WE DO THE MASHED POTATO AND THE FUNKY CHICKEN

The Beach Boys

Sunflower/Surf's Up

  • AMG Review of Sunflower/Surf's Up

    Amg
    John Bush
    All Music Guide

    After anthologizing the Beach Boys' creative peak with several reissues during the '90s, Capitol turned its attention to the '70s recordings by acquiring the rights to the group's LPs for Warner/Reprise. The first fruits of this campaign arrived (after several long delays) in mid-2000, comprising a single disc with 1970's Sunflower and the following year's Surf's Up. It's a perfect place to begin, too, considering they were certainly the Beach Boys' best albums of the '70s. Sunflower especially is a beautiful work, stocked with excellent harmonies and the best songs the group had written since Pet Sounds; British critics and fans even deemed it a worthy successor. And for listeners more interested in the aborted Smile than Pet Sounds, Surf's Up is an eccentric work that displays the group's increasingly fractured genius. Even aside from the music, pairing Sunflower and Surf's Up provides a fascinating glimpse of a band in search of its identity after several years of commercial shutouts and dwindling critical interest. On Sunflower, the Beach Boys merged their fondness for sun and sand with a growing sense of their own maturity; the cover photo even features the group lounging in a park, playing with their children. Less than a year later, however, that hope for the future is not just replaced but completely obliterated for Surf's Up, as social/environmental paranoia and fatalistic resignation compete for attention on a set of skewed pop songs. These radically different struggles for attention during the early '70s -- whether to reprise the surf-and-sun sound or become a quintessentially '70s "aware" band, whether to ascend the mountain of Brian Wilson's heavenly production sense or surrender to his growing melancholia -- make for two dozen compelling tracks. It surely wouldn't have been quite as compelling if the music hadn't been able to match -- at least to a degree -- the fascinating midlife crisis going on in America's pop band.

Carl Wilson "Feel Flows"
about 1 year ago

I always liked the Beach Boys as a kid, a neighborhood friend had Beach Boys Party! and I especially loved their version of "Barbara Ann" on that record and their singles always brought a smile to my ears. Later when I became more of a rock fan, I was attracted to their later, more serious albums like 20/20 and especially Surf's Up. I didn't really know then about the various Wilson family in...

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IWMMP3 - The Beach Boys Live - Sail On Sailor
over 2 years ago
Blog post image preview

Let's end this "love-fest":http://mog.com/Jonh_Ingham/blog_post/102632 on a high note.After the Fillmore East "appearance":http://mog.com/Jonh_Ingham/blog_post/103652 with The Grateful Dead the group decided the place they should record their next album was Holland. Those sessions started the last great contemporary work the group did; Brian went off the rails again and when "Kokomo" became th...

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Al Gore III
over 2 years ago

This is probably the most interesting track off of their Surf's Up album, besides the Smile track Surf's Up.

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Carl Wilson "Feel Flows"
about 1 year ago

I always liked the Beach Boys as a kid, a neighborhood friend had Beach Boys Party! and I especially loved their version of "Barbara Ann" on that record and their singles always brought a smile to my ears. Later when I became more of a rock fan, I was attracted to their later, more serious albums like 20/20 and especially Surf's Up. I didn't really know then about the various Wilson family in...

More >

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