The BEACH BOYS History Part Four SMiLE |

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • Matt dives deep into SMiLE, the Beach Boys infamous unreleased album from 1967. As with many other band histories, Matt tests the integrity of the myths that surround the SMiLE project and lays out the history via a timeline
    Listen to Matt's Mix of SMiLE: tinyurl.com/mu...
    Support Pop Goes the 60s with PATREON:
    rb.gy/nhcy3
    Thank you for the support!

Комментарии • 382

  • @vickielawson3114
    @vickielawson3114 7 месяцев назад +7

    No way. It already blew my mind that Van Dyke was the guy on the Fairytale Theatre I watched as a kid, but to also learn he was on the Honeymooners I watched as a kid… what?

    • @vickielawson3114
      @vickielawson3114 7 месяцев назад +2

      I fell in love with Smile in 1999 when I was 21 and to learn he was involved in 2 different things I loved as a kid is mind-blowing.

  • @dadaveda
    @dadaveda 10 месяцев назад +15

    This is the best analysis of Smile and what was going on with Brian in this period that I have ever come across. Congratulations on this thorough work.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you, that is very flattering.

    • @ms8596
      @ms8596 4 месяца назад +1

      I have to second that. I have been familiar with the Smile story for 56 years now, researching it like crazy since about '77, and as much as I've researched, read, talked to participants and a number of well versed journalists (Tom Nolan, Steven Gaines, David Leaf), you still opened my eyes to a number of things.

    • @burlingtonbill1
      @burlingtonbill1 3 месяца назад

      @@ms8596 Yes he did.

  • @jblassio
    @jblassio 10 месяцев назад +24

    I think one thing to remember is the abuse Brian suffered at the hands of his father growing up. Brian was the oldest and was constantly receiving the wrath of Murray Wilson. Carl was lost in the shuffle and was probably ignored, while Dennis was the most rebellious and one who gave it right back to Murray. Had Brian gained some coping skills from counseling he could have dealt with the pressure he had in his career. Throw in the high expectations he put on himself, the pressure for writing hits for the band, drug use and his PTSD and you have a perfect recipe for disaster. The Beach Boys only went on due to Mike Love and Carl Wilson’s efforts; who kept the band touring and pushed the band to continue making music. I just bought some of the post-Pet Sounds albums to listen. Surfs-Up, Holland, Sunflower are good listens so far. Not all the tracks are perfect, but you could tell that The Beach Boys weren’t done as a band yet. There was still something there. Thanks Matt! This video made my Sunday!

    • @Lance37a
      @Lance37a 10 месяцев назад +1

      Counseling in the 50's? Not going to happen, his dad seemed almost as bad as Joe Jackson.....Almost. Murray saw Brian's talent at a early age and was very envious of his talent.

    • @jblassio
      @jblassio 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Lance37a you’re right, but I’m talking about what could have made a difference had it been available to Brian in the 1950s. He did eventually get treatment and was able to overcome all his demons.

    • @philiprobins5488
      @philiprobins5488 Месяц назад

      Remember that Brian told Howard Stern, in a 1998 in studio interview, that Murray’s own father nearly severed Murray’s ear from his head with a hammer, when Murray was a child

  • @joelgoldenberg1100
    @joelgoldenberg1100 10 месяцев назад +6

    That very dramatic piano sequence at the end of Child Is Father of the Man, which is then accompanied by strings, and which comes just before Surf's Up on the Smile album is IMO the greatest musical moment of the Smile album and one of the greatest musical moments of all time.

  • @hejla4524
    @hejla4524 10 месяцев назад +37

    The trouble with the so-called 'enlightened' is they lack the self-discipline to see projects through. They needed someone 'unenlightened' like George Martin to pull all the threads together and get some product out.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +16

      Exactly. They needed someone who wasn't loaded to steer the ship when someone got seasick!

    • @Harriet-Jesamine
      @Harriet-Jesamine 5 месяцев назад +1

      😂Brilliant

    • @burlingtonbill1
      @burlingtonbill1 3 месяца назад +4

      Exactly what I was thinking. (And it couldn't be Murry or Mikey.) They needed Jack Rieley 5 years before he showed up.

    • @BrendanJSmith
      @BrendanJSmith 2 месяца назад

      They needed a manager who understood Brian's creativity and encouraged him to see it through to the end.

  • @ricjan58
    @ricjan58 10 месяцев назад +26

    Your Beach Boy history is a stellar piece of work, easily your best yet. Thank you for your commitment to the 1960's.

