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The Beach Boys, Surf Music, and the British Invasion

The Beach Boys, Surf Music, and the British Invasion. Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys. Formed in 1961 by Brian Wilson, his two brothers, a cousin, and a friend in Hawthorne, California Brian Wilson was the guiding spirit of the band during the group’s first decade.

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The Beach Boys, Surf Music, and the British Invasion

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  1. The Beach Boys, Surf Music, and the British Invasion

  2. Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys • Formed in 1961 by Brian Wilson, his two brothers, a cousin, and a friend in Hawthorne, California • Brian Wilson was the guiding spirit of the band during the group’s first decade. • The defining model of the Beach Boys: • Demonstrate mastery of early rock ’n’ roll • Create original material based on and extending those styles • Branch out beyond the forms, sounds, and lyrics of traditional rock ’n’ roll to create something truly unique

  3. Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys • The songs of the Beach Boys enshrined Wilson’s somewhat mythical version of California in the consciousness of young Americans. • “Surfin’ Safari” • “Surfer Girl” • “The Warmth of the Sun” • “California Girls” • Wilson’s vision was inclusive even though it remained place specific.

  4. Brian Wilson’s Journey from Imitation, through Emulation, to Innovation • The Beach Boys’ first Top 10 hit, the famous “Surfin’ USA” (Number Three, 1963), simply borrows the music of Chuck Berry’s 1958 hit “Sweet Little Sixteen” with new words. • The Beach Boys’ next hit, “Surfer Girl” (Number Seven, 1963), reinvigorated the sound and spirit of the doo-wop ballad by infusing it with California beach content. • “Fun, Fun, Fun” • The group’s first hit of 1964 evoked Chuck Berry. • The solo guitar introduction cops its twelve-bar blues licks directly from Berry’s “Roll Over Beethoven” and “Johnny B. Goode.”

  5. Brian Wilson’s Journey from Imitation, through Emulation, to Innovation • By mid-1964, Wilson had moved past obvious emulation into a period of aggressive experimentation with his inherited styles and forms. • “I Get Around” • The Beach Boys’ first Number One record • Turns the up-tempo rock ’n’ roll anthem into a thoroughly individual kind of expression

  6. “Surf Music” • The popular duo Jan (Berry) and Dean (Torrence) worked with Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys on a number of projects. • Wilson co-wrote Jan and Dean’s biggest hit, “Surf City” (Number One, 1963).

  7. Dick Dale (b. 1937) • The guitar style of Southern California surf music is based on the sound created by Dick Dale of the Del Tones. • Solid-body guitar • High-wattage Fender amplifier • Lots of reverb • “Wet” sounding surf guitar • One of Dick Dale’s characteristic techniques was the rapid, descending tremolo • Borrowed by the Chantays to open their recording of “Pipeline” • Sustained national recognition eluded Dick Dale in the 1960s. • His music became famous in the 1990s, when his recording of “Misirlou,” from 1962, was used as opening music in the hit film Pulp Fiction.

  8. Ventures • The most successful instrumental group associated with surf rock • Seattle-based ensemble • Adopted aspects of the style after it became popular in California • The Ventures hit Number Four with “Hawaii Five-0” • Theme song of the hit TV show • Featured on American Bandstand

  9. The Beatles, the British Invasion, and the American Response • The Beatles • If greatness is measured in commercial success and popularity, the Beatles were the greatest popular musicians of the twentieth century. • They started out as a performing band modeled on Buddy Holly’s group, the Crickets. • After some initial shifts in personnel, the Beatles achieved a stable lineup by 1962, consisting of • John Lennon and George Harrison (lead and rhythm guitars and vocals), • Paul McCartney (bass and vocals), and • Ringo Starr (drums and occasional vocals).

  10. The Beatles • During their extended apprenticeship period, the Beatles played at clubs in their hometown of Liverpool and elsewhere. • In Hamburg, Germany, they performed an imitative repertoire that centered on covers of songs by the American rock ’n’ roll artists they most admired.

  11. Listening: “Please Please Me” (1962) • Written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney • Performed by the Beatles • An excellent example of the Beatles’ early songwriting and performing. • Straightforward, up-tempo love song in a typical AABA form • Clever internal rhymes: “complainin’” is rhymed with “rain in [my heart]” at the beginning of the B section.

  12. Listening: “Please Please Me” (1962) • Formal structure with two levels • The A sections have their own distinctive form, aabc: a phrases have descending melodic motion; b phrase text simply repeats the words “come on, come on,” building intensity; the c phrase is the melodic high point of the section. • AABA • A a a b c • A a a b c • B d d’ • A a a b c

  13. Listening: “Please Please Me” (1962) • A • a Descending melodic motion • a Again • b “Come on, come on”—builds intensity • c “Please, please me”—melodic high point of the section • B • d “ I don’t…” Bridge—new music • d’ “I do…” Change/extension of phrase • A Exact repetition of A section

  14. Listening: “A Hard Day’s Night” (1964) • Written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney • Performed by the Beatles • Number One in 1964 • Title song of the Beatles’ first movie • Begins with dissonant guitar chord—effective hook

  15. Listening: “A Hard Day’s Night” (1964) • Overall form is AABA • The A section is twelve bars long, has three four-bar phrases, and uses blue notes that do not follow the typical blues harmonic structure. • More than the three traditional chords are used. • The chord changes don’t always happen in the expected places.

