The long awaited release of the Brian Wilson and Beach Boys masterpiece, Smile Sessions. With the full participation of original Beach Boys Al Jardine, Mike
Love, and Brian Wilson, Capitol/EMI has, for the first time, collected and compiled the band’s legendary 1966-’67 sessions for the never-completed SMiLE
album. Rolling Stone magazine recently called SMiLE the most famous unfinished album in rock & roll history.”
In several sessions between the summer of 1966 and early 1967, The Beach Boys recorded a bounty of songs and drafts for an album, SMiLE, that was intended to
follow the band’s 1966 album, Pet Sounds. The master tapes were ultimately shelved, and The Beach Boys’ SMiLE has never been released. Drawn from the
original masters, SMiLE Sessions presents an in-depth overview of The Beach Boys’ recording sessions for the enigmatic album, which has achieved legendary,
mythical status for music fans around the world.
SMiLE Sessions’ physical and digital configurations include an assembled collection of core session tracks, while the box set delves much deeper into the
sessions, adding early song drafts, alternate takes, instrumental and vocals-only mixes, and studio chatter. SMiLE Sessions invites the listener into the
studio to experience the album’s creation, with producer, singer and bassist Brian Wilson’s vision leading the way as he guides his fellow Beach Boys, singer
Mike Love, drummer Dennis Wilson, lead guitarist Carl Wilson, rhythm guitarist Al Jardine, and newest member Bruce Johnston (who’d replaced Brian Wilson in
the touring group during 1965), through the legendary sessions.
Artwork for all of the SMiLE Sessions’ physical and digital configurations has been created with and inspired by Beat-Pop artist Frank Holmes’ original 1967
LP sleeve art and booklet designs intended for the SMiLE album.
2CD Edition contains:
- Lift top box measures 5.5″ x 5.5″ x 1″
- Features original cover art designed by Frank Holmes
- 2 CD wallets
- 14.5″ x 20″ poster of Frank Holmes cover art
- 1″ Smile button
- 36 page booklet featuring:
- Liner notes by Brian Wilson and more.
- Previously unseen photos
The world’s most famous “lost” album…at last! Note: This review also applies to .Other than The Beatles’ GET BACK album, which still has not been released in its original form (the Spectorized and the remixed, de-Spectorized notwithstanding), The Beach Boys’ SMiLE project is the most famous (and maybe infamous) unreleased album in rock history. Originally planned as a follow-up to 1966′s , Brian Wilson scrapped the project in mid-1967 after months of work, believing he had lost his competition with The Beatles, and the pressures from the other Beach Boys, plus legal problems with Capitol Records, finally wore him down.A replacement album, , cobbled together by the group using only the “Good Vibrations” single and fragments from the original sessions – the rest of the album was rerecorded – was a critical and commercial flop. Fragments of SMiLE were issued on later Beach Boys albums such as and . In 1993, about an hour of lost SMiLE music was issued on the boxed set. Then, in 2004, Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks completed a new version of SMiLE and recorded it with Brian’s new band, The Wondermints (); a live concert version, recorded earlier that year in London, was also issued on DVD.Now, with the impending 50th anniversary of The Beach Boys approaching, Capitol Records, along with Brian, has released two versions of THE SMiLE SESSIONS – a basic two-disc version, and a nine-disc box set (five CDs, two vinyl LPs, and two vinyl 45 RPM singles). The first CD, which contains the same contents in both releases, contains a newly revised SMiLE album, using the same running order as the 2004 remake, giving us an idea of what the album would have sounded like in 1967. Most of the tracks are mono, as Brian always preferred; he was deaf in one ear, and could not hear stereo sound properly, and as a producer, he believed that only mono mixes could present the music to the listener as he wanted it heard. Stereo, Brian believed, left too much to the listener’s equipment setup. While I would have loved to have a stereo version of the album, as was done with box set in 1996, the producers explained that unlike Pet Sounds, most of the multi-track masters and many of the components were lost, so a stereo remix of SMiLE was impossible to produce.The second CD of the first version contains session highlights from “Our Prayer” to “Good Vibrations” – more than enough to satisfy the casual Beach Boy fan. The deluxe box set is aimed more at collectors and die-hards, and what a collection it is. CD1 is identical to the first version, but CDs 2 through 5 contain a very comprehensive view of the SMiLE sessions. So comprehensive, in fact, that the “Heroes and Villains” sections take up about 90 percent of CD2, and the “Good Vibrations” sessions take up all of CD5. While somewhat repetitive, the session tapes offer fascinating listening, showing Brian’s perfectionism and dedication to getting the right sound. I’m sure he drove the other musicians and the other Beach Boys crazy, but it was obviously worth the effort.The two-LP vinyl album in the deluxe edition follows tracks 1-19 of CD1 for the first three sides. The fourth side contains rare stereo mixes that are not included on the CDs. The two 45s are the singles that never were, the two-part “Heroes and Villains” single, and the “Vega-Tables”/”Surf’s Up” single.Packaging and amenities are impressive. The two-disc set includes a colorful 36-page booklet, a SMiLE button, and a fold-out poster of the album artwork. The deluxe edition is even more impressive; the artwork on the box cover has 3-D graphics; the inside of the box lid has the original back cover of the Duophonic (fake stereo) release of the album, had it been issued. Inside the box are a 60-page hardcover book with additional essays and a complete sessionography; a double-gatefold sleeve with slots for all five CDs and the two vinyl 45s; the two-record vinyl album in a mono jacket with a gatefold sleeve and a 10″ photo album inside; and a giant-economy-size version of…