  • @ministerofdarkness
    @ministerofdarkness 10 месяцев назад +10

    We all know how Mike Love could be a thorn in Brian’s side. But to his defense about the “ Cabinessence “ lyrics, Mike wanted to understand the lyrics for not only the studio, but also singing them live in concert. Understanding the lyrics he could potentially tell an audience the meaning behind them. The Smile songs definitely would’ve been challenging to perform live within the group setting of that time. Anyways, great overview of the album. PLAY LOUD

    • @misternewoutlook5437
      @misternewoutlook5437 10 месяцев назад +4

      Yep, definitely with Mike on this one. Image is one thing, but you need at least some clarity. Even Al Jardine was sick of all this stuff. He missed the days of the simple genre of girls, cars and surfing.

    • @robertzastrow4648
      @robertzastrow4648 10 месяцев назад +2

      @ministerofdarkness The lyric example Matt gave (which I've also seen given in books about the Beach Boys) is "Over and Over, the Crow Cries uncover the Cornfield (s)" from the song Cabinessence. Since the song is about the building of the Transcontinental Railroad, I take the line about the crow cries/train whistles civilizing "uncivilized" lands/displacing Indian tribes who occupied the land the railroad tracks/civilization was being placed on. Cabinessence has always reminded me of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody, which Brian also liked when he first heard it.

    • @matthewrider5906
      @matthewrider5906 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@robertzastrow4648 Also took umbrage w/the 'Surf's Up' lyric "columnated ruins domino...." How did that NOT paint a picture in Mike's mind??!!🤦

    • @ms8596
      @ms8596 4 месяца назад +2

      @@matthewrider5906 Mike's mind was filled with constant banality. It's like taking a thug to the ballet.

    • @matthewrider5906
      @matthewrider5906 4 месяца назад +1

      @@ms8596 Aye... You're right.

  • @pedrorocha9722
    @pedrorocha9722 10 месяцев назад +4

    This is a very complex moment in rock'n'roll music history. That's why this video is a masterpiece in conciseness, touching all the keys and never losing oneself in them.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Hello Pedro. Thank you for the kind words. This took a long time to lay out because of all the drama! But Smile is a story without an ending, so you'll stay tuned for part 4!

    • @burlingtonbill1
      @burlingtonbill1 3 месяца назад

      Excellently-put !

  • @soulfoodie1
    @soulfoodie1 10 месяцев назад +20

    Just to note the vital work Darian Sahanaja of the Wondermints and Brian Wilson 's live backing band did helping to put the 2004 version of Smile together alongside Brian and Van Dyke Parks This owes something to the mixes and research he and his friend Domenic Priore (who kept the legend of Smile alive with his work. 'Look listen, vibrate, smile') . Also to note the Smile Sessions box set was released in 2011, several years after 'Brian Wilson presents Smile' and it used this as the template for the 'completed' version of the original session.
    It's fascinating that the Smile Sessions and bootlegs of the sessions would be enormously influencial on 1990s indie rock with The Elephant 6 collective and bands like the High Llamas a d others in particular exploring what Brian was doin

    • @ryangettig274
      @ryangettig274 10 месяцев назад +2

      Word on that-the Wondermint's stalwart support of Brian Wilson is directly akin to the Arthur Lee & Baby Lemonade musical collaboration!:)

  • @Mandrake591
    @Mandrake591 10 месяцев назад +8

    Won-won-won-wonderful job, Matt! The original “Smile” sounds complete to me too.

  • @ATOMIKAGE
    @ATOMIKAGE 10 месяцев назад +4

    Great video Matt. I’m 72 years old and followed The Beach Boys as they were happening in the sixties. Because of your in-depth analysis, I never realized all that really went on with this group behind the scenes. Sure, everyone knew Brian was having some problems. However, I was so into the music of that time the Beatles, Stones, I never gave it a second thought. Thank you, Matt for all your great analysis on these iconic artists. All the best…….Philip C.

    • @oldermusiclover
      @oldermusiclover 10 месяцев назад

      you are a year older then myself sadly after the drugs took over I have read that Mike got so mad at Denny he sent a couple of guys over to his house and had him beat up things got really sad among the brothers for a while

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      My pleasure, Phil. Thanks for watching!

