Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Chapter 5: All or Nothing (January - November 1967)

January 15, 1967
DENNIS WILSON: "'66 was a frightening time to be a rock musician. The Rolling Stones had come out with Could You Walk on the Water, and then America believed that John Lennon said the Beatles were bigger than Jesus Christ. Hell, we'd even had a song titled 'God Only Knows'. They may had been fighting religion, but the Beach Boys weren't trying to. At least, I don't think we did." (1996)

The original cover for Smile, designed by Frank Holmes.
Trying once again to top the Beatles with Abracadabra, Brian Wilson had declared that the Beach Boys' twelfth album was going to be called Smile. It was touted as a teenage symphony to God and would contain a variety of genres including comedy sketches, classical music, folk, spirituality, and satire. It was a far more ambitious project than Pet Sounds, but perhaps it may have been a far more daunting task than Wilson had predicted.

One of the proposed tracks for Smile was "Good Vibrations", which was originally planned to appear on Pet Sounds, but was instead dropped in favor of being a non-album single for October. The majority of the backing tracks had been finished by December 1966, but the rest of the band was baffled by Brian's ideas, and did not record their vocals. He had worked with Van Dyke Parks for the majority of the music, including lyrics. He had first met the senior Wilson brother back in 1965 through David Crosby and Terry Melcher[1].

The intended release date for Smile was January 15, 1967 under Capitol Records. However, Brian had missed the deadline, and that incident would mark the beginning of not only the downfall of Brian Wilson, but the Beach Boys as well.

NICK GRILLO: "Brian had a difficult time trying to explain his concept to the rest of the boys. In the studio, he would be seen curled into a ball telling us that there were 'too many bells' and told us to get rid of them. There were no bells as far as I knew, but I dismissed it as stress over missing the initial deadline. If I knew then what I know now, I could've done something to prevent his downfall." (2011)[2]

February - July 1967
The Beach Boys in the recording studio, 1967.
Various incidents had taken place surrounding the Smile recording sessions; Carl's arrest for draft evasion, clumsy editing processes, a lawsuit against Capitol Records demanding for over $250 thousand for royalty payments, as well as the threat in terminating their contract with Capitol, but most significant was the decline of Brian Wilson's mental health and creative dissatisfaction. Arguments within the group would eventually lead to Van Dyke Parks leaving the project in April. Still, Wilson refused to give up on Smile until he'd made the album he intended to release.

But did he really know the album he wanted to make?

MIKE LOVE: "Everybody was thinking the same when it came down to Brian's vision of Smile. When asked, Carl [Wilson] had said that Smile was to have the theme of spirituality and spreading goodwill. He'd come up with a 'health' side, whatever the hell that was, but it seemed like he was overthinking it too much, especially after Rubber Soul." (2007)

And it only got worse with the performance of the Beatles at the Games for May concert with Pink Floyd, and the subsequent release of Merseyside two weeks after that. The concert had split opinions among rock music fans; some took it as an excuse to lie down and let their greats become greater, others claimed it was a call to arms. It was undeniably the latter for Brian Wilson; by now, he had become increasingly paranoid and deluded over his "rivalry" with the Liverpudlians, and the constant consumption of cannabis and smuggled candy bars did little to soothe his schizophrenic behavior.

AL JARDINE: "One day, he'd say that a recording had too much guitar, and then another, he'd demand that the guitar be overdubbed. It was a nightmare, as if the album was cursed." (1987)

July 14, 1967
CARL WILSON: "I knew that with Brian's sudden death, we were in trouble. We had an unfinished album on our hands, Capitol wasn't happy with our situation, and I was feeling scared. I told the others, 'We've fucking had it now.'" (1992)[3]

Brian Wilson shortly before his death at twenty-five, 1967.
It was a day that would forever be a dark one in the Beach Boys' history. It was shortly after the last recording session that Brian Wilson had suffered from a heart attack. He was discovered by their manager Nick Grillo and was quickly rushed to the nearest hospital, but by then, it was already too late. The doctors' reports confirmed that the cause of his heart attack was excessive amounts of drugs, alcohol and stress. When the remaining Beach Boys received the news of their band mate's sudden death, they took the rest of the month off to prepare for Brian's funeral. His widow, Marilyn, was devastated by the news, even going so far as to accuse the Beatles for his death.

At the time of Brian's death, the majority of the recordings that would eventually form the final Smile album ranged from the initial February 1966 sessions with "Good Vibrations", all the way up to July 1967, half a year after the planned release! During the strenuous sessions, EMI and Capitol released "Then I Kissed Her", a previously released track from 1965, for a May single, despite the band's protests.

