Music Review: Beach Boys - Love You - Page 2

Part of: The Discographer

“Honkin’ Down The Highway” is a song that just misses. Al Jardine’s vocal is fine, but the song just never takes off in typical Beach Boys fashion. Here it is the songs structure rather than the production that is the problem.  

“The Night Was So Young” returns Carl Wilson’s vocals to solid ground but “Let’s Put Our Heart’s Together” does not help Brian’s vocal problems at all. When Beach Boys Love You was released there was hope that Brian’s vocal problems would be temporary. This, however, did not prove to be the case.

The ultimate problem with Beach Boys Love You was the writing. The song structures were average, but the lyrics were trite and for the most part not very listenable. Brian Wilson wrote about life’s simplicities which were just not interesting.  

When you compare Beach Boys Love You to their sixties material and even to their early seventies releases, the results are startling and I do not mean this in a positive way. Beach Boys Love You is best buried deep in the Beach Boys catalogue.

  

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Article Author: David Bowling

I have been collecting vinyl records for over forty years and my collection is approaching 50.000 records. My wife Susan and children, Stacey and Amy, have learned to humor my passion. I am now settled in beautiful Whispering Pines, North Carolina …

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  • 1 - Gordon Hauptfleisch

    May 12, 2008 at 5:06 am

    The biggest head-scratching moment on "Love You" -- one on my favorites Beach Boys' albums -- is the why-bother Roger McGuinn-written snippet, "Ding Dang." Dang.

    You mentioned a couple other fly-over moments, such as "Solar System," but by and large I find the album fun, unpretentious, and warm. And I appreciate the ramshackle production.

  • 2 - Chris Shields

    May 13, 2008 at 5:57 am

    I find this album to be one of the more consistently interesting albums of the post-Holland Beach Boys albums. The synthesizer use is pretty interesting, considering Brian Wilson's past use of symphonic sounds, orchestrations, lush vocal beds, etc. It showed a brittle Wilson, the snippets of things that interested him and his attempts to distance himself from the BW of the past to get a new start. A man haunted by his past, and not necessarily keen to be a Beach Boy anymore, would want to stake his own identity.

    These days, when artists try a new sound, it's considered bold and daring. Sometimes commercial suicide. It's no different for classic artists (Bob Dylan was always remaking himself). I see this as BW branching out and trying something new. Remember, this started off as "Brian Loves You," largely a solo album. Take it for what it's worth, and it's got some great moments.

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