  16. Listening: “A Hard Day’s Night” (1964) • A Blues-like twelve-bars • It’s been a hard day’s night… • It’s been a hard day’s night… • But when I get home to you… • A • You know I work… • And it’s worth it… • So why on earth…

  17. Listening: “A Hard Day’s Night” (1964) • B When I’m home… bridge—new music • A—Exact repetition of first A • A—Instrumental—Guitar solo, eight bars • Voice enters for last four bars of section • B When I’m home… as before • A It’s been a hard day’s… as before

  18. Listening: “Yesterday” • Instrumentation—acoustic guitar and strings • Distinguishing features of Beatles’ style: • Reference to popular style • Emphasis on melody • Imaginative instrumentation • Responsiveness to text

  19. Listening: “Yesterday” • Romantic ballad with strong roots in Tin Pan Alley popular song tradition • Form: AABABA—variation of Tin Pan Alley thirty-two-bar AABA form • Opening A section • 1. Yesterday • 2. All my troubles… • 3. Now it looks… • 4. Oh, I believe…

  20. Listening: “Eleanor Rigby” (1966) • Instrumentation: String quartet—violins, viola, cello • The lyrics describe two lonely people whose lives have been exercises in futility • The harmony emphasizes the feeling of loneliness by alternating between two chords without reaching a goal. • The melody does not lead anywhere; there is no sense of melodic development. • Verse-Chorus form—alternation of a persistent refrain and narrative.

  21. The Rolling Stones • Of all the British Invasion acts other than the Beatles, the Rolling Stones have had the greatest cumulative influence in America. • They cultivated an image as “bad boys,” in deliberate contrast to the friendly public image projected by the Beatles. • “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” • Perhaps their most famous hit record • Number One in 1965 • Composed by band members Mick Jagger and Keith Richards • Memorable buzzing guitar hook • Unrelenting beat • Unabashedly self-oriented and ultimately sexual lyrics • The song perfectly exemplifies the distinctive low-down, hard-rocking essence of both the Rolling Stones themselves and their music.

  22. Other British Invasion Bands • The other British Invasion acts that had a long-term impact in America started as the Beatles did: with firm roots in American R&B and rock ’n’ roll. • On the whole, the Rolling Stones, the Animals, the Who, the Kinks, and Eric Clapton remained closer to these roots during their careers than the Beatles did.

  23. Beach Boys • Brian Wilson, inspired by the Beatles’ album Rubber Soul (1965), produced what is arguably rock’s first concept album, Pet Sounds. • Released in mid-1966 • Modest seller, compared with some other Beach Boys albums • Had an enormous impact on other musicians • Paul McCartney affirmed that Pet Sounds was the single greatest influence on the Beatles’ landmark 1967 album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

  24. “Good Vibrations” • Wilson furthered his experimentation with the late 1966 single “Good Vibrations,” which reached Number One on the charts and has remained probably the Beach Boys’ most famous song. • Written and produced by Brian Wilson • Performed by the Beach Boys • Innovative hit single

  25. “Good Vibrations” • Virtually every aspect of the record is unusual. • No name for the form • Unique yet effective • Wilson uses a rich sound palette to communicate the sensuous experience that is the essential subject matter of “Good Vibrations.” • Memorable melodic hooks and a wide, colorful palette of chords • Extremely costly recording to produce • Milestone in the developing history of rock production

  26. Listening: “Good Vibrations,” 1966 • A “I love the colorful clothes…” • High solo voice • Organ accompaniment • Flutes • Percussion • Minor key

  27. Listening: “Good Vibrations,” 1966 • B “I’m picking up good vibrations” • Bass voice enters • Accompanied by cello, theremin, percussion • Group enters with vocals • Major key

  28. Listening: “Good Vibrations,” 1966 • A again • B again structure suggests verse/chorus • C Soft humming, then “I don’t know but she sends me there…” • Steadily builds tension • No stable key

  29. Listening: “Good Vibrations” 1966 • Instrumental transition • New key established (major) • D “Gotta keep those lovin’ good vibrations happenin’ with her” • Solo voice, then group • Organ accompaniment • Text repeats, fades out

  30. Listening: “Good Vibrations,” 1966 • Transition—“Aah!” • Variations on B, “I’m picking up good vibrations…” • Full group texture • Overlapping vocals • Major key • Voices drop out • Cello and theremin

  31. Smile • At the time Wilson was completing “Good Vibrations,” he was also at work on an album to be called Smile. • Eagerly anticipated for many months, Smile was abandoned in 1967. • Wilson returned to and completed Smile in 2004.

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