fbpx
Wikipedia

Smile (The Beach Boys album)

Smile (stylized as SMiLE[1]) is an unfinished album by the American rock band the Beach Boys that was intended to follow their 1966 album Pet Sounds. It was to be an LP of twelve tracks assembled from modular fragments, the same editing process used for their "Good Vibrations" single. Instead, after a year of recording, the album was shelved and the group released a downscaled version, Smiley Smile, in September 1967. Over the next four decades, few of the original Smile tracks were officially released, and the project came to be regarded as the most legendary unreleased album in popular music history.[2][3]

Smile
One of the covers prepared by Capitol's art department; illustration by Frank Holmes
Studio album (unfinished) by
RecordedFebruary 17, 1966 – July 1971
Studio
Genre
ProducerBrian Wilson
The Beach Boys recording chronology
Pet Sounds
(1966)
Smile
(1966–1967)
Smiley Smile
(1967)

The album was produced and almost entirely composed by Brian Wilson with guest lyricist and assistant arranger Van Dyke Parks, both of whom conceived the project as a riposte to the British sensibilities that had dominated popular music of the era. Wilson touted Smile as a "teenage symphony to God" to surpass Pet Sounds. It was a concept album that was planned to feature word paintings, tape manipulation, more elaborate vocal arrangements, experiments with musical acoustics, themes of youth and innocence, and comedic interludes, with influences drawn from mysticism, pre-rock and roll pop, doo-wop, jazz, ragtime, musique concrète, classical, American history, poetry, spirituality, and cartoons. Over 50 hours of tape was recorded, ranging from musical and spoken word to sound effects and role-playing. The lead single would have been "Heroes and Villains", about the early history of California, or "Vega-Tables", a tongue-in-cheek promotion of organic food.

Numerous issues, including legal entanglements with Capitol Records, Wilson's uncompromising perfectionism and mental instabilities, as well as Parks' withdrawal from the project in early 1967, prevented the album's completion. Most of the tracks were produced between August and December 1966, but few were ever finished, and the album's structure was never finalized. Afraid of the public's reaction to his work, Wilson blocked attempts to release Smile in the subsequent years. After the group issued a truncated version of "Heroes and Villains", they reworked some of the material into new songs, such as "Cool, Cool Water", and completed only three more tracks, "Our Prayer", "Cabinessence" and "Surf's Up". A mythology grew around the project, and its unfulfilled potential inspired many artists, especially those in indie rock, post-punk, electronic, and chamber pop genres.

Smile had been estimated to be "50% done" by mid-1967.[4] Since the 1980s, extensive session recordings have circulated widely on bootlegs, allowing fans to assemble hypothetical versions of a finished album, adding to its legacy as an interactive project. Responding to this, Capitol included a loose reconstruction of the album on the 1993 box set Good Vibrations. In 2004, Wilson, Parks, and Darian Sahanaja arranged a version of Smile for concert performances, billed as Brian Wilson Presents Smile, which Wilson then adapted into a solo album. He stated that this version differed substantially from his original vision.[5] The 2011 compilation The Smile Sessions was the first official package devoted to the original Beach Boys' recordings and included an approximation of the completed album. It received universal acclaim and won Best Historical Album at the 55th Grammy Awards.

Background edit

In late 1964, as Brian Wilson's industry profile grew, he became acquainted with various individuals from around the Los Angeles music scene.[6] He also took an increasing interest in recreational drugs (particularly marijuana, LSD, and Desbutal).[7] According to his then-wife Marilyn, Wilson's new friends "had the gift of gab [...] All of a sudden [Brian] was in Hollywood—these people talk a language that was fascinating to him. Anybody that was different and talked cosmic or whatever [...] he liked it."[6] Wilson's closest friend in this period was Loren Schwartz, an aspiring talent agent that he met at a recording studio. Schwartz introduced Wilson to marijuana and LSD, as well as a wealth of literature commonly read by college students.[8][nb 1] During his first LSD trip, Wilson had what he considered to be "a very religious experience" and claimed to have seen God.[9]

 
Wilson producing a Pet Sounds recording session in early 1966

In November 1965, early in the sessions for the Beach Boys' 11th studio LP Pet Sounds, Wilson began experimenting with the idea of recording an album focused on humor and laughter.[10][nb 2] He was intent on making Pet Sounds a complete departure from previous Beach Boys releases and did not wish to work with his usual lyricist, Mike Love. Instead, he worked with jingle writer Tony Asher on most of the album's songs.[11][nb 3] On February 17, 1966, Wilson began tracking their song "Good Vibrations", which was intended for Pet Sounds but omitted due to Wilson's dissatisfaction with the recording.[13] He attempted a couple of different arrangements of the track from then until April.[14]

Wilson stated at the time that he "wanted to write [songs] with more than one level. Eventually, I would like to see longer singles—so that the song can be more meaningful. A song can, for instance, have movements—in the same way as a classical concerto—only capsulized."[15] Starting with the fourth session held for "Good Vibrations", on May 4, he began recording the song in sections, rather than tracking the full piece all the way through, with the intention of later splicing the fragments into a composite track.[16]

Released on May 16, Pet Sounds was massively influential, containing sophisticated orchestral arrangements that raised the band's prestige to the top level of rock innovators.[2] In the US, the album confused their fans and sold worse than previous Beach Boys releases, but in the UK, the reception was highly favorable.[17] The UK success emboldened Wilson to take greater creative risks and helped convince the band's label, Capitol Records, to fund and promote his next project, however ambitious it may be.[18]

Creative circle edit

Collaboration with Parks edit

 
Van Dyke Parks (pictured 1967) provided the majority of Smile's lyrics and thematic direction and participated in sessions as an instrumentalist

In 1966, Wilson attended a party held at the home of the Byrds' record producer Terry Melcher. There, he was introduced to Van Dyke Parks, a 23-year-old professional songwriter, arranger, session musician, and former child actor.[19][nb 4] Parks had moved to Los Angeles a few years earlier, hoping to compose the scores to Disney films, but instead lent his services to the Byrds and MGM pop groups the Mojo Men and Harper's Bizarre.[19] During this meeting, Wilson noticed that Parks had an unusually articulate manner of speaking. Wilson had been searching for a new lyricist, and soon after, approached Parks with the offer to write lyrics for the Beach Boys' next album.[22] Parks had worries, having heard that Asher had dissociated himself from Wilson and the Beach Boys, but nonetheless agreed to collaborate.[23]

Between July and September,[24] Wilson and Parks wrote many songs together at Wilson's Beverly Hills home for the upcoming project, tentatively called Dumb Angel.[25] Writing sessions may have also extended to October or November.[26][nb 5] Aside from playing on some of the Smile recording dates, Parks' contributions were limited to writing words to Wilson's melodies. He said: "I had no input whatsoever in the music. I was a total lyricist and sometimes an instrumentalist."[27] Like Asher, Parks had minimal experience as a lyricist, and Wilson had little prior knowledge of his collaborator's musical background.[28]

Parks implied in various interviews that he and Wilson shared an understanding of the album's Americana thematic, but in 2005, he wrote a response to a New York Review of Books article that stated otherwise ("Manifest Destiny, Plymouth Rock, etc. were the last things on his mind when he asked me to take a free hand in the lyrics and the album's thematic direction").[29] In a 2004 article, journalist Geoffrey Himes stated that although Parks did not write any of the music, he did collaborate with Wilson on the arrangements.[24]

Wilson's associates edit

All of a sudden it wasn't just Brian and me in a room; it was Brian and me and David Anderle and Michael Vosse and Loren Schwartz and Terry Sachen and all kinds of self-interested people pulling him in various directions.

—Van Dyke Parks[30]

Having withdrawn from the Beach Boys' concert tours, Wilson placed distance between himself and his bandmates, and continued to involve more people in his social, business, and creative affairs.[31] As biographer Steven Gaines wrote, his circle soon "enlarged to encompass a whole new crowd. Some of these people were 'drainers', [but others] were talented and industrious".[32] During the Smile era, Wilson's coterie included:

  • David Anderle, an MGM Records talent scout who was nicknamed "the mayor of hip" by the underground press.[33] He initially met Wilson in 1965 through a family member.[34] Gaines credits Anderle as the primary conduit between Wilson and the "hip" associates surrounding him.[33]
  • Danny Hutton, a singer that Parks had performed with at The Troubador in 1964.[35] He and Wilson first met in late 1964; they became further acquainted after being reintroduced by Hutton's manager, Anderle, in late 1965.[34] Hutton also introduced Parks to Anderle, who soon became Parks' manager as well.[21]
  • Derek Taylor, former press officer for the Beatles. He had been the Beach Boys' publicist since March 1966.[36] Taylor said he was hired to take the band to "a new plateau", and to that end, he spearheaded a media campaign that proclaimed Wilson to be a "genius".[37]
  • Mark Volman, singer from the Turtles. He was introduced to Wilson by Hutton[38] and has rarely spoken about his association with Wilson because it had "always made me feel like a groupie for Brian".[39]

Many of these people became mainstays at Wilson's home and during studio sessions.[40] Various journalists were also arranged to accompany Wilson in and out of the studio.[41] They included:

  • Michael Vosse, a magazine reporter[42] who had been friends with Anderle in college.[34] Parks introduced Vosse to Wilson,[43] and Taylor arranged for Vosse to interview Wilson for the forthcoming release of "Good Vibrations". The day after their meeting, Wilson called Vosse and offered him a job recording sounds of nature.[42]
  • Paul Jay Robbins, from the Los Angeles Free Press. Robbins was a New Left political activist who reported on and participated in the 1966 Sunset Strip riots. He met Parks through attending Byrds concerts, and Parks in turn brought Robbins into Wilson's fold.[43]
  • Paul Williams, the 18-year-old founder and editor of Crawdaddy![44] Williams stated that he had been impressed by Pet Sounds and "Good Vibrations", and subsequently "found my way to Brian's mansion at Christmas 1966 [...] and eventually made my way back to New York to spread the word, like other journalists before and after me."[45]
  • Jules Siegel, from The Saturday Evening Post.[44] He was introduced to Wilson by Anderle[46] and subsequently accompanied Wilson at his home and in the studio for two months.[47]
  • Richard Goldstein, from The Village Voice.[44]

The album held a grandiose importance among those involved, as Anderle said, "Smile was going to be a monument. That's the way we talked about it, as a monument."[48] Commenting on the reliability of figures such as Anderle, Siegel, and Vosse, journalist Nick Kent wrote that their claims are oftentimes "so lavish [that] one can be forgiven, if only momentarily, for believing that Brian Wilson had, at that time orbited out to the furthermost reaches of the celestial stratosphere for the duration of this starcrossed project."[49] Gaines acknowledged that the "events surrounding the album differed so much according to each person's point of view, that no one can be certain [of the facts]."[50] Williams acknowledged that he, Wilson, Anderle, Parks, Taylor, and other journalists were "very stoned" and that perhaps "had some effect on our assessment of what was going on."[51]

Inspiration and concept edit

Overlap with other Brother Records projects edit

Wilson originally planned many different projects, such as a sound effects collage, a comedy album, and a "health food" album.[52] Capitol did not support some of these ideas, which led to the Beach Boys' desire to form their own label, Brother Records.[53] Plans for the label began in August 1966 with Anderle at the head.[54] In a press release, he stated that Brother Records was to give "entirely new concepts to the recording industry, and to give the Beach Boys total creative and promotional control over their product."[55] Anderle later said that the label was for releasing projects that were "special" for Brian, and there was initially no concern over whether the label's products would be distributed by Capitol.[56]

Anderle said that it was "really important" to make the point that "Brian was so creative at this time [that] it was impossible to try to tie things up [...] we were talking about doing humor albums [...] there was the Smile talk [...] there was 'The Elements' talk. [...] the humor concept was separate from Smile, originally. [...] Smile was going to be the culmination of all of Brian's intellectual occupations."[57] Journalist Tom Nolan later reported that Wilson's "incredible fantasies" included "an album of music built from sound effects [...] chords spliced together through a whole LP". Nolan commented that when Wilson momentarily shifted his focus to films, it had seemed to be "a step easier to capturing more. If you couldn't get a sound from a carrot, you could show a carrot. He would really liked to have made music that was a carrot."[52]

American identity edit

 
According to Van Dyke Parks, Smile was partly intended to reclaim popular music from the influence of British acts like the Beatles (pictured in 1964).[58]

Smile was to be explicitly American in style and subject as a riposte to the British sensibilities that had dominated rock music of the era.[59] Wilson stated that, with Smile, he intended to "'Americanize' early America and mid-America" similar to how George Gershwin "Americanized" jazz and classical music.[5] To Parks, Gershwin's 1924 composition "Rhapsody in Blue" represented a "musical kaleidoscope" of America, a quality that he and Wilson sought to emulate.[60]

Parks said that they "kind of wanted to investigate [...] American images. [...] Everyone was hung up and obsessed with everything totally British. So we decided to take a gauche route that we took, which was to explore American slang, and that's what we got."[29] Further on the subject, he explained, "Everybody else was getting their snout in the British trough. Everybody wanted to sing 'bettah'', affecting these transatlantic accents and trying to sound like the Beatles. I was with a man who couldn't do that. He just didn't have that option. He was the last man standing."[58]

Mark Prendergast writes that Wilson "spent the best part of 1966" working on "Good Vibrations" in order to "keep up" with the Beatles,[61] and numerous writers state that Wilson intended Smile as a response to the Beatles' August 1966 release Revolver.[62][63][nb 6] In a 2004 interview, Wilson mentioned that while the 1965 album Rubber Soul had inspired him to match the artistic standards of the Beatles for Pet Sounds, "Smile wasn't the same kind of thing; it wasn't anything like The Beatles. It wasn't pop music; it was something more advanced."[24] In examining many books, documentaries, and articles about the subject, music journalist Andrew Sacher states that Wilson himself "never seems to mention Revolver", possibly because his "main goal in late 1966 was topping his own Pet Sounds".[65] Asked in a 1969 interview about the influence of Revolver on Wilson, Mike Love stated that the record did not impact Wilson's music, adding that "Brian was in his own world, believe me."[66]

Humor and mysticism edit

 
Wilson stated that his understanding of ego and humor was evinced from the writings of Arthur Koestler (pictured)

Smile was inspired by Wilson's growing fascination with matters such as astrology, numerology and the occult.[67] Wilson described himself as an avid reader after a friend had introduced him to Pickwick Bookshop, a Hollywood bookstore. "I started reading too many books. If I'd stuck with just a few, I'd have been all right, but I read so many authors it got crazy. [...] I went through a thing of having too many paths to choose from and of wanting to do everything and not being able to do it all."[68] According to an unnamed participant, "If you came up to the house and introduced something new to Brian's thought processes—astrology, a different way to think about the relationship of Russia to China, anything at all—if all of a sudden he was into that, it would find its way into the music. You could hear a bit and say, 'I know where that feeling came from.'"[52]

Many firsthand and secondary accounts support that Wilson owned books that encompassed poetry, prose, cultural criticism (Arthur Koestler's 1964-published The Act of Creation was often cited by Wilson), and "diverse expressions of non-Christian religions and belief systems" such as Hinduism (from the Bhagavad Gita), Confucianism (from the I Ching or Book of Changes), Buddhism, and Subud.[69] Much of this counter-cultural literature promoted related practices that Wilson was further interested by, such as meditation and vegetarianism.[70]

In a 2005 interview, Wilson stated that his studying of metaphysics was "crucial" and referenced The Act of Creation as "the big one for me". He said that the book "turned me on to very special things", specifically, "that people attach their egos to their sense of humor before anything else."[71] Anderle said that Wilson was fixated on humor and spirituality, and "had a real innate sense of spiritualism without the knowledgeable part that you learn by reading. [...] Whatever manifestation it took was whatever it was. There was numerology for a while; there was astrology for a while. Then we got into the I Ching."[72] Vosse said that he was told by Wilson "that he felt laughter was one of the highest forms of divinity [...] And Brian felt that it was time to do a humor album."[73][74] He opined that Smile, had it been completed, would have been "basically a Southern California, non-country oriented, gospel album—on a very sophisticated level—because that's what he was doing, his own form of revival music".[73]

Jules Siegel famously recalled that, during one evening in October, Wilson announced to his wife and friends that he was "writing a teenage symphony to God".[75] According to Siegel, Wilson felt he was moving into a "white spiritual sound" that he thought represented the future of music.[76][nb 7] In November 1966, Nolan reported that Wilson's shift in artistic focus was inspired by his psychedelic experience from the year prior.[77] Asked where he believed music would go, Wilson responded: "White spirituals, I think that's what we're going to hear. Songs of faith."[78][nb 8]

In late 1966, Wilson commented that Dumb Angel had been a working title for the album and explained that the name was discarded because the group wanted to go with something "more cheery".[79][nb 9] In February 1967, Carl offered that the title Smile was chosen because the group was focusing on spirituality and "the concept of spreading goodwill, good thoughts and happiness".[80] Carlin wrote that the Dumb Angel title may have been inspired by hallucinations Wilson saw while composing late at night under the influence of Desbutals.[81] In 2004 interviews, Wilson denied that Smile was influenced by LSD,[82] Zen, or religion.[5] Anderle also denied that drugs were an influence on Wilson's artistic pursuits.[83] Parks said that Wilson envisioned Smile as experimenting with "the mind-expanding possibilities of music and the mind-expanding properties of drugs".[84]

Themes and lyricism edit

Van Dyke had a lot of knowledge about America. I gave him hardly any direction. We wanted to get back to basics and try something simple. We wanted to capture something as basic as the mood of water and fire.

—Brian Wilson, 2005[24]

Although Smile is a concept album, the surviving recordings do not lend themselves to any formal narrative development, only to themes and experiences. According to Heiser, there is also a wealth of material that appears to have "little, if anything to do with [an] Americana theme".[18][nb 10] Other themes involved physical fitness, childhood, and the natural environment.[85] Web journal Freaky Trigger states: "While the lyrics are usually pretty damned literary, at their most extreme, they're divorced from any kind of meaning in the straightforward sense."[86] Parks rebuked the suggestion that Smile was planned as a concept album and said that the work was only envisioned "to use the American vernacular at a time when there was a lot of soundalike Beatle-esque music around."[87]

By contrast, musicologist Philip Lambert describes Smile as "an American history lesson seen through the eyes of a time-travelling bicycle rider on a journey from Plymouth Rock to Hawaii."[88] Documentarian Keith Badman states that Wilson intended the album to be an American-themed exploration of the innocence of youth and childhood.[89] Williams concluded that it was to be "perhaps the story of the unnatural love affair between one man's voice and a harpsichord".[90] A melodic and rhythmic motif (sometimes called the "Bicycle Rider" theme) was configured into several tracks, which he said "[broke] down the walls that give songs identities without ever offering conceptual ('rock opera') explanation or resolution."[91]

Parks' lyrics employed wordplay, allusions, and quotations.[92] He acknowledged that there were occasional "references" to specific historical entities, however, "I don't think that I was interested in wordplay as much as I was interested in the power of words."[93] References to American history range from the emergence of railroads and automobiles to Western colonialism and its impact on Native American tribes.[59] Scholar Darren Reid interpreted the focus on older American themes as a self-conscious, deeper reflection on the hedonistic, modern Americana of the Beach Boys' earlier songs. He said that, despite Wilson's later claims that the album was about humor and happiness, "the resultant album does not radiate predominately happy mood. [...] Perhaps the smile Wilson refers to is an ironic one [...] Humour, sarcasm, and lonely introspection are the contrasts that hold Smile together."[94]

Some songs followed themes related to God and childhood, namely "Wonderful", "Child Is Father of the Man", and "Surf's Up".[85] Only "Wonderful" referred to God explicitly.[95] Parks supported that his associations with the spiritual aspect of Wilson's work were "inescapable", but professed that he disliked writing lyrics that dealt with religious belief, believing it gave the appearance of "trying to be uppity".[96] In his recollection, "There's a lot of things about belief in Smile, and its very question of belief is what was plaguing Brian at that time. What should we keep from the structure that we had, the hard-wiring that we had with religion? He had religion beat into him, and I did in my own way, too. So there's a lot of thinking about belief."[97]

Asked what words come to mind when listening to Smile in 2011, Wilson replied, "Childhood. Freedom. A rejection of adult rules and adult conformity. Our message was, 'Adults keep out. This is about the spirit of youth.'"[18][98] In another interview that year, he questioned a journalist how they would categorize Smile. They responded with "impressionistic psychedelic folk rock", and said that while most rock seems to be about adulthood, Smile "expresses what it's like to be a kid in an impressionistic way" and "depicts the psychedelic magic of childhood", to which Wilson replied: "I love that. You coin those just right."[99]

Carter summarized that Smile's subject matter engaged with matters related to history, culture, and society while also traversing "complex landscapes of faith: from national allegiance and ideological persuasion to religious belief and spiritual devotion."[100] He argued that "Smile picks up where Pet Sounds left off", expanding the introspective themes of Pet Sounds into "an exploration of the nation's historical, social, ideological, and cultural identity."[101][nb 11] In his view, the lyrics also espouse "an antiestablishment skepticism toward religious institutions", "an interest in alternative belief structures", and "exceptionalist leanings".[102]

Composition and production edit

Modular approach edit

We did things in sections. There might just be a few bars of music, or a verse, or a particular groove, or vamp [...] They would all fit. You could put them one in front of the other, or arrange it in any way you wanted. [...] It was sort of like making films I think.

Carl Wilson, 1973[18]

In the 1960s, it was common for pop music to be recorded in a single take, but the Beach Boys' approach differed.[103] Since 1964, Wilson had performed tape splices on his recordings, usually to allow difficult vocal sections to be performed by the group.[104] By 1966, "Good Vibrations" had established Wilson's compositional approach for Smile. Instead of working on whole songs with "clear large-scale syntactical structures", he limited himself to recording short interchangeable fragments (or "modules"). Through the method of tape splicing, each fragment could then be assembled into a linear sequence, allowing any number of larger structures and divergent moods to be produced at a later time.[18] A similar fragmentary approach is common in film editing, albeit under the term "dangling causes".[105][nb 12]

Parks said that he and Wilson were conscious of musique concrete and that they "were trying to make something of it".[106] Heiser called the album's use of jumpcuts a "striking characteristic" and said that they "must be acknowledged as compositional statements in themselves, giving the music a sonic signature every bit as noticeable as the performances themselves. There was no way this music could be 'real'. Wilson was therefore echoing the techniques of musique concrète and seemed to be breaking the audio 'fourth wall'—if there can said to be such a thing."[18] He interpreted the methodology of using modules as consistent with the album's conceptual thread, "a return to the pre-grammatical, non-linear and analogical (as opposed to logical) thinking of early childhood – they are artefacts of play."[18] Ethnomusicologist David Toop countered that "modular" "suggests discrete components that interlock" and offered "cellular" as a possibly more accurate term.[107]

The material was continuously revised, rewritten, and rearranged on a daily basis. Anderle recalled examples: "The beginning of 'Cabin Essence' becomes the middle of 'Vega-Tables', or the ending becomes the bridge. I would beg Brian not to change a piece of music because it was too fantastic. But when Brian did change it, I admit it was equally beautiful."[41] Some of the songs were fully-composed with obvious verse-chorus structures (including "Heroes and Villains" and "Surf's Up") while other songs were short segments designed to illustrate a mood or a setting.[60] Due to the fragmentary and never-finalized nature of the recordings, it is ambiguous when and where most Smile songs begin and end.[18]

In the mid-1960s, trialing mixes required the physical act of cutting tape reels (with razor blades) and splicing them together. Creating an entire LP that relied on these processes proved too challenging for Wilson.[18] Engineer Mark Linett argued that Wilson's ambitions were implausible to fulfill with pre-digital technology, especially with "the infinite number of possible ways you could assemble this puzzle."[108] His colleague Alan Boyd shared the same view, stating that the tape editing "would have been probably an unbearably arduous, difficult and tedious task".[109]

Orchestrations and arrangements edit

Smile has been described by various commentators as a work of art pop,[110][111] psychedelic rock[112][113] avant-pop,[114][115] progressive pop,[116] experimental rock,[117] folk rock,[99][118] musique concrète,[106][18] and Americana music.[119] At least 50 hours of tape was produced from the sessions and encompassed musical and spoken word to sound effects and role playing. Many of the modules were composed as word paintings and invoked visual concepts or physical entities.[18] According to Toop, during the mid-1960s, Wilson's style was akin to "cartoon music and Disney influence mutating into avant-garde pop".[120] Heiser argues that attempting to summarize the whole of Smile is "a pointless exercise" and that it is preferable to write of "the many musical inhabitants of this complex, nebulous macrocosm."[18] He lists several of these through the following descriptions:

[...] a Renaissance-era vocal motet by Carlo Gesualdo, filled with manneristic, unpredictable chromatic turns (though treated with a typically glissandi-laden Beach Boys approach [...] young men pretending to be animals or performing an "underwater" chant populated by word-beasts such as "swim swim fishy" "underwater current" "jellyfish" "shark" "dolphin" "goldfish" and "eel". [...] a "panoramic" wild-west movie score [...] The Beach Boys faking a group orgasm. [...] a spoken word skit portraying a man trapped inside a microphone. [...] the guttural chanting of cartoon-esque cavemen [...] a group of french horns "talking" and "laughing" with each other [...][18]

The music itself carried on the "harmonic ingenuity" of Pet Sounds,[121] and in the belief of academic Dave Carter, "it makes little point to distinguish between the two albums in terms of their differential impact."[122] With Smile, Wilson's orchestrations emphasized traditional American instruments such as banjo, steel guitar, fiddle, mandolin, harmonica, and tack piano.[123] Other instruments included "precipitate brass like a Tibetan horn", muted (with tape) piano, baritone guitar and upright bass played in a tic-tac style, dobro, bouzouki, and bass harmonica.[107] There was also a greater complexity to Wilson's compositions. Al Jardine said that the music became "more textural, more complex and it had a lot more vocal movement. [...] With ['Good Vibrations'] and other songs on Smile, we began to get into more esoteric kind of chord changes, and mood changes and movement. You'll find Smile full of different movements and vignettes. Each movement had its own texture and required its own session.""[124] As with Pet Sounds, Smile featured a more unique sense of rhythm relative to the band's earlier records.[18]

 
Parks compared Wilson's orchestrations to those by the early 20th-century composer Percy Grainger.

Harpsichords and tack piano (typically played in unison) feature prominently, as well as mallets and "quirky/echoey percussion".[18] Parks said that the "first thing I can remember in the studio" with Wilson was his use of "tuneful percussion, like a piano or a Chinese gong", which reminded Parks of early 20th-century orchestrations by men such as Percy Grainger, particularly Grainger's arrangement of "Country Gardens".[125] Priore noted that a "flair for exotica" can be heard in "Holidays", "Wind Chimes", "Love to Say Dada", and "Child Is Father of the Man".[126] Heiser observed that "playful" and "colorful" moods – which he likens to the music of Sesame Street – are consistent throughout the recordings.[18]

The vocal arrangements, according to Heiser, use "a wide range of pitch centres, antiphonal effects, rhythmic variations, juxtapositions of legato and staccato figures, rounders-like echoes, and vocal effects not usually associated with mid-sixties rock records."[18] Academic Brian Torff commented that Smile contained "choral arranging" and a "rhapsodic Broadway element".[127] Toop wrote that the Smile vocals "willfully regresses into baby talk".[107] Williams suggested that, "for the most part", Smile "uses words the same way it uses strings and keyboards—for their sounds."[90] Freaky Trigger concurred that "the line between the sung word and mere sound become criss-crossed and blurred again and again and again [...] where the word becomes subservient to sound, which is only six or so steps on the road to sound-for-the-sake-of-sound". The journal considers comparisons with the work of Sun Ra and John Cage, and concludes that this was a reconfiguration of doo-wop, a genre that the Beach Boys were rooted in.[86]

Psychedelic music will cover the face of the world and color the whole popular music scene. Anybody happening is psychedelic.

—Brian Wilson quoted in TeenSet, late 1966[125]

Psychedelic musical characteristics distinguished the Beach Boys' mid-1960s work, particularly through the group's invocation of "greater fluidity, elaboration, and formal complexity", "a cultivation of sonic textures", "the introduction of new (combinations of) instruments, multiple keys, and/or floating tonal centers", and the occasional use of "slower, more hypnotic tempos".[69] Guardian critic Alexis Petridis wrote that until the negative effects of LSD surfaced in rock music via Skip Spence's Oar (1969) and Syd Barrett's The Madcap Laughs (1970), "artists tactfully ignored the dark side of the psychedelic experience". He argued that Smile presented such a quality in the form of "alternately frantic and grinding mayhem" ("Fire"), "isolated, small-hours creepiness" ("Wind Chimes"), and "weird, dislocated voices" ("Love to Say Dada").[128]

Contemporary context edit

I'd call it contemporary American music, not rock 'n' roll. Rock 'n' roll is such a worn out phrase. It's just contemporary American.

—Brian Wilson discussing Smile with NME, late 1966[129]

We wanted Smile to be a totally American article of faith. And in fact, it seemed to me the best way to do that [...] was to be counter-countercultural.

—Van Dyke Parks, 2009[130]

Smile drew from what most rock stars of the time considered to be antiquated pop culture touchstones, like doo-wop, barbershop, ragtime, exotica, pre-rock and roll pop, and cowboy films.[128] Some of the music incorporated chanting, forays into Indian and Hawaiian music, jazz, classical tone poems, cartoon sound effects, musique concrète, yodeling,[131] and elements derivative of Sacred Harp, Shaker hymns, Mele, and Native American chants.[107] Music critic Erik Davis wrote of the album's disconnect to contemporary rock music clichés, noting that "Smile had banjos, not sitars".[132][nb 13] Wilson said he deliberately avoided traditional rock instrumentation because he wanted to employ ideas that were more "original" for Smile.[24] Also recorded were renditions of older songs such as "Gee", "I Wanna Be Around", "The Old Master Painter", and "You Are My Sunshine". Priore described this action as Wilson's attempt to expose "pre-'60s songwriting [...] to the psychedelic era."[133]

Among the many "contradictory templates" Toop felt were "buried within Smile's music legacy" were Frank Sinatra, the Lettermen, the Four Freshmen, Martin Denny, Patti Page, Chuck Berry, Spike Jones, Nelson Riddle, Jackie Gleason, Phil Spector, Bob Dylan, the Penguins, and the Mills Brothers.[107] He wrote that collaborations between Miles Davis and Gil Evans "haunt SMiLE tracks like 'Look (Song for Children)' and 'Child Is Father of the Man'", and compared the project's "explorations of acoustic phenomena" to "similar tendencies by Charles Ives, Les Baxter's thematic LPs, and Richard Maxfield's electronic experiments with insect sounds or instruments played underwater".[107] Furthermore, he wrote that the project may be regarded as tone poems "in oblique relationship to Third Stream, that rejected dream of the late 1950s best described in Charles Mingus's term 'jazzical'".[107] In 2004, Wilson stated that Smile was too advanced for him to consider it pop music, and said that he admired and was influenced by Johann Sebastian Bach for his ability to construct a continuum of complex music using simple forms and simple chords.[24]

Potential contents edit

This LP will include "Good Vibrations" and "Heroes And Villains" and ten other tracks [plus] lots of humor—some musical and some spoken. It won't be like a comedy LP—there won't be any spoken tracks as such—but someone might say something in between verses.

