Frogtoon Music

Surf's Up by The Beach Boys

Artist Biography For The Beach Boys

The Beach Boys Are An Iconic American Rock Band Frequently Cited As One Of The Most Influential And Commercially Successful Groups In The History Of Popular Music Due To Their Intricate Vocal Harmonies Studio Experiments And Novel Approaches To Pop Songwriting. Rooted In Doo-Wop And Rock And Roll Their Early String Of Vocal Surf Hits Defined The '60s California Sound. For A Period Afterward They Notably Delved Into Progressive Pop Styles. Often Combining Elements From Classical And Jazz In Innovative Ways. Formed In Hawthorne California In 1961 The Original Group Comprised Singer-Musician-Composer And Bandleader Brian Wilson His Brothers Carl Wilson And Dennis Wilson Their Cousin Mike Love And Friend Al Jardine. Wilson Neighbor David Marks Appeared On Their First Four Albums And Was A Member From 1962 To 1963 As A Temporary Replacement For Jardine Who Had Left The Group To Pursue A Career In Dentistry. On Their First Few Studio Albums The Group Primarily Played Surf Music But This Changed After 1964 As Their Songs Became More Sophisticated And Autobiographical. The 1965 Album Today! Particularly Represented This Shift In Sound. Bruce Johnston Joined The Group That Same Year. Session Drummer Hal Blaine Is Quoted "We All Studied In Conservatories We Were Trained Musicians. We Thought It Was A Fluke At First But Then We Realized Brian Was Writing These Incredible Songs. This Was Not Just A Young Kid Writing About High School And Surfing." Following Their Most Esteemed Work Pet Sounds 1966 The Band Became Symbols Of Psychedelic Counterculture. The Highly Anticipated Follow-Up Smile Was Left Unfinished And Brian Soon Relinquished His Creative Hold On The Group. A Trilogy Of Lo-Fi Releases Followed Smiley Smile 1967 Wild Honey 1967 And Friends 1968 . Brian Would Not Be Credited As A Primary Composer For Any Beach Boys Album Until 1977's Love You An Album On The Fringe Of Synth-Pop New Wave And Punk. In Brian's Absence The Beach Boys Still Managed To Release Music That Was Regarded Favorably By Fans And Critics Despite Poor Sales Sunflower 1970 And Surf's Up 1971 . South African Musicians Blondie Chaplin And Ricky Fataar Played And Sang With The Band On The Next Two Albums Carl & The Passions - So Tough 1972 And Holland 1973 . Many Changes In Both Musical Style And Personnel Have Occurred In Their Sometimes-Stormy Career Brian Wilson's Mental Illness And Drug Addiction The Deaths Of Dennis Wilson In 1983 And Carl Wilson In 1998 And Continuing Legal Battles Among Surviving Members Of The Group. With The Release Of 1974's Endless Summer They Became A More Popular Touring Act Playing Their Greatest Hits. They Have Recorded 36 Billboard Top 40 Hits Including Four Number-One Singles Have Had Over 100 Million Sales And Were Inducted Into The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame In 1988. Official Site Http //www.Thebeachboys.Com

Frogtoon Music - Song Info: Surf's Up

"Surf's Up" Is A Song Recorded By The Beach Boys Written By Brian Wilson And Van Dyke Parks. It Was Originally Intended For Smile An Unfinished Beach Boys Album That Was Scrapped In 1967. The Lyrics Describe A Man At A Concert Hall Who Experiences A Spiritual Awakening And Resigns Himself To God And The Joy Of Enlightenment The Latter Envisioned As A Children's Song. A Performance Of The Song By Brian Wilson Was Famously Featured In The 1967 TV Documentary Inside Pop The Rock Revolution Where It Was Described As "too Complex" To Comprehend On A First Listen And Was Interpreted By Music Scholars Of The Time As A Sign That Popular Music Was Blossoming Into A Legitimate Art Form. Wilson's Segment Aroused Great Expectations For Smile Only For Its Cancellation To Be Disclosed To The Press By Derek Taylor A Month Later. Nothing In The Song Relates To Surfing The Title Is A Play-On-Words Referring To The Group Shedding Their Image. Musically The Song Was Composed As A Two-Movement Piece That Modulates Key Several Times And Avoids Conventional Harmonic Resolution. It Features A Coda Based On Another Smile Track "Child Is Father Of The Man". The Line "Columnated Ruins Domino" Was Elaborated On By Wilson “Empires Ideas Lives Institutions Everything Has To Fall Tumbling Like Dominoes.” The Only Surviving Full-Band Recording Of "Surf's Up" From The 1960s Is The Basic Backing Track Of The First Movement. There Are Three Known Recordings Of Wilson Performing The Full Song By Himself Two Of Which Were Filmed For The 1967 Documentary. Several Years After Smile Was Scrapped The Band Added New Vocals And Synthesizer Overdubs To Wilson's First Piano Performance As Well As The Original Backing Track For Inclusion On The 1971 Album Of The Same Name With Carl On Lead Vocals For The First Movement. Another Recording From 1967 Was Found Decades Later And Finally Released For The 2011 Archival Compilation The Smile Sessions.

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Frogtoon Music Album Info: Surf's Up

Surf's Up Is The Seventeenth Studio Album By American Rock Band The Beach Boys Released On August 30 1971 On Brother Records And Reprise. The Album Was Released To More Public Anticipation Than The Beach Boys Had Previously Had For Several Years. The Album's Title Is Taken From The Song Of The Same Title Written By Brian Wilson And Van Dyke Parks For The Abandoned Studio Album Smile. Track Listing Side One
"Don't Go Near The Water" "Long Promised Road" "Take A Load Off Your Feet" "Disney Girls 1957 " "Student Demonstration Time" Side Two
"Feel Flows" "Lookin' At Tomorrow A Welfare Song " "A Day In The Life Of A Tree" "'Til I Die"
"Surf's Up"