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02-20-2013, 08:25 PM | #591 (permalink) |
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I somehow don't think the world was waiting with baited breath for the next Beach Boy's album. They were pop stars, but not cultural icons like the Beatles and were never as merchandised. Musically I believe the Beatles album for album made better ones then the Beach Boys. I realize that The Beach Boys made quite a few more then the Beatles, but I'd say you can count the good Beach Boy albums on one hand.
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02-23-2013, 02:09 AM | #592 (permalink) | ||
carpe musicam
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"it counts in our hearts" ?ºº? “I have nothing to offer anybody, except my own confusion.” Jack Kerouac. “If one listens to the wrong kind of music, he will become the wrong kind of person.” Aristotle. "If you tried to give Rock and Roll another name, you might call it 'Chuck Berry'." John Lennon "I look for ambiguity when I'm writing because life is ambiguous." Keith Richards |
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02-23-2013, 12:27 PM | #593 (permalink) | |
Master, We Perish
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Plus, the Beach Boys were actually set up to play the Monterrey Pop Festival, and just had a platinum hit leading up to their next album. So at least Smile was as greatly anticipated and put the Beach Boys in the position to be icons like the Beatles. But I think Brian Wilson alone has garnered such a title since his influence on McCartney Beatles is pretty damn clear.
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02-23-2013, 03:06 PM | #594 (permalink) | |
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The answer is The Beatles, although The Beach Boys come in a close second. Hell, even Kokomo is very musically gratifying. |
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02-23-2013, 05:39 PM | #595 (permalink) | |
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02-26-2013, 01:41 PM | #596 (permalink) |
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"The Beatles were multi-instrumentalists who played almost every instrument themselves?" Get a grip on some facts. John Lennon was still playing banjo chords well into their recording career. George Martin and Brian Epstein seriously considered replacing the Beatles as instrumentalists for their recordings at the time Beatle George and Paul were knifing Pete Best in the back. Right till the end of the Sixties, GEORGE MARTIN composed whole missing passages of songs, made the song 'A Day in the Life' out of two messes of songs by John & Paul; made their first big hit 'Please Please Me' -- all the Beatles had to do was follow the template. George Harrison almost mastered sitar. But just compare drummer for drummer: Dennis Wilson was the multi-instrumentalist and brilliant composer; Ringo almost talentless in every other department, as he shows trying to sing and write songs to this day. Yes, the moptops were great for merchandising Beatle toys, just like Capitol had done with Bozo the Clown before them. Brian Wilson used some session musicians to fill in while the group was out touring -- something the Beatles did once every summer, I think, and only the lucrative markets around the world: stuff their home town, Liverpool. Even London -- that was just a place they puttered around most of the year, rubbing shoulders with other fashion plates and politicians. Then they would go in to the studio with fragments of songs roughed out -- none could write music let alone arrange it -- for Martin to fix up. They lived cosseting themselves in palatial estates, adopted by the upper crust as pets and media favourites.
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02-26-2013, 05:10 PM | #597 (permalink) | ||||||||
carpe musicam
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John, Paul and George were mates from early on even before they had a Rock band or needed a drummer. Pete came in later on, and there were instances where Paul played drums. Stu was part of the group too, he opt out to pursue art. Martin might had his doubts about the whole band in the beginning but that was because it would a way to insure a hit, I don't that thought lasted long. And anyway the Beach Boys actually did what Martin and Epstein only thaought about doing. They admit they could had handled it better, but it was done after's George Martin's suggestion who wanted a better than Best. They met up with Ringo playing the circuit and were chums with him more so than Pete. Quote:
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John Lennon never felt that way, he felt like some in English high society "crust" (as you put it) didn't like him because he was a Northerner.
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"it counts in our hearts" ?ºº? “I have nothing to offer anybody, except my own confusion.” Jack Kerouac. “If one listens to the wrong kind of music, he will become the wrong kind of person.” Aristotle. "If you tried to give Rock and Roll another name, you might call it 'Chuck Berry'." John Lennon "I look for ambiguity when I'm writing because life is ambiguous." Keith Richards |
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02-26-2013, 10:09 PM | #598 (permalink) | |
Master, We Perish
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Ok, now I'll piss on the Beatles a little here and there but this is getting hateful.
Firstly, I don't think there can be much doubt that the Beatles were multi-instrumentalists (and pretty damn good ones at that) in the realm of Rock-oriented playing. Guitar, bass, drums, and other bluesy/keys based things were their forte; now, more orchestral sounds? Of course not. I don't think there are many Rock artists that play in their own orchestra- not Brian Wilson, not anyone from Radiohead (maybe Johnny Greenwood), and not even the godlike Beatles. I also don't doubt the influence of George Martin on the group as well (along with Wilson's); he was the only one in the group with classical training, and brought a lot of those ideas in as early as Rubber Soul ("In My Life," for example). However, each song, with its creation by different members and their experiences at the time, is very distinct, like seeing Lennon's experimentation/sentimentality on "Norwegian Wood," "Lucy in the Sky...," or "Happiness is a Warm Gun" compared to McCartney's poppy nuggets "Penny Lane," "Rocky Rackoon," "When I'm 64," and so on into Harrison's more spiritual and contemplating rock or even Ringo's quirky little pieces - basically, the songs are too unique to each artist to be blown off as the fleshed out compositions of George Martin. That is, unless Martin is some uber-God of pop that just kept it under wraps for this long, which I wouldn't doubt but I don't think is too likely. Personally, I like more of Lennon's material outside of the group, and at that point he was getting his production from a progressively whacked out Phil Spector or his own muses (him and Yoko) and i don't know what else. McCartney even has "Ram," which is a really fun popfolk album thing. Harrison I still have to get into, and I like "Photograph," but my point remains. Also, as for the Beach Boys being such great instrumentalists and Brian scrounging together "some studio musicians" to fill out parts, that's pretty much untrue. The Boys were only around for vocal arrangements at least by Pet Sounds, and if Brian had his way it would've stayed so. The musicians he was hiring were Phil Spector's best, most precise players, which explains the artful playing on their most hailed albums. Brian himself played piano and organ exactly one time for each instrument on "Pet Sounds," and the other members didn't put much more in.
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02-27-2013, 11:18 AM | #599 (permalink) | |
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02-27-2013, 11:35 AM | #600 (permalink) | |
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