—Brian Wilson, November 1966[134]

Tracks listed on Wilson's 1966 note edit

On December 15, 1966, Wilson attempted to ease Capitol's concerns over the album's delay by delivering a handwritten note that contained an unordered, preliminary track listing. Capitol prepared record sleeves that listed these songs on the reverse side with the disclaimer "see label for correct playing order".[135] Preliminary mixes (and in some cases many) were created for several of these tracks.[136]

"Good Vibrations" edit

As Wilson neared the completion of "Good Vibrations", he asked Parks to rewrite the song's lyrics, but Parks declined, as he did not wish to alienate Mike Love.[137][nb 14] The title was written several times on one of the covers prepared by Capitol in order to boost album sales.[136]

"Heroes and Villains" edit

"Heroes and Villains", the first song Wilson wrote with Parks, was envisioned by Wilson as a three-minute musical comedy to surpass "Good Vibrations".[139] He created myriad versions of the track, some of which ranged in length from six to eight minutes.[140] Wilson came up with the title and told Parks that he thought of the Old West when he wrote the melody, which reminded Parks of the Marty Robbins song "El Paso". Parks immediately conceived the opening line: "I've been in this town so long that back in the city I've been taken for lost and gone and unknown for a long, long time."[141]

The success of their collaboration led to them writing more songs with an Old West theme, including "Barnyard" and "I'm in Great Shape".[142] In 1978, Wilson told biographer Byron Preiss that there was intended to be a piece called the "Barnyard Suite", which would have been "four songs in four short pieces, combined together, but we never finished that one. We got into something else."[93]

"I'm in Great Shape" edit

On November 4, 1966, Brian recorded a piano demonstration of "Heroes and Villains" that included "I'm in Great Shape" and "Barnyard" as sections of the song, but on his note from December, "I'm in Great Shape" was listed as a separate track from "Heroes and Villains".[143]

"Wind Chimes" edit

Marilyn said: "We went shopping one day and we brought home some wind chimes. We hung them outside the house and then one day, while Brian was sitting around he sort of watched them out the window and then he wrote the song ['Wind Chimes']. I think that's how it happened. Simple. He does a lot of things that way."[144] In July 1967, the bass line was reworked into "Can't Wait Too Long".[79]

"Wonderful" edit

The title of "Wonderful" derived from a pet name Wilson had for Marilyn.[95] Parks identified the music as "entirely different from anything else. and I thought that it was a place, an opportunity, to begin a love song. [...] Now I thought, once we had gotten 'Heroes And Villains' done, we might have seen a boy/girl song emerge, other than 'Wonderful'. Honestly, I really thought we would do it, but I never found an opportunity to pursue that with the music I was given.[145] Between August and December 1966, Wilson recorded three arrangements of the song, all of which were unfinished.[146]

"Cabin Essence" edit

"Cabin Essence" is about railroads.[148] Biographer Jon Stebbins deemed the song "some of the most haunting, manic, evil-sounding music the Beach Boys ever made" with its waltz chorus replete with "demonic chanting, buzzing cellos, and rail-spike pounding".[149]

"Child Is Father of the Man" edit

"Child Is Father of the Man" features keyboard, trumpet, vocal rounds, and a droning guitar saturated with reverb.[133] According to Parks, the lyric came from Wilson's "fervent desire to re-invent himself as an individual, not as a boy". The title was appropriated from William Wordsworth's poem "My Heart Leaps Up".[150] Parks later said that other lyrics had been written for the song that were never recorded.[26] In 2003, he wrote new lyrics to complete the song.[133]

"Surf's Up" edit

"Surf's Up" is the second song Wilson and Parks started writing together.[151] It was composed as a two-movement piece, most of it in one night while they were high on Wilson's Desbutals.[123] Wilson commented that the song's first chord was a minor seventh, "unlike most of our songs, which open on a major – and from there it just started building and rambling [...] when we finished it, he said, 'Let's call it "Surf's Up"', which is wild because surfing isn't related to the song at all."[96]

Oppenheim declared on his 1967 CBS documentary that "Surf's Up" was "one aspect of new things happening in pop music today. As such, it is a symbol of the change many of these young musicians see in our future."[152] In a self-penned 1969 article, Vosse wrote that "Surf's Up" was to be the intended ending climax of Smile, and that it would have followed a section described as a "choral amen sort of thing."[73]

"Do You Like Worms?" edit

"Do You Like Worms?" is about the recolonization of the American continent. None of the lyrics mention worms. Parks later said that he did not know where the title came from and attributed it to possibly an engineer, Wilson, or Mike Love.[155] The "bicycle rider" mentioned in the lyric is a reference to "Bicycle Rider Back" playing cards printed by the United States Playing Card Company during the 19th century. Parks commented, "A lot of people misinterpreted that, but that's OK; it's OK not to be told what to think, if you're an audience."[93] In January 1967, the song's keyboard break melody was rerecorded as the chorus of "Heroes and Villains".[156] In 2004, the song was retitled "Roll Plymouth Rock".[157]

"Vega-Tables" edit

"Vega-Tables", according to Wilson, came from his desire "to turn people on to vegetables, good natural food, organic food. Health is an important element in spiritual enlightenment. But I do not want to be pompous about it, so we will engage in a satirical approach."[158] It was the last Parks co-write that was recorded for the album.[159] A module called "Do a Lot" or "Sleep a Lot" was considered for inclusion in "Heroes and Villains". In 1967, the section spun off into a piece called "Mama Says".[18]

"The Old Master Painter" edit

Also known as "My Only Sunshine", the track is a medley of the standards "The Old Master Painter" and "You Are My Sunshine".[158] Dennis Wilson sang the lead on "You Are My Sunshine".[129] In 2005, Wilson wrote that the rendition of "The Old Master Painter" was brief because he could not remember the full song.[160] In January 1967, the track's ending was repurposed as the ending of "Heroes and Villains", minus the "when skies are gray" vocals.[161]

"The Elements" edit

"The Elements" was a conceptualized four-part movement that encompassed the four classical elements: Air, Fire, Earth, and Water.[162] According to Anderle, Wilson "was really into the elements", so much so that he "ran up to Big Sur for a week, just 'cause he wanted to get into that, up to the mountains, into the snow, down to the beach, out to the pool, out at night, running around, to water fountains, to a lot of water, the sky, the whole thing was this fantastic amount of awareness of his surroundings. So the obvious thing was to do something that would cover the physical surroundings."[163] To assist with the recording of this piece, Wilson instructed others to travel around with a Nagra tape recorder and record the different variations of water sounds that they could find. Vosse recalled, "I'd come by to see him every day, and he'd listen to my tapes and talk about them. I was just fascinated that he would hear things every once in a while and his ears would prick up and he'd go back and listen again. And I had no idea what he was listening for!"[164]

 
Artist's rendering of the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, an event which "Fire" was based on

"The Elements – Part 1" (also known as "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow" and commonly referred to as "Fire").[162] was recorded under unusual conditions. Wilson instructed a friend to purchase several dozen fire helmets at a local toy store so that everybody in the studio could don them during its recording. Wilson also had the studio's janitor bring in a bucket with burning wood so that the studio would be filled with the smell of smoke.[165] He subsequently recorded the crackling noises made by the burning wood and mixed them into the track.[162]

Anderle recalled that Wilson told the group "what fire was going to be, and what water was going to be; we had some idea of air. That was where it stopped. None of us had any ideas as to how it was going to tie together, except that it appeared to us to be an opera."[163] Parks recalled that an elemental concept did not come up until later in the project.[166] One of the illustrations created for the album included "Vega-Tables" as part of "The Elements", but Wilson's note listed "The Elements" and "Vega-Tables" (as well as "Wind Chimes") separately.[167] Wilson told Preiss that "Air" was an instrumental piano piece that was never finished.[168]

Non-listed tracks edit

"Prayer" edit

"Prayer" is a wordless hymn that was intended to begin the album.[169] Lambert describes the piece as "every technique of chromatic harmony [Wilson] had ever heard or imagined."[170] On the session tape, Wilson announces, "This is intro to the album, take one." Jardine is heard remarking to Wilson that the piece could be considered its own track, but Wilson rejects the suggestion.[171] This information makes "Prayer" the only track that is known to have had a definitive placement on the album.[136]

"I Ran" edit

"I Ran" (also known as "Look" and originally labelled "Untitled Song #1") is a song that featured upright bass, vibraphones, keyboard, French horn, guitars, organs, trombone and woodwind.[172] The Beach Boys recorded vocals for the track on October 3, 1966, but the tape from that session was lost.[156] In 2003, the piece was retitled "Song for Children" and given new lyrics by Parks.[133]

"He Gives Speeches" edit

"He Gives Speeches" was recorded on September 1, 1966, at the second-to-last session for "Good Vibrations". In July 1967, the composition was reworked as the first section of "She's Goin' Bald".[173]

"Holidays" edit

"Holidays" (mislabeled on bootlegs as "Tones" or "Tune X"[174]) is an exotica instrumental that ends with a marimba melody later recycled for the 1967 version of "Wind Chimes".[175] In 2003, the piece was given new lyrics and retitled "On a Holiday".[176]

"I Wanna Be Around" edit

"I Wanna Be Around" is a rendition of the Sadie Vimmerstedt and Johnny Mercer pop standard. It was recorded the day after the "Fire" session, along with a piece titled "Friday Night", which was intended to segue from "I Wanna Be Around".[162] Halfway through the session, Wilson conceived the idea to overdub the sounds of construction noises onto the track. He then handed out various tools to his musicians for them to create the sounds of sawing, wood cutting, hammering, and drilling. In 1968, these noises (also known as "Workshop", "Woodshop", and "The Woodshop Song") were used on the fade-out of the album version of "Do It Again".[177] In 2005, Wilson wrote that the purpose of recording "I Wanna Be Around" was "to show how I could be funny and serious at the same time".[160] Priore claimed that Wilson later told collaborator Andy Paley that "I Wanna Be Around" and "Workshop" were meant to function as a "rebuilding after the fire".[167]

"You're Welcome" edit

"You're Welcome" is a vocal chant with heavy reverb that was later issued as the B-side of the 1967 "Heroes and Villains" single.[178]

"Love to Say Dada" edit

"Love to Say Dada" (or "All Day") is a piece that later evolved into "Cool, Cool Water". In 2003, "Love to Say Dada" was given new lyrics by Parks and retitled "In Blue Hawaii".[18]

Audio vérité and other recordings edit

Brian was consumed with humor at the time and the importance of humor. He was fascinated with the idea of getting humor onto a disc and how to get that disc out to the people.

—David Anderle[53]

Wilson held sessions that were dedicated to capturing "humorous" situations.[156] According to Carlin, Wilson devoted "hours [to] recording himself and friends while they chanted, played games, had pretend arguments, or just shot the breeze. It was just like the old days with his Wollensak recorder, except much, much weirder."[179] The surviving tapes include:

  • Lifeboat reel (recorded October 18, 1966)
    24-minutes long and features Wilson, Parks, Anderle, Vosse, Wilson's sister-in-law Diane Rovell, a woman named Dawn, and Siegel. Throughout the tape, Siegel encourages others to play the party game Lifeboat, where players act as shipwreck survivors who have to decide who among them will be tossed overboard in order to save the others.[156] It later turns into barbed exchanges between the participants. At one point, someone asks Wilson, "What are we doing here?"[171] As the mood worsens, Wilson is heard saying, "I feel so depressed. Really, seriously. I keep sinking. I'm too down to smile."[171]
  • Second party reel (recorded November 4, 1966)
    Features Wilson, Parks, Hutton, Vosse, and a man named Bob.[180] The group pretend to order treats from a psychedelic ice cream van that plays a music box version of "Good Vibrations" (played by Wilson at a piano).[179] Wilson then leads a comedy routine about falling into a piano, and then into a microphone. The group also plays a rhythm on bongos while chanting "Where's my beets and carrots" and "I've got a big bag of vegetables".[180] Parks later said, "I sensed all that was destructive, so I withdrew from those related social encounters."[179]
  • "Vegetables Arguments" (recorded November 16, 1966)
    Features mock disagreements between Vosse and session drummer Hal Blaine, who plays a man that is irate at Vosse for trespassing into his garden. It later turns into a serious conversation between Blaine, Vosse, and Wilson about the planetary alignments. Wilson completes the session by having his own mock disagreement with Blaine. Badman writes, "At one point, it is believed that these recordings will somehow figure into the 'Vegetables' track itself."[181][nb 15]

In early 1967, Brian's brothers Carl and Dennis went into the studio to record pieces that they had written individually. Dennis' "I Don't Know" was recorded on January 12, and Carl's "Tune X" (later "Tones") followed on March 3 and 31.[182] Badman speculated the recordings may have been "part of a conscious effort to make [Smile] more of a group effort than effective a Brian solo project, or may simply be for Carl and Dennis to test their production mettle."[183]

Brian also recorded novelty songs with photographer Jasper Daily: "Teeter Totter Love", "Crack the Whip", and "When I Get Mad I Just Play My Drums".[184] Love characterized "Teeter Totter Love" as "Simple but poignant."[185] The AFM contracts for these tracks list "Brother Records" under "Employer's Name".[186] Gaines wrote that these recordings were to have fulfilled Wilson's separate "humor album" concept. The collection was offered to A&M Records but rejected.[53] Vosse said that when Wilson pitched "Crack the Whip" to Chuck Kaye, the head of A&M, "You could see the panic on [Kaye's] face when he heard how awful it was. This look of, 'What the fuck do I do?'"[187]

Artwork and packaging edit

Capitol gave Smile the catalog number DT2580. At least two versions of the album jacket were designed, with minor differences.[188] It was to have included cover artwork designed by graphic artist Frank Holmes, a friend of Parks, as well as a booklet containing several pen-and-ink drawings, also by Holmes.[79] He met with Wilson and Parks circa June 1966 and was given lyric sheets of their songs, for which he based his drawings on. By Holmes' recollection, his contributions were finished by October.[119] The pieces were titled:

  • "My Vega-tables" / "The Elements" ("Vega-Tables")
  • "Do You Like Worms"
  • "Two-step to lamps light" / "Surf's Up"
  • "Diamond necklace play the pawn" ("Surf's Up")
  • "Lost and found you still remain there" ("Cabinessence")
  • "The rain of bullets eventually brought her down" ("Heroes and Villains")
  • "Uncover the cornfield" / "Home on the Range" ("Cabinessence")[183]

Holmes based the cover on an abandoned jewelry store near his home in Pasadena.[189] He recalled, "I thought that was a good image because of the way, any time you go into a store, you're entering something [...] This was something that would be pulling you into the world of Smile–the Smile Shoppe–and it had these little smiles all around."[119] Depicted inside the shop is "a husband and wife—a kind of early-Americana, old-style, 19th-century kind of image."[119] Wilson approved the cover and took it to Capitol.[119] Parks later said that the illustrations heavily informed the making of Smile and considered them to be the album's "third equation". He felt that he and Wilson would not have continued the project the way they did without thinking of it in cartoon terms.[190]

According to Vosse, the smile shop derived from Wilson's humor concept. He said that "everybody who knew anything about graphics, and about art, thought that the cover was not terribly well done [...] but Brian knew better; he was right. It was exactly what he wanted, precisely what he wanted."[74] Parks recalled: "Frank was supposed to do something 'light-hearted', but there were no specific instructions and he came up with the perfect video vessel for realizing what we were doing, something I thought was an integral part of the situation. I think that still stands; I think of Smile in visual terms.[190]

 
The Smile logo that was pictured on the original cover art

In September, Capitol began production on a lavish gatefold cover with a 12-page booklet containing featuring color photographs of the group (ultimately selected from a November 7 photoshoot in Boston conducted by Guy Webster as well as Holmes' illustrations).[79] In early 1967, they added the repeated written instances of "Good Vibrations" on the album cover, which were not featured on Holmes' original design.[135] The back cover featured a monochrome photograph depiction of the group, without Brian, framed by astrological symbols.[183][188] Capitol produced 466,000 copies of the record sleeve and 419,200 copies of the accompanying booklet.[183] They were stored in a warehouse in Pennsylvania until the 1990s.[191]

Original recording sessions and collapse edit

The gap between conception and realization was too great, and nothing satisfied Brian by the time he'd worked it out and gotten it on tape. And eventually the moment passed [...] like many other fine artists before him, Brian was unable to realize his original concept of Smile when he wanted to, and after a while he no longer wanted to. He no longer had the same vision.

—Paul Williams, writing in the September/October 1967 issue of Crawdaddy![192]

Smile was shelved due to corporate pressures, technical problems, internal power struggles, legal stalling, and Wilson's deteriorating mental health.[193] After investing several months into the project, he concluded that Smile was too esoteric for the public and decided to record simpler music instead.[194][195] Carl stated that Brian felt he could not complete the album and was intensely afraid of an unfavorable public response.[196] In Brian's own words, he and his band felt "we were too selfishly artistic and weren't thinking about the public enough."[197]

Criticism from Wilson's bandmates (1966–1967) edit

Writers frequently theorize that the album was cancelled because Wilson's bandmates were unable to appreciate the music. However, Stebbins says that the conclusions those writers draw from this perspective are "overly simplistic and mostly wrong" with not enough consideration for Wilson's psychological decline.[198] Derek Taylor remembered that although Brian exhibited "scary" mood swings, his bandmates were generally supportive of him.[199] Taylor also remembered Wilson being terribly insecure and highly sensitive to criticism, having "never [left me] in peace" whenever he would be asked by Wilson to offer music opinions.[200]

Carl, Dennis, and Jardine contributed instrumentally to some of the tracking sessions, and Carl participated in the sessions more than anyone else in the band with the exception of Brian,[198] although Stebbins notes, "Even Carl was unhappy with the project".[201] Having attended some of the sessions circa January 1967, journalist Tracy Thomas reported in the NME that Brian's "dedication to perfection does not always endear him to his fellow Beach Boys, nor their wives, nor their next door neighbours, with whom they were to have dinner [...] But when the finished product is 'Good Vibrations' or Pet Sounds or Smile they hold back their complaints."[202]

 
Mike Love (pictured 1966) was often blamed for the album's collapse, a characterization that he and some commentators have disputed.

It is often suggested that Mike Love, in particular, was responsible for the project's collapse. Love dismissed such claims as hyperbole and said that his vocal opposition to Wilson's drug suppliers was what spurred the accusation that he, as well as other members of the band and Wilson's family, sabotaged the project.[203] Wilson's statements on the matter have been inconsistent; he has both supported and denied whether his confidence in the project had been undermined by Love.[204]

Parks has sometimes stated that he was dismissed from the project at Love's behest.[205] In a 1974 interview, he elaborated that he had both "resigned" and "was fired" because Love and "the least known members" had decided "that I had written some words that were indecipherable and unnecessary."[206] Two years later, when he was interviewed for the 1976 television special The Beach Boys: It's OK!, he indicated that he himself had suggested to Love that they discard his lyrics after Love had inquired about a particular line, "and so they did".[207] In a 2013 interview, he said that he "walked away from the job" to escape Wilson's "buffoonery" and Love's "jealousy".[208]

In journalist Clinton Heylin's estimation, other reports suggest that it is more likely that Wilson himself became dissatisfied with Parks' lyrics, although "Love certainly happily fed" Wilson's change of opinion.[205] Commenting on the accusation that he contributed to the project's collapse by voicing his criticisms to Wilson, Love acknowledged that Wilson, under the influence of psychoactive drugs, "could have become extra-, ultrasensitive to attitudes, you know, body language, or whatever", but disputed the insinuation that he should "be held responsible" and "take a beating" for his cousin's drug-induced paranoia and debilitated mental condition,[204] a subject that was much less understood in that era.[209]

Drug use, Wilson's mental state and perfectionism (1966–1967) edit

[Brian would go] after take after – a monotony of repeated takes – to get a performance that fell by the wayside because of maybe one eighth note [...] He was his own worst critic, and everybody suffered in the process.

—Van Dyke Parks[210]

One of the major issues that led to project's collapse was Wilson's uncompromising perfectionism, which may have been exacerbated by his drug use at the time.[210] In one Smile session tape, a horn player can be heard sarcastically remarking of the producer's repeated calls for retakes, "Perfect – just one more".[211] At the end of another session, which had lasted until dawn, an engineer asked Wilson's wife if she thought he would be satisfied with a certain take, to which she responded, "No, when he gets home he won't be satisfied. He's never satisfied."[77][212]

Wilson was later declared to have bipolar and schizoaffective disorders, although most of the members in his coterie did not feel that he showed signs of mental illness during the early Smile sessions.[213] In Michael Vosse's recollection, Wilson was no more eccentric than "a lot of people in showbiz" and "all those things that people looked back upon later as quite alarming" had not originally appeared to be of significant concern.[214] Anderle supported, "Brian wasn't the only [strange] one. We were all strange, doing strange things."[215] Taylor remembered struggling with Wilson's "temporary whims".[216]

To prepare for the album's writing and recording, Wilson had purchased about two thousand dollars' worth of marijuana and hashish (equivalent to $18,000 in 2022).[52] He erected a $30,000 ($271,000) hotboxing tent in what was formerly his dining room, located a sandbox under the grand piano in his den, and, after developing a fixation with health and fitness, replaced his living room furniture with gym mats.[217][nb 16] In reference to the tent, Vosse said, "we were all excited about it, [and] anybody who thinks this was like Brian being wacko and everybody [else disapproving] is wrong."[218] David Oppenheim, who briefly visited Wilson's home in late 1966, later described the scene as "a strange, insulated household, insulated from the world by money [...] A playpen of irresponsible people."[215] The sandbox remained in Wilson's home until April 1967.[219]

Carl recalled: "To get that album out, someone would have needed willingness and perseverance to corral all of us. Everybody was so loaded on pot and hash all of the time that it's no wonder the project didn't get done."[196] Dennis echoed that the group became "very paranoid about the possibility of losing our public. [...] Drugs played a great role in our evolution but as a result we were frightened that people would no longer understand us, musically."[220] Brian told an interviewer in 1976: "We were too fucking high, you know, to complete the stuff. We were stoned! You know, stoned on hash 'n' shit!"[221][40] The only sober participant, Al Jardine, likened the experience to "being trapped in an insane asylum", referring to such incidents as a "Heroes and Villains" session where Brian instructed his bandmates to crawl around the studio space and make pig-snorting noises.[222]

Wilson's use of LSD was negligible compared to his use of Desbutal.[223] Parks said that he never witnessed Wilson using psychedelics,[224] and, in a 2004 interview, stated that "Brian was strongly against acid at that time."[82] He said that he had not been interested in using psychedelics himself, nor "anything that would incapacitate" Wilson.[24] Anderle also said he never saw Wilson taking psychedelics.[83] Vosse said that Wilson "may have taken LSD once" at the time.[189] Siegel attributed Wilson's paranoid delusions, odd behavior, and loss of artistic confidence to his abuse of Desbutal:

By that point, Brian was suffering from [...] classic amphetamine psychosis. He was taking a lot of amphetamines, in the form of Desbutal, which is methedrine and some barbiturate mixed together. That's a combination that's gonna fuck you up – if you take enough of it, you will feel like the walls are looking at you! There were a number of parts to his paranoia – some of [which] were valid – [...] [but] one of the effects of the amphetamine is the God-like feeling, combined with the fear. The things that you do, you see as having so much potency, which usually is your own delusion. [...] The problem is when you crash, [just] how ugly and stupid and trivial it all looks – all you can see are the mistakes.[223]

Vosse said that, despite the large amount of marijuana that was available, Wilson "wasn't stoned all the time [...] really, Brian had a job to do, and he was a hard workin' guy."[189] He referred to Brian's drug use as "the biggest red herring in [his] story I've heard so far", and rebuked the accusation that Brian was "some kind of nut".[218] Danny Hutton disputed that the drugs "got in the way at all" and believed that Brian's use of certain substances had helped him "work longer hours."[218] Parks said: "Don't let the marijuana confuse the issue here. If you look at the amount of work that was done in the amount of time it took to almost finish it, it's amazing. A very athletic situation, very focused."[218]

Early sessions and promotion (May–December 1966) edit

 
Most of the Smile sessions were conducted at Western Studio on Sunset Boulevard (pictured 2019)

On May 11, 1966, Wilson recorded an instrumental take of "Heroes and Villains" at Gold Star Studios. The session was conducted as an experiment and was not a full-fledged recording.[16] On August 3, Wilson returned to the studio for the tracking of "Wind Chimes", marking the unofficial start of the album's sessions.[137][nb 17] From then, over 80 sessions were conducted for the album, spread out over the next ten months.[18] "Good Vibrations" was completed on September 21.[79] By then, Dumb Angel had been renamed to Smile.[225]

 
The Beach Boys accepting a record sales certification at Capitol, late 1966.

Smile was one of the most-discussed albums in the rock press[136] and was first projected for a December 1966 release date.[177] Derek Taylor continued to write articles in the music press, sometimes anonymously, in an effort to further speculation about the album.[226] "Good Vibrations" was released as a single and became the group's third US number-one hit, reaching the top of the Billboard Hot 100 in December, as well as their first number one in Britain.[227] Wilson told Melody Maker that Smile would "be as much an improvement over [Pet] Sounds as that was over Summer Days".[228] Dennis told Hit Parader: "In my opinion, it makes Pet Sounds stink. That's how good it is."[229][230] At some point, Wilson, alongside Michael Vosse, made an appearance on The Lloyd Thaxton Show, where he spoke about the benefits of eating vegetables.[42]

In December, Capitol ran ads for the album In Billboard that read: "Good Vibrations. Number One in England. Coming soon with the 'Good Vibrations' sound. Smile. The Beach Boys."[229] This was followed with a color ad in TeenSet that exclaimed "Look! Listen! Vibrate! SMILE!"[229] The ad promised the inclusion of "Good Vibrations" as well as "other new and fantastic Beach Boys songs [...] and [...] an exciting full-color sketch-book look inside the world of Brian Wilson!"[231] Cardboard displays of the album's cover artwork were displayed in record stores, and Capitol circulated a promotional ad for employees at its label, which used "Good Vibrations" as the backdrop for a voice-over saying: "With a happy album cover, the really happy sounds inside, and a happy in-store display piece, you can't miss! We're sure to sell a million units [...] in January!"[229]

The Beach Boys' album Smile and single "Heroes And Villains" will make them the greatest group in the world. We predict they'll take over where The Beatles left off.

Hit Parader, December 1966[119]

In the UK, one headline proclaimed that the Beach Boys' British distributor EMI Records were giving the band the "biggest campaign since the Beatles".[232] On December 10, NME published a reader's poll that placed Wilson as the fourth-ranked "World Music Personality"—about 1,000 votes ahead of Bob Dylan and 500 behind John Lennon.[233] In addition, the Beach Boys were voted the top band in the world, ahead of the Beatles, the Walker Brothers, the Rolling Stones, and the Four Tops.[234][nb 18] On December 17, KRLA Beat published a nonsense article by Wilson, titled "Vibrations – Brian Wilson Style", that contained many private jokes and references.[119][nb 19]

A Los Angeles Times West Magazine piece by Tom Nolan noted Wilson as "the seeming leader of a potentially-revolutionary movement in pop music".[78] Biographer David Leaf wrote that although the success of "Good Vibrations" "bought Brian some time [and] shut up everybody who said that Brian's new ways wouldn't sell [...] his inability to quickly follow up [the single was what] became a snowballing problem."[237] Sanchez writes that Wilson was "poised to take his place next to the Beatles and Bob Dylan on the board of pop music luminaries", but as time passed, the hype for Smile went from "expectation" to "doubt" and "bemusement".[238]

First signs of issues and resistance (November–December 1966) edit

[Murry Wilson had told] me what a horrible mistake it had been for Brian to put out "Good Vibrations" – because, he said, Brian's going to lose his whole audience [...] So that became the big argument: Are we gonna lose our image or are we gonna start a new one ...

—Michael Vosse, 1969[73]

Wilson started having increasing doubts about the project during the latter months of 1966.[162][239] From October 25 to November 14, Wilson's bandmates embarked on a tour of Europe (which included the group's first dates in the UK), followed by their fourth annual US Thanksgiving tour from November 16 to 24.[240] Vosse later wrote that Smile "was a totally conceived entity" when the group was away on their British tour, but upon their return, the project "started going nuts".[73] In Gaines' description, Wilson's bandmates "knew nothing of Brian's strange behavior" and were "infuriated" when they returned to California; to them, Anderle now appeared as the leader of "a whole group of strangers [that] had infiltrated and taken over the Beach Boys", and which were encouraging Wilson's eccentricities.[241] Anderle commented, "I stand guilty on those counts [...] I was an interloper and I was definitely fueling his creativity. No holds barred. No rules."[241][242]

Wilson's friends, family, and colleagues often date the project's unraveling to around the time he recorded "Fire" on November 28.[162] Parks did not attend the session and later said that he had avoided it "like the plague" due to what he had perceived as "regressive behavior" from Wilson.[243] Within a few days of the "Fire" session, a building across the street from the studio burned down. Wilson was frightened that the music may have caused the fire and decided to discard the track. He later said that his use of marijuana and hashish led him to believe that he was creating witchcraft music.[162]

Tensions during the recording sessions emerged around this time, marking a contrast from the joyous atmosphere that began the project.[244] Anderle remembered that the debacle with "The Elements" coincided with what he felt was one of the greatest factors in the project's demise: resistance Wilson began to encounter in the studio – namely with "engineers", "getting studio time", and "giv[ing] parts to one of the fellas or to a group of the fellas". He said that Wilson "would go through a tremendous paranoia before he would get into the studio, knowing he was going to have to face an argument."[245]

"Don't fuck with the formula" edit

"Don't fuck with the formula" is a quote that is often attributed to Love,[246] although Love denied saying those specific words and later argued that the Beach Boys "have no formula."[247] The remark originates from a 1971 Rolling Stone magazine article, "The Beach Boys: A California Saga", written by Nolan.[248] Unusual for rock journalism of the era, Nolan's article devoted minimal attention to the group's music, and instead focused on the band's internal dynamics and history, especially the events surrounding the Smile sessions.[249] The relevant text is as follows:

Mike Love was the tough one for David [Anderle]. Mike really befriended David: He wanted his aid in going one direction while David was trying to take it the opposite way. Mike kept saying, "You're so good, you know so much, you're so realistic, you can do all this for us—why not do it this way," and David would say, "Because Brian wants it that way." "Gotta be this way." David really holds Mike Love responsible for the collapse. Mike wanted the bread, "and don't fuck with the formula."[52]

In a prior interview from 1968, Anderle said that Wilson's bandmates were first concerned about losing "what the Beach Boys are" by going too "far out" beyond a "simple dumb thing", and had "wanted to stay pretty much within the form of what the Beach Boys had created — really hard [...] whatever that is, California rock or whatever."[250] By Vosse's account, while tensions had developed during the group vocal sessions, "older members of the Wilson family did everything possible to destroy the relationship between Brian and Van Dyke, Brian and David Anderle, and Brian and me. [...] out of suspicion [...] that the Beach Boys would dissolve. [...] and they didn't like our appearances."[73]

Love addressed these accusations in a 1993 interview by stating that he had been deeply concerned about Wilson's treatment of "himself", "others", and "the reputation of the band", as well as the potential destruction of "our livelihoods".[251] In a 2015 interview, he indicated that he did not have an issue with "crazy stupid sounds", nor with accommodating Wilson's odd requests, but had still desired "to make a commercially successful pop record, so I might have complained about some of the lyrics on Smile".[204] According to Carl, "I know there's been a lot written, and maybe said about Michael not liking the Smile music. I think his main problem was [that] the lyrics were not relatable. They were so artistic, and to him, they were really airy-fairy and too abstract. Personally, I loved it."[41][nb 20]

Over the ensuing decades, "don't fuck with the formula" has been repeated in myriad books, articles, websites, and blogs.[248][nb 21] In Leaf's 1978 biography The Beach Boys and the California Myth, Anderle is quoted saying that the line had been "taken slightly out of context", and clarified that Love had actually agreed with Anderle on "a business level. [...] Artistically, it was another matter."[242] In a 1998 deposition related to the memoir Wouldn't It Be Nice: My Own Story, Wilson testified that Love had never spoken the line to him.[254]

Capitol lawsuit and Parks' departure (December 1966 – March 1967) edit

Vosse believed that "as schisms developed within the Beach Boys", Parks had become the "most convenient" scapegoat once the disapproving camp found that the songwriters "would fight every once in awhile [and] have arguments."[73] In Parks' recollection, "the whole house of cards began tumbling down" when he was invited to the studio by Wilson to settle a dispute from Love over the "Cabinessence" lyric "over and over the crow cries uncover the cornfield".[255] Love did not understand the lyrics and thought that the song contained possible references to drug culture, something that he did not wish to be associated with, and took to characterizing Parks' contributions as "acid alliteration".[256] Parks did not offer him an explanation for the lyrics, and he sang the line despite his reservations.[257] Reflecting on their exchange, Love said that he was not necessarily "against" the lyrics, and that Parks had not appeared to be insulted by his questioning.[258] Jardine said that Love would ask Parks on multiple occasions, "What does that [lyric] mean?' And he would go, 'I don't know, I was high.' [laughs] Mike would go, 'That's disgusting. That doesn't make any sense.' [laughs]"[222][nb 22]

Brian was starting meet a fantastic amount of resistance on all fronts. Like, very slowly everything started to collapse about him. The scene with Van Dyke. [...] So he abandoned the studio. Then [...] He got his head into the business aspects of Brother Records. So that kept him out of [recording]. [...] [He had] an incredible amount of excuses not to cut.

—David Anderle, 1968[245]

On December 15, Wilson informed Capitol A&R director Karl Engemann that the album and its lead single "Heroes and Villains" would probably be delivered "some time prior to January 15".[135] In response, Capitol delayed the release date of Smile and "Heroes and Villains" to March 1967.[135] Wilson had also begun to suspect that Capitol was withholding payments from the band and instructed Grillo to conduct an audit of the label's financial records. Discrepancies were soon found.[177] Possibly due to Capitol's insistence on a ready single, Wilson returned to work on "Heroes and Villains" on December 19, 1966, after which he halted work on the album's other tracks until April 1967.[260]

In January, Brian missed his deadline and began working less on the album, Carl received a draft notice from the US Army,[183] "Good Vibrations" began falling off the top 20 chart positions after spending seven weeks in the top 10,[261] and Parks was offered a solo artist deal from Warner Bros.[183] Vosse said that Parks eventually signed the contract, "And the day he signed he put his head back into his own music again. And was less and less available to Brian. And Brian was less and less sure of what he was doing with the album."[73]

On February 28, the band launched a lawsuit against Capitol that sought neglected royalty payments in the amount of $250,000 (equivalent to $2.24 million in 2022). Within the lawsuit, there was also an attempt to terminate their record contract prior to its November 1969 expiry.[262] Following the suit, Wilson announced that the album's lead single would be "Vega-Tables", a song that he had yet to start recording.[263]

Parks was strongly opposed to issuing "Vega-Tables" as the album's lead single, as he had considered the song to be one of their weaker efforts.[264] After February, by Anderle's account, tensions between Parks and Wilson flared as the songwriters "started clashing" because Wilson thought Parks' "lyric was too sophisticated, and in some areas Brian's music was not sophisticated enough [for Van Dyke]."[163] Vosse wrote, "Van Dyke would get really mad because he hated working in a subservient position where there was someone that could say no; and Brian always maintained that. And every once in a while, he would say no just to let Van Dyke know he could say no: and that's what really made Van Dyke mad."[73] Jules Siegel supported that Parks was "tired of being constantly dominated by Brian."[265][266]

On March 2, after a session for "Heroes and Villains", Wilson and Parks ran into disagreements, possibly over lyrics, and temporarily dissolved their partnership. This event is sometimes cited as marking the conclusion of the Smile "era".[267][nb 23] Parks himself stated that he did not wish to keep involving himself with what he felt were family feuds unrelated to him[269] and thought that Smile could have been finished without his continued participation.[270] Wilson depended on Parks whenever issues came up in the studio, and when Parks left, the end result was that Wilson lost track of how the album's fragmented music should be assembled.[271] Another dilemma, according to Anderle, was the lyrics, since Wilson now had "to finish some of the lyrics himself. Well, how was he gonna put his lyrics in with the lyrics already started by Van Dyke? So he stopped recording for a while."[272]

Wilson's move to Bel-Air and disintegrated circle (Late 1966 – April 1967) edit

 
At one point, Wilson thought that he was being targeted in a Jewish conspiracy led by record producer Phil Spector[273]

Wilson's paranoid delusions had intensified throughout the winter,[274] by which time his progressively erratic behavior had started to alarm his associates.[275] One of the well-known stories involves a portrait of Wilson that Anderle had been painting in secret for several months. When he showed the painting to Wilson, Wilson believed that the portrait had literally captured his soul.[276] Anderle later said that he felt his relationship with Wilson was never the same afterward.[52] On another occasion, after attending a theatrical screening for the film Seconds, Wilson was convinced that it had coded messages about his life planted by Phil Spector and director John Frankenheimer. According to Gaines, Wilson suggested to his colleagues that Spector and Frankenheimer were working together as part of a Jewish conspiracy to "destroy Brian Wilson [...] Anderle, himself a Jew, was so insulted he couldn't speak. [...] It took him several days to forgive Brian."[273] Taylor said that Wilson later assigned "people [to follow] Spector. Then Murry was having Brian tailed and so Brian got someone to tail Murry and it just went on and on. All of it complete insanity."[219]

By that time [...] well it was just all hell breaking loose. It was tapes being lost, ideas being junked – Brian thinking, "I'm no good," then, "I'm too good" – then, "I can't sing!" I can't get those voices anymore. There was even a time back then when there hardly seemed to be a Beach Boys at all.