  • @feber16
    @feber16 10 месяцев назад +5

    I love the Smile album. I bought a bootleg CD a long time ago- probably in the mid-late nineties. I saw Brian Wilson play Smile on tour in 2004 and bought his solo version of Smile that I have listened to many times- and will take it out soon for another listen. The harmonies are fantastic. (Of course!) I bought the Smiley Smile album when it was released in 1967. I like that one too! Great series, as usual.

    • @waynesilverman3048
      @waynesilverman3048 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes Paul Weller was in high spirits the night he saw Brian WILSon I London 2004 smile in full (apart from worried and getting a bit mad over his change from round of drinks his m8 Paulio Hewitt ( oasis ,Steve Marriott Paul Weller books) got with Weller s cash

  • @wasteofspace20
    @wasteofspace20 10 месяцев назад +11

    You always are the best, fair minded, objectively analytical and thorough in your covering of history and context. No one is better than you at these pieces!

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you, I appreciate that. I do try to give these myths a close look and generally I find them to be baseless. The minority that controls the narratives need to be taken to task, which my viewers seem to appreciate.

  • @caavoom
    @caavoom 10 месяцев назад +10

    Had Smile been released at the time, I think it'll tank. Lost in the dominance of Sgt. Pepper but would be regardless as an underrated masterpiece years later and far superior musically, lyrically and technically.
    Great video! Hoping you tackle Love - Forever Changes next.

    • @jeffclement2468
      @jeffclement2468 10 месяцев назад +3

      I have to agree. I think it may have been too sophisticated musically, and possibly the subject matter would've gone over people's heads at the time.
      I'm glad I finally got to hear it when I did...the restored version with the new band. I saw them perform the album along with a few Beach Boys chestnuts that I wasn't expecting ("Please Let Me Wonder") A very special event. 😻

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      I do have Love on my radar so do stay tuned!

    • @jldraw
      @jldraw 10 месяцев назад +5

      I've heard the argument of "SMiLE" being unsuccessful if it was released in 1966/1967. Where this argument loses credibility with me is that albums at the time were still be largely sold off the back of successful singles and "Good Vibrations" was about as big of a hit as the pop/rock world had seen at the time. The fact that Capitol allegedly insisted that "Good Vibrations" be plastered all over the cover of Frank Holmes artwork tells me that a major selling point of "SMiLE" would've been "Good Vibrations" alongside ostensibly "Heroes And Villains". In the end it all comes down to timing. As Matt mentioned in the video if The Beach Boys had managed to get "SMiLE" out of the gate prior to the summer of love, it's fortunes would've been much better than it's eventually successor ("Smiley Smile"). The album would have sold and coasted on the strength of "Good Vibrations" alone which would have prevented it from tanking regardless of the rest of the music contained within.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +4

      @@jldraw I do think it would have sold well and as you said, Good Vibrations would have helped promote it. It's really too bad they couldn't get it together.

    • @ms8596
      @ms8596 4 месяца назад +2

      @@jldraw I agree. Brian was "it" with the "it" crowd until the disasters of mid-67. First cancelling Smile, then pulling out of Monterrey, it put them so deep in the rear view mirror of the audiences of that era. Another thing too, members of the Wrecking Crew were there to perform for performers who didn't have bands, so they surely could have augmented the Beach Boys stage delivery of Pet Sounds and Smile material. They definitely were familiar with it!
      Actually I take something back - I think the first mistake was the Leonard Bernstein special. It was supposed to be about Brian initially, an incredible opportunity, but not being able to give a good interview killed that. But when Surf's Up did air, it also created a bigger buzz about all of this great music everyone had been reporting on. The lie about it all being destroyed was something I never believed or how would pieces of it start emerging on subsequent albums?
      One thread throughout their career - bad decisions and bad luck over and over again. Decisions that cost them millions and millions of dollars and numerous opportunities to be the pinnacle.

  • @bandcouver
    @bandcouver 10 месяцев назад +6

    I found your version of what could have been the Smile album a very concise and enjoyable listen. Bonus points for adding the reverb-heavy 'dum dee dum oh ho' vocal harmonies that weren't included on the offically released version of 'Good Vibrations'. It makes a stellar tune even better.
    I feel they belong in there. Fine work, Matt.

    • @JohnHancotte
      @JohnHancotte 10 месяцев назад

      And the longer fade out with the woodwind horn motif. Always wanted a longer ending as a resolution after such a build up. Very cool mix with the other tunes as well, at least I noticed in Heroes In Villains a difference.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you! I'm sure some purists would cringe at my mix, but like I said, I hit the highlights!