August 4 - September 22, 1967
EMI called the surviving Beach Boys for a meeting, stating that Smile had to be completed once and for all, even without Brian Wilson's input. The band agreed, and needed to find a producer; as far as they knew, the Beach Boys were finished.

NORMAN SMITH: "When I heard about the Beach Boys' situation, I sort of raised my hand and offered to help finish up Smile. I was working on Pink Floyd's second album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, but I still wanted to help the Beach Boys out of the jam they were in. Understandably, they were sort of uncomfortable with my presence, having worked with the Beatles before, but still, they appreciated that I came in. They were even impressed with my work with Pink Floyd." (1980)

Norman Smith, 1967.
When new producer Norman Smith was brought in, he had been given a sheet of paper listing the potential songs for the final album. Taking a cue from George Martin, Smith decided to arrange the tracks in a "W"-shaped pattern; the best songs would be at the start and end of both sides ("Good Vibrations", "Cabin Essence", "Heroes and Villains", "Surf's Up"), whilst the weaker songs would be more towards the middle. In addition to the twelve songs on the list, he even included two new recordings, "With Me Tonight" and "Little Pad", and used an alternate version of "Good Vibrations" to differentiate it from the original 1966 single release.

MIKE LOVE: "It was so wrong, and yet it was so right at the same time." (2007)

AL JARDINE: "What Norman Smith did was take the biggest load of badly-recorded garbage with a cynical feeling to it ever, and he made something of it." (1967)[4]

The final mixes for Smile were done within a fortnight due to Smith needing to return to England and finish his work with Pink Floyd, and the master tapes were finally given to Capitol Records for a release date of September 22, 1967.

The Beach Boys - Smile
Released: September 22, 1967
Recorded: February 17, 1966 - July 14, 1967
Producer: Brian Wilson, Norman Smith

Track listing[5]
Side A
Good Vibrations
Do You Like Worms
I'm in Great Shape/Barnyard
With Me Tonight
Vega-Tables
Wonderful
Cabin Essence

Side B
Heroes and Villains
Child is the Father of the Man
The Old Master Painter
Wind Chimes
The Elements
Little Pad
Surf's Up

The definitive Smile was met with mixed to negative reviews upon release, with some critics deriding it as "a cheapskate epitaph, a cardboard tombstone, a sad and tatty final note for Brian Wilson." John Lennon and Paul McCartney would defend the album in interviews, even stating that despite his bad situation, Brian was still able to give his audience some worthwhile music.

27 November 1967
Shortly following the release of Smile, as well as a university tour with Rick Wright of Pink Floyd, the Beatles briefly returned to the studio to record an album covering the Beach Boys called Tribute to Brian Wilson[6], released shortly after their single "Hello Goodbye"/"I Am the Walrus". Critics singled out Paul's vocal on "God Only Knows" as the best performance of the album.

The Beatles - Tribute to Brian Wilson
Released: 27 November 1967
Recorded: 26-30 October 1967
Producer: George Martin

Track listing
Side A
Wouldn't It Be Nice? [LM]
Vege-Tables [M]
I Get Around [LM]
Little Deuce Coupe [H]
Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder [M]
Good Vibrations [LH]
California Girls [LM]

Side B
Heroes and Villains [S]
I Know There's an Answer [H]
Little Honda [L]
Surfer Girl [M]
I'm Waiting for the Day [L]
Help Me, Rhonda [H]
God Only Knows [M]

The message from the back cover is as follows:

"As you are very well aware, we have lost one of the brightest voices in pop music this year, one of the best songwriters the United States had to offer. Brian Wilson to us was not only an accomplished musician, songwriter and singer, but he was a friend - a dear friend whose works will never be forgotten. Ever since Surfin' came out in 1961, he and the Beach Boys have been making hit after hit, rivaling us even in 1964. Of course, Pet Sounds was the biggest inspiration for Merseyside, no secret, but we think his masterpiece, his swan song, will be Smile, a true treasure for the generation. But, as you know, he died of heart attack before the release of Smile... As a tribute, the Beatles have decided to record this album in tribute of Brian; all album sales will go to the Wilson family."

Eventually, time would prove kind to Smile. By its twenty-fifth anniversary in 1992, reviews became more positive, praising the songwriting and production, and even saying the Beach Boys went out on a high note. The one downside was that Brian Wilson never lived to see his final masterpiece be a critical success, but despite his early death at twenty-five, his legacy, as well as that of the Beach Boys, would live on forever.