—Derek Taylor, 1975[219]

In Wilson's own words, he had become "fucked up" and "jealous" of Spector and the Beatles,[277] and he said that when he started Smile, he had been "trying to beat" the Beatles.[278] Taylor commented that Wilson was preoccupied with "a mad possessive battle" against the Rolling Stones and "particularly" the Beatles, and that he "didn't want me to like any other artist but himself."[216][nb 24] Throughout early 1967, the music industry and pop fans were aware that the Beatles were working on a significant new work as their follow-up to Revolver, with the band having been ensconced in their London studios since the previous November.[281] According to historian Darren Reid: "In Wilson's mind, the first album to market [in 1967] would be the one to claim victory, it would be the record which would set the standard against which all other albums released after that time would have to be judged."[94]

A popular rumor is that Wilson was deeply affected by his first exposure to the Beatles' February 1967 single "Strawberry Fields Forever".[282] He heard the song while driving with Michael Vosse under the influence of Seconal (a sedating drug). Vosse recalled that as Wilson pulled over to listen, "He just shook his head and said, 'They did it already—what I wanted to do with Smile. Maybe it's too late.' I started laughing my head off, and he started laughing his head off."[218][283] He tempered his statement by saying that he "never gave much import" to Wilson's remark.[218] Responding to a fan's question on his website in 2014, Wilson denied that hearing the song had "weakened" him.[282]

While litigation was underway, the Smile tapes were temporarily moved to Sound Recorders, a studio belonging to engineer Armin Steiner,[284] and Anderle met with many record companies, but failed to secure a distributor for Brother Records.[285] In March, Wilson cancelled a session – because he decided that the "vibrations" were too hostile – at a cost of $3,000 (equivalent to $26,000 in 2022). Two other dates were also cancelled.[286] On March 18, KMEM in San Bernardino conducted a radio survey that reported that Wilson was busy preparing "Heroes and Villains" and Smile, "and he's informed the Capitol bosses that he doesn't intend to 'hold back' on these projects."[287] On March 30, KFXM reported that the continued litigation had held up the release of the new single.[288] The next day, Parks briefly returned to the project, making an appearance at a session date.[289]

In April, while staying with Taylor in Los Angeles, Paul McCartney visited a "Vega-Tables" session, after which he previewed an upcoming Beatles song for Wilson: "She's Leaving Home".[206] Around this time, Wilson became aware of rumors alleging that Taylor had possibly played some of the Smile tapes for the Beatles. His attitude changed "completely", according to Parks, as Wilson felt "raped" and began "question[ing] the loyalties of the people who were working for him".[290][nb 25]

In mid-1967, Wilson and his wife put their Beverly Hills home up for sale and took residence at a newly-purchased mansion in Bel Air.[286][nb 26] He also set to work on constructing a personal home studio.[286] Most of the coterie, including Parks and Siegel, disassociated themselves or were exiled from Wilson's social group by April.[275] Siegel was told by Vosse that he was banished from Wilson's social circle because his girlfriend was suspected by Wilson to have been disrupting his work through ESP.[229] According to Siegel, "Wilson didn't trust [anyone] anymore, [but] with some of them he had good reason."[292] Vosse was dismissed in March, as Wilson's bandmates resented the fact that they had been paying the salary of an aide who worked solely for Wilson.[276]

Semi-hiatus (April–May 1967) edit

Parks' last recorded appearance on the album's sessions was for a "Vega-Tables" date on April 14, after which Wilson took a four-week break from the studio.[289] Anderle said that, at the time, he felt that "the central thing [that destroyed Smile] was Van Dyke's severing of the relationship."[293] He left of his own accord weeks later; the last time Wilson was visited by Anderle to discuss business matters, Wilson refused to leave his bedroom.[52] Wilson had discussed breaking up the Beach Boys "on many occasions," according to Anderle, "But it was easier, I think to get rid of the outsiders like myself than it was to break up the brothers. You can't break up brothers."[294]

On April 25, CBS premiered Inside Pop: The Rock Revolution, a documentary by David Oppenheim and Leonard Bernstein.[295] According to Leaf, the documentary was originally supposed to be focused on Wilson, but it was later decided to expand the scope of the program due to the Beach Boys' waning popularity in early 1967.[296] Wilson's segment was limited to footage of him singing "Surf's Up" at his piano without any interview footage or references to Smile.[297] According to Kent, when Wilson viewed the finished documentary, he was disturbed by the praises he was afforded, thereby accelerating the album's collapse.[298]

I feel like I’ve lost my talent. I'm working harder and getting less satisfaction than ever before.

—Brian Wilson to Tiger Beat, circa April 1967[299]

Desperate for a new product from the group, on April 28, the group's British distributor EMI released "Then I Kissed Her" as a single without the band's approval.[300] On April 29, Taylor announced in Disc & Music Echo that "All the 12 songs for the new Beach Boys album are completed and [...] there are plans to release the album on a rush-schedule any moment."[300] That same day, a Taylor-penned press release, published in Record Mirror and NME, revealed that "Heroes and Villains" was delayed due to "technical difficulties" and that the forthcoming lead single would be "Vegetables" backed with "Wonderful".[300] A session scheduled for May 1 was cancelled.[301]

Williams reported in the May issue of Crawdaddy! that the next Beach Boys LP would include "Heroes and Villains" ("weighing in at over four minutes"), "The Elements" ("a composition in four movements"), "The Child Is the Father of the Man" [sic], "and something about going in the yard to eat worms." He wrote, "Lyrics are mostly by Van Dyke Parks, and it is possible that the LP will be finished one of these days. Smile."[192] On May 6, a week after stating that Smile was to be released "any moment", Taylor announced in Disc & Music Echo that the album had been "scrapped" by Wilson;[302] however, it is likely that the report was spurious and that Wilson was unaware of Taylor's proclamation.[303]

On May 11, Wilson returned to the studio to work on "Heroes and Villains". On May 14, his bandmates conducted a press conference at the Amsterdam Hilton with the Dutch music press. Hitweek later reported that communications between Wilson and his bandmates had broken down to the point that his bandmates thought Smile had been scheduled for release by mid-May. The next day, Wilson cancelled a session for "Love to Say Dada", again due to "bad vibes".[304] Badman states that the final session for the album was held for "Love to Say Dada" on May 18. A follow-up that was scheduled for the next day was cancelled.[305]

Smiley Smile (June–September 1967) edit

It is sometimes suggested that Wilson cancelled Smile because of the widespread recognition afforded to the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (released in the U.S. on June 2). Leaf writes that the success of the Beatles' album was "probably only another contributing factor", reasoning that "if Brian had decided to scrap Smile only because of Pepper, then he probably would not have released ['Heroes and Villains' weeks later]."[306] From June 3 to 7, the band resumed sessions at professional studios before retreating to the home studio.[307] In a June issue of Hit Parader, Dennis reported that the group were still recording Smile and that the album was "50% done".[4]

 
The Beach Boys at Zuma Beach in Malibu, July 1967.

Wilson reflected that he had run out of ideas "in a conventional sense" during this period and had been "about ready to die".[195] He said: "Time can be spent in the studio to the point where you get so next to it, you don't know where you are with it, you decide to just chuck it for a while."[308] Wilson declared to his bandmates that most of the material recorded for Smile was now off-limits[309] and later said that his decision to keep "Surf's Up" unreleased was one that "nearly broke up" the band.[195]

From June to July, the Beach Boys reconvened at Wilson's home to record the bulk of Smiley Smile at his improvised studio.[307] The album is a significantly less ambitious affair than Smile, being stylistically similar to Beach Boys' Party!,[310] and includes simplified remakes of select Smile material.[311] Only two tracks used modules that had originated from the Smile sessions (two for "Heroes and Villains" and two for "Vegetables").[18] Parks was not involved with the album's making,[312] and despite the band's claim that Smile was shelved for being "too weird", there was no attempt to make the musical content on Smiley Smile appear any less bizarre for their standard audience.[313]

Smiley Smile is sometimes considered the fulfillment of Wilson's "humor" concept album.[156] This belief was shared by Anderle, who surmised, "I think that what Brian tried to do with Smiley Smile is he tried to salvage as much of Smile as he could and at the same time immediately go into his humor album."[314] Carl compared it to "a bunt instead of a grand slam".[315] The cover artwork featured a new illustration of Frank Holmes' smile shop, this time located in the middle of an overgrown jungle.[316]

On July 18, Capitol announced that they had reached a settlement with the band, and Brian announced the launch of Brother Records, whose product was to be distributed by Capitol.[317] Capitol A&R director Karl Engemann began circulating a memo, dated July 25,[318] in which Smiley Smile was referred to as a "cartoon" stopgap for Smile. The memo also discussed conversations between him and Wilson pertaining to the release of a 10-track Smile album that would not have included "Heroes and Villains" or "Vegetables".[317][319] This never came to fruition and, instead, the group embarked on a tour of Hawaii in August.[320][nb 27] On September 18, Smiley Smile, the first album by the band in which the production was credited to "the Beach Boys", was released to an underwhelming critical and commercial response.[315]

Aftermath edit

Wilson's struggles and Song Cycle edit

Throughout 1967, Wilson's image reduced to that of an "eccentric" figure as a multitude of revolutionary rock albums were released to an anxious and maturing youth market.[303] He gradually ceded production and songwriting duties to the rest of the group and self-medicated with the excessive consumption of food, alcohol, and drugs.[321] In a 2004 interview, he indicated that listening to the Smile music would eventually, for him, reawaken "the bad feelings of the drugs".[322] In a 1993 interview, Bruce Johnston remembered of the Smile sessions,

Brian [was] disintegrating. The music was cool but it's always tinged with the reality of making it. Brian degraded us, made us lay down for hours and make barnyard noises, demoralized us, freaked out. I can't tell you a lot of it, it's really fucked up. He thought it was hilarious, he was stoned and laughing. We hated him then because we didn't really know what was happening to him. [...] Everyone pumped Brian's ego to the ceiling and he lapped it up because Murry had been such a shit to him and approval was what he craved. [...] Expectation destroyed Brian as much as anything else. Murry, Pet Sounds' failure in America, drugs, ego and expectation. That's what destroyed Brian.[251]

For many years after its shelving, Wilson had been traumatized by the project and regarded it as representing all of his failures in life.[24] He had stated that he considered the recordings "contrived with no soul"[323] and "corny drug influenced music",[324] as well as imitations of the work of Phil Spector without "getting anywhere near him".[325] If broached the subject of Smile, he would usually decline to comment or simply walk away from the inquisitive party.[24] His discomfort in discussing the work lasted until around the early 2000s.[109]

For so long, this project brought me nothing but humiliation. It was the first question people always asked—"How come Smile never came out?"

—Van Dyke Parks, 2004[24]

Parks initially attempted to distance himself from the album's legend.[326] In 1998, he referred to Smile as "just a few months of work I did as a contract employee many, many years ago. Life goes on. [...] I think it means a lot more to other people than it does for me."[326][nb 28] Writing in his 2006 biography on Wilson, Carlin said that Parks had come to resent that his career had been eclipsed by "something that didn't quite get finished in 1967."[326] The fact that he was not properly credited for some of his co-written songs that were published on later Beach Boys albums, including "Wind Chimes" and "Wonderful",[176] was another source of frustration.[326] Carlin added, "And if Van Dyke felt guilty about abandoning his Smile partner just as the going was getting tough, he was also a hardworking professional who believed that Brian's surrender, followed by decades of near-withdrawal, mounted to another kind of betrayal."[326]

After breaking away from the project in early 1967, Parks signed a solo contract with Warner Bros, where he formed part of a creative circle that came to include producer Lenny Waronker and songwriter Randy Newman.[327][nb 29] At the end of the year, the company released Parks' debut album, Song Cycle, a record that often was, and continues to be, compared to Smile.[329][nb 30] Although Song Cycle sold poorly, Parks continued working at Warner as an arranger. Biographer Kevin Courrier wrote that the "failed aspiration of Smile served as a guiding spirit" for Song Cycle as well as the Parks- and Waronker-produced debut album by Newman, Randy Newman Creates Something New Under the Sun (1968).[330] Music historian Timothy White writes that "the lives and business interests" of Wilson, Parks, Waronker, and Warner Bros. would become "forever intertwined".[331]

Further recording and abandoned Reprise release edit

Some of the Smile material continued to trickle out in subsequent Beach Boys releases, often as filler songs to offset Wilson's unwillingness to contribute.[332] The first two instances of recycled Smile songs appeared on the albums directly following Smiley Smile: "Mama Says" from Wild Honey (1967) and "Little Bird" from Friends (1968). "Mama Says" was based on a section from "Vega-Tables" and the bridge of "Little Bird" was based on the refrain of "Child Is Father of the Man". Neither of the tracks were recordings from the Smile sessions; they were each recorded for their respective albums.[333]

 
Against Brian's wishes, his bandmates (pictured) finished "Our Prayer" and "Cabinessence" in late 1968.[332]

In 1969, "Cabin Essence" (retitled "Cabinessence") and "Prayer" (retitled "Our Prayer") appeared on the band's album 20/20, with additional vocals that were recorded by Carl, Dennis, and Johnston in November 1968. "Workshop" was also integrated into the 20/20 version of "Do It Again".[334] According to Carlin, Brian was opposed to the inclusion of "Prayer" and "Cabin Essence", and refused to participate in the overdub sessions.[332]

After 20/20, the Beach Boys signed to Reprise Records, a deal that was brokered by Parks, by then a multimedia executive at Warner.[335] The band's record contract held a clause which guaranteed a $50,000 advancement to the group provided that they deliver a completed Smile album by 1973. Brian was not consulted on this stipulation.[336] Their first Reprise album, Sunflower, was released in 1970. At Waronker's insistence, the record included "Cool, Cool Water", a song that had evolved from "Love to Say Dada".[337]

 
Carl Wilson (pictured) initiated Smile tape preservation efforts with band engineer Stephen Desper in the early 1970s[336]

For the band's second Reprise album, tentatively titled Landlocked, Wilson agreed to the inclusion of "Surf's Up".[338] From mid-June to early July 1971, Carl and band manager Jack Rieley retrieved the Smile multi-tracks from Capitol's vaults, primarily to locate the "Surf's Up" masters, and attempted to repair and splice the tapes. Brian joined them on at least two occasions.[339] Afterward, the band set to work on recording the song at Brian's home studio. Brian initially refused to participate in these sessions, but after a few days, he added a part to the song's "Child Is Father of the Man" coda.[340] Landlocked was then rechristened Surf's Up and released in August.[341] Most listeners at the time were unaware that the song derived from a lost Beach Boys album.[342]

On February 28, 1972, Carl announced the imminent release of Smile at a London press conference. Asked if he had been working on the album, he replied that he had, during the previous June, and that the group had created safety copies of all the tapes.[343] He claimed that these tapes were now fully assembled and new vocals had been overdubbed where necessary.[336][nb 31] Melody Maker printed a list of songs that were to be included on Carl's proposed version of Smile, some of which "seem[ed] to come under the overall subtitle of 'Heroes and Villains'".[336] They were: "Child Is Father of the Man", "Surf's Up", "Sunshine", "Cabinessence" (incorporating "Iron Horse" [sic]), "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow", "I Love to Say Dada" (incorporating "Cool, Cool Water"), and the original versions of "Vega-Tables", "Wind Chimes", and "Wonderful".[336]

Asked about the forthcoming release at a later date, Carl responded: "We've all had intentions of finishing the album, but something persists that keeps that from happening, and I don't know what that is."[345] In April 1973, the band's assistant manager Steve Love wrote a memo to remind the group that, "pursuant to the terms of contract between Warner Brothers and Brother Records, Inc., The Beach Boys' Smile album is supposed to be delivered to Warner Brothers no later than May 1st or $50,000 is to be deducted from any advance to the group after May 1st."[346] No album was delivered, and as threatened, $50,000 was held back from the group's next payment (equivalent to $330,000 in 2022).[347]

In 1973, Brian told a Melody Maker reporter that there was not enough material to compile a Smile album and that it would never be released.[348] Also in 1973, Wilson and his group American Spring contributed additional vocal and instrumental parts to a remix of Dean Torrence's 1967 rendition of "Vegetables", credited to "Laughing Gravy", and released on the Jan and Dean compilation Gotta Take That One Last Ride.[349] In a 1976 interview, Wilson stated that he felt an obligation to release Smile and offered that the album would come out "probably in a couple years."[350]

Bootlegs, partial releases, and fan efforts edit

Earliest bootlegs and fan network edit

Many of the original Smile recordings were only publicly available on bootlegs until 2011.[351] These bootlegs often presented a hypothetical vision of the completed album, with compilers including liner notes that explained their choices of sequencing.[352] One of the most relied-upon sources for the album's contents came from the list of song titles included on the discarded Smile album jackets that had been produced by Capitol in late 1966.[353]

Audio bootlegs purported as Smile began circulating among fans during the late 1970s and drew upon released material from Smiley Smile, 20/20, and Surf's Up. The compilers were only informed by the song titles listed on the Smile album jacket and were sometimes unaware that most of the released material was not from the original Smile sessions.[354] According to Andrew Flory, "Little is known about the process through which [actual] Smile material leaked into bootleggers' hands."[355] One rumor holds that the first tapes came from Dennis, who had created copies for friends, who then created copies for their friends.[198] Although there were rumors of leaked tape transfers and acetate discs in the late 1970s, only a minimal amount of this material was available to bootleggers until the early 1980s.[355]

 
Biographer David Leaf (pictured in 2022) traveled to California in the 1970s with the goal of helping Wilson complete Smile.[356]

In the 1970s and early 1980s, fan groups for the Beach Boys were organized by at least a dozen people, including David Leaf, Don Cunningham, Marty Tabor, and Domenic Priore.[357][nb 32] Most of the fan correspondence was through newsletters, which helped disseminate information and attract people who were interested in compiling details concerning the band's music.[357] The proliferation of these groups was due in part to an advertisement for Beach Boys Freaks United, the band's official fan club, that was displayed on the back cover of the 1976 album 15 Big Ones.[358] Priore later wrote that "It wasn't much of a publication, but it did include a 'Trading Post' [that] became an essential, pre-Internet contact source."[357][nb 33]

To assist with the writing of his 1978 authorized biography of the band, Byron Preiss was given a tape of Smile recordings, the contents of which were distributed to a small group of people over the next few years.[360] Another biography of the band, authored by Leaf, was published that year. In his book, Leaf wrote that Smile "can never be completed as Brian intended, so a compromise solution might be to release the surviving tapes and outtakes in a series of records called The Smile Sessions [like] Elvis' Sun Sessions [...]".[344]

There's been too much press on it. It's like talking about bringing out the '67 Rolls Royce and they finally show it in [modern day]. You go, "Oh, no."

—Bruce Johnston arguing against a full Smile release in 1981[361]

Leaf's book included quotes from Bruce Johnston, who believed that such a release would be a "bad idea" commercially and "would [only] live up to your expectations if you were [somebody like] Zubin Mehta analyzing a young composer's work."[344] In a later interview that year, he told Leaf that the band's manager James William Guercio had insisted on opening their 1979 release L.A. (Light Album) with "Rock Plymouth Rock/Roll". Johnston said: "I wanted to make up a collage [of the Smile recordings], but I want Brian to be the one to put the collage together. I can tell he still feels funny about that stuff. You know, there's a lot of Smile stuff intact [...]".[362] Johnston again mentioned Smile in a 1981 interview, where he declared plans to issue a six-minute compilation of the album's recording sessions without Wilson's knowledge.[361]

"Brother Records" Smile and Linett tape edit

In 1983, a 48-minute cassette tape began circulating and was soon pressed onto an LP bootleg that was referred to as the "Brother Records" Smile.[363] It included a range of material that originated from Smile or was thought to be related to the project, as well as an unrelated 1959 recording, "Here Come de Honey Man" by Miles Davis, that was erroneously listed as "Holidays".[364][nb 34] The LP did not indicate an authorial origin on its sleeve but featured the organizational addresses of Cunningham's Add Some Music, Tabor's Celebrate, Beach Boys Freaks United, and the Australian publication California Music.[365]

In April 1985, the video documentary The Beach Boys: An American Band featured some previously unreleased Beach Boys music, including an excerpt of "Fire".[366] Also that year, a "Second Edition" of the Brother Records LP surfaced without the labelled addresses and with a significantly different presentation order. The set also included different mixes that suggested a spread of newly available Smile recordings.[367] Their improved sound quality indicated that a Beach Boys insider had accessed the band's tape vaults and created cassette copies of the recordings.[360]

 
Wilson toyed with the idea of asking his bandmates to help him finish Smile in the late 1980s.

In 1987, Waronker encouraged Wilson to compose a Smile-esque song for his debut solo album, Brian Wilson (1988). This resulted in the "Rio Grande" suite, written with co-producer Andy Paley.[368] At this time, Linett, who engineered the album, had prepared mixes of some Smile tracks in anticipation for a then-forthcoming release.[369] In 1988, Wilson confirmed that Smile was being compiled and mixed for an imminent release.[370] In another report, he said that the forthcoming project "got sidetracked with business" and worried whether the album would sell due to it being mostly instrumental tracks. He added that he had considered asking his bandmates to overdub the remaining vocal tracks.[371]

According to journalist David Cavanaugh, "things went awry when a cassette compiled for Capitol executives leaked into the public domain, causing Brian to lose interest."[360] One of the collaborators on Wilson's solo album had been given 1st-generation copies of Smile recordings, which were then passed on to a DJ, who then made copies for friends. Following this, in the words of music historian Andrew Doe, "Bootlegs of Smile came out left, right and centre."[360]

Look! Listen! Vibrate! Smile! edit

 
Musician Darian Sahanaja, who collaborated on the first book about Smile, later joined Wilson's live band in the 1990s.

In the late 1980s, Domenic Priore collaborated with musicians Darian Sahanaja and Nick Walusko on a punk-style fanzine called The Dumb Angel Gazette, the most comprehensive attempt to document information regarding the album.[372] The second issue, Look! Listen! Vibrate! Smile!, featured a 300-page summary of Smile history told through press clippings, reprints of older articles, and various primary sources, as well as original commentary.[373] Additional assistance for this issue came from David Leaf, Andy Paley, journalist Greg Shaw, and musician Probyn Gregory, a friend of Sahanaja and Walusko.[374] Afterward, Sahanaja, Gregory, and Walusko formed the pop group Wondermints,[375] and later, the core nucleus of Wilson's supporting band in the late 1990s and early 2000s.[376]

According to Priore, although some "questioned the sanity behind the publication of such a huge book on an album that had never been released", the book ultimately "received accolades from Spin and Rolling Stone", as well as "positive personal reactions" from musicians such as XTC, Apples in Stereo, and former Beatle George Harrison.[374]

Spread of bootlegs and Good Vibrations box set edit

The wider dissemination of Smile bootlegs informed the public that the album was closer to completion than Wilson had admitted in interviews.[191] Since the mid-1980s, CDs had supplanted vinyl as the predominant medium for bootlegs, and, following the Linett tape leak, dozens of different Smile CD releases were traded and sold commercially by mail order, independent record stores, and head shops.[377] Many of the new buyers had crossed over from Beatles bootleg markets.[378] One of the most popular Smile bootlegs from the late 1980s was a Japanese CD (emerging in November 1989[379]) that opened with a 15-minute version of "Good Vibrations".[360]

Capitol issued alternate versions of "Good Vibrations" and "Heroes and Villains" as bonus tracks on a 1990 CD reissue of Smiley Smile and Wild Honey.[360] In response to the 1992 appearance of a new three-disc vinyl bootleg, which contained uncirculated versions of "Wonderful", "Love to Say Dada" and "Barnyard",[380] Capitol then issued over 40 minutes of original Smile recordings on the career-spanning box set Good Vibrations: Thirty Years of the Beach Boys (1993).[381][360] Never-before-released tracks included "Do You Like Worms?", "I Love to Say Da Da", the Smile versions of "Wonderful", "Wind Chimes", and "Vegetables", session highlights of "Surf's Up" and "Cabinessence", and some erroneously titled "Heroes and Villains" outtakes.[18]

I seriously doubt that any of you reading this don't have a homemade cassette recorder. If you do, then try this suggestion on a blank homemade cassette: COMPILE A SMILE ALBUM BY YOURSELF AT HOME!!!

—Music historian Domenic Priore writing in his book Look! Listen! Vibrate! Smile![373]

The Good Vibrations set had featured the first official release of a compiled Smile album, which was sequenced by Leaf, Paley, and Linett.[382] However, the material was largely presented "as-is", without truly approximating what the completed album would have sounded like.[18] Responding to a suggestion in Leaf's Good Vibrations liner notes, a preponderance of listeners began constructing their own version of the album using the resources provided in the box set.[383]

Two types of Smile bootlegs appeared in the 1990s: those in which the compilers attempted to assemble the album in a completed form, and others that simply presented the project as session recordings.[377] The best-known releases were issued by the underground labels Vigotone and Sea of Tunes. They both released Smile sets that combined the two types of bootlegs and helped bring interest to the recordings among people outside of the Beach Boys fan community.[384] Vigotone's 1993 version of the album was the heaviest-circulated Smile bootleg in the 1990s.[385]

Smile box set rumors and arrests edit

In 1995, Wilson reteamed with Parks for the collaborative album Orange Crate Art, which provoked speculation regarding a future release of Smile.[386] Wilson also performed "Wonderful", in its original Smile arrangement, for the Don Was-directed documentary I Just Wasn't Made for These Times, and this rendition was included on the accompanying soundtrack album.[319] In addition, Capitol announced a three-CD box set entitled The Smile Era to be released in the autumn.[387]

A Smile box set failed to materialize at this time partly due to the arduous task of compiling and sequencing.[388] Don Was said in a 1995 interview, "We showed Brian an interactive CD-ROM of Todd Rundgren's [No World Order] and told him that this is how he should release Smile. He could load up an interactive CD with seven hours of stuff from those sessions and just tell the people who buy it, 'You finish it.' Brian's into it; now it's up to the record company."[389] Following the recording of the Beach Boys' 1996 album Stars and Stripes Vol. 1, the group discussed finishing Smile at a band meeting. Carl vetoed the idea, as he had feared that it would cause Brian another nervous breakdown.[390] The difficulties that caused the 18-month delay for the release of The Pet Sounds Sessions (1997) discouraged Capitol from issuing a similar box set for Smile.[360]

Asked about Smile during the press run for his 1998 comeback album Imagination, Wilson responded, "I thought too much. Smile was just a bunch of weird stuff that didn't even amount to anything."[391] In 2001, weeks after his first public performance of "Heroes and Villains" in decades, he told an interviewer, "I don't really ever want to put out the Smile stuff. It's just not appropriate music. [...] I know it's a legendary thing. The Smile trip is a legend."[392]

In the late 1990s, Sea of Tunes released seven hours of Smile music spread out over eight CDs as part of their "Unsurpassed Masters" series.[385] By the end of the 1990s, Smile had become one of the most well-documented projects in the bootlegging community.[393] Those involved with releasing the Sea of Tunes bootlegs were later apprehended by authorities, and it was reported that nearly 10,000 discs were seized.[394] Vigotone planned to follow their 1998 bootleg, Heroes and Vibrations, with a multi-disc Smile box set before they were similarly raided and closed down by law enforcement in 2001.[360]

Official versions edit

2004 – Brian Wilson Presents Smile edit

 
Parks joining Wilson onstage after a performance of Brian Wilson Presents Smile at the Royal Festival Hall, February 2004.

Wilson was able to complete a version of Smile in 2004 with the assistance of the Smile fan network that had developed since the 1970s.[395] Following Wilson's early 2000s live performances of the Pet Sounds album, Sahanaja began suggesting Smile songs at band rehearsals, which led to plans for concerts that comprised a Smile-themed setlist.[396] Sahanaja was assigned the role of "musical secretary" for the project[397] and Parks was recruited to assist with the sequencing and the writing of new lyrics.[398] Together with Wilson, they configured the presentation into three movements.[333] Sahanaja said: "At that point, he [Brian] and Van Dyke were talking as if they were finishing Smile."[399] According to Steven Gaines, Wilson had stated an intention to complete Smile in three movements as early as 1980.[400]

Brian Wilson Presents Smile (BWPS) premiered at the Royal Festival Hall in London in February 2004. A studio album adaptation was recorded six weeks later and released in September. Beautiful Dreamer: Brian Wilson and the Story of Smile, a documentary film by Leaf, premiered on Showtime the next month.[401] None of Wilson's bandmates were involved with BWPS or the documentary, and none of the original recordings were used on the album.[18] The album debuted at number 13 on the Billboard Hot 100, the highest chart position of any album by the Beach Boys or Brian Wilson since 1976's 15 Big Ones.[402] In support of the album, Wilson embarked on a world tour that included stops in the US, Europe, and Japan.[403]

2011 – The Smile Sessions edit

The Smile Sessions, released as a five-CD box set in October 2011, was the first official package dedicated to the Beach Boys' Smile.[404] It features comprehensive session highlights and outtakes, as well as an approximation of what the completed album might have sounded like, using the 2004 version as a model.[404] Like BWPS, many of the people involved with the making had been involved with the Beach Boys fan community for decades, including Priore and Reum, who contributed essays and were consulted for the project.[405] The set received immediate critical acclaim, was ranked on Rolling Stone's 2012 list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time", and won Best Historical Album at the 55th Grammy Awards.[406]

Influence and legacy edit

Legend and mystique edit

The album has been one of the most discussed and dissected unreleased records ever made [...] Multiple theories abound concerning what Smile might actually have been if it had been completed, and many mysteries are contained even within Brian's semi-official tracklist, not to mention the scores of unfinished takes, brief instrumentals, and experiments that were attempted during the sessions.

—Ed Howard of Stylus, 2003[136]

In the decades following Smile's non-release, it became the subject of intense speculation and mystique[191][407] and gained status as the most legendary unreleased album in the history of popular music.[2][3] Many of the writers and "hanger-ons" who surrounded Wilson at the time were largely responsible for the mythological status later afforded to the project.[369] In October 1967, Cheetah magazine published "Goodbye Surfing, Hello God!", a memoir written by Jules Siegel that originated many of the subsequent myths and legends related to Smile.[408][409] Flory credited the piece with giving "rock fans a manner in which to view Wilson as hip" as well as "venerat[ing] Smile as a relic of this hipness, intensifying audience interest in the unavailable work".[410]

A published conversation between David Anderle and Paul Williams, serialized in Crawdaddy in 1968, was another early resource for information regarding the album.[369] In his book How Deep Is the Ocean, Williams also included a 1997 conversation between the two. Anderle acknowledged of his role in inflating the mythology, "I guess we all do that. We all extend the story, don't we? We all extend the moment. It's satisfying. But what a burden for Brian [...]"[411]

Responding to Anderle's statement, Siegel countered, "Brian was a genius and, if anything, I underestimated him. [...] I wasn't aware of him as a myth. I just wrote down what I saw and heard."[46] Williams shifted his opinion on the album after having heard many of the recordings for the first time in 16 years.[380] He felt that when "the myth" that he and Anderle had "certainly helped create" is discounted from his evaluation, the tracks "clearly" reveal themselves as "the work of someone very stoned", and that even though "there are moments of great sensitivity and deep feeling", the "overall character [...] is not at all a "heart" album (as Pet Sounds certainly is); rather it is, and was clearly meant to be, a sort of three-ring circus of flashy musical ideas and avant-garde entertainment."[412]

During the 1970s, the perceived mystique around the project was increasingly shared by music critics.[413] In 1983, Dave Marsh bemoaned the hype, calling it "an exercise in myth-mongering almost unparalleled in show business. Brian Wilson became a Major Artist by making music no one outside of his coterie ever heard."[413] Writing in his 2014-published 33⅓ book about the album, Luis Sanchez opined that album's myth had since lost its power to "lure and convince" as "writers and cultists kept the story alive by rehashing hyperbole and rumor that could only take the story so far. [...] the myth itself overtook and nearly consumed the artist and the music it was about."[414]

Bootlegs of the sessions became influential in their own right[330] and intensified the public's interest in the album.[136] Journalist Bill Holdship reported in 1995, "Since moving to LA, I've encountered people who are as obsessed with Smile the same way people are obsessed with the Kennedy assassination."[251] By 1999, fans had published many essays devoted to the album through the Internet,[394] and by the early 2000s, several books had been devoted to the album.[415] Writing in 2002, journalist Rob Chapman summarized that the album had become "the ultimate metaphor for pop's golden age; that moment when everything seemed possible, when heaven seemed reachable".[416] In Courrier's words, the project "became oddly influential. While functioning mostly as a rumor, when some bootlegged tracks confirmed its existence, Smile became a catalyst for records that followed in its wake."[330] In 2011, Smile topped Uncut's list of the greatest bootleg recordings of all time.[417]

Hypothetical release scenario edit

Many of the album's advocates believe that had it been released, it would have altered the group's direction and solidified their position at the vanguard of rock innovators.[418] It may have also significantly impacted the development of concept albums, as Allan Moore argued, "it would have suggested an entirely different possible line of development for the concept album, wherein parts of tracks reappeared in others producing a form frankly far more sophisticated than any of its contemporaries."[419] David Howard, writing in his book Sonic Alchemy, said that "Had Wilson been able to connect all the dots, Smile would most certainly be regarded as one of pop's major artistic statements, rather than an infamous, unfortunate footnote."[420] In 2003, Ed Howard of Stylus Magazine wrote that the album "could have expanded boundaries for both the Beach Boys and pop music as a whole. Instead, for the most part it remains unheard today, and that's quite possibly the saddest fact in all of music."[421]

 
Part of the speculation surrounding Smile centers on whether the album would have been more influential than the Beatles' 1967 release Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Spencer Owen of Pitchfork argued in 2001 that the album could have dramatically altered the course of popular music history, such that "Perhaps we wouldn't be so monotheistic in our pop leanings, worshiping only at the Beatles' altar the way some do today."[422] In Anderle's belief, "[Smile] would have been a major influence in pop music [...] as significant if not a bigger influence than Sgt. Pepper was."[423] Brian Boyd of The Irish Times rued that Wilson's desire to match the Beatles had contributed to the project's collapse, but also commented that since this competitive instinct was shared by his rivals, the release of Smile may have prolonged the group's break-up.[424]

It is likely that the vast majority of the content recorded for Smile would have been left off the record due to the runtime constraints of vinyl discs. According to Linett, although contemporaries such as Frank Zappa and Bob Dylan had experimented with double albums, there is "no indication" that a multi-disc format for Smile "was ever contemplated" in 1966 or 1967.[388] Mojo's Jim Irvin challenged "the assumption that, if completed, Smile would have been perfect" and proposed that "it might have simply been considered a giant, perplexing, forty-minute 'Heroes And Villains' with some stuff about vegetables in the middle. Would it really have gone over much bigger than Van Dyke's disastrous Song Cycle a year later? Would it be inviting such brouhaha today?"[425]

Asked in a 1987 interview whether Smile would have topped his rivals' subsequent release, Wilson replied: "No. It wouldn't have come close. Sgt. Pepper would have kicked our ass."[278] Later, he claimed that his work would have been "too advanced" for 1967 audiences.[109] In 1993, Mike Love said he believed Smile "would have been a great record", but in its unfinished state, is "nothing, it's just fragments".[251] Writing in his book about Sgt. Pepper, Clinton Heylin criticized Parks' lyrics as "little more than columns of non sequiturs from a man who once swallowed a thesaurus" and decreed that much of the surviving Smile recordings "confirm that Wilson was nowhere near completing an album to rival Revolver let alone its psychedelic successor."[426] In the opinion of Kicks co-editor Billy Miller, "nobody would have got too jazzed over electricity being invented for the second time" had Smile followed the release of Sgt. Pepper, "And it's a damn shame, too".[427]

Reviewing the available bootlegs and officially released tracks for AllMusic, Richie Unterberger said that "numerous exquisitely beautiful passages, great ensemble singing, and brilliant orchestral pop instrumentation" were in circulation, yet "the fact is that Wilson somehow lacked the discipline needed to combine them into a pop masterpiece that was both brilliant and commercial."[428] Former Record Collector editor Peter Doggett states that Smile would most likely have had the same reception as that afforded Song Cycle – namely, critical acclaim but a commercial disaster.[429] He wrote that the release of Smile "would surely have set the Beatles back for months while they considered a suitable reply [...] But it wouldn't have been commercial, in the way that the Doors, or Love, or Jefferson Airplane were."[430][nb 35]

Innovations edit

If music students in a hundred years’ time want a master class in the development of compositional technique in twentieth century popular music then they should listen to the Smile tapes. [...] [it] stands totally apart from what anybody else was producing during the mid-'60s.