  • @davidkieltyka9
    @davidkieltyka9 10 месяцев назад +5

    Great stuff, Matt!
    I first heard a version of Smile back in the days of tape trading…mid 1980s. Wasn’t really a Beach Boys fan apart from some of the hits, but Smile knocked me out with its richness and complexity.
    I got to see Brian Wilson & band perform his 2004 version live at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor. Wasn’t altogether sure how it might turn out but it was a fantastic show. There are parts of that 2004 album I prefer to the Beach Boys recordings too.

  • @michaelrochester48
    @michaelrochester48 10 месяцев назад +5

    About a year ago, the Beach Boys had played in Syracuse New York, and I was waiting to get some autographs. I asked Bruce Johnson to sign my Smile album and he refused, saying loudly “ I hated that goddamn album!”

    • @hejla4524
      @hejla4524 10 месяцев назад +3

      He prefers Smiley Smile. The Smile album has too many bad memories.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +2

      He actually refused? Wow. I do have some quotes from him that I would like to use in my 10 Reasons Why Smile Didn't Happen video. Thank you, Michael!

    • @nathananthony7517
      @nathananthony7517 10 месяцев назад

      I think Smiley Smile is a complete mess. It sounds like a tired muffled pile of garbage, which is weird since it's actually not far removed from the original album. @@hejla4524

    • @burlingtonbill1
      @burlingtonbill1 3 месяца назад +1

      @@popgoesthe60s52 I hopoe you will use them at some point. For me, Bruce has always been the quintessential nice-guy yes-man.

  • @Super_Synthesis
    @Super_Synthesis 10 месяцев назад +6

    By the time Brian Wilson worried that he'd mystically started a fire with his recording sessions, he'd already suffered his first psychotic break, as his schizo-affective disorder emerged.

  • @tawnieriekena7
    @tawnieriekena7 10 месяцев назад +4

    The Van Dyke Parks song you exerpted is based on Beethoven's 9th Symphony. A song probably best remembered by pop culture fans as the one sung by the woman in the milk bar in the opening scene of A Clockwork Orange.

  • @shyman99
    @shyman99 10 месяцев назад +16

    As you discuss Brian, you get the sense of someone who is drowning in an expectation of creativity, which is guaranteed to sabotage creativity. One has to wonder how things may have played out had Brian not removed himself from his primary support system.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +6

      I think Brian could have achieved what he wanted with Parks and the rest of the Beach boys minus the rest of the hangers on. Too many cooks in the kitchen.

  • @BrixtonTone
    @BrixtonTone 10 месяцев назад +4

    I'm not a Beach Boys fan but have found this series informative and entertaining . Thanks again for all the work you put in Matt .

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you, Brix.

    • @BrixtonTone
      @BrixtonTone 10 месяцев назад

      @@popgoesthe60s52 You're welcome Matt, I've got a story about some soon to be Beach Boys playing in my house, I'm saving it for the right moment to include (Carl and the Passions ) : )

  • @JohnHancotte
    @JohnHancotte 10 месяцев назад +3

    Loved every minute of this. It's a dark story and that chapter certainly did not end well. Who could compete with Billy Shears and the gang, after all? George Martin was the fifth Beatle and really helped them realize their project. Brian didn't have that semi-fatherly figure who could arrange, perform, advise, and ultimately produce. Love your version of Smile with the alternate mixes and that wonderful Surf's Up to close it out. There was a noticeable lack of strong drumming in this era of Brian's output that, to me, acts a a bit of a commercial poison. Vegetables comes to mind. Still, I like it.

  • @johnyarusso4953
    @johnyarusso4953 10 месяцев назад +3

    Excellent job Matt! You even covered some things I didn't even know about.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Glad to hear! I appreciate the comment, Johny.

  • @uhoh007
    @uhoh007 5 месяцев назад +1

    Incredible.....I learn so much from your shows, and relive my youth considerably "enlightened" :)

  • @johncoltrane7899
    @johncoltrane7899 18 дней назад

    A great deep dive into Smile, thanks very much. The sequencing of the timeline in context with other outside influences really explains why the world never received the album when it should have.

  • @micolsen9824
    @micolsen9824 10 месяцев назад +2

    Great episode. This makes me want to dig out my 1993 Beach Boys box set and listen to all those cool Smile outtakes. Thanks!

  • @GianlucaAbbadessa
    @GianlucaAbbadessa 10 месяцев назад +2

    The greatest pop music work of all the times.

