Smile is inarguably the most long awaited album in modern pop
history. It's been more than 37 years since the title first
appeared on a label release schedule, intended as the January,
1967 follow-up to the groundbreaking art-rock of the Beach Boys'
Pet Sounds. But Smile never made its initial release date. Today,
this album is not a mere reconstruction of past performances, but
something entirely new, a serious summation of a project that has
been gestating for nearly four decades.
BBC Review
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While current list-orientated thinking places the
Beach Boys' Pet Sounds as one of the greatest modern popular
s, debate still rages as to whether its mooted
follow-up, Smile, would have outshone it. Only ever glimpsed in
segments, was the album just a victim of a self-perpetuating
myth, enhanced by legends of Brian and his missing marbles? Or
was this one of the great lost rtunities? 40 years later,
Brian's finally letting us know...
After creating Pet Sounds almost single-handedly while his
siblings toured the globe, Brian - already in the throes of
considerable mental anguish - embarked on a project even more
gargantuan. With maverick lyricist Van Dyke Parks he proceeded to
craft a 'teenage symphony to God'. Six months of intense work
yielded most of the tracks, but by then Wilson was suffering from
intense paranoia and exhibiting somewhat erratic behaviour. While
the "Fire" sequence of "Mrs O'Leary's Cow" (getting the
orchestra to wear fireman's helmets!) he believed that the vibes
had started a major conration nearby. Now irreparably fragile
and convinced he could never better the Beatles, he took to his
bed for years, releasing tantalising snippets of his symphony on
subsequent albums and leaving fans to try and assemble their own
versions from advance press release track listings. Ironically
Brian's own website cls that: "To this day, few have heard
this lost masterpiece".
What's immediately apparent is that this project, once dubbed
'unwieldy', is perfectly suited to modern ears. The complexity of
the segmented arrangements, the recurring themes ("Roll Plymouth
Rock", "Heroes and Villains" etc.) and the lush orchestration and
vocal harmonies actually improve under modern
techniques, making what once seem muddled now a startlingly clear
vision of American history - albeit a baroque and impressionistic
one. Parks' lyrics defy categorisation and still convey a concise
sense of the weight of 200 years. One instinctively knows what he
means by 'Bicycle rider, just look what you've done to the church
of the American Indian' or 'Colonnaded ruins domino' ("Surf's
Up").
The music manages even more. Every second is packed with a
thorough trawling of popular forms, from lounge jazz ("I Wanna Be
Around") to barbershop ("Heroes and Villains"). A capella opener
"Our Prayer" provides the missing link between the Four Freshmen
and gospel music(!) and "Wonderful" manages to be both
and holy. Only during the final suite, containing oddities such
as "Vega-tables" and the aforementioned "Mrs O'Leary's Cow", do
you start to wonder if Brian's muse is unravelling before your
ears.
Aficionados will argue for decades over the differences between
these newly recorded versions and the sacred originals, yet the
Wondermints, Brian's backing band on recent live outings, are so
steeped in Beach Boys lore that you'd be hard pushed to tell them
from the originals. Only Brian's older, worn vocals really give
the game away. Anyone fearing that finally finishing Smile would
diminish its status can now rest easy. This is a work of genius
that transcends time. Is it time to rewrite those lists again?
--Chris Jones
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