Footnotes
  1. Terry Melcher was the producer for the Byrds.
  2. Nick Grillo was the Beach Boys' second manager following the dismissal of Murry Wilson, the father to Brian, Carl and Dennis.
  3. John Lennon said something similar concerning the fate of the Beatles after the death of Brian Epstein.
  4. John Lennon said something similar when defending Phil Spector's work on Let It Be.
  5. All tracks are taken from Smiley Smile and The Smile Sessions. "Good Vibrations", "Vega-Tables", "Wonderful", "Heroes and Villains", and "Wind Chimes" come from the former to add some variation, and to give an idea to what Norman Smith may have contributed.
  6. Tribute to Brian Wilson is the only album so far in the series that is completely fictional. The lead singers are listed in [brackets].
Author's Comments

Like the previous chapter, this chapter was originally written back in January 2018 and now it's very much the definitive version of my personal backstory for Smile. If you have a hard time accepting it, I don't blame you. Smile has become almost mythological in a sense, and despite the facts being laid out for all to read, they've been overshadowed by the hype for half a century. Your results as to how it might've sounded may vary.

As for why I chose to have Brian Wilson killed off? Well, if you think about it, the Beach Boys' post-Surf's Up albums ranged from mediocre to downright unlistenable, with That's Why God Made the Radio being a surprising comeback from them in 2012. Having him killed off in 1967 would mean that the Beach Boys end at their creative peak, a similar reason to how the Beatles broke up following Abbey Road (or, depending on how you view it, Let It Be) - only in their case, no one died until 1980.

On a similar tangent, I had Brian Epstein survive into 1968, but how will he handle the Beatles during their last few years? Well, those are chapters for later. I'd also like to point out that I'm establishing a rule for Strawberry Peppers; for every person whose life I spare, another one dies in their place - not on the same day that Person A died on, but around a similar period. Can't have too many people surviving now, can we?

My final comment here is that ever since hearing about Peter Tork's death last month, that got me thinking; what could I do for the Monkees in this timeline? From what I've read, they've plenty of material during the late 1960s that wasn't put out on the albums back then. I've also got similar plans for the Yardbirds and the Zombies, and you've got some ideas for what I could do with each band, that would be great. You might even have something that I never even thought up myself!

16 comments:

  1. I'd say at least Carl and the Passions, Holland, and Love You were the last hurrah after Surf's Up. Still, such an interesting take on smile, though I'll alwyas prefer the smile version of Wonderful

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh yeah, I forgot about those :P

      Delete
    2. BTW, if you haven't, give Brian's That Lucky Old Sun a listen!

      Delete
  2. Oh ye, that's Bruce Johnston in that image, not Van Dyke

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Really? It kinda looked like Van Dyke given that he wears glasses.

      Delete
  3. Wow! Great tribute album to Wilson, Beatles doing Beach Boys songs? Doesn't get much better than that!
    Unfortunately, I don't have any ideas for what you could do with the Monkees. But so far, everything you're doing is perfection! :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. But I do have an idea for a band to change in this TL, if you like the idea. King Crimson has been described as one of the best bands of the late 1960's in progressive rock music. However, 2 of the members (Ian McDonald and Michael Giles) didn't want to tour and Greg Lake felt uncomfortable with continuing without them. So the 3 of them left, leaving Robert Fripp and lyricist Peter Sinfield to continue the group. In OTL, Bryan Ferry auditioned to replace Greg as the lead singer, but Greg returned to do vocals for one more album. I've always loved King Crimson and Roxy Music and I've long thought that Bryan would've been great in the group, I've gone so far as to make some playlists of Crimson and Roxy Music material. Basically, the lineups would be the same as OTL just with Bryan singing the songs and writing half the material. What do you think of this idea?

      Delete
    2. I think it'd be fun to tackle King Crimson. They may not get much focus in Phase One (which takes us up to 1970), but they'll most likely get focus in Phase Two, which takes us from 1971 to 1976.

      Delete
  4. Until I read footnote 6, I had my websearches revving and ready to try and track down tracks I knew probably didn't exist, but as with all the other 'fictional' albums posited here, I thought, 'maybe I missed something and he found it.'

    Now *this* may be the greatest Beatle album that never existed, alongside Everyday Chemistry, and the five BNBU albums SonicLoveNoize created...really digging this alt-history you're building here, how far are you planning on taking it along? Is there an endpoint chronologically you have in mind?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The majority of the albums very much draw from OTL; I even list the sources as to where they can be found. Some assembly is required!

      Thanks. Phase One will take us all the way to 1970, Phase Two will cover 1971-1976, and Phase Three will run from 1977-1985, ending with the Beatles performing at Live Aid. I don't have an endpoint in mind at this stage, but I may theoretically take this all the way up to 2019.