  • @bzydad
    @bzydad 10 месяцев назад +2

    I'm really enjoying this series on the Beach Boys, keep up the great work.

  • @MikeE_Fab4
    @MikeE_Fab4 10 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you very much, Matt - excellent work! A truly complex time period in Beach Boys history that you've distilled to become understandable. Listening to your mix of SMiLE right now! MikeE

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Hey Mike! Thank you for checking out my mix!

  • @tmrezzek5728
    @tmrezzek5728 10 месяцев назад +10

    "It's perfect! Do it again." Brian Wilson was the Stanley Kubrick of the recording studio. Great review!

  • @tomsku69
    @tomsku69 10 месяцев назад +1

    Your attention to details goes to the next (or maybe several) level, thank you!

  • @Fool3SufferingFools
    @Fool3SufferingFools 10 месяцев назад +2

    Always good to hear another sequencing of Smile... I made many of them myself over about 15 years back in the day, and yours is as good as any I've heard.
    Anymore I mainly listen to Brian's 2004 version, because after such a long journey it was nice to arrive at a destination.
    Listening to Strawberry Fields, it's easy to hear why Brian thought the Beatles had "gotten there first"... considering the way he was working with brass instruments in the Heroes & Villains and Surf's Up sessions ("George Fell into His French Horn," etc.), cellos doing glissandos and staccato figures ("The Old Master Painter," "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow"), and way-out lyrics by Van Dyke Parks.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you. Yeah, the Beatles certainly had the drive and ambition to keep cranking songs out, which the Beach Boys lost because all control was with a guy who was losing his mind.

    • @burlingtonbill1
      @burlingtonbill1 3 месяца назад

      One of the things seemingly no one has mentioned is that Strawberry Fields utilized a Mellotron. Most folks immediately think of the Moody Blues, but Mike Pinder (R.I.P.) actually introduced it to the Beatles before the Moodies incorporated it into "In Search of the Lost Chord" and beyond. Its sound may have been part of what staggered BW.

  • @johnlorinc2081
    @johnlorinc2081 10 месяцев назад +3

    Great video once again. Really enjoying this series. The story of the Beach Boys is sometimes just as fascinating as their music.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, I'm finding the drama at time overshadowing the actual music! Thanks for watching.

    • @johnlorinc2081
      @johnlorinc2081 10 месяцев назад

      That's why Heroes and Villains was a perfect title for the book written about them. Lots of heroes and lots of villains. But regardless the music lives on.@@popgoesthe60s52

  • @johnnymonroe
    @johnnymonroe 10 месяцев назад +1

    I suspect, like many on here, back in the pre-internet 90s I once compiled my own shabby 'Smile' album on cassette and had to make do. Brian Wilson's solo version 20 years ago was wonderful, though it's great to hear the Beach Boys originals in a proper mix - one which I downloaded and then burned onto CD (always got to have it physical). Thanks for that mix, Matt, and for another engrossing episode in a fascinating story up there with the best of your band histories.

  • @harrysmusicroom
    @harrysmusicroom 10 месяцев назад +3

    I'm really enjoying this series, thanks.

  • @CoinOpTV
    @CoinOpTV 10 месяцев назад +1

    Pretty epic deep dive!

  • @tomasfagerberg6323
    @tomasfagerberg6323 9 месяцев назад +2

    A colleague of mine at our music school in Hallstahammar, Sweden, a young female cello player, played on Smile 2004. She's in the video. I think her name was Anna, but it's more then 20 years, so. Maby no one else cares, but for me it's a bit fun.

  • @Diggers5
    @Diggers5 10 месяцев назад +2

    Fascinating viewing - well done! 👍
    I love learning new things about BBs history.
    Thank you for your efforts Matt.

