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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music)
- 136 statements
- 24 feature instances
- 3 referencing feature instances
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | label |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | page |
SmileTheBeachBoys | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | comment |
SMiLE is a legendary "lost album" from The Beach Boys. Planned for a 1967 release as the follow-up to Pet Sounds, it was meant to be a Concept Album, conceptualized as either a "teenage symphony to God," a musical journey through Americana, or both. But due to Brian Wilson's gradual Creator Breakdown, which culminated after listening to Sgt. Pepper, he abandoned the project.In its place, the deliberately sparsely produced Smiley Smile was released, containing reworked songs and ideas from SMiLE; several ensuing Beach Boys albums would also contain such material. Over the following decades, session material was extensively bootlegged, building the album's legend as the "greatest unreleased album of all time". It wasn't until after the Turn of the Millennium that the public finally got not one, but two versions of this lost masterpiece.Brian Wilson Presents SMiLE is the sixth studio album by Brian Wilson, released in 2004 through Nonesuch Records. It is an all-new re-imagining of the original project by Wilson, his touring band, and original lyricist Van Dyke Parks (who finally supplied the words to songs that had only existed for decades as instrumentals). In 2011, this was followed by The SMiLE Sessions, a box set compilation released through Capitol Records and derived from the original 1966–67 recordings. Described by Wikipedia as "an approximation of what the completed SMiLE album might have sounded like based on the template established in 2004 for Brian Wilson Presents SMiLE", the latter is as close to what the 1967 release would have been as we're ever likely to get. | |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | isPartOf |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_17257125 | type |
The Wild West | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_17257125 | comment |
The Wild West: "Heroes And Villains" goes from romanticized visions of the Old West to acknowledgement that real life back then was pretty shit. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_17257125 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_17257125 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_18230131 | type |
Baroque Pop | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_18230131 | comment |
Baroque Pop: Definitely Brian's heaviest foray into the baroque, awash with Bach influences. Fittingly, one of the prominent instruments is the harpsichord, one of the most emblematic instruments of the baroque period. However, the final result ends up sounding little like Bach and more akin to a barrage of Americana, neo-classical, pop and musique concrète seen by a kaleidoscope doo-wop filter. Brian Wilson himself mentions that George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue was a major influence in his music and it shows in some of the tracks, most notably "Heroes and Villains". | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_18230131 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_18230131 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_1e7487cd | type |
Breaking the Fourth Wall | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_1e7487cd | comment |
Breaking the Fourth Wall: Brian in "Vega-Tables" directly invites the listener to send the Beach Boys in their letter telling them the name of the listener's vegetable. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_1e7487cd | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_1e7487cd | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_22093e9b | type |
New Sound Album | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_22093e9b | comment |
New Sound Album: After the moody Baroque Pop of Pet Sounds comes this Genre Roulette. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_22093e9b | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | hasFeature |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_22093e9b | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_26cce216 | type |
Age-Progression Song | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_26cce216 | comment |
Age-Progression Song: The entire second movement details in an abstract fashion the hardships of growth, noting its cyclic nature and ending in "Surf's Up" as a symbolic manifestation of renewal and catharsis through understanding of the beauty and importance of childhood as constant hope and happiness. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_26cce216 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | hasFeature |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_26cce216 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_2719ab04 | type |
Special Guest | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_2719ab04 | comment |
Special Guest: One of the guys chomping celery in "Vega-Tables" is apparently an uncredited Paul McCartney. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_2719ab04 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_2719ab04 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_2e70a1db | type |
Miniscule Rocking | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_2e70a1db | comment |
Miniscule Rocking: Several songs on both versions of the album are under two minutes long. Epic Rocking: On the other hand, they're not really songs in the proper sense. The album could just as easily be considered a single composition with three discrete movements, which respectively last for 16:06, 10:43, and 19:25. | |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_2e70a1db | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_3bbf3fef | type |
