Music Review: The Beach Boys - Stars and Stripes Vol. 1
Published May 19, 2008
Mike Love had the idea for the Beach Boys to travel to Nashville and provide backing vocals for some of the leading country artists of the day. These country artists would of course sing classic Beach Boys songs.
I had doubts about this project before the album was released in 1996 but the results were not half bad. As with any album of this type the songs range from very good to below average depending on the right country artist being matched to an appropriate Beach Boys song. This was not an easy task at times as many of the Beach Boys songs are unique and ingrained into the American consciousness.
Mike Love, as the executive producer, had the good sense to ask Brian Wilson and Joe Thomas to co-produce the album. Brian was feeling well at this point in his career and the Beach Boys harmonies throughout the album are crisp and clear plus the production sounds very modern.
There were some excellent covers contained on Stars and Stripes Volume 1.
“Don’t Worry Baby” is the first track and leads off with beautiful Beach Boys harmonies. You immediately realize that Brian is back. It is interesting to hear a woman singing this love song. Lorrie Morgan’s clear voice rises above the harmonies. The beat has been changed a bit but it works well here.
“Sloop John B” by Colin Raye and “I Can Hear Music” by Kathy Troccoli both stick close to the originals. Both songs feature stellar harmonies in support of the good lead vocals. “I Can Hear Music” features a subtle sax throughout and a great Beach Boys a Capella sound near the end. Both songs benefit from modern production techniques.
Willie Nelson sings “The Warmth Of The Sun.” I could almost visualize this song without hearing it. This slow ballad was a good choice for Nelson. His rough understated delivery is a good counterpoint for subtle harmonies by the Beach Boys.
- Music Review: The Beach Boys - Stars and Stripes Vol. 1
- Published: May 19, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Pop, Music: Rock
- Part of a feature: The Discographer
- Writer: David Bowling
- David Bowling's BC Writer page
- David Bowling's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us