  • @christianstough6337
    @christianstough6337 10 месяцев назад +1

    Another great recap and review. Being seen as cool was/is everything in Pop Music. Maybe not everything, but so very important and not to be underestimated. Being seen as a California surf band was not helping in this regard in 1967. Pet Sounds and Good Vibrations was their way out of that stereotype, but they had to keep it going. Monterey- and the way they presented themselves at Monterey was half the battle. If their performance had fallen into the barber shop quartet zone- they were screwed. Good Vibrations had to be front and center, with some of the cooler tracks from Pet Sounds and their earlier records mixed in. If they had trotted out their early surf and car hits it would not have gone down well. The second piece of the puzzle was Smile. Why Brian was pushing for Heroes and Villains and not Surf Up is beyond me. Surf's Up was the perfect song for this moment. It's a great song, references the past and mocks it at the same time. Make sure Good Vibrations is on that album and make the rest album tracks and get that thing out by March at the latest. Because the truth is, the album is unique, but it's not that great. It's quirky and interesting, but far from brilliant and a step down after Pet Sounds. Smile would have ranked with Pink Floyds first album (also done by someone going insane) or Satanic Majesties. A unique sound, but nothing brilliant beyond that. Certainly better than the common pop garbage which is always released in every era. But no one is going to be humming those tunes walking down the street. Your quote of Brian nails it, " I Feel like I am losing my talent ". He was, and it showed. Even worse , he was losing his mind. I listened to bootlegs of these songs for years and they are scary. because it always seemed to me that he had created a musical puzzle that he could not solve. Listening to these tracks is so eerie for me as I feel like I can hear him slowly losing his mind and his grasp on reality. Making the leap from teenage oriented material to adult oriented material and doing it successfully , is a hard hard leap to make. With Pet Sounds and Good Vibrations, The Beach Boys had pulled it off, but then they broke and the couldn't sustain it. Or more accurately, Brian broke and no one else in the band had enough vision to carry them through. It is such a tantalizing moment in their history- they were so close. Wild Honey was interesting, but they would never reach those heights again.

    • @burlingtonbill1
      @burlingtonbill1 3 месяца назад

      Nice overview. I think the point to remember is that after PS, you could never predict what they'd do next. Brian's domination never fully returned, but look around! The music kept changing, and they changed with it. The individual members stepped up and started contributing solidly. Personally, I love "Sunflower," and only wish Dennis could've lived longer so we could be treated to more "Slip On Through"s and "Forever"s.

  • @clydekimsey7503
    @clydekimsey7503 10 месяцев назад +1

    That brian Wilson painted reminds me of the style of Klimt.

  • @BrendanJSmith
    @BrendanJSmith 2 месяца назад

    This story absolutely breaks my heart.

  • @terryprill2510
    @terryprill2510 10 месяцев назад +1

    Heroes and Villains was a very unusual single release, the flip side (You're Welcome) and was only :23 seconds long and was a waste of good vinyl with side A being a masterpiece work and side B leaving you wonder where the Smile album was going where there were so many better choices to land there. You're so right to share the band began to fall back to old standards and more beach type beat releases that made Pop radio-play but set them back in a progressive direction.

    • @kylem5159
      @kylem5159 10 месяцев назад +1

      Do you mean “You’re Welcome?” That was the original flip of the Heroes and Villains single.

    • @terryprill2510
      @terryprill2510 10 месяцев назад

      That's It! do you remember it being only a few seconds long?

    • @terryprill2510
      @terryprill2510 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'll make that correct. TY

  • @kristian_goddard
    @kristian_goddard 10 месяцев назад +1

    Brilliantly done, Matt! I’ve been obsessed with the SMiLE sessions for years and got to see Brian perform it live for the first ever time at the Royal Festival Hall in London.

  • @burlingtonbill1
    @burlingtonbill1 3 месяца назад

    I own and have read a ton of books on BW and the BBs but your concise hit-list graphic of Brian's enlightened friends was impressive. Also, I had never actually thought much more about the one-off & handshake deal with Mike, post PS and GV... You make a compelling argument that Mike was a bit less of a snake then previously thought, although ML may have been creatively blank about going in any future direction LYRICALLY other than back to the beach, dragstrip, or the ladies. THAT, as far as I know, has never been discussed by anyone.
    Your comments about the "Fire" sessions were especially good. It was amazing to see VDP's quote as well. This is well-considered, really solid discussion. It's a tough period for any longstanding BBs fan to have to dissect, and then when you think it's in the rearview, along comes Wenner's comment like a gut punch, and the "Beatles Are Greatest Ever & Forever" crowd does their endless "I Told You so's." This is some of your best work ever. Thanks.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  3 месяца назад +1

      Thank you, Bill. I am proud of this series and I felt that Smile cried out for its own video. I spent about 2 years collecting information, researching and outlining the story, so it was daunting but very satisfying to do. I appreciate the warm comments.

  • @buzzawuzza3743
    @buzzawuzza3743 10 месяцев назад +3

    An excellent look at these troubles. At what point does a sane man stop and think about this notion of competing with other artists? You make the best music you can and release it when it's ready.

