Uncut Magazine have produced a good review of That Lucky Old Sun which is taking pride of place on the offical Brian site. Also looks like the September Hollywood Bowl shows will have some songs from Lucky Old Sun but not all – however, looking very good for a November Sun tour of the States.
Archive for July, 2008
Closer To The Sun
Tuesday, July 29th, 200823 Songs For Today
Monday, July 28th, 20081)IDIOT WIND (Bob Dylan)
2) MAMA, YOU BEEN ON MY MIND (Bob Dylan)
3) SHE’S YOUR LOVER NOW (Bob Dylan)
4) BLIND WILLIE MC TELL (Bob Dylan)
5) I’M NOT THERE (Bob Dylan)
6) I THREW IT ALL AWAY (Bob Dylan)
7) LAY LADY LAY (Bob Dylan)
8 ) GOING GOING GONE (Bob Dylan)
9) SENOR (TALES OF YANKEE POWER) (Bob Dylan)
10) VIVA LA VIDA (Coldplay)
11) LOVE REMEMBER ME (Dennis Wilson)
12) HOLY MAN (Dennis Wilson)
13) THOUGHTS OF YOU (Dennis Wilson)
14) YOU AND I (Dennis Wilson)
15) A TIME TO LIVE IN DREAMS (Beach Boys)
16) ONLY WITH YOU (Beach Boys)
17) CLOUDMAN (Jimmy Webb)
18) JUST THIS ONE TIME (Jimmy Webb)
19) WHERE’ER YOU GO (Paul Weller)
20) CRUELTY TO ANIMALS (Pernice Brothers)
21) CONSCIENCE CLEAR (I WENT TO SPAIN) (Pernice Brothers)
22) JUDY (Pernice Brothers)
23) BLINDED BY THE STARS (Pernice Brothers)
Meanwhile On The Soul Front
Sunday, July 27th, 2008Aside from Brian Wilson’s new works, Lucky Soul have been one of my major joys of the past two years, so it’s great to hear news on their MySpace blog of work on their second album.
Hello Dears!
I just thought I’d write to let y’all know how we’re getting on with the new album. It’s been a while since we were last in the (big) studio and while touring is flippin’ great, quite frankly you get a little bit bored of playing the same songs over and over again. So… we’ve got seven or eight spangly new tracks already demoed and sounding rather good, and another seven or eight written and ready to commit to hard-disk at our ‘lil studio in Camberwell. Andrew’s gone into studio hibernation and hasn’t seen the daylight for a good few weeks. If you asked him what day it was he wouldn’t have a clue and I’ve noticed the enormo-jars of Nescafe going down alarmingly quick! Meanwhile, in true diva style I managed to get some of my vocals done at home in my PJ’s surrounded by feathers and down in my makeshift vocal booth. It’s really refreshing to get stuck in and work on new stuff.. and of course this is the first time we’ll be recording with our all-new super tight rhythm section, Rusty and Mr Atkins. Yay!
Here are some titles of our new songs, you know, just to whet your appetite…
Into The Night
Our Heart
Love, Love, Love
Upon Hilly Fields
Southern Melancholy
Why Can’t Everyone Just Be Nice For A Change?
Up In Flames
Crying In the Morning
That’s When Trouble Begins‘Why Can’t Everyone’ is a beaut – all gospel harmonies and slow, soulful melody with a very hummable chorus, ‘Love Love Love’ is all dolly-esque and country, ‘Southern Melancholy’ has gone all Scott Walker and is so, so lush, and another of the new ones sounds like James Bond and looks set to be another LS epic. Current favourite is ‘Upon Hilly Fields’ which sounds like somewhere between Dirty Old Town and Witchita Lineman (we managed to steer it away from Crocodile Shoes thank goodness, but you get the drift!) We’ve already decided to borrow my step-sister’s blue-eyed horse, Kel for the video, and I’ll be dressed as Doris Day in Calamity Jane. Yee ha!
That’s your lot for now. Don’t forget to join in the fun at the forum www.luckysoul.co.uk/forum and we might even let you into a few more second album secrets if you ask nicely.
Lots of Love,
Ali (the little tease) x x x
Why Can’t Everyone Just Be Nice For A Change? Poignant title. Scott Walker. Wichita Lineman. Indeed you tease! But here’s to a great album with great success and something more to look forward to!
Keep The Customer Satisfied
Friday, July 25th, 2008One of the big recent Brian Wilson stories has been the offer of a refund for his July 11 Hammerstein show. An interesting perspective on this is on the Guardian blog and I think Brian and his management come out of it pretty well- it certainly shows that Brian’s tours are all about healing and reclaiming a legacy and not about the money. Now if Amy Winehouse was doing these sort of refunds…..
