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SurfGuitar101 Forums » The Shallow End »

Permalink the story behind the Beach Boys' Surfin' - 50 years later - from WSJ

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The Wall Street Journal
MUSIC
NOVEMBER 17, 2011

Fifty-Year-Old Boys
By JIM FUSILLI

This month marks the 50th anniversary of the Beach Boys' first single. From left, Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Dennis Wilson, Carl Wilson and David Marks.

Fifty years ago this month, the Beach Boys released their first single, "Surfin'," ushering in a brief surf-pop craze and announcing the arrival of what would soon become a significant contributor to American music. The only serious challenger to the Beatles as the best rock group of their time, the Beach Boys produced a stream of increasingly sophisticated radio hits as well as "Pet Sounds," in my view the best album of the rock era. Though some of the quintet's early hits sound quaint now, its midperiod music, composed and arranged by Brian Wilson, still holds up. Mr. Wilson remains as much an influence on rock and pop today as he was during the band's glory years of 1963-67.

"Surfin'" wasn't the song the Beach Boys—Brian, Carl and Dennis Wilson, their cousin Mike Love and Al Jardine (who was soon replaced by David Marks; Mr. Jardine returned shortly thereafter)—intended as its debut.

The oldest of the Wilson brothers, Brian was the group's musical leader. He had a gift for arranging vocals, and earlier that year had arranged a version of the Four Freshmen's hit "Their Hearts Were Full of Spring" that the quintet wanted to record. Mr. Jardine said he and the group sang the song for his mother, Virginia, to impress her so she'd fund a recording session.

"It was just beautiful," Mr. Jardine recalled over breakfast here last month. "We were a serious group. We wanted to let her know we were sharp."

But when they sang it for producers Hite and Dorinda Morgan at the couple's office in Hollywood, the Morgans passed. As the group was about to leave, Dennis Wilson mentioned they had a song called "Surfin.'" But Brian and Mr. Love hadn't finished writing it.

According to Beach Boys legend, when Murry and Audree Wilson left for a brief vacation to Mexico City that summer, they left money for their three sons to use for food. Instead, the boys rented instruments to write and learn to play "Surfin'."

As Mr. Love developed the lyric, Mr. Wilson did the vocal arrangements. The band members' varied musical tastes helped shape the song, which, as simple as it is, incorporates elements of rock 'n' roll, doo-wop and then-contemporary vocal music into a unique blend. "We liked folk music," recalled Mr. Love when we spoke by phone. "But we weren't into it as much as we were into doo-wop, R&B and rock 'n' roll."

When the group played the song for the Morgans, Mr. Morgan liked the tune and signed Mr. Love and Brian Wilson to a songwriting contract. On Oct. 3, 1961, Mr. Morgan brought the group into the studio to cut "Surfin'." Mr. Love sang lead and added a doo-wop vocal riff; Mr. Jardine played a rented upright bass; Carl Wilson, then 15 years old, played guitar; and Brian Wilson played a snare drum. After a dozen takes, Mr. Morgan was satisfied.

"It was really fun. Not typical music," Mr. Jardine said. "It's about what's happening around us."

The track was released in mid-November 1961. To the band's surprise, the group was listed as the Beach Boys, not as the Pendletones, the name the members preferred. A promotion rep at their label, Candix Records, came up with the idea; Murry Wilson, who had appointed himself the band's manager, went along with the decision.

"Murry was brutal—abusive emotionally and sometimes physically. He wasn't an easy guy to live with," Mr. Love said. "But he was a born salesman."

When the band learned it would be one of the choices for a KFWB on-air contest, the Wilsons and Loves recruited family and friends to call in and vote for "Surfin'."

Brian Wilson recalled the DJ's preamble: "He said, 'We're going to play you five songs. One will be the pick of the week.' We said, 'Let's call in and disguise our voices.'" Replaying the moment 50 years later at his Beverly Hills home, Mr. Wilson raised his hand as if placing a phone handset by his ear, dropped his voice and intoned, "'Surfin'' by the Beach Boys." Then, summoning what was once the most famous falsetto in rock, squeaked, "'Surfin'' by the Beach Boys." Smiling with pride, he said: "It got pick of the week. We couldn't believe it." He added, "I knew it was going to be a hit."

