• BW

    From Geoff@geoff@nospamgeoffwood.org to rec.music.beatles on Thu Jun 12 11:22:16 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.beatles

    Of course RIP to Brian. Wrote, arranged, and produced some catchy songs,
    some excellent and highly memorable. Some quite sophisticated for their
    genre.

    But I can't help thinking of The Beach Boys, in the musical band sense,
    as being the equivalent of today's BTS, New Kids on the Block,
    Backstreet Boys, NSYNC, One Direction, Boys To Men, Take That, etc. With practically all the music other than vocals done by studio musicians.
    --
    geoff

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From super70s@super70s@super70s.invalid to rec.music.beatles on Wed Jun 11 20:47:49 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.beatles

    On 2025-06-11 23:22:16 +0000, Geoff said:

    Of course RIP to Brian. Wrote, arranged, and produced some catchy
    songs, some excellent and highly memorable. Some quite sophisticated
    for their genre.

    But I can't help thinking of The Beach Boys, in the musical band sense,
    as being the equivalent of today's BTS, New Kids on the Block,
    Backstreet Boys, NSYNC, One Direction, Boys To Men, Take That, etc.
    With practically all the music other than vocals done by studio
    musicians.

    They're not the first '60s group I would put in that class, they all
    played their instruments live. Even The Monkees did but for the studio recordings but the BB, Monkees, Byrds, Mamas & Papas, Grass Roots, and
    several others often used the studio pros. And it was a good thing
    considering all the great tracks those bands produced.

    Steely Dan had long abandoned a formal band at the height their
    popularity in the late '70s, and weren't embarrassed by it at all.

    From Wikipedia:

    Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys produced and co-wrote many of his band's
    most famous tracks and used the Wrecking Crew's talents extensively in
    the mid-1960s, including on songs such as "Help Me, Rhonda",
    "California Girls", and "Good Vibrations" as well as the albums Pet
    Sounds and Smile. Some reports falsely claim that the Wrecking Crew
    replaced the Beach Boys on record after their first few hits; however,
    this misconception derived from incomplete written documentation of the recording sessions. After audio documentation surfaced, it was revealed
    that the Beach Boys' first ten albums leading up to Pet Sounds and
    Smile were, by and large, self-contained efforts, and the band members
    played instruments on most of their singles and key album tracks. It
    was not until the 1965 album The Beach Boys Today! that Wrecking Crew musicians began to figure heavily on the band's studio recordings, an arrangement that lasted until 1967.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wrecking_Crew_(music)

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Geoff@geoff@nospamgeoffwood.org to rec.music.beatles on Thu Jun 12 22:52:13 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.beatles

    On 12/06/2025 1:47 pm, super70s wrote:
    On 2025-06-11 23:22:16 +0000, Geoff said:

    Of course RIP to Brian. Wrote, arranged, and produced some catchy
    songs, some excellent and highly memorable. Some quite sophisticated
    for their genre.

    But I can't help thinking of The Beach Boys, in the musical band
    sense, as being the equivalent of today's BTS, New Kids on the Block,
    Backstreet Boys, NSYNC, One Direction, Boys To Men, Take That, etc.
    With practically all the music other than vocals done by studio
    musicians.

    They're not the first '60s group I would put in that class, they all
    played their instruments live. Even The Monkees did but for the studio recordings but the BB, Monkees, Byrds, Mamas & Papas, Grass Roots, and several others often used the studio pros. And it was a good thing considering all the great tracks those bands produced.

    Steely Dan had long abandoned a formal band at the height their
    popularity in the late '70s, and weren't embarrassed by it at all.

    From Wikipedia:

    Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys produced and co-wrote many of his band's
    most famous tracks and used the Wrecking Crew's talents extensively in
    the mid-1960s, including on songs such as "Help Me, Rhonda", "California Girls", and "Good Vibrations" as well as the albums Pet Sounds and
    Smile. Some reports falsely claim that the Wrecking Crew replaced the
    Beach Boys on record after their first few hits; however, this
    misconception derived from incomplete written documentation of the
    recording sessions. After audio documentation surfaced, it was revealed
    that the Beach Boys' first ten albums leading up to Pet Sounds and Smile were, by and large, self-contained efforts, and the band members played instruments on most of their singles and key album tracks. It was not
    until the 1965 album The Beach Boys Today! that Wrecking Crew musicians began to figure heavily on the band's studio recordings, an arrangement
    that lasted until 1967.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wrecking_Crew_(music)


    Steely Dan later on never pretended to be anything other than Becker
    with additional musicians.