Mojo journalist Rob Chapman, 2002[416]

With Smile, Wilson anticipated editing practices that were not common until the digital age.[105] "In a way", Linett said, "Brian invented the method of modular recording that we take for granted today."[104] The album cover – considered to be among the most legendary in rock music, according to Priore[432] – would have been one of the earliest instances of a popular music group featuring original commissioned artwork.[433] Paul Williams argued that, with Smile, Wilson had become one of the earliest pioneers of sampling.[434] Priore wrote that Wilson "manipulated sound effects in a way that would later be extremely successful when Pink Floyd released The Dark Side of the Moon in 1973, the best-selling album of the entire progressive rock period".[125]

Sanchez offered his view of the project as a "radical" expansion of "the glow and sui generis vision" of Pet Sounds, one which "presents itself with a kind of directness that is unlike anything else in popular music".[435] Ed Masley of AZ Central wrote that Smile "doesn't sound like" many other pop albums that were considered to be the vanguard of the "psychedelic revolution [...] but it clearly shares their spirit of adventure in a way that would have been unthinkable just two years earlier."[109] Ed Howard wrote that the album's "arty experimentation", "exotic, often surprising arrangements", and "twisting wordplay" was "arguably" more innovative than contemporary work by the Beatles.[421]

In 1999, Freaky Trigger wrote that Smile was not "the best album ever", but that it is "astoundingly original" and "tangible evidence of an alternative rock history which turned out differently".[436] In 2011, despite its chosen focus being "new American music that is outside the commercial mainstream", online publication NewMusicBox made an exception with Smile, citing its standing as "an album recorded more than 45 years ago by one of the biggest (and most financially lucrative) musical acts of all time".[433] The site's reviewer, Frank Oteri, wrote:

Wilson's experiments in 1966 and 1967 seem normative of the kinds of things most interesting musicians in any genre were up to at that point and even tamer than some of them. The blurring of boundaries between musical genres was pretty much commonplace at that time, as was the attitude, however real or imagined, that just about any musical undertaking was somehow an expansion beyond anything that had come before it. [...] What has gone down in history as the breakthrough, however, is The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. [...] Despite how remarkable Sgt. Pepper's was and still sounds 44 years later, had SMiLE actually been released, that honor probably would have, could have, and should have been accorded to it instead.

Oteri concluded that "the same pride of place in American music history held by other great innovators" such as Charles Ives, George Gershwin, John Cage, John Coltrane, and James Brown would "probably" never include Smile, since, "For many people, the Beach Boys will always be perceived as a light-hearted party band that drooled over 'California Girls' while on a 'Surfing Safari'."[433]

Alternative music edit

Smile was influential to indie rock[433] and its mythology became a touchstone for chamber pop and the more art-inclined branches of post-punk.[437] In Priore's estimation, the "alternate-rock" generation began embracing Smile after the early 1990s.[438] In 2002, Chapman remarked that he had "yet to meet an ambient or electronica artist who doesn't have a soundfile full of Smile bytes".[416]

The potential of what Smile would have been was the primary thing that inspired us (Elephant 6). When we started hearing Smile bootlegs, it was mind-blowing. It was what we had hoped it would be, but a lot of those songs weren't finished, so there was still this mystery of not hearing the melodies and lyrics. We wondered, "What are these songs and how do they fit together? Is this a verse?"

—Elephant 6 and Apples in Stereo co-founder Robert Schneider[439]

The Elephant 6 Recording Company, a collective of bands that includes Apples in Stereo, the Olivia Tremor Control, Neutral Milk Hotel, Beulah, Elf Power, and of Montreal, was founded through a mutual admiration of 1960s pop music, with Smile being "their Holy Grail".[439] Will Cullen Hart appreciated "the idea of the sections, each of them being a colorful world within itself. [Wilson's] stuff could be so cinematic and then he could just drop down to a toy piano going plink, plink, plink and then, when you least expect it, it can fly back into a million gorgeous voices."[440] According to Kevin Barnes, of Montreal's album Coquelicot Asleep in the Poppies: A Variety of Whimsical Verse (2001) was partly based on Smile.[441]

Released exclusively in Japan, the 1998 tribute album Smiling Pets featured cover versions of Pet Sounds and Smile tracks by artists such as the Olivia Tremor Control, Jim O'Rourke, and Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore.[394] Trey Spruance, who recorded a version of "Good Vibrations" for the album, said that Smile "definitely" influenced the Mr. Bungle album California (1999), "especially when it comes to the Faustian scale of it."[442] The cover artwork for Velvet Crush's Teenage Symphonies to God (1994) was based on the Smile cover.[438]

Kevin Shields of My Bloody Valentine said that his band's 2013 album MBV was inspired by the modular approach of Smile.[443] Priore believed that the Smile recordings influenced albums such as XTC's Oranges & Lemons (1989), the High Llamas' Gideon Gaye (1994) and Hawaii (1996), the Flaming Lips' The Soft Bulletin (1999), Mercury Rev's All Is Dream (2001), the Apples in Stereo's Her Wallpaper Reverie (1999), Heavy Blinkers' 2000 eponymous LP, and the Thrills' So Much for the City (2003).[438]

Unfinished state and interactivity edit

[T]he main reason SMiLE is so unique [is that it was] the first album that forced fans to interact with it directly. We had to make our own edits and running orders on cassettes. They enjoyed debates on how it was supposed to be heard and what tracks were really intended to be included in the mythic "Elements" suite that supposedly would have climaxed the album.

—Mike Segretto, author of 33 1/3 Revolutions Per Minute: A Critical Trip Through the Rock LP Era (2022)[444]

There remains no definitive form or content of Smile, and whether Smile should be considered an "album" has itself been challenged.[18] Quoted in Leaf's 1978 biography, Anderle felt that Smile should be viewed not as an album, but an epoch that includes Pet Sounds and "Good Vibrations".[57] Heiser wrote, "Possibly the best term offered yet to describe the project is: 'sonic menagerie'", a term used by co-producer Dennis Wolfe in the liner notes of The Smile Sessions.[18] Priore had long suggested that the album was virtually finished in 1967, however, Ed Howard contended: "Smile was, simply put, nowhere near finished [...] Furthermore, any effort to guess at what the album might have sounded like would be nothing more than conjecture. [...] it's likely that [Brian] himself didn't have a clear, constant, single idea for the album".[136]

Upon the release of BWPS, critics popularly viewed Smile as "finally completed".[445] In his review of The Smile Sessions, Toop argued that such attempts to complete the album are "misguided". He described Smile as a "labyrinth" that exists "in a memory house into which Wilson invited all those who could externalize its elements".[107] Freaky Trigger shared a similar view, writing: "There is no 'correct' track sequence, there is no completed album, because Smile isn't a linear progression of tracks. As a collection of modular melodic ideas it is by nature organic and resists being bookended."[446] Toop said the project's demise and film-like editing process also "parallels the great lost projects by Orson Welles, Erich Von Stroheim and Sergei Eisenstein."[107] Howard supported that the material "is best heard as a movie reel on the making of a record: multiple takes of each song, with no definitive version."[136]

Academic Larry Starr opined that "the idea there could be a 'definitive' Smile decades after Brian Wilson abandoned the project was always chimerical".[447] He added, "Those whimsically inclined might suggest that Smile's apparent malleability could represent just one additional illustration of the extent to which it was ahead of its time."[448] In a 2004 conversation with Wilson, Parks suggested that, with Smile, the pair may have inadvertently created the first ever interactive album.[18]

In popular culture edit

  • Lewis Shiner's 1991 science fiction novel Glimpses contains a chapter in which the protagonist travels back in time to November 1966 and helps Wilson complete Smile.[394][449]
  • The 2007 comedy film Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story contains a segment inspired by the Smile saga, in which the protagonist is consumed with recording his "masterpiece" (titled “Black Sheep”) and suffers a mental breakdown.[450]

Reconstruction track listings edit

All tracks written by Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks, except where noted.

1993: Good Vibrations: Thirty Years of the Beach Boys, disc two (relevant Smile portion) – sequenced by Mark Linett, Andy Paley, David Leaf
No.TitleLength
17."Good Vibrations" (Brian Wilson, Mike Love)3:38
18."Our Prayer" (Wilson)1:07
19."Heroes and Villains"2:56
20."Heroes and Villains (Sections)"6:40
21."Wonderful"2:02
22."Cabinessence"3:33
23."Wind Chimes"2:32
24."Heroes and Villains (Intro)"0:35
25."Do You Like Worms"4:00
26."Vegetables"3:29
27."I Love to Say Da Da"1:34
28."Surf's Up"3:38
Total length:35:44
2004: Brian Wilson Presents Smile – sequenced by Brian Wilson, Van Dyke Parks, Darian Sahanaja
No.TitleLength
1."Our Prayer" / "Gee" (Wilson, William Davis, Morris Levy)2:09
2."Heroes and Villains"4:53
3."Roll Plymouth Rock"3:48
4."Barnyard"0:58
5."Old Master Painter" / "You Are My Sunshine" (Haven Gillespie, Beasley Smith)1:04
6."Cabin Essence"3:27
7."Wonderful"2:07
8."Song for Children"2:16
9."Child Is Father of the Man"2:18
10."Surf's Up"4:07
11."I'm in Great Shape" / "I Wanna Be Around" / "Workshop" (Wilson, Parks, Johnny Mercer, Sadie Vimmerstedt)1:56
12."Vega-Tables"2:19
13."On a Holiday"2:36
14."Wind Chimes"2:54
15."Mrs. O'Leary's Cow" (Wilson)2:27
16."In Blue Hawaii"3:00
17."Good Vibrations" (Wilson, Tony Asher, Love)4:36
Total length:46:49
2011: The Smile Sessions – sequenced by Mark Linett, Alan Boyd, Dennis Wolfe
No.TitleLength
1."Our Prayer" (Wilson)1:05
2."Gee" (Davis, Levy)0:51
3."Heroes and Villains"4:52
4."Do You Like Worms (Roll Plymouth Rock)"3:35
5."I'm in Great Shape"0:28
6."Barnyard"0:48
7."My Only Sunshine" ("The Old Master Painter" / "You Are My Sunshine"; Gillespie, Davis, Mitchell)1:55
8."Cabin Essence"3:30
9."Wonderful"2:04
10."Look (Song for Children)" (Wilson)2:31
11."Child Is Father of the Man"2:10
12."Surf's Up"4:12
13."I Wanna Be Around / Workshop" (Mercer, Wilson)1:23
14."Vega-Tables"3:49
15."Holidays" (Wilson)2:32
16."Wind Chimes" (Wilson)3:06
17."The Elements: Fire (Mrs. O'Leary's Cow)" (Wilson)2:35
18."Love to Say Dada" (Wilson)2:32
19."Good Vibrations" (Wilson, Love)4:15
Total length:48:03

Track table edit

Adapted from The Smile Sessions liner notes[451] and Andrew Doe's Bellagio 10542 online compendium.[452]

Track Recording span
1966 1967 1968 1971
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
January
February
March
April
May
‡ "Good Vibrations"
‡ "Heroes and Villains"
# "Wind Chimes"
† "Look (Song for Children)"
# "Wonderful"
# "He Gives Speeches"
† "Holidays"
‡ "Our Prayer"
‡ "Cabin Essence"
# "Child Is Father of the Man"
# "I'm in Great Shape"
# "Vega-Tables"
# "Do You Like Worms?"
# "Barnyard"
‡ "Surf's Up"
# "My Only Sunshine"
† "The Elements: Fire"
† "I Wanna Be Around"
‡ "You're Welcome"
# "Love to Say Dada"
† "I Don't Know"
# "Gee"
† "Tones" / "Tune X"

Key

Recording
Demo or studio experiment
Survives only as an instrumental
# Recorded with vocals
Finished