"Surfin'" scored in Southern California and Las Vegas. For some reason, it found a big audience in Minneapolis too. Mr. Love recalled: "Nationally, it was hit or miss."

"There was a certitude about the way we went about it," Mr. Jardine said. "We knew it was good. We had a lot of experience listening to music."

Brian Wilson, however, wasn't satisfied with the sound of the recording. And thus one of rock's great producers was born.

"Brian took to production and arranging like a duck to water," Mr. Love said. "The studio quickly became his domain."

"Surfin'" introduced the Beach Boys' distinctive sound. "It's there," Mr. Wilson said of the voices. "Mike on the bass; Carl, Dennis and Al in the middle; I was on top. That's our signature sound.

"It was our initial break," he added. "Sure, I'm proud of it. Absolutely."

Mr. Fusilli is the Journal's rock and pop music critic. Email him at jfusilli@wsj.com or follow him on Twitter: @wsjrock

Ivan
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Thanks Ivan. Man, I just love that stuff. The Pendletones...wow.

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Good article, thanks Ivan! The BB's original name The Pendeltones is a reference to the shirts they wore onstage that were the preferred wool shirt worn by Surfers. The man who suggested the name change was A&R man Joe Saraceno who was the man behind the Marketts and later many of the Ventures records. Also, they don't mention Nik Venet who is credited as producer on their early stuff, although Brian really did the producing. But Venet was the A&R guy at Capitol that helped them get their deal with the label. Venet would later work with The Hondells and become a big producer for a while. Also, these articles always leave David Marks out of the mix. David and Carl were big Dick Dale fans and learned to play guitar together. They would bring DD’s surf guitar vibe to the band which was also important to their early sound.

BOSS FINK "R.P.M." available now from DOUBLE CROWN RECORDS!
www.facebook.com/BossFink
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Last edited: Nov 18, 2011 08:58:48

wow great article... imagine how rock and roll/surf music history would've been altered had Brian not backed out of the Monterey Pop festival? Especially considering the fact that McCartney was trying to recreate the BB sound on Sgt Pepper's?

Peace and Stay Free!

Great stuff! To get to "see the inner workings" of some of the most influential pop/rock bands!

Fast Cars & Loud Guitars!

Another cool early Beach Boys fact is Paul Johnson was almost a Beach Boy! I asked PJ about this and he confirmed it. Al Jardine played on their first single on the Candix label, but when they got signed to Capitol, David Marks was the second guitarist on the first three LP’s. But before Dave was asked to join they asked Paul who declined in order to focus on his own band, The Belairs. Paul and the boys were friends and he recalled hanging with them at their house a few times. Mr. Moto was in fact part of The Beach Boys early live set. During this period the boys shared the bill with The Belairs, The Vibrants, Dick Dale, The Challengers, toured with The Surfaris and headlined the Surf Fair at Santa Monica Civic in Dec 1962 when their popularity had grown to a fever pitch.

image

BOSS FINK "R.P.M." available now from DOUBLE CROWN RECORDS!
www.facebook.com/BossFink
www.doublecrownrecords.com

shivers13 wrote:

Another cool early Beach Boys fact is Paul Johnson was almost a Beach Boy!

I don't think most people here would think of that as something cool and propably would have seen PJ as a traitor, haha...

T H E ✠ S U R F I T E S

Klas, I wouldn't say that. I didn't know that and think it's an awesome bit of trivia. My earliest musical memories are of The Beach Boys. Their importance in general can't be overstated, in my opinion. It makes you wonder what might've happened if...

The Mystery Men?
El Capitan and The Reluctant Sadists
SSS Agent #31

Another Beach Boy, Bruce Johnston, can be heard on Pink Floyd's "The Show Must Go On" from The Wall (Toni Tennille is also on that track).

Fast Cars & Loud Guitars!

Richard wrote:

Klas, I wouldn't say that. I didn't know that and
think it's an awesome bit of trivia. My earliest
musical memories are of The Beach Boys. Their
importance in general can't be overstated, in my
opinion. It makes you wonder what might've happened
if...