      Delete
    2. Oh, I noted you do provide the recipe for making the delicacies...it was just the Wilson tribute sounded so legitimate in principle, I hoped it was possible to create LOL

      I can hear some of it in my mind's ear...and it makes some sense that this would be one where Ringo went songless.

      I am intrigued that you at least consider up to the Beatles at Live Aid (I could see them having attempted the double show appearance as Phil Collins did, and likely might've upstaged Queen as the Belle of Wembley that day, unless in the NTL Queen never exists or break up way before Freddie died [your comment on survival vs. extinction as a rule in the Wilson death explanation is a consideration here]), and that obviously you will have a reasonable explanation for no Beatle breakup in '70 (though, again, the alt-history tapestry you're building here already seems to be drawing them away from history)...

      I think that's what is making this so interesting, most of the time these alt-histories focus on one player (BNBU) while 'assuming' everything else goes the way it had in OTL, while here you go tossing a nuclear spanner in the works by offing Brian Wilson at the height of the 60's, and it's entirely plausible that that would have sent aftershocks across the entire musical world that, though you're doing a good job of it, we can't possibly imagine...I may not go about assembling everything, but know you have a faithful reader.

      P.S. If you're interested in what was my first encounter with an alt-Beatle timeline, I'm gonna say 15 years ago?, Black 47's Larry Kirwan wrote a book, named after the song, Liverpool Fantasy, where he took up an alt-history where they broke up in 1962 during the recording of Please Please Me, and the book concerns itself with them reuniting in 1987...it's a banger, I can say that LOL

      It mainly sets the stage by rolling out a chapter a piece, much like you are, setting the players and where they are in this 1987, and the turns taken do feel organic enough (I can honestly say that is one where I didn't even realize who it was going to turn out to be, though once it did, all the rest that I had been saying 'Who the F is this supposed to be?' about, made *perfect* sense), and it really doesn't have what most would call a 'happy' ending, but as I said, organic enough based upon the roads taken...I bought mine in an actual brick and mortar store, but it should be available on Amazon, if you're interested. :)

      Delete
    3. Ringo sang "Heroes and Villains", per tradition that he usually sang one track per album - the likes of A Hard Day's Night were sort of the exception, not the rule. The country vibe seems to fit his love for the genre, I felt.

      As for Queen at Live Aid? Well, I'd say more about what comes of Freddie, Brian, Roger and Deacy, but I'd be spoiling future tales to come! :P

      I'm reminded of this quote by Doc Brown from Back to the Future Part III: "Your future hasn't been written yet ... Your future is whatever you make it." In this case, I am writing the future. A lot of alt-history Beatles stories I've read simply laser-focus on them and rarely around the culture surrounding them, if at all. A prime example of this is The Death and Life of Mal Evans by Peter Lee, a book set in the point of view of Beatles roadie Mal Evans and trying to prevent his own death in 1976. It's a good read though, and I suggest checking it out since you suggested Liverpool Fantasy to me.

      Delete
    4. I have seen that book mentioned in passing, on another alt-Beatle site, I think it may even have been Peter Lee's himself, because someone had assembled a plausible 1972 live concert that essentially swaps out for the Concert For Bangladesh in the timeline of the book, or at least as close as possible considering the availability of certain performances in this OTL ;)

      Delete
    5. The concert in the book had taken place in 1973, and the track "Bangla Desh" was written with Eric Clapton as opposed to George writing by himself. Again, since the book is in Mal's point of view, we don't get much of an explanation as to why it takes place in 1973 rather than 1971.

      Still, would've been nice to see the Beatles perform live in the 1970s.

      Delete
    6. http://www.halfhearteddude.com/2015/09/beatles-reunited-and-live/

      Delete
  5. Ya know, in all my years and years of making SMILE mixes, I don't think I've ever added the Smiley Smile tracks to it. But now it seems so obvious that that would've probably been the case at the time. And I think I just made my favorite SMILE playlist ever roughly based on your sequence.

    1. Our Prayer
    2. Good Vibrations
    3. Do You Like Worms?
    4. I'm In Great Shape/Barnyard
    5. Fall Breaks And Back To Winter (it's sorta another example of the repeating themes and motifs, ya dig?)
    6. With Me Tonight
    7. Vega-Tables
    9. Wonderful
    10. Cabinessence

    1. Heroes and Villains
    2. Child Is Father Of The Man
    3. My Only Sunshine
    4. Look
    5. Wind Chimes
    6. The Elements
    7. Little Pad
    8. Our Prayer (reprise) / Surf's Up

    ReplyDelete