Brian’s Hidden Beauties LI: She Knows Me Too Well
Thursday, July 24th, 2008
She Knows Me Too Well was part of a revolutionary double-header single that the Beach Boys released in September 1964 -the A-side was When I Grow Up (To Be A Man), and in retrospect, it’s hard to believe this is 1964 vintage. Both sides of the single show a production quality as well as lyrical insight that seems way ahead of it’s time. Both songs made it on to LP in the 1965 Today album and enhanced that album which is now regarded by many as the best of the pre-Pet Sounds Beach Boys releases.
The song was featured on the Good Vibrations box set and in some of Brian’s recent concerts, including last year’s UK shows for That Lucky Old Sun. However, it is a definitely a fan favorite as oppossed to a widely-known classic. Brian’s aching vocal, and the realistic sentiment of the song, do make it a minor classic and another reason to delve deep into the works of Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys.
FAQ Updated
Sunday, July 20th, 2008I’ve updated the FAQ on the Cabin website, have a look here. Mostly just updating recent events from Brian and Dennis. Please let me know if you suggested corrections or improvements.
It’s Cool To Be A Beach Boy
Saturday, July 19th, 2008This is an article from over a month ago from the New Statesman that was flagged on our Shut Down message board, but is worth repeating and noting here
The lure of the beach
Jude Rogers
Published 12 June 2008
A new generation of US bands cites the Beach Boys as a huge inspiration. Why now?Ten years after Oasis soaked up the multicoloured madness of the Beatles and Blur updated the woozy whimsy of the Kinks, a very different kind of psychedelia is on the tip of every cool musician’s tongue. Step forward, the harmony-drenched sounds of new American psychedelia, and its own generation of alternative rock groups. This scene, led by bands such as Fleet Foxes, Grizzly Bear and Animal Collective, shares one inspiration: the more experimental sounds of the late-career Beach Boys. But why the Beach Boys and why now?
Robin Pecknold of Seattle’s Fleet Foxes, the hirsute, baroque pop quintet that Mojo magazine recently called “America’s next great band”, has one theory. “The Beach Boys’ music soaks up all of America, from the sunny sound of Hawaii to the folk songs of the south to the intelligence of the north-east. In hard times, it’s about remembering the romance of the country, and also about the power of the human voice to convey those emotions.”
In 1966, the Beach Boys had entered a strange phase in their career. While political and sexual revolutions were empowering the group’s contemporaries, Brian Wilson had begun an intense collaboration as a songwriter with the songwriter and arranger Van Dyke Parks. The plan was to make a lush concept album called Smile, one that Wilson described as “a teenage symphony to God”, inspired by the band’s single “Good Vibrations”. Back then, the album never materialised. Under the weight of Wilson’s mental illness and drug abuse, and the band’s internal wrangling, the recording sessions fell apart, leaving a mysterious trail of songs that would be revisited by Wilson only years later. His version of Smile was premiered at the Royal Festival Hall in London in February 2004, and finally released the following September. Not surprisingly, its influence quickly bubbled into the mainstream.
Pecknold, the son of baby boomers who themselves grew up in the late 1960s, remembers hearing bootlegs of Smile long before 2004. As he talks about the effect they had on him, his voice glows with happiness. “They just blew my mind. They were so inventive and committed – the product of a man who just couldn’t do anything else. There was also an incredible honesty to it, which we and other bands relate to. Because in American music today, it’s almost like there’s a trend against irony.”
Today, as in the late Sixties, America is a country whose reputation has been battered by an unpopular war. Perhaps this is why bands have been driven towards the innocence and purity of their musical roots. This is certainly the case with Fleet Foxes, who mix Beach Boys-inspired, spiritual harmonies with folk and hymnal flavours that suggest something deeper in their cultural make-up. And it doesn’t matter to these bands that such influences were deeply unfashionable until recently.
Other harmony-loving, influential young American groups such as Midlake and Band of Horses take another Beach Boy, Brian’s little brother Dennis, as a huge inspiration. Though best known for his early death in 1983 and his brief friendship with Charles Manson, Dennis Wilson was also a cult solo performer. After sharing a tense childhood with his brother in the shadow of their controlling father, Murry, he made his classic debut album, Pacific Ocean Blue, in 1977. It is a long-deleted LP full of heartfelt, psychedelic soul songs. Fans have clamoured in recent years for its re-release, and it at last emerges this month.