Recurring Riff | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_3bbf3fef | comment |
Recurring Riff: A harpsichord rendition of the chorus of "Heroes and Villains" appears at several points in the first "movement." The harpsichord riff from "Wonderful" also reappears, usually on piano, throughout the second movement. Some Hawaiian-esque chanting from "Roll Plymouth Rock" reappears, for no apparent reason, in the bridge of "Vega-Tables". Heck, most of the album can be seen as a varying scale of simple to obscure variations on the bicycle rider theme. "Song for Children" gets a very brief reprise at the end of "Good Vibrations". | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_3bbf3fef | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_3bbf3fef | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_4b1ca7d2 | type |
Genre Roulette | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_4b1ca7d2 | comment |
Genre Roulette: Categorizing the album is a trying task, and make no mistake - it defies explanation. Some songs even switch styles midway, such as the a cappella opener "Our Prayer" transitioning into a brief rendition of the doo-wop standard "Gee". To give further examples of this roulette of influences: "Cabinessece" sounds like an Americana pocket pop symphony, "Vega-Tables" like a comedic DIY Doo-wop "sketch" that takes the idea of musique concrète literally, "The Elements:Fire" resembles a repetitive acid Disney nightmare, the second movement a minimalist baroque song-cycle, etc... Entirely deliberate on Wilson's part, as he wanted each segment of the album to have a distinct sound. He went to the extent of using different recording studios for different segments to give them distinct sonic characteristics. The process of compiling the album has been compared to film editing both by Carl Wilson and archivist Alan Boyle, and can be compared to "dangling clauses" in a film where an unresolved action in one segment is picked up and pursued later in the film, and in which each segment has unresolved issues until the denouement. Another consequence is that the tracks on the album, mostly lacking traditional song structures, also lack clearly defined beginnings and endings, as explained below under Siamese Twin Songs. | |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_4b1ca7d2 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_5313c266 | type |
Bookends | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_5313c266 | comment |
Book Ends: Well, almost; BWPS begins with "Our Prayer", a short snippet of which also serves as a lead-in to "Good Vibrations" (officially the ending of the preceding track, "In Blue Hawaii", a.k.a. "Love to Say Dada"). | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_5313c266 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | hasFeature |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_5313c266 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_74149c93 | type |
Epic Rocking | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_74149c93 | comment |
Epic Rocking: On the other hand, they're not really songs in the proper sense. The album could just as easily be considered a single composition with three discrete movements, which respectively last for 16:06, 10:43, and 19:25. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_74149c93 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | hasFeature |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_74149c93 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_7464705c | type |
Arc Words | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_7464705c | comment |
Arc Words: "Child, Child, Child, Father of the Man..." "Nananana Na... Nana Naaaaa..." "Roooock, Roooock, Rooooll..." | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_7464705c | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | hasFeature |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_7464705c | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_7d276626 | type |
Siamese Twin Songs | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_7d276626 | comment |
Siamese Twin Songs: Despite the large number of tracks listed above, most of them are more like movements of longer compositions. The album itself is divided into three "chapters" and while there are a couple of gaps within them (in particular, "Good Vibrations" is separated from the rest of the album, though it's not quite a complete fade-out), most sections of music run continuously for around ten to sixteen (or twenty, depending on whether you count "Good Vibrations" as a separate section) minutes. The only complete fade-outs are between "Cabinessence" and "Wonderful" and then between "Surf's Up" and "I Wanna Be Around" or "I'm in Great Shape". Compounding this effect are the fact that most parts of the album lack clearly defined song structures, meaning that songs' beginnings and endings are ambiguous, and Wilson employed an unusual production technique of recording short segments several times, often at different studios, and then splicing his favourite takes together in a technique his bandmate and brother Carl Wilson compared to film editing. This resulted in each segment having a distinct sonic profile rather than the consistent sound typical to recordings of the era, and it was actually extremely groundbreaking in its time; similar techniques would later be employed by, amongst others, Pink Floyd on The Dark Side of the Moon and Yes on Close to the Edge. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_7d276626 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_7d276626 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_9b6acdb3 | type |
Lyrical Cold Open | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_9b6acdb3 | comment |