The Beach Boys – “Teenage symphonies to God” The product of a drug addled genius imploding, the greatest lost album in rock music, a smorgasbord of styles and content so varied it makes your head ache but your heart leap and a tale of ambition so big no studio could hope to contain it. The Beach Boys resident modern day Mozart has of course previously let the cat out of the bag on this music with his truly lovely 2004 “Brian Wilson presents Smile” where the compositional dreams of completely inspired 24 year old imbued with the lyrical preoccupations of the slightly less mad Van Dyke Parks, were finally reconstituted by more reflective composer in his early sixties. Some Beach Boys fans might argue that the 2004 rework fully did the job (scoring an unprecedented 97 on Metacritic reviews) but others have never ceased to harbor deep longing for the base metal of the original sessions on official release despite the fact that this must be one of the most available bootlegs in musical history.”Smile” was the product of Wilson being locked away in 1966-67 in the small Studio One at Sunset Sound in Hollywood. His behavior by this time was erratic at best and his emotional state increasingly volatile. The pressure of following Pet Sounds and the sheer earth shaking impact of the Beatles “Sgt Pepper” literally spun him out of control and impacted on a man whose mental health was rapidly degenerating and which would spiral into a prolonged acid induced psychological hell. All this is captured in graphic detail in Wilson’s own enthralling yet excruciatingly painful autobiography “Wouldn’t it be nice” and “Smile” was primary architect of his near destruction.That was then and this is now. As of today “The Smile Sessions” will be issued in three versions: as a two-CD set; and in a box set with four CDs, two vinyl LPs, two vinyl singles and a 60-page book. For Beach boys obsessives this is manna from heaven and you can spend as much time as you require in the second disc bumping around the studio with Wilson as he fiddles, twiddles and constructs. But what of the main act of this album that stretches in suites from “Our Prayer” to “Good Vibrations”? The format followed here by producers Mark Linett and Alan Boyd is essentially that of the 2004 Smile Sessions. The remastering is pristine and even after the umpteenth listen you are reminded that on occasions Brian Wilson could musically balance on mercury. No offence to the “later Wilson” of 2004 but its also the case that the sweetness of vocals on the original and the alchemy of the “group” harmonies make this an extra special deal. The great “Cabin Essence” while perhaps not as powered up as the 2004 version remains the great unheralded Beach Boys song. When followed with “Wonderful” it is a killer double pairing. Those who love “Heroes and Villains” are completely overwhelmed for choice with the original, a very nice stereo mix and at least five other works in progress or variants. With the sublime “Surfs Up” you get the god like genius of the original plus an instrumental and a gorgeous take piano take which is an absolute standout. Quite what new can be said of Good Vibrations other than to gasp in shock and awe. Granted “Vega -tables” and “Barnyard” will either completely charm or irritate but “Mrs O’Learys cow” remains the Beach boys “Day in the life” with its frightening swirling dark force and one can only picture the horror on Mike Love’s face when this was first played back.Listening again to “Smile” confirms that the obsessive Wilson could never perfectly transpose the noise or the demons inside his head to a finished product. It also shows that it nearly killed him trying. In terms of the earlier Beatles comparison this reviewer is firmly the camp that much prefers the staggering pop/rock genius of “Revolver” to the ground breaking psychedelica of “Sgt Pepper”. In the same way the sheer unrelenting perfection of “Pet Sounds” far outstrips the modular brilliant eerie innovation of “Smile”. It does not detract however from one of the great pieces of modern music and a compositional genius who nearly pulled off the ultimate musical masterstroke. The word essential doesn’t come close.
Finally! The Classic Album With The Classic Voices! Like everyone else I’m beside myself with this collection (even though I’d heard most of the tracks before). I/we have been waiting for this for an eternity! It’s about time! When I found out earlier this year that the original ‘Smile’ would be released (then pushed back until today), I was counting the days. I had today off and at 10:00 sharp entered the local CD store and walked out with the 2-CD Set five minutes later. I drove for the next two hours while I listened to every note on my car stereo. Then listened again. There were more snippets than I knew existed. I mean, didn’t Brian say years ago that he got rid of a lot of the tracks because it was too painful to keep them? I’m glad that was a falsity. Anyway, I loved it infinitely more than the 2004 version, mainly due to the 1966 Beach Boy voices! Listening to the Smile background vocal track and hearing Brian’s clear high angelic voice withers the 2004 vocal versions. No offense to Darian, Scott and the boys, who shine on that album. My only qualms with the Smile Sessions (and they really don’t matter for my overall enjoyment); are: 1. Most of the tracks are in mono; and 2. My favorite 30 seconds of the album needed to be recorded louder per volume and in my opinion carry on a little longer: The ‘Whispering Winds’ section of the latter part of ‘Holidays’. Other than those trivialities on my part, the album is a classic! Thanks Beach Boys and Capitol! Finally!