    • @Lance37a
      @Lance37a 10 месяцев назад +1

      Was he sane? He probably had all sorts of emotional damage from his father growing up. It seems like his father just wanted yo use him

  • @UsualmikeTelevision
    @UsualmikeTelevision 10 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing job Matt. Look forward to the next one!!! I learned something new about Van Dyke Parks today, that he was working with Alec Guinness (Obi Wan Kenobi) and Grace Kelly many moons ago!!!

  • @keithlarson9304
    @keithlarson9304 10 месяцев назад

    Please forgive the misspellings. Well, another great installment by our friend Matt. As a musician myself, I cannot imagine the torture Brian Wilson went through when competing with the beatles. What a curse! This episode also took me back to me as a 13-year-old in the summer of 1967 as a caddy at the Everett Golf and Country Club. Possibly the best summer of my life. Just look at what was on the charts back then. Magical! Thanks again, matt.

  • @noslen954
    @noslen954 10 месяцев назад +3

    Outstanding job Matt. ❤❤❤
    This is your best series yet.

  • @ms8596
    @ms8596 4 месяца назад

    I've heard that same Capitol Smile promotion for Dec 1966. Same wording as this one for Jan '67 other than selling a million units for Christmas.

  • @jimhuxley9643
    @jimhuxley9643 10 месяцев назад +2

    Another master class in documentary-excellent work Matt.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you, Jim! This was a tough one to do - more to come!

  • @georgemixis2172
    @georgemixis2172 10 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent and deep look into this period of the Beach Boys, Matt. It seems that the Boys were hesitant to leave the "formula" that gave them their earlier success with Brian as the main writer... but it seems that Brian had too much pressure. It is as since the writing process was on his shoulders, it was a lot as opposed to the Beatles (in spite the Lennon/McCartney push, George and Ringo still had part of the process.

  • @bobburroughs6241
    @bobburroughs6241 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great series Matt. Saw them on November 8,1966 at Tooting, England - Good Vibrations was memorable.

  • @SurferJoe1
    @SurferJoe1 10 месяцев назад +2

    Couple comments: (1) In line with what you said, I've always felt that Mike was seeing his entire role in the band diminish by 1966 and I think that accounts for a lot of the tension. Track his lead vocals, etc. over a span beginning with the "All Summer Long" album and watch what's happening by "Pet Sounds". (2) I've always rated the album as 80% complete, with missing vocals for "Look"/"Child Is Father", "Great Shape", "Worms" etc.; missing tracks for the Elements, and much sweetening, as well as sequencing, which was changing quickly and erratically as Brian's state of mind devolved and his impulsivity was unravelling him. Interestingly, a tracking session for "Surf's Up Pt. 2" was done and is lost. This is presumed to be strings for the "Dove-nested towers" sequence. That's why the 2004 version has a string arrangement. I think vocals for "Look" once existed, too. (3) In regard to the tracks with no vocals sounding o.k. as-are, my view is colored by having been a bootleg fanatic since the eighties: we got dribs and drabs of incomplete stuff that sounded great, but when another leak provided a more complete version, it was always stunning and unexpected. Like Danny Hutton said about hearing a Brian track in that era, you were never prepared for where it was going next and that's never more true than with this album.

  • @nickwebb9290
    @nickwebb9290 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is a truly stunning series Matt with so much detail and insight, stuff I never knew. Roll on Part Five 👍
    And thanks for all the work you put into this 🙏

  • @THECLARENCES
    @THECLARENCES 7 месяцев назад +1

    Long live the memories of Dennis & Carl Wilson. xoxo The Clarences

  • @CSMuffin
    @CSMuffin 10 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent video! I had the Smile 5 CD box set when it came out, but I could never get into it and ended up selling it. I LOVE Pet Sounds, but that took me years to totally appreciate. I now consider it one of the best albums ever.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you, Larry! I had to reduce Smile to a single album to really enjoy it and even then there are 2-3 tracks I could do without.

  • @chuchusdaddy
    @chuchusdaddy 10 месяцев назад +2

    Another excellent presentation, Matt. But, Brian Wilson Presents SMiLE was not a live recording. It was Brian’s (and his excellent backing band led by Darian Sahanajah) recreation of SMiLE as it was meant to be. I saw the live performance at Carnegie Hall, and it was amazing and very moving for me.

    • @glenngreenberg2712
      @glenngreenberg2712 10 месяцев назад

      I was at the Carnegie Hall performance too. A magical night.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      You are correct, I didn't explain that well at all. Thanks for the correction.