Personnel edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This included The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, poetry by Kahlil Gibran, works by Herman Hesse, and texts by Krishna.[8]
  2. ^ He recorded at least two sketches, "Dick" and "Fuzz", which involved exchanges between himself, a woman named Carol, and the Honeys, a girl group which included Marilyn. These recordings remain unreleased.[10]
  3. ^ Asher was recommended to Wilson by Schwartz.[12]
  4. ^ Carlin dates their meeting to mid-July,[20] whereas Badman cites February.[19] Parks had already met Wilson once before, in December 1965, when mutual friend David Crosby invited him to Wilson's home in Beverly Hills.[21]
  5. ^ According to Derek Taylor, the pair were working together "night after night [...] when the other Beach Boys were touring Britain", which would have been in October and November.[26]
  6. ^ According to biographer Robert Rodriguez, Wilson felt that Revolver had topped his achievements on Pet Sounds.[64] He writes the Beach Boys crafted Smile as a response,[62] a sentiment echoed by David Howard.[63]
  7. ^ Siegel quoted Wilson saying, "Did you hear the Beatles' album? Religious, right? That's the whole movement. That's where I'm going. It's going to scare a lot of people."[76]
  8. ^ Nolan wrote, "He'd never take [acid] again, he says, because that would be pointless, wouldn't it? And the people who take it all the time, acid heads he can't go along with. Like all those people–Timothy Leary and all–they talk a lot, but they don't really create, you know?"[77]
  9. ^ In his 2016 memoir, it was written that the lowercase "i" was a reference to the loss of ego, one of the album's concepts.[1]
  10. ^ He surmised that this may have added to the difficulty in assembling the tracks into a coherent sequence.[18]
  11. ^ On Pet Sounds, "the protagonist seeks security", whereas on Smile, "no loss is final—indeed loss and gain are no more than parts of a whole—and the vibrations, if intangible, are ultimately good."[102]
  12. ^ "Dangling causes", as defined by David Bordwell, are "unresolved action[s] presented near the end of one section that is picked up and pushed further in a later section. Every scene will tend to contain unresolved issues that demand settling further along."[105] When compiling The Smile Sessions, Alan Boyd made use of film editing software Final Cut Pro.[105]
  13. ^ Davis added that "the 'purity' of tone and genetic proximity that smoothed their voices was almost creepy, pseudo-castrato, a 'barbershop' sound that Hendrix, on 'Third Stone From the Sun', went thumbs down on."[132]
  14. ^ According to Parks, he was offered the opportunity to rewrite Love's lyrics because "[Brian] was embarrassed with the 'excitation' part Mike Love had insisted on adding. But I told Brian that I wouldn't touch it with a 10-foot pole and that nobody'd be listening to the lyrics anyway once they heard that music."[138]
  15. ^ The arguments are similar to those featured in a later Beach Boys track, "T M Song", from 15 Big Ones. [181]
  16. ^ Marilyn vetoed his suggestion to sell organic vegetables from a drive-through window at the rear of their home.[146]
  17. ^ According to Badman, the session were officially inaugurated on September 8 with the recording of "Holidays".[79]
  18. ^ Billboard said that this result was probably influenced by the success of "Good Vibrations" when the votes were cast, together with the band's recent UK tour, whereas the Beatles had neither a recent single nor had they toured the UK throughout 1966. The reporter nevertheless added that "The sensational success of the Beach Boys [...] is being taken as a portent that the popularity of the top British groups of the last three years is past its peak."[235] Ringo Starr commented, "We haven't been doing much and it was run just at a time when the Beach Boys had something good out. We're all four fans of the Beach Boys. Maybe we voted for them."[236]
  19. ^ It discussed the "energy" between himself ("Gemini"), David Anderle ("the Jolly Jewish Carrot"), and Michael Vosse ("Michael Spinach", "the Green Glob", or "Sidney"), as well as Guy Webster, Hal Blaine, and possibly Jules Siegel (referred to as "celery"). In one excerpt, Wilson wrote, "Grasping firmly onto the carrot, Brian ate it quickly, and, lo and behold! – it gave him some very out-of-sight vision, of a very out-of-sight world. "[119]
  20. ^ This was contradicted by Parks, who felt that Love's true issues were not with the lyrics, as he has always claimed, but with "the music".[208] Jardine, who praised Parks' lyrics and admitted to initially harboring discontent for the band's changing musical direction, contended that Love was "a formula hound" in that he typically dismissed songs that he felt lacked clear and distinguishable hooks.[222]
  21. ^ In 2017, Rolling Stone included the cousins' discord as one of "Music's 30 Fiercest Feuds and Beefs". Contributor Jordan Runtagh wrote that when Wilson "sought to move the band beyond their fun-in-the-sun persona. Love found the new musical daring pretentious, and feared alienating the fans originally won over by their carefree surfing image."[252] In 2014, fans reacted negatively to the announcement that Wilson would be recording a duets album, comparing it to a "cash-in". A Facebook post attributed to Wilson responded to the feedback: "In my life in music, I’ve been told too many times not to fuck with the formula, but as an artist it's my job to do that."[253]
  22. ^ Brian supported in a 2011 interview that while it was his own choice to shelve the album, Love had said to him, "I'm disgusted with this, this is nothing like [...] any kind of Beach Boys type song."[259]
  23. ^ Heylin states that the studio logs appear to indicate March 2 as the date that Smile was "abandoned".[268]
  24. ^ One of Brian's "thoroughly insistent psychologically arm-twisting tactic[s to] test my devotion to his cause", as Taylor called it, was to play "a new song [of his] and immediately start [...] making statements like 'Better than the Stones, yeah?' Then he'd put on [a song like] 'Paperback Writer', and say [...] 'Is that really any good?' and I'd have to say very deliberately, 'Yes Brian, it is very good.' He was never satisfied though. Never."[279] Anderle supported that "Brian always felt that [...] the Beatles were number two [with Derek] [...] He had a very strong feeling about that."[280]
  25. ^ Parks remembered the rumor being that two members of the Beatles had visited Steiner's studio to listen to unmixed Smile master tapes.[291]
  26. ^ According to Badman, the move was to extricate themselves from Wilson's "hanger-ons".[286] Marilyn installed a high brick wall and an electronically-controlled gate around the estate.[231]
  27. ^ Music historian Andrew Doe speculated that the memo may have reflected Brian "being his usual agreeable self and telling people what they wanted to hear ... or a simple misunderstanding."[318]
  28. ^ During an interview, when Parks suggested that the album did not mean as much to him as it did to its fans, he was asked why he had kept framed lithographs of Frank Holmes' Smile artwork on the wall above his workspace, to which his wife Sally interjected, "He's got you there, Van."[326]
  29. ^ Parks surmised that Warners was interested in signing him as a solo artist due to having collaborated with Wilson.[328]
  30. ^ Richard Henderson, writing his 33⅓ book about the album, said that "Clearly, Parks was his own man as a composer and instrumentalist prior to the SMiLE collaboration, but one of Wilson's favorite devices, creating new timbres via laminates of different instruments playing unison lines, can be heard [...] throughout the album."[328]
  31. ^ The purpose of these announcements may have been to mislead Reprise into allowing the group more time to prepare their next album.[344]
  32. ^ Other notable fans were Alice Lillie, Paula Perrin, Peter Reum, and Mike Grant.[357]
  33. ^ Surveys conducted in Tabor's late-1970s publication, Friends of the Beach Boys, indicated that there was overwhelming interest among readers for the Beach Boys' psychedelic period and for the release of Smile and other rare tracks.[359]
  34. ^ Other contents included "Wonderful" and "Wind Chimes" from Smiley Smile, the "Water Chant" segment of "Cool, Cool Water" from Sunflower (incorrectly titled "I Love to Say Da Da"), various versions of "Can't Wait Too Long", an alternate mix of "Good Vibrations", "George Fell into His French Horn", "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow", and the Laughing Gravy rendition of "Vega-Tables".[364]
  35. ^ In his estimation, Wilson would have been "crushed with disappointment" while the band would have been left without "the salvation of unused Smile tracks with which to bolster their subsequent albums. Otherwise, life carries on much as before."[431]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Wilson & Greenman 2016, p. 186.
  2. ^ a b c Bogdanov, Woodstra & Erlewine 2002, p. 72.
  3. ^ a b Jones 2008, p. 63.
  4. ^ a b Delehant, Jim (June 1967). "Dennis Wilson: We Just Want To Be A Good Group". Hit Parader.
  5. ^ a b c Ronnie (October 16, 2004). "Interview with Brian Wilson". Ear Candy Mag.
  6. ^ a b Gaines 1986, p. 124.
  7. ^ Sanchez 2014, p. 92.
  8. ^ a b Gaines 1986, pp. 124–125, 133–134.
  9. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 87, 136.
  10. ^ a b Badman 2004, p. 102.
  11. ^ Gaines 1986, pp. 144–145.
  12. ^ Carter 2016, p. 180.
  13. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 118–120, 131.
  14. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 126, 131.
  15. ^ Granata 2003, p. 58.
  16. ^ a b Badman 2004, pp. 131–132.
  17. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 134, 139.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Heiser, Marshall (November 2012). . The Journal on the Art of Record Production (7). ISSN 1754-9892. Archived from the original on April 15, 2015. Retrieved July 24, 2017.
  19. ^ a b c Badman 2004, p. 114.
  20. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 92.
  21. ^ a b Carter 2016, p. 175.
  22. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 114, 131.
  23. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 160.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Himes, Geoffrey (October 1, 2004). . Paste Magazine. Archived from the original on January 8, 2009. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
  25. ^ Badman 2004, p. 133.
  26. ^ a b c Badman 2004, p. 166.
  27. ^ Badman 2004, p. 153.
  28. ^ Carter 2016, p. 179.
  29. ^ a b Parks, Van Dyke (January 12, 2006). "IN RESPONSE TO: A Lost Pop Symphony from the September 22, 2005 issue". The New York Review of Books. nybooks.com.
  30. ^ Priore 2005, p. 117.
  31. ^ Gaines 1986, pp. 147, 158.
  32. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 158.
  33. ^ a b Gaines 1986, pp. 155–156, 158.
  34. ^ a b c Carter 2016, p. 174.
  35. ^ Carter 2016, pp. 172, 174.
  36. ^ Badman 2004, p. 120.
  37. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 120, 142.
  38. ^ The Smile Sessions (deluxe box set booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 2011.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  39. ^ Ronnie. "Interview with Mark Volman of the Turtles". Ear Candy. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  40. ^ a b White 1996, p. 268.
  41. ^ a b c Badman 2004, p. 149.
  42. ^ a b c Carlin 2006, p. 101.
  43. ^ a b Carter 2016, pp. 173–176.
  44. ^ a b c Sanchez 2014, p. 94.
  45. ^ Williams 2010, p. 84.
  46. ^ a b Siegel, Jules (June 18, 1998). "David Anderle's falsehoods". waste.org. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
  47. ^ Ellsworth, Adam (January 26, 2013). "Arts Remembrance: Be the Rock Star — A Tribute to Jules Siegel". The Arts Fuse. Retrieved May 29, 2019.
  48. ^ Hoskyns 2009, p. 130.
  49. ^ Kent 1995, p. 264.
  50. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 162.
  51. ^ Williams 2010, p. 96.
  52. ^ a b c d e f g Nolan, Tom (October 28, 1971). . Rolling Stone. No. 94. Archived from the original on September 25, 2018. Retrieved August 25, 2017.
  53. ^ a b c Gaines 1986, p. 164.
  54. ^ Matijas-Mecca 2017, p. 60.
  55. ^ Priore 2005, p. 108.
  56. ^ Leaf 1978, p. 98.
  57. ^ a b Leaf 1978, pp. 96–97.
  58. ^ a b Priore 2005, p. 94.
  59. ^ a b Schinder 2007, p. 117.
  60. ^ a b Carlin 2006, p. 98.
  61. ^ Prendergast 2003, p. 180.
  62. ^ a b Rodriguez 2020, pp. 221–222.
  63. ^ a b Howard 2004, p. 76.
  64. ^ Rodriguez 2012, p. 184.
  65. ^ Sacher, Andrew (November 24, 2021). "Beatles vs Beach Boys: a brief history of the greatest rivalry in pop innovation". Brooklyn Vegan.
  66. ^ Gilliland, John (1969). "Show 37 – The Rubberization of Soul: The great pop music renaissance. [Part 3]" (audio). Pop Chronicles. University of North Texas Libraries.
  67. ^ Priore 2005, p. 173.
  68. ^ Rensin, David (December 1976). "A Conversation With Brian Wilson". Oui.
  69. ^ a b Carter 2016, p. 178.
  70. ^ Carter 2016, pp. 178–179.
  71. ^ Brown, Ethan (August 4, 2005). "Influences: Brian Wilson, The lost Beach Boy's favorite things—Phil Spector, Arthur Koestler, and Celine Dion's legs". New York. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  72. ^ Leaf 1978, p. 97.
  73. ^ a b c d e f g h i Vosse, Michael (April 14, 1969). "Our Exagmination Round His Factification For Incamination of Work in Progress: Michael Vosse Talks About Smile". Fusion. Vol. 8.
  74. ^ a b Kent 2009, p. 36.
  75. ^ Sanchez 2014, p. 101.
  76. ^ a b Gaines 1986, pp. 168–169.
  77. ^ a b c Nolan, Tom (November 27, 1966). "The Frenzied Frontier of Pop Music". Los Angeles Times West Magazine.
  78. ^ a b Sanchez 2014, pp. 93–94.
  79. ^ a b c d e f Badman 2004, p. 147.
  80. ^ Grant, Mike (February 1967). "'Our influences are of a religious nature': the Beach Boys on Smile". Rave.
  81. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 91.
  82. ^ a b Simmons, Sylvie (March 2004). "Brian Wilson: Smile? Don't mind if I do…". Mojo.
  83. ^ a b Leaf 1978, p. 116.
  84. ^ Tobler 1978, p. 37.
  85. ^ a b Zahl, David (November 16, 2011). "That Time The Beach Boys Made a Teenage Symphony to God". Mockingbird.
  86. ^ a b Michael (June 7, 1999). "Let's Just Say That Sometimes?>!". Freaky Trigger. Retrieved July 1, 2014.
  87. ^ Sandall, Robert (September 23, 2004). "SMiLE: How We Created Pop's Lost Legend". The Daily Telegraph.
  88. ^ Lambert 2008, p. 115.
  89. ^ Badman 2004, p. 131.
  90. ^ a b Williams 2010, p. 94.
  91. ^ Williams 2010, pp. 94–98.
  92. ^ Carter 2016, p. 182.
  93. ^ a b c Priore 2005, p. 68.
  94. ^ a b Reid, Darren R. (2013). "Deconstructing America: The Beach Boys, Brian Wilson, and the Making of SMiLE". Open Access History and American Studies.
  95. ^ a b Dillon 2012, p. 151.
  96. ^ a b Priore 2005, p. 89.
  97. ^ Priore 2005, p. 73.
  98. ^ Myers, Marc (October 7, 2011). "Still Picking Up Good Vibrations". The Wall Street Journal.
  99. ^ a b Myers, Matt (October 7, 2011). . Jazzwax. Archived from the original on July 2, 2014. Retrieved July 5, 2014.
  100. ^ Carter 2016, pp. 169, 182.
  101. ^ Carter 2016, p. 183.
  102. ^ a b Carter 2016, p. 184.
  103. ^ Schinder 2007, p. 116.
  104. ^ a b Bell, Matt (October 2004). "The Resurrection of Brian Wilson's Smile". Sound on Sound. Retrieved July 16, 2013.
  105. ^ a b c d Britt, Thomas. "The Beach Boys: The SMiLE Sessions". PopMatters.
  106. ^ a b Priore 2005, p. 70.
  107. ^ a b c d e f g h i Toop, David (November 2011). "The SMiLE Sessions". The Wire. No. 333. pp. 30–31.
  108. ^ "The Beach Boys - SMiLE Sessions Webisode #9 - Chaos & Complexity" (Video). YouTube. The Beach Boys. November 29, 2011.
  109. ^ a b c d Masley, Ed (October 28, 2011). "Nearly 45 years later, Beach Boys' 'Smile' complete". Arizona: AZ Central. Retrieved November 19, 2014.
  110. ^ Richardson, Mark (November 2, 2011). "The Smile Sessions review". Pitchfork. Retrieved July 16, 2013.
  111. ^ Lynskey, Dorian (May 16, 2016). "Brian Wilson Entrances Bristol on Eve of 'Pet Sounds' 50th Anniversary". Rolling Stone.
  112. ^ Essner, Dean (September 27, 2014). "Brian Wilson's SMiLE vs. The Beach Boys' The Smile Sessions". PopMatters.
  113. ^ Hall 2014, p. 63.
  114. ^ Sellars 2015, p. 106.
  115. ^ Fusilli, Jim (June 19, 1998). "Beach Boy Bounces Back". The Wall Street Journal.
  116. ^ Dansby, Andrew (November 11, 2011). "Beach Boys makes its fans SMiLE again". Chron.
  117. ^ Lowe 2007, p. 219.
  118. ^ Sommer, Tim (July 21, 2015). "Beyond the Life of Brian: The Myth of the 'Lesser' Beach Boys". The New York Observer.
  119. ^ a b c d e f g h Priore 2005, p. 102.
  120. ^ Toop 1995, p. 114.
  121. ^ Lambert 2016, pp. 82–85.
  122. ^ Carter 2016, p. 181.
  123. ^ a b Carlin 2006, p. 97.
  124. ^ a b Sharp, Ken (April 2, 2013). . Rock Cellar Magazine. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 2, 2014.
  125. ^ a b c Priore 2005, p. 79.
  126. ^ Priore 2005, p. 23.
  127. ^ Leopold, Todd (January 17, 2012). "The creative struggle of Brian Wilson". CNN.
  128. ^ a b Petridis, Alexis (October 27, 2011). "The Beach Boys: The Smile Sessions – review". The Guardian. London. Retrieved June 28, 2013.
  129. ^ a b Priore 2005, p. 69.
  130. ^ Sanchez 2014, p. 88.
  131. ^ Murphy, Sean (August 28, 2012). "The Once and Future King: 'SMiLE' and Brian Wilson's Very American Dream". Popmatters. Retrieved July 17, 2014.
  132. ^ a b Davis, Erik (November 9, 1990). . LA Weekly. Archived from the original on December 4, 2014. Retrieved January 14, 2014.
  133. ^ a b c d Priore 2005, p. 72.
  134. ^ Priore 1995, p. 30.
  135. ^ a b c d Badman 2004, p. 167.
  136. ^ a b c d e f g h Howard, Ed (July 28, 2003). . Stylus. stylusmagazine.com. Archived from the original on May 10, 2012.
  137. ^ a b Badman 2004, p. 142.
  138. ^ Holdship, Bill (April 6, 2000). "Heroes and Villains". The Los Angeles Times.
  139. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 131–132, 153.
  140. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 120.
  141. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 93.
  142. ^ Priore 2005, pp. 65, 68.
  143. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 156, 167.
  144. ^ Preiss 1979, p. [page needed].
  145. ^ Priore 2005, p. 71.
  146. ^ a b Badman 2004, p. 150.
  147. ^ "The 50 Greatest Beach Boys Songs". Mojo Magazine. June 2012.
  148. ^ Badman 2004, p. 168.
  149. ^ Stebbins 2011, p. 90.
  150. ^ Priore 2005, p. 74.
  151. ^ Priore 2005, p. 42.
  152. ^ Priore 2005, p. 92.
  153. ^ Trynka & Bacon 1996, p. 128.
  154. ^ Preiss 1979, p. 60.
  155. ^ Priore 2005, p. 65.
  156. ^ a b c d e Badman 2004, p. 151.
  157. ^ Priore 2005, p. 66.
  158. ^ a b Badman 2004, p. 160.
  159. ^ Priore 2005, p. 109.
  160. ^ a b Priore 2005, p. 10.
  161. ^ Badman 2004, p. 161.
  162. ^ a b c d e f g Badman 2004, p. 163.
  163. ^ a b c Williams & Anderle 1995, p. 230.
  164. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 250.
  165. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 173.
  166. ^ Priore 2005, p. 82.
  167. ^ a b Priore 2005, p. 86.
  168. ^ Preiss 1979, p. 62.
  169. ^ Lambert 2007, p. 47.
  170. ^ Lambert 2016, p. 90.
  171. ^ a b c Carlin 2006, p. 112.
  172. ^ Badman 2004, p. 144.
  173. ^ Badman 2004, p. 145.
  174. ^ Priore 1995, p. 154.
  175. ^ Priore 2005, pp. 169–170.
  176. ^ a b Priore 2005, p. 170.
  177. ^ a b c Badman 2004, p. 165.
  178. ^ Doggett 1997, p. 72.
  179. ^ a b c Carlin 2006, p. 111.
  180. ^ a b Badman 2004, p. 156.
  181. ^ a b Badman 2004, p. 162.
  182. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 173, 178, 180–181.
  183. ^ a b c d e f Badman 2004, p. 173.
  184. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 175–177.
  185. ^ Preiss 1979, p. 63.
  186. ^ Matijas-Mecca 2017, p. 180.
  187. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 102.
  188. ^ a b White 1996, p. 269.
  189. ^ a b c Carlin 2006, p. 100.
  190. ^ a b Priore 2005, p. 100.
  191. ^ a b c Schinder 2007, p. 118.
  192. ^ a b Williams 1997, pp. 17–23.
  193. ^ Matijas-Mecca 2017, pp. xiv, 60–63, 77–78.
  194. ^ Priore 1995, p. 197.
  195. ^ a b c Highwater, Jamake (1968). Rock and Other Four Letter Words: Music of the Electric Generation. Bantam Books. ISBN 0-552-04334-6.
  196. ^ a b Himes, Geoffrey (September 1983). "The Beach Boys High Times and Ebb Tides Carl Wilson Recalls 20 Years With and Without Brian". Musician (59).
  197. ^ Heylin 2007, pp. 186–187.
  198. ^ a b c Stebbins 2011, p. [page needed].
  199. ^ Kent 2009, p. 29.
  200. ^ Kent 1995, pp. 263, 267.
  201. ^ Stebbins 2000, p. 58.
  202. ^ Thomas, Tracy (January 28, 1967). "Beach Boy a Day: Brian — Loved or Loathed Genius". NME.
  203. ^ Love 2016, pp. 160–162, 166.
  204. ^ a b c Hedegaard, Erik (February 17, 2016). "The Ballad of Mike Love". Rolling Stone.
  205. ^ a b Heylin 2007, p. 180.
  206. ^ a b Badman 2004, p. 181.
  207. ^ Weis, Gary (Director) (1976). The Beach Boys: It's OK! (Documentary).
  208. ^ a b Parkes, Taylor (May 22, 2013). "The Clang Of The Yankee Reaper: Van Dyke Parks Interviewed". The Quietus.
  209. ^ Fine, Jason (June 21, 2012). "The Beach Boys' Last Wave". Rolling Stone. Retrieved June 8, 2014.
  210. ^ a b Heylin 2007, pp. 182–183.
  211. ^ Heylin 2007, p. 183.
  212. ^ Heylin 2007, p. 51.
  213. ^ Carlin 2006, pp. 103, 280.
  214. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 103.
  215. ^ a b Gaines 1986, p. 171.
  216. ^ a b Kent 2009, p. 32.
  217. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 159.
  218. ^ a b c d e f Leaf, David (Director) (2004). Beautiful Dreamer: Brian Wilson and the Story of Smile (Documentary).
  219. ^ a b c Kent 2009, p. 41.
  220. ^ Griffiths, David (December 21, 1968). "Dennis Wilson: "I Live With 17 Girls"". Record Mirror.
  221. ^ Love 2016, p. 163.
  222. ^ a b c Sharp, Ken (July 28, 2000). . Goldmine. Archived from the original on January 9, 2013.
  223. ^ a b Heylin 2007, p. 182.
  224. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 163.
  225. ^ Matijas-Mecca 2017, p. 50.
  226. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 105.
  227. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 155–156.
  228. ^ Priore 2005, p. 39.
  229. ^ a b c d e Priore 2005, p. 96.
  230. ^ Stebbins 2000, p. 85.
  231. ^ a b White 1996, p. 270.
  232. ^ Sanchez 2014, p. 86.
  233. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 106.
  234. ^ Sanchez 2014, pp. 86–87.
  235. ^ "It's Beach Boys Over Beatles: Reader Poll". Billboard. Vol. 78, no. 50. December 10, 1966. p. 10. ISSN 0006-2510.
  236. ^ "The History of Rock 1966". Uncut. 2015. pp. 79, 141–142. ASIN B01AD99JMW.
  237. ^ Priore 1995, p. 255.
  238. ^ Sanchez 2014, p. 4.
  239. ^ Carlin 2006, pp. 108–109.
  240. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 153, 159, 162.
  241. ^ a b Gaines 1986, p. 174.
  242. ^ a b Leaf 1978, p. 110.
  243. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 172.
  244. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 163, 173, 180.
  245. ^ a b Williams & Anderle 1995, p. [page needed].
  246. ^ Matijas-Mecca 2017, pp. xx–xxi.
  247. ^ Love 2016, pp. 164–165.
  248. ^ a b Love 2016, p. 164.
  249. ^ Hepworth 2016, p. 223.
  250. ^ Williams & Anderle 1995, p. 224.
  251. ^ a b c d Holdship, Bill (August 1995). "Lost in Music: Brian Wilson". MOJO. No. 2.
  252. ^ Runtagh, Jordan (September 15, 2017). "Music's 30 Fiercest Feuds and Beefs: Brian Wilson vs. Mike Love". Rolling Stone.
  253. ^ Michaels, Sean (June 12, 2014). "Brian Wilson fans furious at Frank Ocean and Lana Del Rey collaborations". The Guardian.
  254. ^ Love 2016, pp. 163–164.
  255. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 116.
  256. ^ Love 2016, pp. 131, 151.
  257. ^ Love 2016, pp. 162, 166.
  258. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 313.
  259. ^ Wilson, John (October 21, 2011). "Brian Wilson interview". Tintin; Brian Wilson interview. bbc.co.uk. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  260. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 167, 180.
  261. ^ Heylin 2007, p. 95.
  262. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 170, 178, 243.
  263. ^ Badman 2004, pp. 173, 178.
  264. ^ Priore 2005, p. 113.
  265. ^ Kent 1995, p. 266.
  266. ^ Kent 2009, p. 40.
  267. ^ Badman 2004, p. 178.
  268. ^ Heylin 2007, p. 186.
  269. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 167.
  270. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 175.
  271. ^ Kent 2009, pp. 38, 42.
  272. ^ Williams & Anderle 1995, p. [page needed].
  273. ^ a b Gaines 1986, pp. 167–168.
  274. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 117.
  275. ^ a b Badman 2004, pp. 153, 163, 173, 180.
  276. ^ a b Carlin 2006, p. 119.
  277. ^ Love 2016, p. 107.
  278. ^ a b Pond, Steve (November 5 – December 10, 1987). "Brian Wilson". Rolling Stone. p. 176.
  279. ^ Kent 1995, p. 263.
  280. ^ Williams & Anderle 1995, p. 233.
  281. ^ Frith, Simon (1981). "1967: The Year It All Came Together". The History of Rock.
  282. ^ a b . January 29, 2014. Archived from the original on February 24, 2021. Retrieved June 27, 2014.
  283. ^ Kiehl, Stephen (September 26, 2004). "Lost and Found Sounds (page 2)". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved April 23, 2018.
  284. ^ Priore 2005, p. 114.
  285. ^ Gaines 1986, p. 165.
  286. ^ a b c d Badman 2004, p. 180.
  287. ^ Priore 2005, p. 106.
  288. ^ Priore 2005, p. 107.
  289. ^ a b Badman 2004, pp. 180–181, 183.
  290. ^ Priore 2005, pp. 116–117.
  291. ^
smile, beach, boys, album, this, article, about, beach, boys, unfinished, album, from, 1966, 1967, confused, with, smiley, smile, smile, sessions, brian, wilson, presents, smile, smile, stylized, smile, unfinished, album, american, rock, band, beach, boys, tha. This article is about the Beach Boys unfinished album from 1966 1967 It is not to be confused with Smiley Smile The Smile Sessions or Brian Wilson Presents Smile Smile stylized as SMiLE 1 is an unfinished album by the American rock band the Beach Boys that was intended to follow their 1966 album Pet Sounds It was to be an LP of twelve tracks assembled from modular fragments the same editing process used for their Good Vibrations single Instead after a year of recording the album was shelved and the group released a downscaled version Smiley Smile in September 1967 Over the next four decades few of the original Smile tracks were officially released and the project came to be regarded as the most legendary unreleased album in popular music history 2 3 SmileOne of the covers prepared by Capitol s art department illustration by Frank HolmesStudio album unfinished by the Beach BoysRecordedFebruary 17 1966 July 1971StudioWesternColumbiaGold StarSound RecordersCapitolBeach Boys Los Angeles GenreArt popprogressive poppsychedeliaexperimentalProducerBrian WilsonThe Beach Boys recording chronologyPet Sounds 1966 Smile 1966 1967 Smiley Smile 1967 The album was produced and almost entirely composed by Brian Wilson with guest lyricist and assistant arranger Van Dyke Parks both of whom conceived the project as a riposte to the British sensibilities that had dominated popular music of the era Wilson touted Smile as a teenage symphony to God to surpass Pet Sounds It was a concept album that was planned to feature word paintings tape manipulation more elaborate vocal arrangements experiments with musical acoustics themes of youth and innocence and comedic interludes with influences drawn from mysticism pre rock and roll pop doo wop jazz ragtime musique concrete classical American history poetry spirituality and cartoons Over 50 hours of tape was recorded ranging from musical and spoken word to sound effects and role playing The lead single would have been Heroes and Villains about the early history of California or Vega Tables a tongue in cheek promotion of organic food Numerous issues including legal entanglements with Capitol Records Wilson s uncompromising perfectionism and mental instabilities as well as Parks withdrawal from the project in early 1967 prevented the album s completion Most of the tracks were produced between August and December 1966 but few were ever finished and the album s structure was never finalized Afraid of the public s reaction to his work Wilson blocked attempts to release Smile in the subsequent years After the group issued a truncated version of Heroes and Villains they reworked some of the material into new songs such as Cool Cool Water and completed only three more tracks Our Prayer Cabinessence and Surf s Up A mythology grew around the project and its unfulfilled potential inspired many artists especially those in indie rock post punk electronic and chamber pop genres Smile had been estimated to be 50 done by mid 1967 4 Since the 1980s extensive session recordings have circulated widely on bootlegs allowing fans to assemble hypothetical versions of a finished album adding to its legacy as an interactive project Responding to this Capitol included a loose reconstruction of the album on the 1993 box set Good Vibrations In 2004 Wilson Parks and Darian Sahanaja arranged a version of Smile for concert performances billed as Brian Wilson Presents Smile which Wilson then adapted into a solo album He stated that this version differed substantially from his original vision 5 The 2011 compilation The Smile Sessions was the first official package devoted to the original Beach Boys recordings and included an approximation of the completed album It received universal acclaim and won Best Historical Album at the 55th Grammy Awards Contents 1 Background 2 Creative circle 2 1 Collaboration with Parks 2 2 Wilson s associates 3 Inspiration and concept 3 1 Overlap with other Brother Records projects 3 2 American identity 3 3 Humor and mysticism 4 Themes and lyricism 5 Composition and production 5 1 Modular approach 5 2 Orchestrations and arrangements 5 3 Contemporary context 6 Potential contents 6 1 Tracks listed on Wilson s 1966 note 6 1 1 Good Vibrations 6 1 2 Heroes and Villains 6 1 3 I m in Great Shape 6 1 4 Wind Chimes 6 1 5 Wonderful 6 1 6 Cabin Essence 6 1 7 Child Is Father of the Man 6 1 8 Surf s Up 6 1 9 Do You Like Worms 6 1 10 Vega Tables 6 1 11 The Old Master Painter 6 1 12 The Elements 6 2 Non listed tracks 6 2 1 Prayer 6 2 2 I Ran 6 2 3 He Gives Speeches 6 2 4 Holidays 6 2 5 I Wanna Be Around 6 2 6 You re Welcome 6 2 7 Love to Say Dada 6 3 Audio verite and other recordings 7 Artwork and packaging 8 Original recording sessions and collapse 8 1 Criticism from Wilson s bandmates 1966 1967 8 2 Drug use Wilson s mental state and perfectionism 1966 1967 8 3 Early sessions and promotion May December 1966 8 4 First signs of issues and resistance November December 1966 8 4 1 Don t fuck with the formula 8 5 Capitol lawsuit and Parks departure December 1966 March 1967 8 6 Wilson s move to Bel Air and disintegrated circle Late 1966 April 1967 8 7 Semi hiatus April May 1967 8 8 Smiley Smile June September 1967 9 Aftermath 9 1 Wilson s struggles and Song Cycle 9 2 Further recording and abandoned Reprise release 10 Bootlegs partial releases and fan efforts 10 1 Earliest bootlegs and fan network 10 2 Brother Records Smile and Linett tape 10 3 Look Listen Vibrate Smile 10 4 Spread of bootlegs and Good Vibrations box set 10 5 Smile box set rumors and arrests 11 Official versions 11 1 2004 Brian Wilson Presents Smile 11 2 2011 The Smile Sessions 12 Influence and legacy 12 1 Legend and mystique 12 2 Hypothetical release scenario 12 3 Innovations 12 4 Alternative music 12 5 Unfinished state and interactivity 12 6 In popular culture 13 Reconstruction track listings 14 Track table 15 Personnel 16 Notes 17 References 18 Bibliography 19 Further reading 20 External linksBackground editIn late 1964 as Brian Wilson s industry profile grew he became acquainted with various individuals from around the Los Angeles music scene 6 He also took an increasing interest in recreational drugs particularly marijuana LSD and Desbutal 7 According to his then wife Marilyn Wilson s new friends had the gift of gab All of a sudden Brian was in Hollywood these people talk a language that was fascinating to him Anybody that was different and talked cosmic or whatever he liked it 6 Wilson s closest friend in this period was Loren Schwartz an aspiring talent agent that he met at a recording studio Schwartz introduced Wilson to marijuana and LSD as well as a wealth of literature commonly read by college students 8 nb 1 During his first LSD trip Wilson had what he considered to be a very religious experience and claimed to have seen God 9 nbsp Wilson producing a Pet Sounds recording session in early 1966In November 1965 early in the sessions for the Beach Boys 11th studio LP Pet Sounds Wilson began experimenting with the idea of recording an album focused on humor and laughter 10 nb 2 He was intent on making Pet Sounds a complete departure from previous Beach Boys releases and did not wish to work with his usual lyricist Mike Love Instead he worked with jingle writer Tony Asher on most of the album s songs 11 nb 3 On February 17 1966 Wilson began tracking their song Good Vibrations which was intended for Pet Sounds but omitted due to Wilson s dissatisfaction with the recording 13 He attempted a couple of different arrangements of the track from then until April 14 Wilson stated at the time that he wanted to write songs with more than one level Eventually I would like to see longer singles so that the song can be more meaningful A song can for instance have movements in the same way as a classical concerto only capsulized 15 Starting with the fourth session held for Good Vibrations on May 4 he began recording the song in sections rather than tracking the full piece all the way through with the intention of later splicing the fragments into a composite track 16 Released on May 16 Pet Sounds was massively influential containing sophisticated orchestral arrangements that raised the band s prestige to the top level of rock innovators 2 In the US the album confused their fans and sold worse than previous Beach Boys releases but in the UK the reception was highly favorable 17 The UK success emboldened Wilson to take greater creative risks and helped convince the band s label Capitol Records to fund and promote his next project however ambitious it may be 18 Creative circle editCollaboration with Parks edit nbsp Van Dyke Parks pictured 1967 provided the majority of Smile s lyrics and thematic direction and participated in sessions as an instrumentalistIn 1966 Wilson attended a party held at the home of the Byrds record producer Terry Melcher There he was introduced to Van Dyke Parks a 23 year old professional songwriter arranger session musician and former child actor 19 nb 4 Parks had moved to Los Angeles a few years earlier hoping to compose the scores to Disney films but instead lent his services to the Byrds and MGM pop groups the Mojo Men and Harper s Bizarre 19 During this meeting Wilson noticed that Parks had an unusually articulate manner of speaking Wilson had been searching for a new lyricist and soon after approached Parks with the offer to write lyrics for the Beach Boys next album 22 Parks had worries having heard that Asher had dissociated himself from Wilson and the Beach Boys but nonetheless agreed to collaborate 23 Between July and September 24 Wilson and Parks wrote many songs together at Wilson s Beverly Hills home for the upcoming project tentatively called Dumb Angel 25 Writing sessions may have also extended to October or November 26 nb 5 Aside from playing on some of the Smile recording dates Parks contributions were limited to writing words to Wilson s melodies He said I had no input whatsoever in the music I was a total lyricist and sometimes an instrumentalist 27 Like Asher Parks had minimal experience as a lyricist and Wilson had little prior knowledge of his collaborator s musical background 28 Parks implied in various interviews that he and Wilson shared an understanding of the album s Americana thematic but in 2005 he wrote a response to a New York Review of Books article that stated otherwise Manifest Destiny Plymouth Rock etc were the last things on his mind when he asked me to take a free hand in the lyrics and the album s thematic direction 29 In a 2004 article journalist Geoffrey Himes stated that although Parks did not write any of the music he did collaborate with Wilson on the arrangements 24 Wilson s associates edit All of a sudden it wasn t just Brian and me in a room it was Brian and me and David Anderle and Michael Vosse and Loren Schwartz and Terry Sachen and all kinds of self interested people pulling him in various directions Van Dyke Parks 30 Having withdrawn from the Beach Boys concert tours Wilson placed distance between himself and his bandmates and continued to involve more people in his social business and creative affairs 31 As biographer Steven Gaines wrote his circle soon enlarged to encompass a whole new crowd Some of these people were drainers but others were talented and industrious 32 During the Smile era Wilson s coterie included David Anderle an MGM Records talent scout who was nicknamed the mayor of hip by the underground press 33 He initially met Wilson in 1965 through a family member 34 Gaines credits Anderle as the primary conduit between Wilson and the hip associates surrounding him 33 Danny Hutton a singer that Parks had performed with at The Troubador in 1964 35 He and Wilson first met in late 1964 they became further acquainted after being reintroduced by Hutton s manager Anderle in late 1965 34 Hutton also introduced Parks to Anderle who soon became Parks manager as well 21 Derek Taylor former press officer for the Beatles He had been the Beach Boys publicist since March 1966 36 Taylor said he was hired to take the band to a new plateau and to that end he spearheaded a media campaign that proclaimed Wilson to be a genius 37 Mark Volman singer from the Turtles He was introduced to Wilson by Hutton 38 and has rarely spoken about his association with Wilson because it had always made me feel like a groupie for Brian 39 Many of these people became mainstays at Wilson s home and during studio sessions 40 Various journalists were also arranged to accompany Wilson in and out of the studio 41 They included Michael Vosse a magazine reporter 42 who had been friends with Anderle in college 34 Parks introduced Vosse to Wilson 43 and Taylor arranged for Vosse to interview Wilson for the forthcoming release of Good Vibrations The day after their meeting Wilson called Vosse and offered him a job recording sounds of nature 42 Paul Jay Robbins from the Los Angeles Free Press Robbins was a New Left political activist who reported on and participated in the 1966 Sunset Strip riots He met Parks through attending Byrds concerts and Parks in turn brought Robbins into Wilson s fold 43 Paul Williams the 18 year old founder and editor of Crawdaddy 44 Williams stated that he had been impressed by Pet Sounds and Good Vibrations and subsequently found my way to Brian s mansion at Christmas 1966 and eventually made my way back to New York to spread the word like other journalists before and after me 45 Jules Siegel from The Saturday Evening Post 44 He was introduced to Wilson by Anderle 46 and subsequently accompanied Wilson at his home and in the studio for two months 47 Richard Goldstein from The Village Voice 44 The album held a grandiose importance among those involved as Anderle said Smile was going to be a monument That s the way we talked about it as a monument 48 Commenting on the reliability of figures such as Anderle Siegel and Vosse journalist Nick Kent wrote that their claims are oftentimes so lavish that one can be forgiven if only momentarily for believing that Brian Wilson had at that time orbited out to the furthermost reaches of the celestial stratosphere for the duration of this starcrossed project 49 Gaines acknowledged that the events surrounding the album differed so much according to each person s point of view that no one can be certain of the facts 50 Williams acknowledged that he Wilson Anderle Parks Taylor and other journalists were very stoned and that perhaps had some effect on our assessment of what was going on 51 Inspiration and concept editOverlap with other Brother Records projects edit Wilson originally planned many different projects such as a sound effects collage a comedy album and a health food album 52 Capitol did not support some of these ideas which led to the Beach Boys desire to form their own label Brother Records 53 Plans for the label began in August 1966 with Anderle at the head 54 In a press release he stated that Brother Records was to give entirely new concepts to the recording industry and to give the Beach Boys total creative and promotional control over their product 55 Anderle later said that the label was for releasing projects that were special for Brian and there was initially no concern over whether the label s products would be distributed by Capitol 56 Anderle said that it was really important to make the point that Brian was so creative at this time that it was impossible to try to tie things up we were talking about doing humor albums there was the Smile talk there was The Elements talk the humor concept was separate from Smile originally Smile was going to be the culmination of all of Brian s intellectual occupations 57 Journalist Tom Nolan later reported that Wilson s incredible fantasies included an album of music built from sound effects chords spliced together through a whole LP Nolan commented that when Wilson momentarily shifted his focus to films it had seemed to be a step easier to capturing more If you couldn t get a sound from a carrot you could show a carrot He would really liked to have made music that was a carrot 52 American identity edit nbsp According to Van Dyke Parks Smile was partly intended to reclaim popular music from the influence of British acts like the Beatles pictured in 1964 58 Smile was to be explicitly American in style and subject as a riposte to the British sensibilities that had dominated rock music of the era 59 Wilson stated that with Smile he intended to Americanize early America and mid America similar to how George Gershwin Americanized jazz and classical music 5 To Parks Gershwin s 1924 composition Rhapsody in Blue represented a musical kaleidoscope of America a quality that he and Wilson sought to emulate 60 Parks said that they kind of wanted to investigate American images Everyone was hung up and obsessed with everything totally British So we decided to take a gauche route that we took which was to explore American slang and that s what we got 29 Further on the subject he explained Everybody else was getting their snout in the British trough Everybody wanted to sing bettah affecting these transatlantic accents and trying to sound like the Beatles I was with a man who couldn t do that He just didn t have that option He was the last man standing 58 Mark Prendergast writes that Wilson spent the best part of 1966 working on Good Vibrations in order to keep up with the Beatles 61 and numerous writers state that Wilson intended Smile as a response to the Beatles August 1966 release Revolver 62 63 nb 6 In a 2004 interview Wilson mentioned that while the 1965 album Rubber Soul had inspired him to match the artistic standards of the Beatles for Pet Sounds Smile wasn t the same kind of thing it wasn t anything like The Beatles It wasn t pop music it was something more advanced 24 In examining many books documentaries and articles about the subject music journalist Andrew Sacher states that Wilson himself never seems to mention Revolver possibly because his main goal in late 1966 was topping his own Pet Sounds 65 Asked in a 1969 interview about the influence of Revolver on Wilson Mike Love stated that the record did not impact Wilson s music adding that Brian was in his own world believe me 66 Humor and mysticism edit nbsp Wilson stated that his understanding of ego and humor was evinced from the writings of Arthur Koestler pictured Smile was inspired by Wilson s growing fascination with matters such as astrology numerology and the occult 67 Wilson described himself as an avid reader after a friend had introduced him to Pickwick Bookshop a Hollywood bookstore I started reading too many books If I d stuck with just a few I d have been all right but I read so many authors it got crazy I went through a thing of having too many paths to choose from and of wanting to do everything and not being able to do it all 68 According to an unnamed participant If you came up to the house and introduced something new to Brian s thought processes astrology a different way to think about the relationship of Russia to China anything at all if all of a sudden he was into that it would find its way into the music You could hear a bit and say I know where that feeling came from 52 Many firsthand and secondary accounts support that Wilson owned books that encompassed poetry prose cultural criticism Arthur Koestler s 1964 published The Act of