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Smiley Smile/Wild Honey (CD)

The Beach Boys

[Cover]

Label:
Released: 1990 List Price: 16.98
Price: $16.13  
 
 
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The spring 2001 version of this two-LP-on-one-CD compilation, in 24-bit sound, is the best way ever to hear either of these albums. Smiley Smile was one of the most genial and unpretentious examples of psychedelic music to emerge in 1967, although at the time it was a difficult album for many fans to appreciate. A lot of it is comprised of what amounts to languid, almost impressionist sound paintings, some of them, such as "Wonderful" and "Wind Chimes," quite stunningly beautiful, and others, such as "Vegetables," beguiling in their innocent goofiness, while still others, like "With Me Tonight," combined those attributes. The 2001 reissue finally lifts about as many layers of hiss -- a result of the use of a makeshift studio, and overdubs on many of the cuts -- as are ever likely to disappear, to get at the music and how it must have sounded to the group when they played it back. Thus, one can hear the action of the bass on "Vegetables" and "Heroes and Villains," and the playing and singing on "Wind Chimes" all now seem several feet closer to the microphone than on previous issues; the opening on "Gettin' Hungry" now leaps out of the extended silence off the fade from "Wind Chimes." Wild Honey was, even more than its companion album, an unfairly maligned effort in its own time -- Smiley Smile had a realistically druggy ambience that was, understandably, harder to take than the highly produced psychedelic efforts of the Beatles and others; but Wild Honey was a solid, accessible, soulful rock & roll release, every song a little jewel (and a few, like the title cut and "Darlin'," quite weighty) that ought to have been on every stack of platters for any teenage dance party thrown over the next decade. The album always had a good sound, and the 2001 reissue only makes a great record even better, pushing the clarity to a higher level -- the drumming on the title tune, "Aren't You Glad," or "I Was Made to Love Her" is as prominent as the vocals, which are all awesome, and it's also easier to appreciate the little details, like the exquisite bass workout in the rhythm section of "I Was Made to Love Her" -- and the massed vocals on "Country Air" are so clean and radiant here that it's like hearing the song for the first time. The compilation is augmented with some fascinating early working versions of "Good Vibrations," the lost B-side "You're Welcome," an alternate take of "Heroes and Villains" from the Smile album sessions, plus a rehearsal of "Their Hearts Were Full of Spring" from a 1967 concert, and the lost (and exquisite) Smile album artifact "Can't Wait Too Long" -- alas, there evidently weren't any Wild Honey leftovers. Note: Capitol previously issued a version of this disc in 1990, with a duller, hissier sound; it should be replaced by the version carrying the 2001 date. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

Tracklisting
Disk  | 1 
1Heroes and Villains
2Vegetables
3Fall Breaks and Back to Winter (W. Woodpecker Symphony)
4She's Goin' Bald
5Little Pad
6Good Vibrations
7With Me Tonight
8Wind Chimes
9Gettin' Hungry
10Wonderful
11Whistle In
12Wild Honey
13Aren't You Glad
14I Was Made to Love Her
15Country Air
16Thing or Two
17Darlin'
18I'd Love Just Once to See You
19Here Comes the Night
20Let the Wind Blow
21How She Boogalooed It
22Mama Says
23Heroes and Villains [Alternate Take][*]
24Good Vibrations [Various Sessions] [*]
25Good Vibrations [Early Take][*]
26You're Welcome [*]
27Their Hearts Were Full of Spring [*]
28Can't Wait Too Long [*]

 

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