Lyrical Cold Open: Played With. The album opens with the band's singing, but they're not singing any lyrics. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_9b6acdb3 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_9b6acdb3 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_a6ed3cd6 | type |
Scatting | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_a6ed3cd6 | comment |
Scatting: "Our Prayer", which also gets a brief reprise right before "Good Vibrations". | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_a6ed3cd6 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_a6ed3cd6 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_ac4ac8e5 | type |
Idiosyncratic Episode Naming | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_ac4ac8e5 | comment |
Idiosyncratic Episode Naming: Brian Wilson Presents SMiLE is divided across three independent movements, dubbed "Americana," "Cycle of Life," and "The Elements," and is so dedicated to the idea that LP releases of both it and the SMiLE Sessions reconstruction dedicate one side to each movement, even though both versions of the album are short enough to fit on one LP just fine. Consequently, both versions dedicate side four on LP copies to bonus tracks. | |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_ac4ac8e5 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_b20fdfc8 | type |
Ur-Example | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_b20fdfc8 | comment |
Ur-Example: A contender for several aspects of popular music, including Progressive Rock and sampling. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_b20fdfc8 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_b20fdfc8 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_c75df49a | type |
Shout-Out | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_c75df49a | comment |
Shout-Out: Several. "Surf's Up" alone has references to the French nursery rhyme "Frère Jacques" ("Brother John"), the Edgar Allan Poe story "The Pit and the Pendulum", and the Robert Burns poem "Auld Lang Syne". The alternate title of "Fire", "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow", references the famous story that the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 was started when a cow owned by Patrick and Catherine O'Leary kicked over a lantern in their barn (the fire did in fact start in the vicinity of the O'Leary barn, but the cow story was made up by a newspaper reporter). | |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_c75df49a | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_d0f0a80d | type |
One-Word Title | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_d0f0a80d | comment |
One-Word Title: "SMiLE", "Gee", "Wonderful" and "Holidays". | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_d0f0a80d | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | hasFeature |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_d0f0a80d | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e139c90b | type |
Progressive Rock | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e139c90b | comment |
Progressive Rock: While not generally considered to be an example itself, it's clearly an important precursor to the genre, even bearing in mind that Wilson's intended sequence for the album wasn't released until 2004, and it shares several important traits of the genre (lengthy, concept-based compositions that blend disparate musical genres, feature recurring motifs, and completely throw traditional verse-chorus-bridge song structure out the window as a few examples). Regardless, several tracks ("Surf's Up", "Good Vibrations", "Heroes and Villains") were officially available long before the official release of the album, and their influence on progressive rock is fairly undeniable - not to mention that fan-created bootlegs of Smile material had been available decades before the official releases. Had the album been released in 1967, it's possible that critics would now tend to think of it as the genre's launching point instead of In the Court of the Crimson King. (Prog historians Hegarty and Halliwell do consider the Beach Boys an early example of a prog rock band, presumably largely on the strength of this material and Pet Sounds.) | |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) | hasFeature |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e139c90b | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e18675e6 | type |
Word Salad Lyrics | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e18675e6 | comment |
Word Salad Lyrics: Some of Van Dyke Parks' word choices border on this ("Over and over the thresher and hover the wheat field", "Columnated ruins domino"). This was one of the reasons Mike Love could never quite get on board with the SMiLE project — he thought it was falling into True Art Is Incomprehensible. | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e18675e6 | featureApplicability |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e18675e6 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e3c20140 | type |
As Long as It Sounds Foreign | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e3c20140 | comment |
As Long as It Sounds Foreign: The Hawaiian lyrics in "Roll Plymouth Rock", depending on whom you ask, are either complete gibberish (which at least fits the rhythm) or a message from Brian that got garbled thanks to his not being a native speaker. | |
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SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e3c20140 | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e96728aa | type |
Recycled Lyrics | |
SMiLE (The Beach Boys) (Music) / int_e96728aa | comment |
Recycled Lyrics: The bridge in "Vega-Tables" would eventually become its own song: "Mama Says" on the album Wild Honey. | |
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