Brian Wilson Finally Able to Smile

Written by Eric Olsen
Published September 14, 2004
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Not only does the collection have 30 great songs, but it also has invaluable information on each one: year of release, highest chart position, producer, songwriter, and the name of the lead singer, which helped me finally sort out once and for all who sounds like what. All of that for $13.99 - now that's value.

The story of the Beach Boys is the story of the pursuit of paradise. The Beach Boy's immaculate blending of angelic voices provide the auditory and symbolic thrill of an earthly paradise. The darker Brian Wilson songs don't touch this same nerve. The public has largely ignored them as aberrant. The Beach Boy's amazing success with compilations and live shows over the years emphasizes this point: the public would rather not have to do the filtering.

Historically, the New World was sold as an earthly paradise from the outset. America was a land where "God requireth not a uniformity of religion to be enacted and enforced in any civil state" (Roger Williams, 1644). America was a land of vast natural resources and uncountable acres of land free for the homesteading.

Prior to that, America was the home of Ponce de Leon's Fountain of Youth. Instead of Eternal Youth, Ponce de Leon found Florida, land of the Eternal Old, but that's another story. The hope of eternal youth persisted, just below the surface, until the frontiers of America had been exhausted: no magic fountain, not even boundless land. Even if America didn't hold the secret to eternal life, it didn't seem unreasonable that America could still yield paradise.

American history is littered with tales of failed Utopian societies. There has been one great success: Mormon Utah. The Shakers and the Harmony Society awaited the millennium communally. The denizens of Fruitland, in 19th century New England collected thousands of books on metaphysics, but neglected to figure out agriculture and went down the horticultural toilet in a few years.

"Brook Farm" was created with the notion that the individual, not God or nature, had the power to create a better world through spiritual and mental development. "Modern Times" was an experiment in communal anarchy.

America has seen the dark side of Utopian idealism as well: autocratic rule doomed Oneida as it has all personality cults from Jonestown to Jeffrey Lundgren's.

Americans as a whole have generally dismissed these efforts as impractical, but most Americans secretly harbor the notion that America itself is one large Utopian society. We suffer in the face of a reality that fails to meet our ideals. This utopian ideal is the reason that we have made America the "land of opportunity" - the land where failure is never viewed as permanent.

In America, bankruptcy is no particular shame, many entrepreneurs boast of it as a great turning point in their lives - the only failure is giving up. The whole structure is set up so that one doesn't give up. (This is the insidious danger of a permanent underclass. The career welfare recipients have given up, thereby short-circuiting the entire system. America has created a society where everyone desires the same material ends; but a significant portion of that society (the permanent underclass) doesn't have access to the ends through societally approved methods. This has led to an epidemic of acquisitional methods not approved of by society at large, like crime.)

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Brian Wilson Finally Able to Smile
Published: September 14, 2004
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Filed Under: Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Music: Pop
Writer: Eric Olsen
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#1 — September 14, 2004 @ 15:41PM — Emily

Great post, Eric! FYI, California has recently granted permission to mark the childhood home of the Wilsons in Hawthorne, CA an official state landmark, even though the home was dozed over a decade ago to make way for the 105 freeway.

#2 — September 14, 2004 @ 16:05PM — Eric Olsen

thanks Emily, I really appreciate the kind words and that's great news about the Hawthorne home and its famous garage, which no longer exist

#3 — September 20, 2004 @ 18:23PM — Eric Olsen

Update - a mini-film about the making of Smile is now available above, check it out.

#4 — October 18, 2004 @ 14:34PM — riley moriarty

There was talk that a recording of the smiLE concert from carnegie hall 10/12 or 13 may be available through NonSuch Records. Do you have any information on that?

#5 — October 18, 2004 @ 14:44PM — Eric Olsen

Riley, I don't see anything about it yet on Brian's site

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