Thumbs Up

www.surfintheeye.com

Richard wrote:

Klas, I wouldn't say that. I didn't know that and
think it's an awesome bit of trivia. My earliest
musical memories are of The Beach Boys. Their
importance in general can't be overstated, in my
opinion. It makes you wonder what might've happened
if...

Note that I wrote "most people here". I know we're a handful on here that are into the vocal surf music by the early Beach Boys. And yeah, it would have been interesting to know what had happened if Paul Johnson actually had joined. My guess would be that not much would have turned out different due to the dominant roles of Brian Wilson and his father.

T H E ✠ S U R F I T E S

I agree too, Richard. Funny thing is Klas is just stirring the pot because I happen to know he likes The Beach Boys! heehe Big Grin

Here's another cool poster from the Surf era... April '62.

image

BOSS FINK "R.P.M." available now from DOUBLE CROWN RECORDS!
www.facebook.com/BossFink
www.doublecrownrecords.com

shivers13 wrote:

Funny thing is Klas is just stirring the pot because I
happen to know he likes The Beach Boys! heehe Big Grin

Yeah, I sure do! And you do too, and Ted, and now Richard. Wow, that's 4 people which means we could start our own vocal surf band! Another pretty funny thing is that I bet most people here would prefer the Pet Sounds album over the BB's surf music albums. All this on a surf music forum, haha.

T H E ✠ S U R F I T E S

Klas, I wouldn't necessarily say "most people", you'd be surprised. Here's another show poster just for you since I know you also dig Gary Usher's Four Speeds. It's from July 13, 1962. The next day, Saturday the 14th, The BB's would play "Mr. Moto" in front of 150 people live on the air on Oxnard's KOXR. The Surfmen would also perform.

image

BOSS FINK "R.P.M." available now from DOUBLE CROWN RECORDS!
www.facebook.com/BossFink
www.doublecrownrecords.com

I dis-agree with that last statement.
Pet sounds is an amazing album.
but I don't consider it a "surf album"

I like the early BB's and Jan n Dean surf vocals stuff.
Heard it way more when I was a kid, than any instro surf.
I just put it in a separate category next to instro surf.

Jeff(bigtikidude)

Klas wrote:

shivers13 wrote:

Funny thing is Klas is just stirring the pot because
I
happen to know he likes The Beach Boys! heehe Big Grin

Yeah, I sure do! And you do too, and Ted, and now
Richard. Wow, that's 4 people which means we could
start our own vocal surf band!

We did didn't we? At least over the web. I dig that new boss Surfites single!

BOSS FINK "R.P.M." available now from DOUBLE CROWN RECORDS!
www.facebook.com/BossFink
www.doublecrownrecords.com

Jeff, I don't consider Pet Sounds a Surf album either, but I like it. I prefer their earlier stuff. The Beach Boys moved away from Surf/Hot Rod in '64 because Brian could see the limitations within the genre. Also, he wanted to do more Phil Specter heavily produced stuff and saw the Beatles as direct competition to their dominance over the airwaves and wanted to beat them, which in a few ways he did.

Here's another BB show poster from the surf era Sept '62...

image

BOSS FINK "R.P.M." available now from DOUBLE CROWN RECORDS!
www.facebook.com/BossFink
www.doublecrownrecords.com

Last edited: Nov 20, 2011 12:45:05

shivers13 wrote:

Klas, I wouldn't necessarily say "most people", you'd
be surprised.

Yeah, I guess there's more people here who like the Beach Boys' early vocals but I made a distinction between just "like" and "being into".

shivers13 wrote:

Here's another show poster just for you
since I know you also dig Gary Usher's Four Speeds.

Cool, the Four Speeds rules as do the Honeys!

T H E ✠ S U R F I T E S

bigtikidude wrote:

I dis-agree with that last statement.
Pet sounds is an amazing album.
but I don't consider it a "surf album"

I don't think anyone would consider Pet Sounds to be a surf album. My point was that most people here would take a Beach Boys non surf album (Pet Sounds) over any of their surf albums even though this is a surf music forum.

T H E ✠ S U R F I T E S

I think yer wrong there.

Jeff(bigtikidude)

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