The upbringing of Brian and Dennis Wilson has another link with the new generation of psychedelic groups: almost all of them have had intensely musical childhoods. Take the influential Brooklyn quartet Grizzly Bear, whose electronic take on the Beach Boys’ late-Sixties reverb has resulted in two gorgeous albums, Horn of Plenty (2004) and Yellow House (2006). Their frontman, Ed Droste, another huge fan of Brian Wilson, has talked proudly about his late grandfather being a professor of music at Harvard for 40 years, his mother being a music teacher who plays the autoharp, and the constant singing he enjoyed at home as a child.
Elsewhere in New York, the avant-garde Animal Collective are one of the most fashionable groups around, a shifting band of musicians who all met at school in Baltimore and learned classical instruments. To date, they have made eight experimental albums that warp Beach Boys harmonies into unsettling shapes, but only recently have they penetrated the mainstream press.
Animal Collective’s biggest related success has been Person Pitch (2007), the third solo album by one of its members, Panda Bear, which the critic Simon Reynolds described as sounding “like the Beach Boys if they’d joined Hare Krishna”. It earned five-star ratings in the Observer and the Independent and made the top tens of end-of-year polls, all for a record inspired by the birth of Lennox’s daughter, Nadja, and a wealth of deeply spiritual, innocent harmonies.
Perhaps it is a result of the Beach Boys’ influence on pop culture that this summer you can’t get away from them. Besides the critical adoration being heaped on the Dennis Wilson reissue, it is encouraging that Brian Wilson himself has become as industrious as he was in the mid-Sixties. On 19 May, he announced his return to Capitol Records, where the Beach Boys made their first album, Surfin’ Safari, in 1962. On 1 September, he will release his latest solo album, That Lucky Old Sun. Like Smile, it was written and recorded with Van Dyke Parks, who is experiencing a career renaissance of his own after arranging the folk harpist Joanna Newsom’s hugely acclaimed Ys and collaborating with the British psychedelic group the Shortwave Set.
“It’s a great honour to be here,” said Wilson at the press conference to announce That Lucky Old Sun, rocking gently on his feet like a child. Bright yellow banners like party decorations welcomed him home. Then he spoke some words that said everything about his past, his present and the effects of his legacy on the young generation: “It’s a very sentimental time in my life.”
I’ve ordered the Fleet Foxes album from Amazon and don’t know the other groups, but it certainly seems that there is quite a bit of music out there still worth seeking out.
90 Years Young
Friday, July 18th, 2008Something completely different today…South Africa is celebrating the 90th birthday of Nelson Mandela. It’s poignant to think back 20 years to when we didn’t even know what Nelson Mandela looked like…in the “bad old days” in South Africa, even pictures of him were banned as if they were pictures of the devil himself. We’ve come a long way since then, and even although there are huge challenges around us, not least of those just to north of us, but today it’s worth celebrating the progress that has been made in this part of the world. And a lot of that is due to the leadership and reconciliation philosophy of Mandela. Happy birthday!
Despite Technical Difficulties, We’re Trying To Keep A Normal Service
Wednesday, July 16th, 2008Looks like my blog has been hacked in some way, as some of the posts have hidden text with all sorts of pharmaceutical stuff which has nothing to do with Brian Wilson or anything I would care to post. Google sent me a note pointing this out, and kindly removing this blog from their search engines.
I’ve upgraded the blog software and removed at least some of the problem text, but as you may have noticed, some of the old text has been a bit corrupted. Any advice on how to fix this, and stop any recurrence of the problem will be much appreciated.
Exploring The Sound
Sunday, July 13th, 2008I’ve already indicated the promise shown by the Explorers Club on their single releases, and now we have their first full-length album, Freedom Wind, as a showcase of their talents and ability to capture the essence of the classic Beach Boys sound. And I’m glad to say that, in a year that hasn’t been a barrel of joy for most of the world, this is a sure tonic of hope and good spirit.
Sure, the sound may be derivative and not show a huge progression from 40 years ago, but if the best way to beat Tiger Woods is to play like him, the best way to make a classic pop album is to pick up on that classic vibration from “America’s Band.” The singles Do You Love Me? and Last Kiss sound like classic pop songs that somehow got lost over the years, but when the band taps into the melancholy vein that permeates Brian’s best work , the album really takes off into the stratosphere of greatness. Tracks like Don’t Forget The Sun, Lost My Head, If You Go, Safe Distance and Hold Me Tight tap into the same California yearning and heartbreak as The Warmth Of The Sun and Please Let Me Wonder.
And these aren’t California middle-aged revivalists, but 20somethings from South Carolina who have had their music featured on hip shows like The O.C and How I Met Your Mother. So this is definitely an album to rediscover one’s hope, share one’s heartbreak with and generally groove to – all Beach Boys fans, pop pickers and simply those who appreciate good music will find a lot here. You can get at Amazon or download at eMusic if you want this music in a hurry -and you should!