Creation was often cited by Wilson and diverse expressions of non Christian religions and belief systems such as Hinduism from the Bhagavad Gita Confucianism from the I Ching or Book of Changes Buddhism and Subud 69 Much of this counter cultural literature promoted related practices that Wilson was further interested by such as meditation and vegetarianism 70 In a 2005 interview Wilson stated that his studying of metaphysics was crucial and referenced The Act of Creation as the big one for me He said that the book turned me on to very special things specifically that people attach their egos to their sense of humor before anything else 71 Anderle said that Wilson was fixated on humor and spirituality and had a real innate sense of spiritualism without the knowledgeable part that you learn by reading Whatever manifestation it took was whatever it was There was numerology for a while there was astrology for a while Then we got into the I Ching 72 Vosse said that he was told by Wilson that he felt laughter was one of the highest forms of divinity And Brian felt that it was time to do a humor album 73 74 He opined that Smile had it been completed would have been basically a Southern California non country oriented gospel album on a very sophisticated level because that s what he was doing his own form of revival music 73 Jules Siegel famously recalled that during one evening in October Wilson announced to his wife and friends that he was writing a teenage symphony to God 75 According to Siegel Wilson felt he was moving into a white spiritual sound that he thought represented the future of music 76 nb 7 In November 1966 Nolan reported that Wilson s shift in artistic focus was inspired by his psychedelic experience from the year prior 77 Asked where he believed music would go Wilson responded White spirituals I think that s what we re going to hear Songs of faith 78 nb 8 In late 1966 Wilson commented that Dumb Angel had been a working title for the album and explained that the name was discarded because the group wanted to go with something more cheery 79 nb 9 In February 1967 Carl offered that the title Smile was chosen because the group was focusing on spirituality and the concept of spreading goodwill good thoughts and happiness 80 Carlin wrote that the Dumb Angel title may have been inspired by hallucinations Wilson saw while composing late at night under the influence of Desbutals 81 In 2004 interviews Wilson denied that Smile was influenced by LSD 82 Zen or religion 5 Anderle also denied that drugs were an influence on Wilson s artistic pursuits 83 Parks said that Wilson envisioned Smile as experimenting with the mind expanding possibilities of music and the mind expanding properties of drugs 84 Themes and lyricism editVan Dyke had a lot of knowledge about America I gave him hardly any direction We wanted to get back to basics and try something simple We wanted to capture something as basic as the mood of water and fire Brian Wilson 2005 24 Although Smile is a concept album the surviving recordings do not lend themselves to any formal narrative development only to themes and experiences According to Heiser there is also a wealth of material that appears to have little if anything to do with an Americana theme 18 nb 10 Other themes involved physical fitness childhood and the natural environment 85 Web journal Freaky Trigger states While the lyrics are usually pretty damned literary at their most extreme they re divorced from any kind of meaning in the straightforward sense 86 Parks rebuked the suggestion that Smile was planned as a concept album and said that the work was only envisioned to use the American vernacular at a time when there was a lot of soundalike Beatle esque music around 87 By contrast musicologist Philip Lambert describes Smile as an American history lesson seen through the eyes of a time travelling bicycle rider on a journey from Plymouth Rock to Hawaii 88 Documentarian Keith Badman states that Wilson intended the album to be an American themed exploration of the innocence of youth and childhood 89 Williams concluded that it was to be perhaps the story of the unnatural love affair between one man s voice and a harpsichord 90 A melodic and rhythmic motif sometimes called the Bicycle Rider theme was configured into several tracks which he said broke down the walls that give songs identities without ever offering conceptual rock opera explanation or resolution 91 Parks lyrics employed wordplay allusions and quotations 92 He acknowledged that there were occasional references to specific historical entities however I don t think that I was interested in wordplay as much as I was interested in the power of words 93 References to American history range from the emergence of railroads and automobiles to Western colonialism and its impact on Native American tribes 59 Scholar Darren Reid interpreted the focus on older American themes as a self conscious deeper reflection on the hedonistic modern Americana of the Beach Boys earlier songs He said that despite Wilson s later claims that the album was about humor and happiness the resultant album does not radiate predominately happy mood Perhaps the smile Wilson refers to is an ironic one Humour sarcasm and lonely introspection are the contrasts that hold Smile together 94 Some songs followed themes related to God and childhood namely Wonderful Child Is Father of the Man and Surf s Up 85 Only Wonderful referred to God explicitly 95 Parks supported that his associations with the spiritual aspect of Wilson s work were inescapable but professed that he disliked writing lyrics that dealt with religious belief believing it gave the appearance of trying to be uppity 96 In his recollection There s a lot of things about belief in Smile and its very question of belief is what was plaguing Brian at that time What should we keep from the structure that we had the hard wiring that we had with religion He had religion beat into him and I did in my own way too So there s a lot of thinking about belief 97 Asked what words come to mind when listening to Smile in 2011 Wilson replied Childhood Freedom A rejection of adult rules and adult conformity Our message was Adults keep out This is about the spirit of youth 18 98 In another interview that year he questioned a journalist how they would categorize Smile They responded with impressionistic psychedelic folk rock and said that while most rock seems to be about adulthood Smile expresses what it s like to be a kid in an impressionistic way and depicts the psychedelic magic of childhood to which Wilson replied I love that You coin those just right 99 Carter summarized that Smile s subject matter engaged with matters related to history culture and society while also traversing complex landscapes of faith from national allegiance and ideological persuasion to religious belief and spiritual devotion 100 He argued that Smile picks up where Pet Sounds left off expanding the introspective themes of Pet Sounds into an exploration of the nation s historical social ideological and cultural identity 101 nb 11 In his view the lyrics also espouse an antiestablishment skepticism toward religious institutions an interest in alternative belief structures and exceptionalist leanings 102 Composition and production editModular approach edit We did things in sections There might just be a few bars of music or a verse or a particular groove or vamp They would all fit You could put them one in front of the other or arrange it in any way you wanted It was sort of like making films I think Carl Wilson 1973 18 In the 1960s it was common for pop music to be recorded in a single take but the Beach Boys approach differed 103 Since 1964 Wilson had performed tape splices on his recordings usually to allow difficult vocal sections to be performed by the group 104 By 1966 Good Vibrations had established Wilson s compositional approach for Smile Instead of working on whole songs with clear large scale syntactical structures he limited himself to recording short interchangeable fragments or modules Through the method of tape splicing each fragment could then be assembled into a linear sequence allowing any number of larger structures and divergent moods to be produced at a later time 18 A similar fragmentary approach is common in film editing albeit under the term dangling causes 105 nb 12 Parks said that he and Wilson were conscious of musique concrete and that they were trying to make something of it 106 Heiser called the album s use of jumpcuts a striking characteristic and said that they must be acknowledged as compositional statements in themselves giving the music a sonic signature every bit as noticeable as the performances themselves There was no way this music could be real Wilson was therefore echoing the techniques of musique concrete and seemed to be breaking the audio fourth wall if there can said to be such a thing 18 He interpreted the methodology of using modules as consistent with the album s conceptual thread a return to the pre grammatical non linear and analogical as opposed to logical thinking of early childhood they are artefacts of play 18 Ethnomusicologist David Toop countered that modular suggests discrete components that interlock and offered cellular as a possibly more accurate term 107 The material was continuously revised rewritten and rearranged on a daily basis Anderle recalled examples The beginning of Cabin Essence becomes the middle of Vega Tables or the ending becomes the bridge I would beg Brian not to change a piece of music because it was too fantastic But when Brian did change it I admit it was equally beautiful 41 Some of the songs were fully composed with obvious verse chorus structures including Heroes and Villains and Surf s Up while other songs were short segments designed to illustrate a mood or a setting 60 Due to the fragmentary and never finalized nature of the recordings it is ambiguous when and where most Smile songs begin and end 18 In the mid 1960s trialing mixes required the physical act of cutting tape reels with razor blades and splicing them together Creating an entire LP that relied on these processes proved too challenging for Wilson 18 Engineer Mark Linett argued that Wilson s ambitions were implausible to fulfill with pre digital technology especially with the infinite number of possible ways you could assemble this puzzle 108 His colleague Alan Boyd shared the same view stating that the tape editing would have been probably an unbearably arduous difficult and tedious task 109 Orchestrations and arrangements edit Smile has been described by various commentators as a work of art pop 110 111 psychedelic rock 112 113 avant pop 114 115 progressive pop 116 experimental rock 117 folk rock 99 118 musique concrete 106 18 and Americana music 119 At least 50 hours of tape was produced from the sessions and encompassed musical and spoken word to sound effects and role playing Many of the modules were composed as word paintings and invoked visual concepts or physical entities 18 According to Toop during the mid 1960s Wilson s style was akin to cartoon music and Disney influence mutating into avant garde pop 120 Heiser argues that attempting to summarize the whole of Smile is a pointless exercise and that it is preferable to write of the many musical inhabitants of this complex nebulous macrocosm 18 He lists several of these through the following descriptions a Renaissance era vocal motet by Carlo Gesualdo filled with manneristic unpredictable chromatic turns though treated with a typically glissandi laden Beach Boys approach young men pretending to be animals or performing an underwater chant populated by word beasts such as swim swim fishy underwater current jellyfish shark dolphin goldfish and eel a panoramic wild west movie score The Beach Boys faking a group orgasm a spoken word skit portraying a man trapped inside a microphone the guttural chanting of cartoon esque cavemen a group of french horns talking and laughing with each other 18 The music itself carried on the harmonic ingenuity of Pet Sounds 121 and in the belief of academic Dave Carter it makes little point to distinguish between the two albums in terms of their differential impact 122 With Smile Wilson s orchestrations emphasized traditional American instruments such as banjo steel guitar fiddle mandolin harmonica and tack piano 123 Other instruments included precipitate brass like a Tibetan horn muted with tape piano baritone guitar and upright bass played in a tic tac style dobro bouzouki and bass harmonica 107 There was also a greater complexity to Wilson s compositions Al Jardine said that the music became more textural more complex and it had a lot more vocal movement With Good Vibrations and other songs on Smile we began to get into more esoteric kind of chord changes and mood changes and movement You ll find Smile full of different movements and vignettes Each movement had its own texture and required its own session 124 As with Pet Sounds Smile featured a more unique sense of rhythm relative to the band s earlier records 18 nbsp Parks compared Wilson s orchestrations to those by the early 20th century composer Percy Grainger Harpsichords and tack piano typically played in unison feature prominently as well as mallets and quirky echoey percussion 18 Parks said that the first thing I can remember in the studio with Wilson was his use of tuneful percussion like a piano or a Chinese gong which reminded Parks of early 20th century orchestrations by men such as Percy Grainger particularly Grainger s arrangement of Country Gardens 125 Priore noted that a flair for exotica can be heard in Holidays Wind Chimes Love to Say Dada and Child Is Father of the Man 126 Heiser observed that playful and colorful moods which he likens to the music of Sesame Street are consistent throughout the recordings 18 The vocal arrangements according to Heiser use a wide range of pitch centres antiphonal effects rhythmic variations juxtapositions of legato and staccato figures rounders like echoes and vocal effects not usually associated with mid sixties rock records 18 Academic Brian Torff commented that Smile contained choral arranging and a rhapsodic Broadway element 127 Toop wrote that the Smile vocals willfully regresses into baby talk 107 Williams suggested that for the most part Smile uses words the same way it uses strings and keyboards for their sounds 90 Freaky Trigger concurred that the line between the sung word and mere sound become criss crossed and blurred again and again and again where the word becomes subservient to sound which is only six or so steps on the road to sound for the sake of sound The journal considers comparisons with the work of Sun Ra and John Cage and concludes that this was a reconfiguration of doo wop a genre that the Beach Boys were rooted in 86 Psychedelic music will cover the face of the world and color the whole popular music scene Anybody happening is psychedelic Brian Wilson quoted in TeenSet late 1966 125 Psychedelic musical characteristics distinguished the Beach Boys mid 1960s work particularly through the group s invocation of greater fluidity elaboration and formal complexity a cultivation of sonic textures the introduction of new combinations of instruments multiple keys and or floating tonal centers and the occasional use of slower more hypnotic tempos 69 Guardian critic Alexis Petridis wrote that until the negative effects of LSD surfaced in rock music via Skip Spence s Oar 1969 and Syd Barrett s The Madcap Laughs 1970 artists tactfully ignored the dark side of the psychedelic experience He argued that Smile presented such a quality in the form of alternately frantic and grinding mayhem Fire isolated small hours creepiness Wind Chimes and weird dislocated voices Love to Say Dada 128 Contemporary context edit I d call it contemporary American music not rock n roll Rock n roll is such a worn out phrase It s just contemporary American Brian Wilson discussing Smile with NME late 1966 129 We wanted Smile to be a totally American article of faith And in fact it seemed to me the best way to do that was to be counter countercultural Van Dyke Parks 2009 130 Smile drew from what most rock stars of the time considered to be antiquated pop culture touchstones like doo wop barbershop ragtime exotica pre rock and roll pop and cowboy films 128 Some of the music incorporated chanting forays into Indian and Hawaiian music jazz classical tone poems cartoon sound effects musique concrete yodeling 131 and elements derivative of Sacred Harp Shaker hymns Mele and Native American chants 107 Music critic Erik Davis wrote of the album s disconnect to contemporary rock music cliches noting that Smile had banjos not sitars 132 nb 13 Wilson said he deliberately avoided traditional rock instrumentation because he wanted to employ ideas that were more original for Smile 24 Also recorded were renditions of older songs such as Gee I Wanna Be Around The Old Master Painter and You Are My Sunshine Priore described this action as Wilson s attempt to expose pre 60s songwriting to the psychedelic era 133 Among the many contradictory templates Toop felt were buried within Smile s music legacy were Frank Sinatra the Lettermen the Four Freshmen Martin Denny Patti Page Chuck Berry Spike Jones Nelson Riddle Jackie Gleason Phil Spector Bob Dylan the Penguins and the Mills Brothers 107 He wrote that collaborations between Miles Davis and Gil Evans haunt SMiLE tracks like Look Song for Children and Child Is Father of the Man and compared the project s explorations of acoustic phenomena to similar tendencies by Charles Ives Les Baxter s thematic LPs and Richard Maxfield s electronic experiments with insect sounds or instruments played underwater 107 Furthermore he wrote that the project may be regarded as tone poems in oblique relationship to Third Stream that rejected dream of the late 1950s best described in Charles Mingus s term jazzical 107 In 2004 Wilson stated that Smile was too advanced for him to consider it pop music and said that he admired and was influenced by Johann Sebastian Bach for his ability to construct a continuum of complex music using simple forms and simple chords 24 Potential contents editThis LP will include Good Vibrations and Heroes And Villains and ten other tracks plus lots of humor some musical and some spoken It won t be like a comedy LP there won t be any spoken tracks as such but someone might say something in between verses Brian Wilson November 1966 134 Tracks listed on Wilson s 1966 note edit On December 15 1966 Wilson attempted to ease Capitol s concerns over the album s delay by delivering a handwritten note that contained an unordered preliminary track listing Capitol prepared record sleeves that listed these songs on the reverse side with the disclaimer see label for correct playing order 135 Preliminary mixes and in some cases many were created for several of these tracks 136 Good Vibrations edit As Wilson neared the completion of Good Vibrations he asked Parks to rewrite the song s lyrics but Parks declined as he did not wish to alienate Mike Love 137 nb 14 The title was written several times on one of the covers prepared by Capitol in order to boost album sales 136 Heroes and Villains edit nbsp Heroes and Villains early 1967 mix source source Excerpt from an early mix of Heroes and Villains One of the distinguishing features of Smile was the use of abrupt jumpcuts 18 Problems playing this file See media help Heroes and Villains the first song Wilson wrote with Parks was envisioned by Wilson as a three minute musical comedy to surpass Good Vibrations 139 He created myriad versions of the track some of which ranged in length from six to eight minutes 140 Wilson came up with the title and told Parks that he thought of the Old West when he wrote the melody which reminded Parks of the Marty Robbins song El Paso Parks immediately conceived the opening line I ve been in this town so long that back in the city I ve been taken for lost and gone and unknown for a long long time 141 The success of their collaboration led to them writing more songs with an Old West theme including Barnyard and I m in Great Shape 142 In 1978 Wilson told biographer Byron Preiss that there was intended to be a piece called the Barnyard Suite which would have been four songs in four short pieces combined together but we never finished that one We got into something else 93 I m in Great Shape edit On November 4 1966 Brian recorded a piano demonstration of Heroes and Villains that included I m in Great Shape and Barnyard as sections of the song but on his note from December I m in Great Shape was listed as a separate track from Heroes and Villains 143 Wind Chimes edit Marilyn said We went shopping one day and we brought home some wind chimes We hung them outside the house and then one day while Brian was sitting around he sort of watched them out the window and then he wrote the song Wind Chimes I think that s how it happened Simple He does a lot of things that way 144 In July 1967 the bass line was reworked into Can t Wait Too Long 79 Wonderful edit The title of Wonderful derived from a pet name Wilson had for Marilyn 95 Parks identified the music as entirely different from anything else and I thought that it was a place an opportunity to begin a love song Now I thought once we had gotten Heroes And Villains done we might have seen a boy girl song emerge other than Wonderful Honestly I really thought we would do it but I never found an opportunity to pursue that with the music I was given 145 Between August and December 1966 Wilson recorded three arrangements of the song all of which were unfinished 146 Cabin Essence edit nbsp Cabinessence 1968 20 20 version source source Cabinessence is described by MOJO as Smile in microcosm 147 Jardine remembered a lot of challenging vocal exercises and movements in that one But we enjoyed those challenges 124 Problems playing this file See media help Cabin Essence is about railroads 148 Biographer Jon Stebbins deemed the song some of the most haunting manic evil sounding music the Beach Boys ever made with its waltz chorus replete with demonic chanting buzzing cellos and rail spike pounding 149 Child Is Father of the Man edit Child Is Father of the Man features keyboard trumpet vocal rounds and a droning guitar saturated with reverb 133 According to Parks the lyric came from Wilson s fervent desire to re invent himself as an individual not as a boy The title was appropriated from William Wordsworth s poem My Heart Leaps Up 150 Parks later said that other lyrics had been written for the song that were never recorded 26 In 2003 he wrote new lyrics to complete the song 133 Surf s Up edit nbsp Surf s Up 1971 Surf s Up version source source A later composite version of Surf s Up was completed by the Beach Boys for the 1971 album of the same name Since portions of the instrumental track were missing a lead vocal one was overdubbed by Carl Problems playing this file See media help Surf s Up is the second song Wilson and Parks started writing together 151 It was composed as a two movement piece most of it in one night while they were high on Wilson s Desbutals 123 Wilson commented that the song s first chord was a minor seventh unlike most of our songs which open on a major and from there it just started building and rambling when we finished it he said Let s call it Surf s Up which is wild because surfing isn t related to the song at all 96 Oppenheim declared on his 1967 CBS documentary that Surf s Up was one aspect of new things happening in pop music today As such it is a symbol of the change many of these young musicians see in our future 152 In a self penned 1969 article Vosse wrote that Surf s Up was to be the intended ending climax of Smile and that it would have followed a section described as a choral amen sort of thing 73 Do You Like Worms edit nbsp Do You Like Worms Bicycle Rider source source A simple rhythmic and melodic theme referred to as Bicycle Rider served as a recurring motif on Smile It was later reworked into the chorus of Heroes and Villains 153 Preiss wrote that the figure was an outlet for Wilson s obsession with the sound of light wheels the gentle clicking of a coasting bicycle 154 Problems playing this file See media help Do You Like Worms is about the recolonization of the American continent None of the lyrics mention worms Parks later said that he did not know where the title came from and attributed it to possibly an engineer Wilson or Mike Love 155 The bicycle rider mentioned in the lyric is a reference to Bicycle Rider Back playing cards printed by the United States Playing Card Company during the 19th century Parks commented A lot of people misinterpreted that but that s OK it s OK not to be told what to think if you re an audience 93 In January 1967 the song s keyboard break melody was rerecorded as the chorus of Heroes and Villains 156 In 2004 the song was retitled Roll Plymouth Rock 157 Vega Tables edit Vega Tables according to Wilson came from his desire to turn people on to vegetables good natural food organic food Health is an important element in spiritual enlightenment But I do not want to be pompous about it so we will engage in a satirical approach 158 It was the last Parks co write that was recorded for the album 159 A module called Do a Lot or Sleep a Lot was considered for inclusion in Heroes and Villains In 1967 the section spun off into a piece called Mama Says 18 The Old Master Painter edit Also known as My Only Sunshine the track is a medley of the standards The Old Master Painter and You Are My Sunshine 158 Dennis Wilson sang the lead on You Are My Sunshine 129 In 2005 Wilson wrote that the rendition of The Old Master Painter was brief because he could not remember the full song 160 In January 1967 the track s ending was repurposed as the ending of Heroes and Villains minus the when skies are gray vocals 161 The Elements edit The Elements was a conceptualized four part movement that encompassed the four classical elements Air Fire Earth and Water 162 According to Anderle Wilson was really into the elements so much so that he ran up to Big Sur for a week just cause he wanted to get into that up to the mountains into the snow down to the beach out to the pool out at night running around to water fountains to a lot of water the sky the whole thing was this fantastic amount of awareness of his surroundings So the obvious thing was to do something that would cover the physical surroundings 163 To assist with the recording of this piece Wilson instructed others to travel around with a Nagra tape recorder and record the different variations of water sounds that they could find Vosse recalled I d come by to see him every day and he d listen to my tapes and talk about them I was just fascinated that he would hear things every once in a while and his ears would prick up and he d go back and listen again And I had no idea what he was listening for 164 nbsp Artist s rendering of the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 an event which Fire was based on The Elements Part 1 also known as Mrs O Leary s Cow and commonly referred to as Fire 162 was recorded under unusual conditions Wilson instructed a friend to purchase several dozen fire helmets at a local toy store so that everybody in the studio could don them during its recording Wilson also had the studio s janitor bring in a bucket with burning wood so that the studio would be filled with the smell of smoke 165 He subsequently recorded the crackling noises made by the burning wood and mixed them into the track 162 Anderle recalled that Wilson told the group what fire was going to be and what water was going to be we had some idea of air That was where it stopped None of us had any ideas as to how it was going to tie together except that it appeared to us to be an opera 163 Parks recalled that an elemental concept did not come up until later in the project 166 One of the illustrations created for the album included Vega Tables as part of The Elements but Wilson s note listed The Elements and Vega Tables as well as Wind Chimes separately 167 Wilson told Preiss that Air was an instrumental piano piece that was never finished 168 Non listed tracks edit Prayer edit Prayer is a wordless hymn that was intended to begin the album 169 Lambert describes the piece as every technique of chromatic harmony Wilson had ever heard or imagined 170 On the session tape Wilson announces This is intro to the album take one Jardine is heard remarking to Wilson that the piece could be considered its own track but Wilson rejects the suggestion 171 This information makes Prayer the only track that is known to have had a definitive placement on the album 136 I Ran edit I Ran also known as Look and originally labelled Untitled Song 1 is a song that featured upright bass vibraphones keyboard French horn guitars organs trombone and woodwind 172 The Beach Boys recorded vocals for the track on October 3 1966 but the tape from that session was lost 156 In 2003 the piece was retitled Song for Children and given new lyrics by Parks 133 He Gives Speeches edit He Gives Speeches was recorded on September 1 1966 at the second to last session for Good Vibrations In July 1967 the composition was reworked as the first section of She s Goin Bald 173 Holidays edit Holidays mislabeled on bootlegs as Tones or Tune X 174 is an exotica instrumental that ends with a marimba melody later recycled for the 1967 version of Wind Chimes 175 In 2003 the piece was given new lyrics and retitled On a Holiday 176 I Wanna Be Around edit I Wanna Be Around is a rendition of the Sadie Vimmerstedt and Johnny Mercer pop standard It was recorded the day after the Fire session along with a piece titled Friday Night which was intended to segue from I Wanna Be Around 162 Halfway through the session Wilson conceived the idea to overdub the sounds of construction noises onto the track He then handed out various tools to his musicians for them to create the sounds of sawing wood cutting hammering and drilling In 1968 these noises also known as Workshop Woodshop and The Woodshop Song were used on the fade out of the album version of Do It Again 177 In 2005 Wilson wrote that the purpose of recording I Wanna Be Around was to show how I could be funny and serious at the same time 160 Priore claimed that Wilson later told collaborator Andy Paley that I Wanna Be Around and Workshop were meant to function as a rebuilding after the fire 167 You re Welcome edit You re Welcome is a vocal chant with heavy reverb that was later issued as the B side of the 1967 Heroes and Villains single 178 Love to Say Dada edit Love to Say Dada or All Day is a piece that later evolved into Cool Cool Water In 2003 Love to Say Dada was given new lyrics by Parks and retitled In Blue Hawaii 18 Audio verite and other recordings edit Brian was consumed with humor at the time and the importance of humor He was fascinated with the idea of getting humor onto a disc and how to get that disc out to the people David Anderle 53 Wilson held sessions that were dedicated to capturing humorous situations 156 According to Carlin Wilson devoted hours to recording himself and friends while they chanted played games had pretend arguments or just shot the breeze It was just like the old days with his Wollensak recorder except much much weirder 179 The surviving tapes include Lifeboat reel recorded October 18 1966 24 minutes long and features Wilson Parks Anderle Vosse Wilson s sister in law Diane Rovell a woman named Dawn and Siegel Throughout the tape Siegel encourages others to play the party game Lifeboat where players act as shipwreck survivors who have to decide who among them will be tossed overboard in order to save the others 156 It later turns into barbed exchanges between the participants At one point someone asks Wilson What are we doing here 171 As the mood worsens Wilson is heard saying I feel so depressed Really seriously I keep sinking I m too down to smile 171 Second party reel recorded November 4 1966 Features Wilson Parks Hutton Vosse and a man named Bob 180 The group pretend to order treats from a psychedelic ice cream van that plays a music box version of Good Vibrations played by Wilson at a piano 179 Wilson then leads a comedy routine about falling into a piano and then into a microphone The group also plays a rhythm on bongos while chanting Where s my beets and carrots and I ve got a big bag of vegetables 180 Parks later said I sensed all that was destructive so I withdrew from those related social encounters 179 Vegetables Arguments recorded November 16 1966 Features mock disagreements between Vosse and session drummer Hal Blaine who plays a man that is irate at Vosse for trespassing into his garden It later turns into a serious conversation between Blaine Vosse and Wilson about the planetary alignments Wilson completes the session by having his own mock disagreement with Blaine Badman writes At one point it is believed that these recordings will somehow figure into the Vegetables track itself 181 nb 15 In early 1967 Brian s brothers Carl and Dennis went into the studio to record pieces that they had written individually Dennis I Don t Know was recorded on January 12 and Carl s Tune X later Tones followed on March 3 and 31 182 Badman speculated the recordings may have been part of a conscious effort to make Smile more of a group effort than effective a Brian solo project or may simply be for Carl and Dennis to test their production mettle 183 Brian also recorded novelty songs with photographer Jasper Daily Teeter Totter Love Crack the Whip and When I Get Mad I Just Play My Drums 184 Love characterized Teeter Totter Love as Simple but poignant 185 The AFM contracts for these tracks list Brother Records under Employer s Name 186 Gaines wrote that these recordings were to have fulfilled Wilson s separate humor album concept The collection was offered to A amp M Records but rejected 53 Vosse said that when Wilson pitched Crack the Whip to Chuck Kaye the head of A amp M You could see the panic on Kaye s face when he heard how awful it was This look of What the fuck do I do 187 Artwork and packaging editCapitol gave Smile the catalog number DT2580 At least two versions of the album jacket were designed with minor differences 188 It was to have included cover artwork designed by graphic artist Frank Holmes a friend of Parks as well as a booklet containing several pen and ink drawings also by Holmes 79 He met with Wilson and Parks circa June 1966 and was given lyric sheets of their songs for which he based his drawings on By Holmes recollection his contributions were finished by October 119 The pieces were titled My Vega tables The Elements Vega Tables Do You Like Worms Two step to lamps light Surf s Up Diamond necklace play the pawn Surf s Up Lost and found you still remain there Cabinessence The rain of bullets eventually brought her down Heroes and Villains Uncover the cornfield Home on the Range Cabinessence 183 Holmes based the cover on an abandoned jewelry store near his home in Pasadena 189 He recalled I thought that was a good image because of the way any time you go into a store you re entering something This was something that would be pulling you into the world of Smile the Smile Shoppe and it had these little smiles all around 119 Depicted inside the shop is a husband and wife a kind of early Americana old style 19th century kind of image 119 Wilson approved the cover and took it to Capitol 119 Parks later said that the illustrations heavily informed the making of Smile and considered them to be the album s third equation He felt that he and Wilson would not have continued the project the way they did without thinking of it in cartoon terms 190 According to Vosse the smile shop derived from Wilson s humor concept He said that everybody who knew anything about graphics and about art thought that the cover was not terribly well done but Brian knew better he was right It was exactly what he wanted precisely what he wanted 74 Parks recalled Frank was supposed to do something light hearted but there were no specific instructions and he came up with the perfect video vessel for realizing what we were doing something I thought was an integral part of the situation I think that still stands I think of Smile in visual terms 190 nbsp The Smile logo that was pictured on the original cover artIn September Capitol began production on a lavish gatefold cover with a 12 page booklet containing featuring color photographs of the group ultimately selected from a November 7 photoshoot in Boston conducted by Guy Webster as well as Holmes illustrations 79 In early 1967 they added the repeated written instances of Good Vibrations on the album cover which were not featured on Holmes original design 135 The back cover featured a monochrome photograph depiction of the group without Brian framed by astrological symbols 183 188 Capitol produced 466 000 copies of the record sleeve and 419 200 copies of the accompanying booklet 183 They were stored in a warehouse in Pennsylvania until the 1990s 191 Original recording sessions and collapse editThe gap between conception and realization was too great and nothing satisfied Brian by the time he d worked it out and gotten it on tape And eventually the moment passed like many other fine artists before him Brian was unable to realize his original concept of Smile when he wanted to and after a while he no longer wanted to He no longer had the same vision Paul Williams writing in the September October 1967 issue of Crawdaddy 192 Smile was shelved due to corporate pressures technical problems internal power struggles legal stalling and Wilson s deteriorating mental health 193 After investing several months into the project he concluded that Smile was too esoteric for the public and decided to record simpler music instead 194 195 Carl stated that Brian felt he could not complete the album and was intensely afraid of an unfavorable public response 196 In Brian s own words he and his band felt we were too selfishly artistic and weren t thinking about the public enough 197 Criticism from Wilson s bandmates 1966 1967 edit Writers frequently theorize that the album was cancelled because Wilson s bandmates were unable to appreciate the music However Stebbins says that the conclusions those writers draw from this perspective are overly simplistic and mostly wrong with not enough consideration for Wilson s psychological decline 198 Derek Taylor remembered that although Brian exhibited scary mood swings his bandmates were generally supportive of him 199 Taylor also remembered Wilson being terribly insecure and highly sensitive to criticism having never left me in peace whenever he would be asked by Wilson to offer music opinions 200 Carl Dennis and Jardine contributed instrumentally to some of the tracking sessions and Carl participated in the sessions more than anyone else in the band with the exception of Brian 198 although Stebbins notes Even Carl was unhappy with the project 201 Having attended some of the sessions circa January 1967 journalist Tracy Thomas reported in the NME that Brian s dedication to perfection does not always endear him to his fellow Beach Boys nor their wives nor their next door neighbours with whom they were to have dinner But when the finished product is Good Vibrations or Pet Sounds or Smile they hold back their complaints 202 nbsp Mike Love pictured 1966 was often blamed for the album s collapse a characterization that he and some commentators have disputed It is often suggested that Mike Love in particular was responsible for the project s collapse Love dismissed such claims as hyperbole and said that his vocal opposition to Wilson s drug suppliers was what spurred the accusation that he as well as other members of the band and Wilson s family sabotaged the project 203 Wilson s statements on the matter have been inconsistent he has both supported and denied whether his confidence in the project had been undermined by Love 204 Parks has sometimes stated that he was dismissed from the project at Love s behest 205 In a 1974 interview he elaborated that he had both resigned and was fired because Love and the least known members had decided that I had written some words that were indecipherable and unnecessary 206 Two years later when he was interviewed for the 1976 television special The Beach Boys It s OK he indicated that he himself had suggested to Love that they discard his lyrics after Love had inquired about a particular line and so they did 207 In a 2013 interview he said that he walked away from the job to escape Wilson s buffoonery and Love s jealousy 208 In journalist Clinton Heylin s estimation other reports suggest that it is more likely that Wilson himself became dissatisfied with Parks lyrics although Love certainly happily fed Wilson s change of opinion 205 Commenting on the accusation that he contributed to the project s collapse by voicing his criticisms to Wilson Love acknowledged that Wilson under the influence of psychoactive drugs could have become extra ultrasensitive to attitudes you know body language or whatever but disputed the insinuation that he should be held responsible and take a beating for his cousin s drug induced paranoia and debilitated mental condition 204 a subject that was much less understood in that era 209 Drug use Wilson s mental state and perfectionism 1966 1967 edit Brian would go after take after a monotony of repeated takes to get a performance that fell by the wayside because of maybe one eighth note He was his own worst critic and everybody suffered in the process Van Dyke Parks 210 One of the major issues that led to project s collapse was Wilson s uncompromising perfectionism which may have been exacerbated by his drug use at the time 210 In one Smile session tape a horn player can be heard sarcastically remarking of the producer s repeated calls for retakes Perfect just one more 211 At the end of another session which had lasted until dawn an engineer asked Wilson s wife if she thought he would be satisfied with a certain take to which she responded No when he gets home he won t be satisfied He s never satisfied 77 212 Wilson was later declared to have bipolar and schizoaffective disorders although most of the members in his coterie did not feel that he showed signs of mental illness during the early Smile sessions 213 In Michael Vosse s recollection Wilson was no more eccentric than a lot of people in showbiz and all those things that people looked back upon later as quite alarming had not originally appeared to be of significant concern 214 Anderle supported Brian wasn t the only strange one We were all strange doing strange things 215 Taylor remembered struggling with Wilson s temporary whims 216 To prepare for the album s writing and recording Wilson had purchased about two thousand dollars worth of marijuana and hashish equivalent to 18 000 in 2022 52 He erected a 30 000 271 000 hotboxing tent in what was formerly his dining room located a sandbox under the grand piano in his den and after developing a fixation with health and fitness replaced his living room furniture with gym mats 217 nb 16 In reference to the tent Vosse said we were all excited about it and anybody who thinks this was like Brian being wacko and everybody else disapproving is wrong 218 David Oppenheim who briefly visited Wilson s home in late 1966 later described the scene as a strange insulated household insulated from the world by money A playpen of irresponsible people 215 The sandbox remained in Wilson s home until April 1967 219 Carl recalled To get that album out someone would have needed willingness and perseverance to corral all of us Everybody was so loaded on pot and hash all of the time that it s no wonder the project didn t get done 196 Dennis echoed that the group became very paranoid about the possibility of losing our public Drugs played a great role in our evolution but as a result we were frightened that people would no longer understand us musically 220 Brian told an interviewer in 1976 We were too fucking high you know to complete the stuff We were stoned You know stoned on hash n shit 221 40 The only sober participant Al Jardine likened the experience to being trapped in an insane asylum referring to such incidents as a Heroes and Villains session where Brian instructed his bandmates to crawl around the studio space and make pig snorting noises 222 Wilson s use of LSD was negligible compared to his use of Desbutal 223 Parks said that he never witnessed Wilson using psychedelics 224 and in a 2004 interview stated that Brian was strongly against acid at that time 82 He said that he had not been interested in using psychedelics himself nor anything that would incapacitate Wilson 24 Anderle also said he never saw Wilson taking psychedelics 83 Vosse said that Wilson may have taken LSD once at the time 189 Siegel attributed Wilson s paranoid delusions odd behavior and loss of artistic confidence to his abuse of Desbutal By that point Brian was suffering from classic amphetamine psychosis He was