances from Tony Asher and Charles younger brother Parker Thompson According to a contemporary report The video treatment for Hang On to Your Ego juxtaposes the concept of not loving yourself too much against images of people caught in the act of self loving says Flansburgh The clip combines hi tech pop art effects with a low tech video portrait inspired by amateur public access shows 53 Wilson s 2016 memoir briefly references this cover version stating only that Someone played me a song once by Frank Black He was in the Pixies a band I don t know very well and then he had some solo albums On one of them he did a cover of I Know There s an Answer where he put the original lyrics back in 4 In 2012 Thompson s version was ranked at number 10 on Paste magazine s list of The 25 Best Beach Boys Covers 51 CD single track listingNo TitleWriter s Length1 Hang On to Your Ego Wilson Sachen3 232 The Ballad of Johnny Horton Thompson4 223 Surf Epic Thompson10 12Total length 17 57Other versions editSee also List of cover versions of Beach Boys songs 1990 Sonic Youth Smiles Vibes amp Harmony A Tribute to Brian Wilson 1997 The Levellers What a Beautiful Day B side 2002 Aaron Sprinkle Making God Smile 2005 The Vitamin String Quartet VSQ Performs the Beach Boys Pet Sounds 2013 The Ashes Mint 400 Records Presents the Beach Boys Pet Sounds 2016 Christian Bland amp the Revelators A Tribute to Pet SoundsNotes edit The memoir goes on to say that he had only taken LSD once to this point 11 It is also one of only two tracks that Wilson wrote with a collaborator other than Asher sharing the distinction with I m Waiting for the Day 14 12 Love was also awarded credit for Hang On to Your Ego which if counted would boost the number to 36 25 During the session Wilson instructed Morgan to wail on that baby for the instrumental break Try to wail Do a thing you know 37 References edit a b Nolan Tom November 27 1966 The Frenzied Frontier of Pop Music Los Angeles Times West Magazine a b c d e Granata 2003 p 105 Badman 2004 pp 82 114 a b Wilson amp Greenman 2016 p 179 a b Interview with Brian Wilson The Pet Sounds Sessions Booklet The Beach Boys Capitol Records 1997 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Carlin 2006 pp 174 175 Daro Lorren May 28 2012 BRIAN AND LSD Collapse Board Retrieved November 20 2020 Granata 2003 p 55 Granata 2003 p 55 56 Wilson amp Greenman 2016 pp 179 180 Wilson amp Greenman 2016 p 169 a b c Badman 2004 p 114 Lambert 2007 p 236 a b Granata 2003 p 80 Granata 2003 p 103 a b c d e f Granata 2003 p 104 a b Love 2016 p 132 Good Vibrations The Beach Boys Mike Love gets his turn Goldmine September 18 1992 Love 2016 pp 105 131 132 a b Elliott Brad August 31 1999 Pet Sounds Track Notes beachboysfanclub com Retrieved March 3 2009 a b Comments by Al Jardine The Pet Sounds Sessions Booklet The Beach Boys Capitol Records 1997 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Fusilli 2005 p 89 Holdship Bill January 2007 The Beach Boys The Making of Pet Sounds Mojo Doe amp Tobler 2009 pp 22 25 a b Doe Andrew G Album Archive Part 2 1966 1973 Bellagio 10452 Retrieved November 10 2020 Comments by Bruce Johnston The Pet Sounds Sessions Booklet The Beach Boys Capitol Records 1997 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link a b c d Fusilli 2005 p 90 a b c d e f Lambert 2007 p 237 Brackett 2008 p 35 The Observers Marilyn Wilson The Pet Sounds Sessions Booklet The Beach Boys Capitol Records 1997 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link a b Valania Jonathon August September 1999 Bittersweet Symphony Magnet DeRogatis 1996 p 36 Lambert 2008 p 116 Lambert 2007 p 238 Lambert 2007 pp 237 238 Granata 2003 p 35 a b c Granata 2003 p 150 Lambert 2008 p 128 Carol Kaye The Pet Sounds Sessions Booklet The Beach Boys Capitol Records 1997 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link a b c Slowinski Craig Pet Sounds LP beachboysarchives com Endless Summer Quarterly Retrieved April 5 2021 Albanese Paul J 2002 The Personality Continuum and Consumer Behavior Quorum Books p 183 ISBN 978 1 56720 558 9 Chapman Rob February 2002 Brian Wilson Unfinished Symphony Mojo Badman 2004 pp 114 115 Badman 2004 p 115 Badman 2004 p 117 Jopling Norman July 2 1966 The Beach Boys Pet Sounds Capitol Record Mirror Strauss D December 8 1997 Pet Sounds It s Not Rock n Roll But We Like It The New York Observer Kaye Ben 2016 05 31 The Beach Boys premiere alternative mix of I Know There s an Answer listen Consequence Retrieved 2023 01 03 The Beach Boys 50 Greatest Songs MOJO April 24 2015 Retrieved June 1 2016 Wild Matt October 3 2013 Sifting through the many solo albums and names of Frank Black Black Francis The A V Club a b Stiernberg Bonnie April 26 2012 The 25 Best Beach Boys Covers Paste Mendelssohn John 2009 Gigantic The Story Of Frank Black And The Pixies Omnibus Press p 127 ISBN 978 0 85712 116 5 Russell Deborah March 8 1993 Artist Takes Vid Crew on Ego Trip Billboard Bibliography editBadman Keith 2004 The Beach Boys The Definitive Diary of America s Greatest Band on Stage and in the Studio Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 87930 818 6 Brackett Donald 2008 Dark Mirror The Pathology of the Singer songwriter Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 99898 1 Carlin Peter Ames 2006 Catch a Wave The Rise Fall and Redemption of the Beach Boys Brian Wilson Rodale ISBN 978 1 59486 320 2 DeRogatis Jim 1996 Kaleidoscope Eyes Psychedelic Rock From the 1960s to the 1990s Fourth Estate ISBN 1 85702 599 7 Doe Andrew Tobler John 2009 The Beach Boys Pet Sounds May 1966 In Charlesworth Chris ed 25 Albums that Rocked the World Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 85712 044 1 Fusilli Jim 2005 Beach Boys Pet Sounds Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4411 1266 8 Granata Charles L 2003 Wouldn t it Be Nice Brian Wilson and the Making of the Beach Boys Pet Sounds Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 55652 507 0 Lambert Philip 2007 Inside the Music of Brian Wilson The Songs Sounds and Influences of the Beach Boys Founding Genius Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4411 0748 0 Lambert Philip March 2008 Brian Wilson s Pet Sounds Twentieth Century Music 5 1 Cambridge University Press 109 133 doi 10 1017 S1478572208000625 S2CID 162871617 Love Mike 2016 Good Vibrations My Life as a Beach Boy Penguin Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 698 40886 9 Wilson Brian Greenman Ben 2016 I Am Brian Wilson A Memoir Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 82307 7 External links editHang On To Your Ego Sessions on YouTube I Know There s An Answer Instrumental Stereo Mix on YouTube The Beach Boys I Know There s An Answer Vocal Session Audio on YouTube Hang On to Your Ego on YouTube Hang On to Your Ego Alternate Version on YouTube The Beach Boys I Know There s An Answer Alternate Mix Audio on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title I Know There 27s an Answer amp oldid 1192143692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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