    What I read listed the various musicians on many BB albums before the
    Wrecking Crew became the staple.

    Question is, why were they required.....
    --
    geoff
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From nyarlathotep1@nyarlathotep1@hotmail.com (Norbert) to rec.music.beatles on Mon Jun 16 13:52:08 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.beatles

    I bought Pet Sounds in the 80s after reading numerous interviews in
    which McCartney praised the album -- and Wilson's supposed bass playing
    on it. I later heard it was Carol Kaye on the bass. More recently, I
    read a book about the Wrecking Crew -- from which I learned that Kaye
    was one of numerous bass players on the album.

    There's a childlike quality to the songs. However, I do not see Pet
    Sounds as a rival in quality to any Beatles album, as much as McCartney
    may have been inspired by it.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From nyarlathotep1@nyarlathotep1@hotmail.com (Norbert) to rec.music.beatles on Mon Jun 16 13:55:21 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.beatles

    Becker and Fagen would actually conceive of parts with specific studio
    players in mind. They really allowed their players to strut their
    specific styles.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Geoff@geoff@nospamgeoffwood.org to rec.music.beatles on Tue Jun 17 13:02:20 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.beatles

    On 17/06/2025 1:52 am, Norbert wrote:
    I bought Pet Sounds in the 80s after reading numerous interviews in
    which McCartney praised the album -- and Wilson's supposed bass playing
    on it.-a I later heard it was Carol Kaye on the bass.-a More recently, I
    read a book about the Wrecking Crew -- from which I learned that Kaye
    was one of numerous bass players on the album.

    There's a childlike quality to the songs.-a However, I do not see Pet
    Sounds as a rival in quality to any Beatles album, as much as McCartney
    may have been inspired by it.

    I just re-listened to the whole album a few times, and remain largely unimpressed. Three great songs with no cohesive theme. Mostly bunch of boy-fancies-girl songs with pretty harmonies.

    And the musically characterised by a few unusual melodies and key
    changes, which to me come across as 'contrived'.

    The best thing I get from it is some great bass lines and playing.
    --
    geoff
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From super70s@super70s@super70s.invalid to rec.music.beatles on Tue Jun 17 06:36:12 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.beatles

    On 2025-06-17 01:02:20 +0000, Geoff said:

    On 17/06/2025 1:52 am, Norbert wrote:
    I bought Pet Sounds in the 80s after reading numerous interviews in
    which McCartney praised the album -- and Wilson's supposed bass playing
    on it.a I later heard it was Carol Kaye on the bass.a More recently, I
    read a book about the Wrecking Crew -- from which I learned that Kaye
    was one of numerous bass players on the album.

    There's a childlike quality to the songs.a However, I do not see Pet
    Sounds as a rival in quality to any Beatles album, as much as McCartney
    may have been inspired by it.

    I just re-listened to the whole album a few times, and remain largely unimpressed. Three great songs with no cohesive theme. Mostly bunch of boy-fancies-girl songs with pretty harmonies.

    And the musically characterised by a few unusual melodies and key
    changes, which to me come across as 'contrived'.

    The best thing I get from it is some great bass lines and playing.

    Some critic wrote a famous essay once about how Pet Sounds was the most overrated album in rock, I can't remember who it was now.

    I'd have to say Surfer Girl is my favorite album of theirs, my older
    sister owned it back then and I could play it in my mind in its
    entirety.

    I do think all their '60s albums are worth owning though and I own all
    of those CD two-fers that came out in the '90s, with a couple of
    exceptions. Plus Surf's Up plus Sunflower plus a couple of discs of
    their later material from a box set I found loose in a record shop.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2