taking a lot of amphetamines in the form of Desbutal which is methedrine and some barbiturate mixed together That s a combination that s gonna fuck you up if you take enough of it you will feel like the walls are looking at you There were a number of parts to his paranoia some of which were valid but one of the effects of the amphetamine is the God like feeling combined with the fear The things that you do you see as having so much potency which usually is your own delusion The problem is when you crash just how ugly and stupid and trivial it all looks all you can see are the mistakes 223 Vosse said that despite the large amount of marijuana that was available Wilson wasn t stoned all the time really Brian had a job to do and he was a hard workin guy 189 He referred to Brian s drug use as the biggest red herring in his story I ve heard so far and rebuked the accusation that Brian was some kind of nut 218 Danny Hutton disputed that the drugs got in the way at all and believed that Brian s use of certain substances had helped him work longer hours 218 Parks said Don t let the marijuana confuse the issue here If you look at the amount of work that was done in the amount of time it took to almost finish it it s amazing A very athletic situation very focused 218 Early sessions and promotion May December 1966 edit nbsp Most of the Smile sessions were conducted at Western Studio on Sunset Boulevard pictured 2019 On May 11 1966 Wilson recorded an instrumental take of Heroes and Villains at Gold Star Studios The session was conducted as an experiment and was not a full fledged recording 16 On August 3 Wilson returned to the studio for the tracking of Wind Chimes marking the unofficial start of the album s sessions 137 nb 17 From then over 80 sessions were conducted for the album spread out over the next ten months 18 Good Vibrations was completed on September 21 79 By then Dumb Angel had been renamed to Smile 225 nbsp The Beach Boys accepting a record sales certification at Capitol late 1966 Smile was one of the most discussed albums in the rock press 136 and was first projected for a December 1966 release date 177 Derek Taylor continued to write articles in the music press sometimes anonymously in an effort to further speculation about the album 226 Good Vibrations was released as a single and became the group s third US number one hit reaching the top of the Billboard Hot 100 in December as well as their first number one in Britain 227 Wilson told Melody Maker that Smile would be as much an improvement over Pet Sounds as that was over Summer Days 228 Dennis told Hit Parader In my opinion it makes Pet Sounds stink That s how good it is 229 230 At some point Wilson alongside Michael Vosse made an appearance on The Lloyd Thaxton Show where he spoke about the benefits of eating vegetables 42 In December Capitol ran ads for the album In Billboard that read Good Vibrations Number One in England Coming soon with the Good Vibrations sound Smile The Beach Boys 229 This was followed with a color ad in TeenSet that exclaimed Look Listen Vibrate SMILE 229 The ad promised the inclusion of Good Vibrations as well as other new and fantastic Beach Boys songs and an exciting full color sketch book look inside the world of Brian Wilson 231 Cardboard displays of the album s cover artwork were displayed in record stores and Capitol circulated a promotional ad for employees at its label which used Good Vibrations as the backdrop for a voice over saying With a happy album cover the really happy sounds inside and a happy in store display piece you can t miss We re sure to sell a million units in January 229 The Beach Boys album Smile and single Heroes And Villains will make them the greatest group in the world We predict they ll take over where The Beatles left off Hit Parader December 1966 119 In the UK one headline proclaimed that the Beach Boys British distributor EMI Records were giving the band the biggest campaign since the Beatles 232 On December 10 NME published a reader s poll that placed Wilson as the fourth ranked World Music Personality about 1 000 votes ahead of Bob Dylan and 500 behind John Lennon 233 In addition the Beach Boys were voted the top band in the world ahead of the Beatles the Walker Brothers the Rolling Stones and the Four Tops 234 nb 18 On December 17 KRLA Beat published a nonsense article by Wilson titled Vibrations Brian Wilson Style that contained many private jokes and references 119 nb 19 A Los Angeles Times West Magazine piece by Tom Nolan noted Wilson as the seeming leader of a potentially revolutionary movement in pop music 78 Biographer David Leaf wrote that although the success of Good Vibrations bought Brian some time and shut up everybody who said that Brian s new ways wouldn t sell his inability to quickly follow up the single was what became a snowballing problem 237 Sanchez writes that Wilson was poised to take his place next to the Beatles and Bob Dylan on the board of pop music luminaries but as time passed the hype for Smile went from expectation to doubt and bemusement 238 First signs of issues and resistance November December 1966 edit Murry Wilson had told me what a horrible mistake it had been for Brian to put out Good Vibrations because he said Brian s going to lose his whole audience So that became the big argument Are we gonna lose our image or are we gonna start a new one Michael Vosse 1969 73 Wilson started having increasing doubts about the project during the latter months of 1966 162 239 From October 25 to November 14 Wilson s bandmates embarked on a tour of Europe which included the group s first dates in the UK followed by their fourth annual US Thanksgiving tour from November 16 to 24 240 Vosse later wrote that Smile was a totally conceived entity when the group was away on their British tour but upon their return the project started going nuts 73 In Gaines description Wilson s bandmates knew nothing of Brian s strange behavior and were infuriated when they returned to California to them Anderle now appeared as the leader of a whole group of strangers that had infiltrated and taken over the Beach Boys and which were encouraging Wilson s eccentricities 241 Anderle commented I stand guilty on those counts I was an interloper and I was definitely fueling his creativity No holds barred No rules 241 242 Wilson s friends family and colleagues often date the project s unraveling to around the time he recorded Fire on November 28 162 Parks did not attend the session and later said that he had avoided it like the plague due to what he had perceived as regressive behavior from Wilson 243 Within a few days of the Fire session a building across the street from the studio burned down Wilson was frightened that the music may have caused the fire and decided to discard the track He later said that his use of marijuana and hashish led him to believe that he was creating witchcraft music 162 Tensions during the recording sessions emerged around this time marking a contrast from the joyous atmosphere that began the project 244 Anderle remembered that the debacle with The Elements coincided with what he felt was one of the greatest factors in the project s demise resistance Wilson began to encounter in the studio namely with engineers getting studio time and giv ing parts to one of the fellas or to a group of the fellas He said that Wilson would go through a tremendous paranoia before he would get into the studio knowing he was going to have to face an argument 245 Don t fuck with the formula edit Don t fuck with the formula is a quote that is often attributed to Love 246 although Love denied saying those specific words and later argued that the Beach Boys have no formula 247 The remark originates from a 1971 Rolling Stone magazine article The Beach Boys A California Saga written by Nolan 248 Unusual for rock journalism of the era Nolan s article devoted minimal attention to the group s music and instead focused on the band s internal dynamics and history especially the events surrounding the Smile sessions 249 The relevant text is as follows Mike Love was the tough one for David Anderle Mike really befriended David He wanted his aid in going one direction while David was trying to take it the opposite way Mike kept saying You re so good you know so much you re so realistic you can do all this for us why not do it this way and David would say Because Brian wants it that way Gotta be this way David really holds Mike Love responsible for the collapse Mike wanted the bread and don t fuck with the formula 52 In a prior interview from 1968 Anderle said that Wilson s bandmates were first concerned about losing what the Beach Boys are by going too far out beyond a simple dumb thing and had wanted to stay pretty much within the form of what the Beach Boys had created really hard whatever that is California rock or whatever 250 By Vosse s account while tensions had developed during the group vocal sessions older members of the Wilson family did everything possible to destroy the relationship between Brian and Van Dyke Brian and David Anderle and Brian and me out of suspicion that the Beach Boys would dissolve and they didn t like our appearances 73 Love addressed these accusations in a 1993 interview by stating that he had been deeply concerned about Wilson s treatment of himself others and the reputation of the band as well as the potential destruction of our livelihoods 251 In a 2015 interview he indicated that he did not have an issue with crazy stupid sounds nor with accommodating Wilson s odd requests but had still desired to make a commercially successful pop record so I might have complained about some of the lyrics on Smile 204 According to Carl I know there s been a lot written and maybe said about Michael not liking the Smile music I think his main problem was that the lyrics were not relatable They were so artistic and to him they were really airy fairy and too abstract Personally I loved it 41 nb 20 Over the ensuing decades don t fuck with the formula has been repeated in myriad books articles websites and blogs 248 nb 21 In Leaf s 1978 biography The Beach Boys and the California Myth Anderle is quoted saying that the line had been taken slightly out of context and clarified that Love had actually agreed with Anderle on a business level Artistically it was another matter 242 In a 1998 deposition related to the memoir Wouldn t It Be Nice My Own Story Wilson testified that Love had never spoken the line to him 254 Capitol lawsuit and Parks departure December 1966 March 1967 edit Vosse believed that as schisms developed within the Beach Boys Parks had become the most convenient scapegoat once the disapproving camp found that the songwriters would fight every once in awhile and have arguments 73 In Parks recollection the whole house of cards began tumbling down when he was invited to the studio by Wilson to settle a dispute from Love over the Cabinessence lyric over and over the crow cries uncover the cornfield 255 Love did not understand the lyrics and thought that the song contained possible references to drug culture something that he did not wish to be associated with and took to characterizing Parks contributions as acid alliteration 256 Parks did not offer him an explanation for the lyrics and he sang the line despite his reservations 257 Reflecting on their exchange Love said that he was not necessarily against the lyrics and that Parks had not appeared to be insulted by his questioning 258 Jardine said that Love would ask Parks on multiple occasions What does that lyric mean And he would go I don t know I was high laughs Mike would go That s disgusting That doesn t make any sense laughs 222 nb 22 Brian was starting meet a fantastic amount of resistance on all fronts Like very slowly everything started to collapse about him The scene with Van Dyke So he abandoned the studio Then He got his head into the business aspects of Brother Records So that kept him out of recording He had an incredible amount of excuses not to cut David Anderle 1968 245 On December 15 Wilson informed Capitol A amp R director Karl Engemann that the album and its lead single Heroes and Villains would probably be delivered some time prior to January 15 135 In response Capitol delayed the release date of Smile and Heroes and Villains to March 1967 135 Wilson had also begun to suspect that Capitol was withholding payments from the band and instructed Grillo to conduct an audit of the label s financial records Discrepancies were soon found 177 Possibly due to Capitol s insistence on a ready single Wilson returned to work on Heroes and Villains on December 19 1966 after which he halted work on the album s other tracks until April 1967 260 In January Brian missed his deadline and began working less on the album Carl received a draft notice from the US Army 183 Good Vibrations began falling off the top 20 chart positions after spending seven weeks in the top 10 261 and Parks was offered a solo artist deal from Warner Bros 183 Vosse said that Parks eventually signed the contract And the day he signed he put his head back into his own music again And was less and less available to Brian And Brian was less and less sure of what he was doing with the album 73 On February 28 the band launched a lawsuit against Capitol that sought neglected royalty payments in the amount of 250 000 equivalent to 2 24 million in 2022 Within the lawsuit there was also an attempt to terminate their record contract prior to its November 1969 expiry 262 Following the suit Wilson announced that the album s lead single would be Vega Tables a song that he had yet to start recording 263 Parks was strongly opposed to issuing Vega Tables as the album s lead single as he had considered the song to be one of their weaker efforts 264 After February by Anderle s account tensions between Parks and Wilson flared as the songwriters started clashing because Wilson thought Parks lyric was too sophisticated and in some areas Brian s music was not sophisticated enough for Van Dyke 163 Vosse wrote Van Dyke would get really mad because he hated working in a subservient position where there was someone that could say no and Brian always maintained that And every once in a while he would say no just to let Van Dyke know he could say no and that s what really made Van Dyke mad 73 Jules Siegel supported that Parks was tired of being constantly dominated by Brian 265 266 On March 2 after a session for Heroes and Villains Wilson and Parks ran into disagreements possibly over lyrics and temporarily dissolved their partnership This event is sometimes cited as marking the conclusion of the Smile era 267 nb 23 Parks himself stated that he did not wish to keep involving himself with what he felt were family feuds unrelated to him 269 and thought that Smile could have been finished without his continued participation 270 Wilson depended on Parks whenever issues came up in the studio and when Parks left the end result was that Wilson lost track of how the album s fragmented music should be assembled 271 Another dilemma according to Anderle was the lyrics since Wilson now had to finish some of the lyrics himself Well how was he gonna put his lyrics in with the lyrics already started by Van Dyke So he stopped recording for a while 272 Wilson s move to Bel Air and disintegrated circle Late 1966 April 1967 edit nbsp At one point Wilson thought that he was being targeted in a Jewish conspiracy led by record producer Phil Spector 273 Wilson s paranoid delusions had intensified throughout the winter 274 by which time his progressively erratic behavior had started to alarm his associates 275 One of the well known stories involves a portrait of Wilson that Anderle had been painting in secret for several months When he showed the painting to Wilson Wilson believed that the portrait had literally captured his soul 276 Anderle later said that he felt his relationship with Wilson was never the same afterward 52 On another occasion after attending a theatrical screening for the film Seconds Wilson was convinced that it had coded messages about his life planted by Phil Spector and director John Frankenheimer According to Gaines Wilson suggested to his colleagues that Spector and Frankenheimer were working together as part of a Jewish conspiracy to destroy Brian Wilson Anderle himself a Jew was so insulted he couldn t speak It took him several days to forgive Brian 273 Taylor said that Wilson later assigned people to follow Spector Then Murry was having Brian tailed and so Brian got someone to tail Murry and it just went on and on All of it complete insanity 219 By that time well it was just all hell breaking loose It was tapes being lost ideas being junked Brian thinking I m no good then I m too good then I can t sing I can t get those voices anymore There was even a time back then when there hardly seemed to be a Beach Boys at all Derek Taylor 1975 219 In Wilson s own words he had become fucked up and jealous of Spector and the Beatles 277 and he said that when he started Smile he had been trying to beat the Beatles 278 Taylor commented that Wilson was preoccupied with a mad possessive battle against the Rolling Stones and particularly the Beatles and that he didn t want me to like any other artist but himself 216 nb 24 Throughout early 1967 the music industry and pop fans were aware that the Beatles were working on a significant new work as their follow up to Revolver with the band having been ensconced in their London studios since the previous November 281 According to historian Darren Reid In Wilson s mind the first album to market in 1967 would be the one to claim victory it would be the record which would set the standard against which all other albums released after that time would have to be judged 94 A popular rumor is that Wilson was deeply affected by his first exposure to the Beatles February 1967 single Strawberry Fields Forever 282 He heard the song while driving with Michael Vosse under the influence of Seconal a sedating drug Vosse recalled that as Wilson pulled over to listen He just shook his head and said They did it already what I wanted to do with Smile Maybe it s too late I started laughing my head off and he started laughing his head off 218 283 He tempered his statement by saying that he never gave much import to Wilson s remark 218 Responding to a fan s question on his website in 2014 Wilson denied that hearing the song had weakened him 282 While litigation was underway the Smile tapes were temporarily moved to Sound Recorders a studio belonging to engineer Armin Steiner 284 and Anderle met with many record companies but failed to secure a distributor for Brother Records 285 In March Wilson cancelled a session because he decided that the vibrations were too hostile at a cost of 3 000 equivalent to 26 000 in 2022 Two other dates were also cancelled 286 On March 18 KMEM in San Bernardino conducted a radio survey that reported that Wilson was busy preparing Heroes and Villains and Smile and he s informed the Capitol bosses that he doesn t intend to hold back on these projects 287 On March 30 KFXM reported that the continued litigation had held up the release of the new single 288 The next day Parks briefly returned to the project making an appearance at a session date 289 In April while staying with Taylor in Los Angeles Paul McCartney visited a Vega Tables session after which he previewed an upcoming Beatles song for Wilson She s Leaving Home 206 Around this time Wilson became aware of rumors alleging that Taylor had possibly played some of the Smile tapes for the Beatles His attitude changed completely according to Parks as Wilson felt raped and began question ing the loyalties of the people who were working for him 290 nb 25 In mid 1967 Wilson and his wife put their Beverly Hills home up for sale and took residence at a newly purchased mansion in Bel Air 286 nb 26 He also set to work on constructing a personal home studio 286 Most of the coterie including Parks and Siegel disassociated themselves or were exiled from Wilson s social group by April 275 Siegel was told by Vosse that he was banished from Wilson s social circle because his girlfriend was suspected by Wilson to have been disrupting his work through ESP 229 According to Siegel Wilson didn t trust anyone anymore but with some of them he had good reason 292 Vosse was dismissed in March as Wilson s bandmates resented the fact that they had been paying the salary of an aide who worked solely for Wilson 276 Semi hiatus April May 1967 edit Parks last recorded appearance on the album s sessions was for a Vega Tables date on April 14 after which Wilson took a four week break from the studio 289 Anderle said that at the time he felt that the central thing that destroyed Smile was Van Dyke s severing of the relationship 293 He left of his own accord weeks later the last time Wilson was visited by Anderle to discuss business matters Wilson refused to leave his bedroom 52 Wilson had discussed breaking up the Beach Boys on many occasions according to Anderle But it was easier I think to get rid of the outsiders like myself than it was to break up the brothers You can t break up brothers 294 On April 25 CBS premiered Inside Pop The Rock Revolution a documentary by David Oppenheim and Leonard Bernstein 295 According to Leaf the documentary was originally supposed to be focused on Wilson but it was later decided to expand the scope of the program due to the Beach Boys waning popularity in early 1967 296 Wilson s segment was limited to footage of him singing Surf s Up at his piano without any interview footage or references to Smile 297 According to Kent when Wilson viewed the finished documentary he was disturbed by the praises he was afforded thereby accelerating the album s collapse 298 I feel like I ve lost my talent I m working harder and getting less satisfaction than ever before Brian Wilson to Tiger Beat circa April 1967 299 Desperate for a new product from the group on April 28 the group s British distributor EMI released Then I Kissed Her as a single without the band s approval 300 On April 29 Taylor announced in Disc amp Music Echo that All the 12 songs for the new Beach Boys album are completed and there are plans to release the album on a rush schedule any moment 300 That same day a Taylor penned press release published in Record Mirror and NME revealed that Heroes and Villains was delayed due to technical difficulties and that the forthcoming lead single would be Vegetables backed with Wonderful 300 A session scheduled for May 1 was cancelled 301 Williams reported in the May issue of Crawdaddy that the next Beach Boys LP would include Heroes and Villains weighing in at over four minutes The Elements a composition in four movements The Child Is the Father of the Man sic and something about going in the yard to eat worms He wrote Lyrics are mostly by Van Dyke Parks and it is possible that the LP will be finished one of these days Smile 192 On May 6 a week after stating that Smile was to be released any moment Taylor announced in Disc amp Music Echo that the album had been scrapped by Wilson 302 however it is likely that the report was spurious and that Wilson was unaware of Taylor s proclamation 303 On May 11 Wilson returned to the studio to work on Heroes and Villains On May 14 his bandmates conducted a press conference at the Amsterdam Hilton with the Dutch music press Hitweek later reported that communications between Wilson and his bandmates had broken down to the point that his bandmates thought Smile had been scheduled for release by mid May The next day Wilson cancelled a session for Love to Say Dada again due to bad vibes 304 Badman states that the final session for the album was held for Love to Say Dada on May 18 A follow up that was scheduled for the next day was cancelled 305 Smiley Smile June September 1967 edit It is sometimes suggested that Wilson cancelled Smile because of the widespread recognition afforded to the Beatles Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band released in the U S on June 2 Leaf writes that the success of the Beatles album was probably only another contributing factor reasoning that if Brian had decided to scrap Smile only because of Pepper then he probably would not have released Heroes and Villains weeks later 306 From June 3 to 7 the band resumed sessions at professional studios before retreating to the home studio 307 In a June issue of Hit Parader Dennis reported that the group were still recording Smile and that the album was 50 done 4 nbsp The Beach Boys at Zuma Beach in Malibu July 1967 Wilson reflected that he had run out of ideas in a conventional sense during this period and had been about ready to die 195 He said Time can be spent in the studio to the point where you get so next to it you don t know where you are with it you decide to just chuck it for a while 308 Wilson declared to his bandmates that most of the material recorded for Smile was now off limits 309 and later said that his decision to keep Surf s Up unreleased was one that nearly broke up the band 195 From June to July the Beach Boys reconvened at Wilson s home to record the bulk of Smiley Smile at his improvised studio 307 The album is a significantly less ambitious affair than Smile being stylistically similar to Beach Boys Party 310 and includes simplified remakes of select Smile material 311 Only two tracks used modules that had originated from the Smile sessions two for Heroes and Villains and two for Vegetables 18 Parks was not involved with the album s making 312 and despite the band s claim that Smile was shelved for being too weird there was no attempt to make the musical content on Smiley Smile appear any less bizarre for their standard audience 313 Smiley Smile is sometimes considered the fulfillment of Wilson s humor concept album 156 This belief was shared by Anderle who surmised I think that what Brian tried to do with Smiley Smile is he tried to salvage as much of Smile as he could and at the same time immediately go into his humor album 314 Carl compared it to a bunt instead of a grand slam 315 The cover artwork featured a new illustration of Frank Holmes smile shop this time located in the middle of an overgrown jungle 316 On July 18 Capitol announced that they had reached a settlement with the band and Brian announced the launch of Brother Records whose product was to be distributed by Capitol 317 Capitol A amp R director Karl Engemann began circulating a memo dated July 25 318 in which Smiley Smile was referred to as a cartoon stopgap for Smile The memo also discussed conversations between him and Wilson pertaining to the release of a 10 track Smile album that would not have included Heroes and Villains or Vegetables 317 319 This never came to fruition and instead the group embarked on a tour of Hawaii in August 320 nb 27 On September 18 Smiley Smile the first album by the band in which the production was credited to the Beach Boys was released to an underwhelming critical and commercial response 315 Aftermath editWilson s struggles and Song Cycle edit Throughout 1967 Wilson s image reduced to that of an eccentric figure as a multitude of revolutionary rock albums were released to an anxious and maturing youth market 303 He gradually ceded production and songwriting duties to the rest of the group and self medicated with the excessive consumption of food alcohol and drugs 321 In a 2004 interview he indicated that listening to the Smile music would eventually for him reawaken the bad feelings of the drugs 322 In a 1993 interview Bruce Johnston remembered of the Smile sessions Brian was disintegrating The music was cool but it s always tinged with the reality of making it Brian degraded us made us lay down for hours and make barnyard noises demoralized us freaked out I can t tell you a lot of it it s really fucked up He thought it was hilarious he was stoned and laughing We hated him then because we didn t really know what was happening to him Everyone pumped Brian s ego to the ceiling and he lapped it up because Murry had been such a shit to him and approval was what he craved Expectation destroyed Brian as much as anything else Murry Pet Sounds failure in America drugs ego and expectation That s what destroyed Brian 251 For many years after its shelving Wilson had been traumatized by the project and regarded it as representing all of his failures in life 24 He had stated that he considered the recordings contrived with no soul 323 and corny drug influenced music 324 as well as imitations of the work of Phil Spector without getting anywhere near him 325 If broached the subject of Smile he would usually decline to comment or simply walk away from the inquisitive party 24 His discomfort in discussing the work lasted until around the early 2000s 109 For so long this project brought me nothing but humiliation It was the first question people always asked How come Smile never came out Van Dyke Parks 2004 24 Parks initially attempted to distance himself from the album s legend 326 In 1998 he referred to Smile as just a few months of work I did as a contract employee many many years ago Life goes on I think it means a lot more to other people than it does for me 326 nb 28 Writing in his 2006 biography on Wilson Carlin said that Parks had come to resent that his career had been eclipsed by something that didn t quite get finished in 1967 326 The fact that he was not properly credited for some of his co written songs that were published on later Beach Boys albums including Wind Chimes and Wonderful 176 was another source of frustration 326 Carlin added And if Van Dyke felt guilty about abandoning his Smile partner just as the going was getting tough he was also a hardworking professional who believed that Brian s surrender followed by decades of near withdrawal mounted to another kind of betrayal 326 After breaking away from the project in early 1967 Parks signed a solo contract with Warner Bros where he formed part of a creative circle that came to include producer Lenny Waronker and songwriter Randy Newman 327 nb 29 At the end of the year the company released Parks debut album Song Cycle a record that often was and continues to be compared to Smile 329 nb 30 Although Song Cycle sold poorly Parks continued working at Warner as an arranger Biographer Kevin Courrier wrote that the failed aspiration of Smile served as a guiding spirit for Song Cycle as well as the Parks and Waronker produced debut album by Newman Randy Newman Creates Something New Under the Sun 1968 330 Music historian Timothy White writes that the lives and business interests of Wilson Parks Waronker and Warner Bros would become forever intertwined 331 Further recording and abandoned Reprise release edit Some of the Smile material continued to trickle out in subsequent Beach Boys releases often as filler songs to offset Wilson s unwillingness to contribute 332 The first two instances of recycled Smile songs appeared on the albums directly following Smiley Smile Mama Says from Wild Honey 1967 and Little Bird from Friends 1968 Mama Says was based on a section from Vega Tables and the bridge of Little Bird was based on the refrain of Child Is Father of the Man Neither of the tracks were recordings from the Smile sessions they were each recorded for their respective albums 333 nbsp Against Brian s wishes his bandmates pictured finished Our Prayer and Cabinessence in late 1968 332 In 1969 Cabin Essence retitled Cabinessence and Prayer retitled Our Prayer appeared on the band s album 20 20 with additional vocals that were recorded by Carl Dennis and Johnston in November 1968 Workshop was also integrated into the 20 20 version of Do It Again 334 According to Carlin Brian was opposed to the inclusion of Prayer and Cabin Essence and refused to participate in the overdub sessions 332 After 20 20 the Beach Boys signed to Reprise Records a deal that was brokered by Parks by then a multimedia executive at Warner 335 The band s record contract held a clause which guaranteed a 50 000 advancement to the group provided that they deliver a completed Smile album by 1973 Brian was not consulted on this stipulation 336 Their first Reprise album Sunflower was released in 1970 At Waronker s insistence the record included Cool Cool Water a song that had evolved from Love to Say Dada 337 nbsp Carl Wilson pictured initiated Smile tape preservation efforts with band engineer Stephen Desper in the early 1970s 336 For the band s second Reprise album tentatively titled Landlocked Wilson agreed to the inclusion of Surf s Up 338 From mid June to early July 1971 Carl and band manager Jack Rieley retrieved the Smile multi tracks from Capitol s vaults primarily to locate the Surf s Up masters and attempted to repair and splice the tapes Brian joined them on at least two occasions 339 Afterward the band set to work on recording the song at Brian s home studio Brian initially refused to participate in these sessions but after a few days he added a part to the song s Child Is Father of the Man coda 340 Landlocked was then rechristened Surf s Up and released in August 341 Most listeners at the time were unaware that the song derived from a lost Beach Boys album 342 On February 28 1972 Carl announced the imminent release of Smile at a London press conference Asked if he had been working on the album he replied that he had during the previous June and that the group had created safety copies of all the tapes 343 He claimed that these tapes were now fully assembled and new vocals had been overdubbed where necessary 336 nb 31 Melody Maker printed a list of songs that were to be included on Carl s proposed version of Smile some of which seem ed to come under the overall subtitle of Heroes and Villains 336 They were Child Is Father of the Man Surf s Up Sunshine Cabinessence incorporating Iron Horse sic Mrs O Leary s Cow I Love to Say Dada incorporating Cool Cool Water and the original versions of Vega Tables Wind Chimes and Wonderful 336 Asked about the forthcoming release at a later date Carl responded We ve all had intentions of finishing the album but something persists that keeps that from happening and I don t know what that is 345 In April 1973 the band s assistant manager Steve Love wrote a memo to remind the group that pursuant to the terms of contract between Warner Brothers and Brother Records Inc The Beach Boys Smile album is supposed to be delivered to Warner Brothers no later than May 1st or 50 000 is to be deducted from any advance to the group after May 1st 346 No album was delivered and as threatened 50 000 was held back from the group s next payment equivalent to 330 000 in 2022 347 In 1973 Brian told a Melody Maker reporter that there was not enough material to compile a Smile album and that it would never be released 348 Also in 1973 Wilson and his group American Spring contributed additional vocal and instrumental parts to a remix of Dean Torrence s 1967 rendition of Vegetables credited to Laughing Gravy and released on the Jan and Dean compilation Gotta Take That One Last Ride 349 In a 1976 interview Wilson stated that he felt an obligation to release Smile and offered that the album would come out probably in a couple years 350 Bootlegs partial releases and fan efforts editEarliest bootlegs and fan network edit Many of the original Smile recordings were only publicly available on bootlegs until 2011 351 These bootlegs often presented a hypothetical vision of the completed album with compilers including liner notes that explained their choices of sequencing 352 One of the most relied upon sources for the album s contents came from the list of song titles included on the discarded Smile album jackets that had been produced by Capitol in late 1966 353 Audio bootlegs purported as Smile began circulating among fans during the late 1970s and drew upon released material from Smiley Smile 20 20 and Surf s Up The compilers were only informed by the song titles listed on the Smile album jacket and were sometimes unaware that most of the released material was not from the original Smile sessions 354 According to Andrew Flory Little is known about the process through which actual Smile material leaked into bootleggers hands 355 One rumor holds that the first tapes came from Dennis who had created copies for friends who then created copies for their friends 198 Although there were rumors of leaked tape transfers and acetate discs in the late 1970s only a minimal amount of this material was available to bootleggers until the early 1980s 355 nbsp Biographer David Leaf pictured in 2022 traveled to California in the 1970s with the goal of helping Wilson complete Smile 356 In the 1970s and early 1980s fan groups for the Beach Boys were organized by at least a dozen people including David Leaf Don Cunningham Marty Tabor and Domenic Priore 357 nb 32 Most of the fan correspondence was through newsletters which helped disseminate information and attract people who were interested in compiling details concerning the band s music 357 The proliferation of these groups was due in part to an advertisement for Beach Boys Freaks United the band s official fan club that was displayed on the back cover of the 1976 album 15 Big Ones 358 Priore later wrote that It wasn t much of a publication but it did include a Trading Post that became an essential pre Internet contact source 357 nb 33 To assist with the writing of his 1978 authorized biography of the band Byron Preiss was given a tape of Smile recordings the contents of which were distributed to a small group of people over the next few years 360 Another biography of the band authored by Leaf was published that year In his book Leaf wrote that Smile can never be completed as Brian intended so a compromise solution might be to release the surviving tapes and outtakes in a series of records called The Smile Sessions like Elvis Sun Sessions 344 There s been too much press on it It s like talking about bringing out the 67 Rolls Royce and they finally show it in modern day You go Oh no Bruce Johnston arguing against a full Smile release in 1981 361 Leaf s book included quotes from Bruce Johnston who believed that such a release would be a bad idea commercially and would only live up to your expectations if you were somebody like Zubin Mehta analyzing a young composer s work 344 In a later interview that year he told Leaf that the band s manager James William Guercio had insisted on opening their 1979 release L A Light Album with Rock Plymouth Rock Roll Johnston said I wanted to make up a collage of the Smile recordings but I want Brian to be the one to put the collage together I can tell he still feels funny about that stuff You know there s a lot of Smile stuff intact 362 Johnston again mentioned Smile in a 1981 interview where he declared plans to issue a six minute compilation of the album s recording sessions without Wilson s knowledge 361 Brother Records Smile and Linett tape edit In 1983 a 48 minute cassette tape began circulating and was soon pressed onto an LP bootleg that was referred to as the Brother Records Smile 363 It included a range of material that originated from Smile or was thought to be related to the project as well as an unrelated 1959 recording Here Come de Honey Man by Miles Davis that was erroneously listed as Holidays 364 nb 34 The LP did not indicate an authorial origin on its sleeve but featured the organizational addresses of Cunningham s Add Some Music Tabor s Celebrate Beach Boys Freaks United and the Australian publication California Music 365 In April 1985 the video documentary The Beach Boys An American Band featured some previously unreleased Beach Boys music including an excerpt of Fire 366 Also that year a Second Edition of the Brother Records LP surfaced without the labelled addresses and with a significantly different presentation order The set also included different mixes that suggested a spread of newly available Smile recordings 367 Their improved sound quality indicated that a Beach Boys insider had accessed the band s tape vaults and created cassette copies of the recordings 360 nbsp Wilson toyed with the idea of asking his bandmates to help him finish Smile in the late 1980s In 1987 Waronker encouraged Wilson to compose a Smile esque song for his debut solo album Brian Wilson 1988 This resulted in the Rio Grande suite written with co producer Andy Paley 368 At this time Linett who engineered the album had prepared mixes of some Smile tracks in anticipation for a then forthcoming release 369 In 1988 Wilson confirmed that Smile was being compiled and mixed for an imminent release 370 In another report he said that the forthcoming project got sidetracked with business and worried whether the album would sell due to it being mostly instrumental tracks He added that he had considered asking his bandmates to overdub the remaining vocal tracks 371 According to journalist David Cavanaugh things went awry when a cassette compiled for Capitol executives leaked into the public domain causing Brian to lose interest 360 One of the collaborators on Wilson s solo album had been given 1st generation copies of Smile recordings which were then passed on to a DJ who then made copies for friends Following this in the words of music historian Andrew Doe Bootlegs of Smile came out left right and centre 360 Look Listen Vibrate Smile edit nbsp Musician Darian Sahanaja who collaborated on the first book about Smile later joined Wilson s live band in the 1990s In the late 1980s Domenic Priore collaborated with musicians Darian Sahanaja and Nick Walusko on a punk style fanzine called The Dumb Angel Gazette the most comprehensive attempt to document information regarding the album 372 The second issue Look Listen Vibrate Smile featured a 300 page summary of Smile history told through press clippings reprints of older articles and various primary sources as well as original commentary 373 Additional assistance for this issue came from David Leaf Andy Paley journalist Greg Shaw and musician Probyn Gregory a friend of Sahanaja and Walusko 374 Afterward Sahanaja Gregory and Walusko formed the pop group Wondermints 375 and later the core nucleus of Wilson s supporting band in the late 1990s and early 2000s 376 According to Priore although some questioned the sanity behind the publication of such a huge book on an album that had never been released the book ultimately received accolades from Spin and Rolling Stone as well as positive personal reactions from musicians such as XTC Apples in Stereo and former Beatle George Harrison 374 Spread of bootlegs and Good Vibrations box set edit The wider dissemination of Smile bootlegs informed the public that the album was closer to completion than Wilson had admitted in interviews 191 Since the mid 1980s CDs had supplanted vinyl as the predominant medium for bootlegs and following the Linett tape leak dozens of different Smile CD releases were traded and sold commercially by mail order independent record stores and head shops 377 Many of the new buyers had crossed over from Beatles bootleg markets 378 One of the most popular Smile bootlegs from the late 1980s was a Japanese CD emerging in November 1989 379 that opened with a 15 minute version of Good Vibrations 360 Capitol issued alternate versions of Good Vibrations and Heroes and Villains as bonus tracks on a 1990 CD reissue of Smiley Smile and Wild Honey 360 In response to the 1992 appearance of a new three disc vinyl bootleg which contained uncirculated versions of Wonderful Love to Say Dada and Barnyard 380 Capitol then issued over 40 minutes of original Smile recordings on the career spanning box set Good Vibrations Thirty Years of the Beach Boys 1993 381 360 Never before released tracks included Do You Like Worms I Love to Say Da Da the Smile versions of Wonderful Wind Chimes and Vegetables session highlights of Surf s Up and Cabinessence and some erroneously titled Heroes and Villains outtakes 18 I seriously doubt that any of you reading this don t have a homemade cassette recorder If you do then try this suggestion on a blank homemade cassette COMPILE A SMILE ALBUM BY YOURSELF AT HOME Music historian Domenic Priore writing in his book Look Listen Vibrate Smile 373 The Good Vibrations set had featured the first official release of a compiled Smile album which was sequenced by Leaf Paley and Linett 382 However the material was largely presented as is without truly approximating what the completed album would have sounded like 18 Responding to a suggestion in Leaf s Good Vibrations liner notes a preponderance of listeners began constructing their own version of the album using the resources provided in the box set 383 Two types of Smile bootlegs appeared in the 1990s those in which the compilers attempted to assemble the album in a completed form and others that simply presented the project as session recordings 377 The best known releases were issued by the underground labels Vigotone and Sea of Tunes They both released Smile sets that combined the two types of bootlegs and helped bring interest to the recordings among people outside of the Beach Boys fan community 384 