I just found out about this website. Way cool!
I grew up in the Bay Area near San Francisco. I've lived in Southern Californa and been surfing for the past 15 years. Though I listened to the Beach Boys in high school, I never got into surf music. Sufers here never really listen to surf music but more on that later.
I've played guitar for about 7 years. Started on a Les Paul played through a Line6 Guitarport. I've always liked U2's music, so I eventually picked up a Strat, a VOX Valvetronix and a few pedals. Now I've got good tone.
So, now I have a Strat with a tremolo and an amp that does a pretty good Blakface model and drips with verb. Ive got the musical tools to surf. I asked Google how, and it landed here!
Now about surfers and the music. Most surfers in SoCal listen to their own thing but it tends toward indie/alternative rock. I never really paid attention much. Nor have I attended contests much, but I was at the ASP Pro tour at Trestles last week watching Kelly Slater pull off his amazing moves.
It really was the whole show; the sun, the sand, the surf and girls in bikinis. One problem though, the music was horrible. It was like 1984 all over and not in a good way. The music was this: Van Halen (with DLR), Bob Dylan, a be bop lady who sounded like Ella Fitzgerald (huh?), Jobim (another huh?) and I kid you not, Michael Jackson's Thriller. Nobody really cared though. Everyone was focused on the scene.
For an industry that prides itself on The Lifestyle, why was this horror of a soundtrack playing? Where is today's surf music? One working theory is that the park rangers were afraid of a riot like at Huntington years ago. But I don't know. I can understand not allowing a punk band and not serving beer, but does the music have to be bad? I'm writing Rabbit Bartholomew at ASP just to put a bug in his ear.
As I was lamenting the situation I happened to be browsing the Surfline website and found something to give me hope. Timmy Curran has just released an album. "Word of Mouth" ... http://www.surfline.com/surfnews/article_bamp.cfm?id=10943
Its free. If you have not heard it you may be interested. Just consider it a gift from the latest noob.
So thats my motivation. I really enjoy the old surf music, but I want to see where it is going. I'd like to see it become re-aquainted with the sport that gave it life in the first place.
And I look forward to hearing all of you guys play.
Thanks for reading,
Mahalo