Vigotone s 1993 version of the album was the heaviest circulated Smile bootleg in the 1990s 385 Smile box set rumors and arrests edit In 1995 Wilson reteamed with Parks for the collaborative album Orange Crate Art which provoked speculation regarding a future release of Smile 386 Wilson also performed Wonderful in its original Smile arrangement for the Don Was directed documentary I Just Wasn t Made for These Times and this rendition was included on the accompanying soundtrack album 319 In addition Capitol announced a three CD box set entitled The Smile Era to be released in the autumn 387 A Smile box set failed to materialize at this time partly due to the arduous task of compiling and sequencing 388 Don Was said in a 1995 interview We showed Brian an interactive CD ROM of Todd Rundgren s No World Order and told him that this is how he should release Smile He could load up an interactive CD with seven hours of stuff from those sessions and just tell the people who buy it You finish it Brian s into it now it s up to the record company 389 Following the recording of the Beach Boys 1996 album Stars and Stripes Vol 1 the group discussed finishing Smile at a band meeting Carl vetoed the idea as he had feared that it would cause Brian another nervous breakdown 390 The difficulties that caused the 18 month delay for the release of The Pet Sounds Sessions 1997 discouraged Capitol from issuing a similar box set for Smile 360 Asked about Smile during the press run for his 1998 comeback album Imagination Wilson responded I thought too much Smile was just a bunch of weird stuff that didn t even amount to anything 391 In 2001 weeks after his first public performance of Heroes and Villains in decades he told an interviewer I don t really ever want to put out the Smile stuff It s just not appropriate music I know it s a legendary thing The Smile trip is a legend 392 In the late 1990s Sea of Tunes released seven hours of Smile music spread out over eight CDs as part of their Unsurpassed Masters series 385 By the end of the 1990s Smile had become one of the most well documented projects in the bootlegging community 393 Those involved with releasing the Sea of Tunes bootlegs were later apprehended by authorities and it was reported that nearly 10 000 discs were seized 394 Vigotone planned to follow their 1998 bootleg Heroes and Vibrations with a multi disc Smile box set before they were similarly raided and closed down by law enforcement in 2001 360 Official versions edit2004 Brian Wilson Presents Smile edit Main article Brian Wilson Presents Smile nbsp Parks joining Wilson onstage after a performance of Brian Wilson Presents Smile at the Royal Festival Hall February 2004 Wilson was able to complete a version of Smile in 2004 with the assistance of the Smile fan network that had developed since the 1970s 395 Following Wilson s early 2000s live performances of the Pet Sounds album Sahanaja began suggesting Smile songs at band rehearsals which led to plans for concerts that comprised a Smile themed setlist 396 Sahanaja was assigned the role of musical secretary for the project 397 and Parks was recruited to assist with the sequencing and the writing of new lyrics 398 Together with Wilson they configured the presentation into three movements 333 Sahanaja said At that point he Brian and Van Dyke were talking as if they were finishing Smile 399 According to Steven Gaines Wilson had stated an intention to complete Smile in three movements as early as 1980 400 Brian Wilson Presents Smile BWPS premiered at the Royal Festival Hall in London in February 2004 A studio album adaptation was recorded six weeks later and released in September Beautiful Dreamer Brian Wilson and the Story of Smile a documentary film by Leaf premiered on Showtime the next month 401 None of Wilson s bandmates were involved with BWPS or the documentary and none of the original recordings were used on the album 18 The album debuted at number 13 on the Billboard Hot 100 the highest chart position of any album by the Beach Boys or Brian Wilson since 1976 s 15 Big Ones 402 In support of the album Wilson embarked on a world tour that included stops in the US Europe and Japan 403 2011 The Smile Sessions edit Main article The Smile Sessions The Smile Sessions released as a five CD box set in October 2011 was the first official package dedicated to the Beach Boys Smile 404 It features comprehensive session highlights and outtakes as well as an approximation of what the completed album might have sounded like using the 2004 version as a model 404 Like BWPS many of the people involved with the making had been involved with the Beach Boys fan community for decades including Priore and Reum who contributed essays and were consulted for the project 405 The set received immediate critical acclaim was ranked on Rolling Stone s 2012 list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time and won Best Historical Album at the 55th Grammy Awards 406 Influence and legacy editLegend and mystique edit The album has been one of the most discussed and dissected unreleased records ever made Multiple theories abound concerning what Smile might actually have been if it had been completed and many mysteries are contained even within Brian s semi official tracklist not to mention the scores of unfinished takes brief instrumentals and experiments that were attempted during the sessions Ed Howard of Stylus 2003 136 In the decades following Smile s non release it became the subject of intense speculation and mystique 191 407 and gained status as the most legendary unreleased album in the history of popular music 2 3 Many of the writers and hanger ons who surrounded Wilson at the time were largely responsible for the mythological status later afforded to the project 369 In October 1967 Cheetah magazine published Goodbye Surfing Hello God a memoir written by Jules Siegel that originated many of the subsequent myths and legends related to Smile 408 409 Flory credited the piece with giving rock fans a manner in which to view Wilson as hip as well as venerat ing Smile as a relic of this hipness intensifying audience interest in the unavailable work 410 A published conversation between David Anderle and Paul Williams serialized in Crawdaddy in 1968 was another early resource for information regarding the album 369 In his book How Deep Is the Ocean Williams also included a 1997 conversation between the two Anderle acknowledged of his role in inflating the mythology I guess we all do that We all extend the story don t we We all extend the moment It s satisfying But what a burden for Brian 411 Responding to Anderle s statement Siegel countered Brian was a genius and if anything I underestimated him I wasn t aware of him as a myth I just wrote down what I saw and heard 46 Williams shifted his opinion on the album after having heard many of the recordings for the first time in 16 years 380 He felt that when the myth that he and Anderle had certainly helped create is discounted from his evaluation the tracks clearly reveal themselves as the work of someone very stoned and that even though there are moments of great sensitivity and deep feeling the overall character is not at all a heart album as Pet Sounds certainly is rather it is and was clearly meant to be a sort of three ring circus of flashy musical ideas and avant garde entertainment 412 During the 1970s the perceived mystique around the project was increasingly shared by music critics 413 In 1983 Dave Marsh bemoaned the hype calling it an exercise in myth mongering almost unparalleled in show business Brian Wilson became a Major Artist by making music no one outside of his coterie ever heard 413 Writing in his 2014 published 33 book about the album Luis Sanchez opined that album s myth had since lost its power to lure and convince as writers and cultists kept the story alive by rehashing hyperbole and rumor that could only take the story so far the myth itself overtook and nearly consumed the artist and the music it was about 414 Bootlegs of the sessions became influential in their own right 330 and intensified the public s interest in the album 136 Journalist Bill Holdship reported in 1995 Since moving to LA I ve encountered people who are as obsessed with Smile the same way people are obsessed with the Kennedy assassination 251 By 1999 fans had published many essays devoted to the album through the Internet 394 and by the early 2000s several books had been devoted to the album 415 Writing in 2002 journalist Rob Chapman summarized that the album had become the ultimate metaphor for pop s golden age that moment when everything seemed possible when heaven seemed reachable 416 In Courrier s words the project became oddly influential While functioning mostly as a rumor when some bootlegged tracks confirmed its existence Smile became a catalyst for records that followed in its wake 330 In 2011 Smile topped Uncut s list of the greatest bootleg recordings of all time 417 Hypothetical release scenario edit Many of the album s advocates believe that had it been released it would have altered the group s direction and solidified their position at the vanguard of rock innovators 418 It may have also significantly impacted the development of concept albums as Allan Moore argued it would have suggested an entirely different possible line of development for the concept album wherein parts of tracks reappeared in others producing a form frankly far more sophisticated than any of its contemporaries 419 David Howard writing in his book Sonic Alchemy said that Had Wilson been able to connect all the dots Smile would most certainly be regarded as one of pop s major artistic statements rather than an infamous unfortunate footnote 420 In 2003 Ed Howard of Stylus Magazine wrote that the album could have expanded boundaries for both the Beach Boys and pop music as a whole Instead for the most part it remains unheard today and that s quite possibly the saddest fact in all of music 421 nbsp Part of the speculation surrounding Smile centers on whether the album would have been more influential than the Beatles 1967 release Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Spencer Owen of Pitchfork argued in 2001 that the album could have dramatically altered the course of popular music history such that Perhaps we wouldn t be so monotheistic in our pop leanings worshiping only at the Beatles altar the way some do today 422 In Anderle s belief Smile would have been a major influence in pop music as significant if not a bigger influence than Sgt Pepper was 423 Brian Boyd of The Irish Times rued that Wilson s desire to match the Beatles had contributed to the project s collapse but also commented that since this competitive instinct was shared by his rivals the release of Smile may have prolonged the group s break up 424 It is likely that the vast majority of the content recorded for Smile would have been left off the record due to the runtime constraints of vinyl discs According to Linett although contemporaries such as Frank Zappa and Bob Dylan had experimented with double albums there is no indication that a multi disc format for Smile was ever contemplated in 1966 or 1967 388 Mojo s Jim Irvin challenged the assumption that if completed Smile would have been perfect and proposed that it might have simply been considered a giant perplexing forty minute Heroes And Villains with some stuff about vegetables in the middle Would it really have gone over much bigger than Van Dyke s disastrous Song Cycle a year later Would it be inviting such brouhaha today 425 Asked in a 1987 interview whether Smile would have topped his rivals subsequent release Wilson replied No It wouldn t have come close Sgt Pepper would have kicked our ass 278 Later he claimed that his work would have been too advanced for 1967 audiences 109 In 1993 Mike Love said he believed Smile would have been a great record but in its unfinished state is nothing it s just fragments 251 Writing in his book about Sgt Pepper Clinton Heylin criticized Parks lyrics as little more than columns of non sequiturs from a man who once swallowed a thesaurus and decreed that much of the surviving Smile recordings confirm that Wilson was nowhere near completing an album to rival Revolver let alone its psychedelic successor 426 In the opinion of Kicks co editor Billy Miller nobody would have got too jazzed over electricity being invented for the second time had Smile followed the release of Sgt Pepper And it s a damn shame too 427 Reviewing the available bootlegs and officially released tracks for AllMusic Richie Unterberger said that numerous exquisitely beautiful passages great ensemble singing and brilliant orchestral pop instrumentation were in circulation yet the fact is that Wilson somehow lacked the discipline needed to combine them into a pop masterpiece that was both brilliant and commercial 428 Former Record Collector editor Peter Doggett states that Smile would most likely have had the same reception as that afforded Song Cycle namely critical acclaim but a commercial disaster 429 He wrote that the release of Smile would surely have set the Beatles back for months while they considered a suitable reply But it wouldn t have been commercial in the way that the Doors or Love or Jefferson Airplane were 430 nb 35 Innovations edit If music students in a hundred years time want a master class in the development of compositional technique in twentieth century popular music then they should listen to the Smile tapes it stands totally apart from what anybody else was producing during the mid 60s Mojo journalist Rob Chapman 2002 416 With Smile Wilson anticipated editing practices that were not common until the digital age 105 In a way Linett said Brian invented the method of modular recording that we take for granted today 104 The album cover considered to be among the most legendary in rock music according to Priore 432 would have been one of the earliest instances of a popular music group featuring original commissioned artwork 433 Paul Williams argued that with Smile Wilson had become one of the earliest pioneers of sampling 434 Priore wrote that Wilson manipulated sound effects in a way that would later be extremely successful when Pink Floyd released The Dark Side of the Moon in 1973 the best selling album of the entire progressive rock period 125 Sanchez offered his view of the project as a radical expansion of the glow and sui generis vision of Pet Sounds one which presents itself with a kind of directness that is unlike anything else in popular music 435 Ed Masley of AZ Central wrote that Smile doesn t sound like many other pop albums that were considered to be the vanguard of the psychedelic revolution but it clearly shares their spirit of adventure in a way that would have been unthinkable just two years earlier 109 Ed Howard wrote that the album s arty experimentation exotic often surprising arrangements and twisting wordplay was arguably more innovative than contemporary work by the Beatles 421 In 1999 Freaky Trigger wrote that Smile was not the best album ever but that it is astoundingly original and tangible evidence of an alternative rock history which turned out differently 436 In 2011 despite its chosen focus being new American music that is outside the commercial mainstream online publication NewMusicBox made an exception with Smile citing its standing as an album recorded more than 45 years ago by one of the biggest and most financially lucrative musical acts of all time 433 The site s reviewer Frank Oteri wrote Wilson s experiments in 1966 and 1967 seem normative of the kinds of things most interesting musicians in any genre were up to at that point and even tamer than some of them The blurring of boundaries between musical genres was pretty much commonplace at that time as was the attitude however real or imagined that just about any musical undertaking was somehow an expansion beyond anything that had come before it What has gone down in history as the breakthrough however is The Beatles Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Despite how remarkable Sgt Pepper s was and still sounds 44 years later had SMiLE actually been released that honor probably would have could have and should have been accorded to it instead Oteri concluded that the same pride of place in American music history held by other great innovators such as Charles Ives George Gershwin John Cage John Coltrane and James Brown would probably never include Smile since For many people the Beach Boys will always be perceived as a light hearted party band that drooled over California Girls while on a Surfing Safari 433 Alternative music edit Smile was influential to indie rock 433 and its mythology became a touchstone for chamber pop and the more art inclined branches of post punk 437 In Priore s estimation the alternate rock generation began embracing Smile after the early 1990s 438 In 2002 Chapman remarked that he had yet to meet an ambient or electronica artist who doesn t have a soundfile full of Smile bytes 416 The potential of what Smile would have been was the primary thing that inspired us Elephant 6 When we started hearing Smile bootlegs it was mind blowing It was what we had hoped it would be but a lot of those songs weren t finished so there was still this mystery of not hearing the melodies and lyrics We wondered What are these songs and how do they fit together Is this a verse Elephant 6 and Apples in Stereo co founder Robert Schneider 439 The Elephant 6 Recording Company a collective of bands that includes Apples in Stereo the Olivia Tremor Control Neutral Milk Hotel Beulah Elf Power and of Montreal was founded through a mutual admiration of 1960s pop music with Smile being their Holy Grail 439 Will Cullen Hart appreciated the idea of the sections each of them being a colorful world within itself Wilson s stuff could be so cinematic and then he could just drop down to a toy piano going plink plink plink and then when you least expect it it can fly back into a million gorgeous voices 440 According to Kevin Barnes of Montreal s album Coquelicot Asleep in the Poppies A Variety of Whimsical Verse 2001 was partly based on Smile 441 Released exclusively in Japan the 1998 tribute album Smiling Pets featured cover versions of Pet Sounds and Smile tracks by artists such as the Olivia Tremor Control Jim O Rourke and Sonic Youth s Thurston Moore 394 Trey Spruance who recorded a version of Good Vibrations for the album said that Smile definitely influenced the Mr Bungle album California 1999 especially when it comes to the Faustian scale of it 442 The cover artwork for Velvet Crush s Teenage Symphonies to God 1994 was based on the Smile cover 438 Kevin Shields of My Bloody Valentine said that his band s 2013 album MBV was inspired by the modular approach of Smile 443 Priore believed that the Smile recordings influenced albums such as XTC s Oranges amp Lemons 1989 the High Llamas Gideon Gaye 1994 and Hawaii 1996 the Flaming Lips The Soft Bulletin 1999 Mercury Rev s All Is Dream 2001 the Apples in Stereo s Her Wallpaper Reverie 1999 Heavy Blinkers 2000 eponymous LP and the Thrills So Much for the City 2003 438 Unfinished state and interactivity edit T he main reason SMiLE is so unique is that it was the first album that forced fans to interact with it directly We had to make our own edits and running orders on cassettes They enjoyed debates on how it was supposed to be heard and what tracks were really intended to be included in the mythic Elements suite that supposedly would have climaxed the album Mike Segretto author of 33 1 3 Revolutions Per Minute A Critical Trip Through the Rock LP Era 2022 444 There remains no definitive form or content of Smile and whether Smile should be considered an album has itself been challenged 18 Quoted in Leaf s 1978 biography Anderle felt that Smile should be viewed not as an album but an epoch that includes Pet Sounds and Good Vibrations 57 Heiser wrote Possibly the best term offered yet to describe the project is sonic menagerie a term used by co producer Dennis Wolfe in the liner notes of The Smile Sessions 18 Priore had long suggested that the album was virtually finished in 1967 however Ed Howard contended Smile was simply put nowhere near finished Furthermore any effort to guess at what the album might have sounded like would be nothing more than conjecture it s likely that Brian himself didn t have a clear constant single idea for the album 136 Upon the release of BWPS critics popularly viewed Smile as finally completed 445 In his review of The Smile Sessions Toop argued that such attempts to complete the album are misguided He described Smile as a labyrinth that exists in a memory house into which Wilson invited all those who could externalize its elements 107 Freaky Trigger shared a similar view writing There is no correct track sequence there is no completed album because Smile isn t a linear progression of tracks As a collection of modular melodic ideas it is by nature organic and resists being bookended 446 Toop said the project s demise and film like editing process also parallels the great lost projects by Orson Welles Erich Von Stroheim and Sergei Eisenstein 107 Howard supported that the material is best heard as a movie reel on the making of a record multiple takes of each song with no definitive version 136 Academic Larry Starr opined that the idea there could be a definitive Smile decades after Brian Wilson abandoned the project was always chimerical 447 He added Those whimsically inclined might suggest that Smile s apparent malleability could represent just one additional illustration of the extent to which it was ahead of its time 448 In a 2004 conversation with Wilson Parks suggested that with Smile the pair may have inadvertently created the first ever interactive album 18 In popular culture edit Lewis Shiner s 1991 science fiction novel Glimpses contains a chapter in which the protagonist travels back in time to November 1966 and helps Wilson complete Smile 394 449 The 2007 comedy film Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story contains a segment inspired by the Smile saga in which the protagonist is consumed with recording his masterpiece titled Black Sheep and suffers a mental breakdown 450 Reconstruction track listings editAll tracks written by Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks except where noted 1993 Good Vibrations Thirty Years of the Beach Boys disc two relevant Smile portion sequenced by Mark Linett Andy Paley David LeafNo TitleLength17 Good Vibrations Brian Wilson Mike Love 3 3818 Our Prayer Wilson 1 0719 Heroes and Villains 2 5620 Heroes and Villains Sections 6 4021 Wonderful 2 0222 Cabinessence 3 3323 Wind Chimes 2 3224 Heroes and Villains Intro 0 3525 Do You Like Worms 4 0026 Vegetables 3 2927 I Love to Say Da Da 1 3428 Surf s Up 3 38Total length 35 44 2004 Brian Wilson Presents Smile sequenced by Brian Wilson Van Dyke Parks Darian SahanajaNo TitleLength1 Our Prayer Gee Wilson William Davis Morris Levy 2 092 Heroes and Villains 4 533 Roll Plymouth Rock 3 484 Barnyard 0 585 Old Master Painter You Are My Sunshine Haven Gillespie Beasley Smith 1 046 Cabin Essence 3 277 Wonderful 2 078 Song for Children 2 169 Child Is Father of the Man 2 1810 Surf s Up 4 0711 I m in Great Shape I Wanna Be Around Workshop Wilson Parks Johnny Mercer Sadie Vimmerstedt 1 5612 Vega Tables 2 1913 On a Holiday 2 3614 Wind Chimes 2 5415 Mrs O Leary s Cow Wilson 2 2716 In Blue Hawaii 3 0017 Good Vibrations Wilson Tony Asher Love 4 36Total length 46 49 2011 The Smile Sessions sequenced by Mark Linett Alan Boyd Dennis WolfeNo TitleLength1 Our Prayer Wilson 1 052 Gee Davis Levy 0 513 Heroes and Villains 4 524 Do You Like Worms Roll Plymouth Rock 3 355 I m in Great Shape 0 286 Barnyard 0 487 My Only Sunshine The Old Master Painter You Are My Sunshine Gillespie Davis Mitchell 1 558 Cabin Essence 3 309 Wonderful 2 0410 Look Song for Children Wilson 2 3111 Child Is Father of the Man 2 1012 Surf s Up 4 1213 I Wanna Be Around Workshop Mercer Wilson 1 2314 Vega Tables 3 4915 Holidays Wilson 2 3216 Wind Chimes Wilson 3 0617 The Elements Fire Mrs O Leary s Cow Wilson 2 3518 Love to Say Dada Wilson 2 3219 Good Vibrations Wilson Love 4 15Total length 48 03Track table editAdapted from The Smile Sessions liner notes 451 and Andrew Doe s Bellagio 10542 online compendium 452 Track Recording span1966 1967 1968 1971February March April May June July August September October November December January February March April May Good Vibrations Heroes and Villains Wind Chimes Look Song for Children Wonderful He Gives Speeches Holidays Our Prayer Cabin Essence Child Is Father of the Man I m in Great Shape Vega Tables Do You Like Worms Barnyard Surf s Up My Only Sunshine The Elements Fire I Wanna Be Around You re Welcome Love to Say Dada I Don t Know Gee Tones Tune X Key RecordingDemo or studio experiment Survives only as an instrumental Recorded with vocals FinishedPersonnel editFurther information The Smile Sessions Personnel This section needs expansion with Comprehensive credits for every track on the box set You can help by adding to it June 2023 Notes edit This included The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint Exupery poetry by Kahlil Gibran works by Herman Hesse and texts by Krishna 8 He recorded at least two sketches Dick and Fuzz which involved exchanges between himself a woman named Carol and the Honeys a girl group which included Marilyn These recordings remain unreleased 10 Asher was recommended to Wilson by Schwartz 12 Carlin dates their meeting to mid July 20 whereas Badman cites February 19 Parks had already met Wilson once before in December 1965 when mutual friend David Crosby invited him to Wilson s home in Beverly Hills 21 According to Derek Taylor the pair were working together night after night when the other Beach Boys were touring Britain which would have been in October and November 26 According to biographer Robert Rodriguez Wilson felt that Revolver had topped his achievements on Pet Sounds 64 He writes the Beach Boys crafted Smile as a response 62 a sentiment echoed by David Howard 63 Siegel quoted Wilson saying Did you hear the Beatles album Religious right That s the whole movement That s where I m going It s going to scare a lot of people 76 Nolan wrote He d never take acid again he says because that would be pointless wouldn t it And the people who take it all the time acid heads he can t go along with Like all those people Timothy Leary and all they talk a lot but they don t really create you know 77 In his 2016 memoir it was written that the lowercase i was a reference to the loss of ego one of the album s concepts 1 He surmised that this may have added to the difficulty in assembling the tracks into a coherent sequence 18 On Pet Sounds the protagonist seeks security whereas on Smile no loss is final indeed loss and gain are no more than parts of a whole and the vibrations if intangible are ultimately good 102 Dangling causes as defined by David Bordwell are unresolved action s presented near the end of one section that is picked up and pushed further in a later section Every scene will tend to contain unresolved issues that demand settling further along 105 When compiling The Smile Sessions Alan Boyd made use of film editing software Final Cut Pro 105 Davis added that the purity of tone and genetic proximity that smoothed their voices was almost creepy pseudo castrato a barbershop sound that Hendrix on Third Stone From the Sun went thumbs down on 132 According to Parks he was offered the opportunity to rewrite Love s lyrics because Brian was embarrassed with the excitation part Mike Love had insisted on adding But I told Brian that I wouldn t touch it with a 10 foot pole and that nobody d be listening to the lyrics anyway once they heard that music 138 The arguments are similar to those featured in a later Beach Boys track T M Song from 15 Big Ones 181 Marilyn vetoed his suggestion to sell organic vegetables from a drive through window at the rear of their home 146 According to Badman the session were officially inaugurated on September 8 with the recording of Holidays 79 Billboard said that this result was probably influenced by the success of Good Vibrations when the votes were cast together with the band s recent UK tour whereas the Beatles had neither a recent single nor had they toured the UK throughout 1966 The reporter nevertheless added that The sensational success of the Beach Boys is being taken as a portent that the popularity of the top British groups of the last three years is past its peak 235 Ringo Starr commented We haven t been doing much and it was run just at a time when the Beach Boys had something good out We re all four fans of the Beach Boys Maybe we voted for them 236 It discussed the energy between himself Gemini David Anderle the Jolly Jewish Carrot and Michael Vosse Michael Spinach the Green Glob or Sidney as well as Guy Webster Hal Blaine and possibly Jules Siegel referred to as celery In one excerpt Wilson wrote Grasping firmly onto the carrot Brian ate it quickly and lo and behold it gave him some very out of sight vision of a very out of sight world 119 This was contradicted by Parks who felt that Love s true issues were not with the lyrics as he has always claimed but with the music 208 Jardine who praised Parks lyrics and admitted to initially harboring discontent for the band s changing musical direction contended that Love was a formula hound in that he typically dismissed songs that he felt lacked clear and distinguishable hooks 222 In 2017 Rolling Stone included the cousins discord as one of Music s 30 Fiercest Feuds and Beefs Contributor Jordan Runtagh wrote that when Wilson sought to move the band beyond their fun in the sun persona Love found the new musical daring pretentious and feared alienating the fans originally won over by their carefree surfing image 252 In 2014 fans reacted negatively to the announcement that Wilson would be recording a duets album comparing it to a cash in A Facebook post attributed to Wilson responded to the feedback In my life in music I ve been told too many times not to fuck with the formula but as an artist it s my job to do that 253 Brian supported in a 2011 interview that while it was his own choice to shelve the album Love had said to him I m disgusted with this this is nothing like any kind of Beach Boys type song 259 Heylin states that the studio logs appear to indicate March 2 as the date that Smile was abandoned 268 One of Brian s thoroughly insistent psychologically arm twisting tactic s to test my devotion to his cause as Taylor called it was to play a new song of his and immediately start making statements like Better than the Stones yeah Then he d put on a song like Paperback Writer and say Is that really any good and I d have to say very deliberately Yes Brian it is very good He was never satisfied though Never 279 Anderle supported that Brian always felt that the Beatles were number two with Derek He had a very strong feeling about that 280 Parks remembered the rumor being that two members of the Beatles had visited Steiner s studio to listen to unmixed Smile master tapes 291 According to Badman the move was to extricate themselves from Wilson s hanger ons 286 Marilyn installed a high brick wall and an electronically controlled gate around the estate 231 Music historian Andrew Doe speculated that the memo may have reflected Brian being his usual agreeable self and telling people what they wanted to hear or a simple misunderstanding 318 During an interview when Parks suggested that the album did not mean as much to him as it did to its fans he was asked why he had kept framed lithographs of Frank Holmes Smile artwork on the wall above his workspace to which his wife Sally interjected He s got you there Van 326 Parks surmised that Warners was interested in signing him as a solo artist due to having collaborated with Wilson 328 Richard Henderson writing his 33 book about the album said that Clearly Parks was his own man as a composer and instrumentalist prior to the SMiLE collaboration but one of Wilson s favorite devices creating new timbres via laminates of different instruments playing unison lines can be heard throughout the album 328 The purpose of these announcements may have been to mislead Reprise into allowing the group more time to prepare their next album 344 Other notable fans were Alice Lillie Paula Perrin Peter Reum and Mike Grant 357 Surveys conducted in Tabor s late 1970s publication Friends of the Beach Boys indicated that there was overwhelming interest among readers for the Beach Boys psychedelic period and for the release of Smile and other rare tracks 359 Other contents included Wonderful and Wind Chimes from Smiley Smile the Water Chant segment of Cool Cool Water from Sunflower incorrectly titled I Love to Say Da Da various versions of Can t Wait Too Long an alternate mix of Good Vibrations George Fell into His French Horn Mrs O Leary s Cow and the Laughing Gravy rendition of Vega Tables 364 In his estimation Wilson would have been crushed with disappointment while the band would have been left without the salvation of unused Smile tracks with which to bolster their subsequent albums Otherwise life carries on much as before 431 References edit a b Wilson amp Greenman 2016 p 186 a b c Bogdanov Woodstra amp Erlewine 2002 p 72 a b Jones 2008 p 63 a b Delehant Jim June 1967 Dennis Wilson We Just Want To Be A Good Group Hit Parader a b c Ronnie October 16 2004 Interview with Brian Wilson Ear Candy Mag a b Gaines 1986 p 124 Sanchez 2014 p 92 a b Gaines 1986 pp 124 125 133 134 Badman 2004 pp 87 136 a b Badman 2004 p 102 Gaines 1986 pp 144 145 Carter 2016 p 180 Badman 2004 pp 118 120 131 Badman 2004 pp 126 131 Granata 2003 p 58 a b Badman 2004 pp 131 132 Badman 2004 pp 134 139 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Heiser Marshall November 2012 SMiLE Brian Wilson s Musical Mosaic The Journal on the Art of Record Production 7 ISSN 1754 9892 Archived from the original on April 15 2015 Retrieved July 24 2017 a b c Badman 2004 p 114 Carlin 2006 p 92 a b Carter 2016 p 175 Badman 2004 pp 114 131 Gaines 1986 p 160 a b c d e f g h i j Himes Geoffrey October 1 2004 Brian Wilson Remembers How To Smile Paste Magazine Archived from the original on January 8 2009 Retrieved May 28 2014 Badman 2004 p 133 a b c Badman 2004 p 166 Badman 2004 p 153 Carter 2016 p 179 a b Parks Van Dyke January 12 2006 IN RESPONSE TO A Lost Pop Symphony from the September 22 2005 issue The New York Review of Books nybooks com Priore 2005 p 117 Gaines 1986 pp 147 158 Gaines 1986 p 158 a b Gaines 1986 pp 155 156 158 a b c Carter 2016 p 174 Carter 2016 pp 172 174 Badman 2004 p 120 Badman 2004 pp 120 142 The Smile Sessions deluxe box set booklet The Beach Boys Capitol Records 2011 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 Ronnie Interview with Mark Volman of the Turtles Ear Candy Retrieved September 2 2022 a b White 1996 p 268 a b c Badman 2004 p 149 a b c Carlin 2006 p 101 a b Carter 2016 pp 173 176 a b c Sanchez 2014 p 94 Williams 2010 p 84 a b Siegel Jules June 18 1998 David Anderle s falsehoods waste org Retrieved November 21 2020 Ellsworth Adam January 26 2013 Arts Remembrance Be the Rock Star A Tribute to Jules Siegel The Arts Fuse Retrieved May 29 2019 Hoskyns 2009 p 130 Kent 1995 p 264 Gaines 1986 p 162 Williams 2010 p 96 a b c d e f g Nolan Tom October 28 1971 The Beach Boys A California Saga Rolling Stone No 94 Archived from the original on September 25 2018 Retrieved August 25 2017 a b c Gaines 1986 p 164 Matijas Mecca 2017 p 60 Priore 2005 p 108 Leaf 1978 p 98 a b Leaf 1978 pp 96 97 a b Priore 2005 p 94 a b Schinder 2007 p 117 a b Carlin 2006 p 98 Prendergast 2003 p 180 a b Rodriguez 2020 pp 221 222 a b Howard 2004 p 76 Rodriguez 2012 p 184 Sacher Andrew November 24 2021 Beatles vs Beach Boys a brief history of the greatest rivalry in pop innovation Brooklyn Vegan Gilliland John 1969 Show 37 The Rubberization of Soul The great pop music renaissance Part 3 audio Pop Chronicles University of North Texas Libraries Priore 2005 p 173 Rensin David December 1976 A Conversation With Brian Wilson Oui a b Carter 2016 p 178 Carter 2016 pp 178 179 Brown Ethan August 4 2005 Influences Brian Wilson The lost Beach Boy s favorite things Phil Spector Arthur Koestler and Celine Dion s legs New York Retrieved May 24 2019 Leaf 1978 p 97 a b c d e f g h i Vosse Michael April 14 1969 Our Exagmination Round His Factification For Incamination of Work in Progress Michael Vosse Talks About Smile Fusion Vol 8 a b Kent 2009 p 36 Sanchez 2014 p 101 a b Gaines 1986 pp 168 169 a b c Nolan Tom November 27 1966 The Frenzied Frontier of Pop Music Los Angeles Times West Magazine a b Sanchez 2014 pp 93 94 a b c d e f Badman 2004 p 147 Grant Mike February 1967 Our influences are of a religious nature the Beach Boys on Smile Rave Carlin 2006 p 91 a b Simmons Sylvie March 2004 Brian Wilson Smile Don t mind if I do Mojo a b Leaf 1978 p 116 Tobler 1978 p 37 a b Zahl David November 16 2011 That Time The Beach Boys Made a Teenage Symphony to God Mockingbird a b Michael June 7 1999 Let s Just Say That Sometimes gt Freaky Trigger Retrieved July 1 2014 Sandall Robert September 23 2004 SMiLE How We Created Pop s Lost Legend The Daily Telegraph Lambert 2008 p 115 Badman 2004 p 131 a b Williams 2010 p 94 Williams 2010 pp 94 98 Carter 2016 p 182 a b c Priore 2005 p 68 a b Reid Darren R 2013 Deconstructing America The Beach Boys Brian Wilson and the Making of SMiLE Open Access History and American Studies a b Dillon 2012 p 151 a b Priore 2005 p 89 Priore 2005 p 73 Myers Marc October 7 2011 Still Picking Up Good Vibrations The Wall Street Journal a b Myers Matt October 7 2011 Interview Brian Wilson on SMiLE Jazzwax Archived from the original on July 2 2014 Retrieved July 5 2014 Carter 2016 pp 169 182 Carter 2016 p 183 a b Carter 2016 p 184 Schinder 2007 p 116 a b Bell Matt October 2004 The Resurrection of Brian Wilson s Smile Sound on Sound Retrieved July 16 2013 a b c d Britt Thomas The Beach Boys The SMiLE Sessions PopMatters a b Priore 2005 p 70 a b c d e f g h i Toop David November 2011 The SMiLE Sessions The Wire No 333 pp 30 31 The Beach Boys SMiLE Sessions Webisode 9 Chaos amp Complexity Video YouTube The Beach Boys November 29 2011 a b c d Masley Ed October 28 2011 Nearly 45 years later Beach Boys Smile complete Arizona AZ Central Retrieved November 19 2014 Richardson Mark November 2 2011 The Smile Sessions review Pitchfork Retrieved July 16 2013 Lynskey Dorian May 16 2016 Brian Wilson Entrances Bristol on Eve of Pet Sounds 50th Anniversary Rolling Stone Essner Dean September 27 2014 Brian Wilson s SMiLE vs The Beach Boys The Smile Sessions PopMatters Hall 2014 p 63 Sellars 2015 p 106 Fusilli Jim June 19 1998 Beach Boy Bounces Back The Wall Street Journal Dansby Andrew November 11 2011 Beach Boys makes its fans SMiLE again Chron Lowe 2007 p 219 Sommer Tim July 21 2015 Beyond the Life of Brian The Myth of the Lesser Beach Boys The New York Observer a b c d e f g h Priore 2005 p 102 Toop 1995 p 114 Lambert 2016 pp 82 85 Carter 2016 p 181 a b Carlin 2006 p 97 a b Sharp Ken April 2 2013 Al Jardine of the Beach Boys Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About SMiLE Interview Rock Cellar Magazine Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved July 2 2014 a b c Priore 2005 p 79 Priore 2005 p 23 Leopold Todd January 17 2012 The creative struggle of Brian Wilson CNN a b Petridis Alexis October 27 2011 The Beach Boys The Smile Sessions review The Guardian London Retrieved June 28 2013 a b Priore 2005 p 69 Sanchez 2014 p 88 Murphy Sean August 28 2012 The Once and Future King SMiLE and Brian Wilson s Very American Dream Popmatters Retrieved July 17 2014 a b Davis Erik November 9 1990 Look Listen Vibrate SMILE The Apollonian Shimmer of the Beach Boys LA Weekly Archived from the original on December 4 2014 Retrieved January 14 2014 a b c d Priore 2005 p 72 Priore 1995 p 30 a b c d Badman 2004 p 167 a b c d e f g h Howard Ed July 28 2003 Smile The Definitive Lost Album Stylus stylusmagazine com Archived from the original on May 10 2012 a b Badman 2004 p 142 Holdship Bill April 6 2000 Heroes and Villains The Los Angeles Times Badman 2004 pp 131 132 153 Carlin 2006 p 120 Carlin 2006 p 93 Priore 2005 pp 65 68 Badman 2004 pp 156 167 Preiss 1979 p page needed Priore 2005 p 71 a b Badman 2004 p 150 The 50 Greatest Beach Boys Songs Mojo Magazine June 2012 Badman 2004 p 168 Stebbins 2011 p 90 Priore 2005 p 74 Priore 2005 p 42 Priore 2005 p 92 Trynka amp Bacon 1996 p 128 Preiss 1979 p 60 Priore 2005 p 65 a b c d e Badman 2004 p 151 Priore 2005 p 66 a b Badman 2004 p 160 Priore 2005 p 109 a b Priore 2005 p 10 Badman 2004 p 161 a b c d e f g Badman 2004 p 163 a b c Williams amp Anderle 1995 p 230 Carlin 2006 p 250 Gaines 1986 p 173 Priore 2005 p 82 a b Priore 2005 p 86 Preiss 1979 p 62 Lambert 2007 p 47 Lambert 2016 p 90 a b c Carlin 2006 p 112 Badman 2004 p 144 Badman 2004 p 145 Priore 1995 p 154 Priore 2005 pp 169 170 a b Priore 2005 p 170 a b c Badman 2004 p 165 Doggett 1997 p 72 a b c Carlin 2006 p 111 a b Badman 2004 p 156 a b Badman 2004 p 162 Badman 2004 pp 173 178 180 181 a b c d e f Badman 2004 p 173 Badman 2004 pp 175 177 Preiss 1979 p 63 Matijas Mecca 2017 p 180 Carlin 2006 p 102 a b White 1996 p 269 a b c Carlin 2006 p 100 a b Priore 2005 p 100 a b c Schinder 2007 p 118 a b Williams 1997 pp 17 23 Matijas Mecca 2017 pp xiv 60 63 77 78 Priore 1995 p 197 a b c Highwater Jamake 1968 Rock and Other Four Letter Words Music of the Electric Generation Bantam Books ISBN 0 552 04334 6 a b Himes Geoffrey September 1983 The Beach Boys High Times and Ebb Tides Carl Wilson Recalls 20 Years With and Without Brian Musician 59 Heylin 2007 pp 186 187 a b c Stebbins 2011 p page needed Kent 2009 p 29 Kent 1995 pp 263 267 Stebbins 2000 p 58 Thomas Tracy January 28 1967 Beach Boy a Day Brian Loved or Loathed Genius NME Love 2016 pp 160 162 166 a b c Hedegaard Erik February 17 2016 The Ballad of Mike Love Rolling Stone a b Heylin 2007 p 180 a b Badman 2004 p 181 Weis Gary Director 1976 The Beach Boys It s OK Documentary a b Parkes Taylor May 22 2013 The Clang Of The Yankee Reaper Van Dyke Parks Interviewed The Quietus Fine Jason June 21 2012 The Beach Boys Last Wave Rolling Stone Retrieved June 8 2014 a b Heylin 2007 pp 182 183 Heylin 2007 p 183 Heylin 2007 p 51 Carlin 2006 pp 103 280 Carlin 2006 p 103 a b Gaines 1986 p 171 a b Kent 2009 p 32 Gaines 1986 p 159 a b c d e f Leaf David Director 2004 Beautiful Dreamer Brian Wilson and the Story of Smile Documentary a b c Kent 2009 p 41 Griffiths David December 21 1968 Dennis Wilson I Live With 17 Girls Record Mirror Love 2016 p 163 a b c Sharp Ken July 28 2000 Alan Jardine A Beach Boy still riding the waves Goldmine Archived from the original on January 9 2013 a b Heylin 2007 p 182 Gaines 1986 p 163 Matijas Mecca 2017 p 50 Carlin 2006 p 105 Badman 2004 pp 155 156 Priore 2005 p 39 a b c d e Priore 2005 p 96 Stebbins 2000 p 85 a b White 1996 p 270 Sanchez 2014 p 86 Carlin 2006 p 106 Sanchez 2014 pp 86 87 It s Beach Boys Over Beatles Reader Poll Billboard Vol 78 no 50 December 10 1966 p 10 ISSN 0006 2510 The History of Rock 1966 Uncut 2015 pp 79 141 142 ASIN B01AD99JMW Priore 1995 p 255 Sanchez 2014 p 4 Carlin 2006 pp 108 109 Badman 2004 pp 153 159 162 a b Gaines 1986 p 174 a b Leaf 1978 p 110 Gaines 1986 p 172 Badman 2004 pp 163 173 180 a b Williams amp Anderle 1995 p page needed Matijas Mecca 2017 pp xx xxi Love 2016 pp 164 165 a b Love 2016 p 164 Hepworth 2016 p 223 Williams amp Anderle 1995 p 224 a b c d Holdship Bill August 1995 Lost in Music Brian Wilson MOJO No 2 Runtagh Jordan September 15 2017 Music s 30 Fiercest Feuds and Beefs Brian Wilson vs Mike Love Rolling Stone Michaels Sean June 12 2014 Brian Wilson fans furious at Frank Ocean and Lana Del Rey collaborations The Guardian Love 2016 pp 163 164 Carlin 2006 p 116 Love 2016 pp 131 151 Love 2016 pp 162 166 Carlin 2006 p 313 Wilson John October 21 2011 Brian Wilson interview Tintin Brian Wilson interview bbc co uk Retrieved July 28 2013 Badman 2004 pp 167 180 Heylin 2007 p 95 Badman 2004 pp 170 178 243 Badman 2004 pp 173 178 Priore 2005 p 113 Kent 1995 p 266 Kent 2009 p 40 Badman 2004 p 178 Heylin 2007 p 186 Carlin 2006 p 167 Gaines 1986 p 175 Kent 2009 pp 38 42 Williams amp Anderle 1995 p page needed a b Gaines 1986 pp 167 168 Carlin 2006 p 117 a b Badman 2004 pp 153 163 173 180 a b Carlin 2006 p 119 Love 2016 p 107 a b Pond Steve November 5 December 10 1987 Brian Wilson Rolling Stone p 176 Kent 1995 p 263 Williams amp Anderle 1995 p 233 Frith Simon 1981 1967 The Year It All Came Together The History of Rock a b Brian Answer s Fans Questions in Live Q amp A January 29 2014 Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved June 27 2014 Kiehl Stephen September 26 2004 Lost and Found Sounds page 2 The Baltimore Sun Retrieved April 23 2018 Priore 2005 p 114 Gaines 1986 p 165 a b c d Badman 2004 p 180 Priore 2005 p 106 Priore 2005 p 107 a b Badman 2004 pp 180 181 183 Priore 2005 pp 116 117 link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.