    • @chuchusdaddy
      @chuchusdaddy 10 месяцев назад

      @@popgoesthe60s52 one more thing Matt. I was surprised when you said that Van Dyke Parks played Tommy Manicotti on The Honeymooners. I just looked it up. According to what I read, it wasn’t him. It was someone named Ralph Robertson. In my opinion, these are minor errors and do nothing to diminish the quality of your work. I dig what you’re doing!

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      @@chuchusdaddy%22%22 Thank you for that correction. I got taken in by that one! I appreciate the comments

    • @Neal_Schier
      @Neal_Schier 10 месяцев назад

      Any idea off hand as to how long it took them to film the BW Presents Smile program? I have always been curious about this and have thought it must have taken at least a week or longer. There are multiple close-up shots and then a back shot but you never see any of the other cameras. They were not edited out, they seemed to have set up a completely new shot.
      I would think to do this to sync with the music would have been quite laborious.

  • @tomwery1899
    @tomwery1899 10 месяцев назад +1

    This series if just great Matt.Lovin' it

  • @rodriguezthiago318
    @rodriguezthiago318 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very good video as usual. When I listened to "Smile" I just couldn't believe how good it was. And yes, it was like 95% finished but Brian felt he needed Parks to finish it. You described all the issues affecting the project but the reason for Parks leaving the project (according to Parks himself) was the confrontation with Mike over the lyrics (ironically, one of his best vocals). Or maybe Brian's collapse was inevitable. If the album came out, things could've been much different for the group although they would still have a couple of problems: no new big hit single and what to play at Monterey

    • @sidneyadnopoz3427
      @sidneyadnopoz3427 7 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds like Brian let perfect be the enemy of good. A real shame

  • @christopher9152
    @christopher9152 10 месяцев назад +4

    Great job, Matt. Smile, even in its fragmented state, is incredible. I'm equally looking forward to your post-Smile coverage. As a hardcore BB fan, I know how many underappreciated (by the general public) gems are scattered across albums like Wild Honey, 20/20, Sunflower, Surf's Up, and Holland. The late 60s through the early 70s was a fertile period for the band creatively despite their faltering commercial success and Brian Wilson's greatly reduced role as producer and primary songwriter.

  • @georgemcgown8310
    @georgemcgown8310 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great video. Can't wait to hear about Friends, Sunflower and 20/20, and Smiley Smile

  • @robertstitches9517
    @robertstitches9517 10 месяцев назад

    Smiles compositions paint such a rich and vivid picture that i do wonder what it would have all been like if it was all properly sequenced and laid out in a concise release for lets say June of July of 67
    But the songs that where complete Heroes and villains and in particular the incredible Surfs up show that Brian had taken another step forward even further past the point of Good Vibrations
    I dont think anyone else could have made those worlds, Surfs Up in particular is a universe unto itself

  • @wonsworld61
    @wonsworld61 10 месяцев назад +1

    A wonderful continuation of the story, Matt (and Im glad this didnt get into the Sgt Pepper vs Smile nonsence. They are two different albums by two different bands).
    I always thought there was more to the simple answer of the "Smile Meltdown", than just the story that Brian got stoned, had a meltdown and absconded with the tapes.
    and to me, the bonus of the fact that the album was never finished (at least until the 90s), is that we ended up with the Surf's Up album, which to this day remains one of my favourite albums of all time, specifically side two. 😊

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you, wonsworld. I may approach the Pepper vs Pet Sounds/Smile topic if only to put it in perspective and save the discussion from the hands of rabid 'Brian is a Genius' cultists.

  • @jeffclement2468
    @jeffclement2468 9 месяцев назад +1

    The "Fire" segment from Smile pre-dated "Helter Skelter" by more than a year. Still, to this day, one of the most disturbing pieces of music I've ever heard. I'm not surprised Brian was freaked out about it.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  9 месяцев назад +1

      I totally agree. It certainly has disturbing qualities to it.

  • @buzzbabyjesus
    @buzzbabyjesus 10 месяцев назад +1

    SMiLE! is my favorite beach Boys album.

  • @rockconnoisseur76
    @rockconnoisseur76 10 месяцев назад +2

    Just when I think I know all there is to know about the groups you highlight, I always learn something new . That's what I like best about your videos: I'm always learning something new. I appreciate your research and insight. Thank you!

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Coming from a person with the name "rockconnoisseur" that is great praise! Thank you for watching.

  • @murdockreviews
    @murdockreviews 2 месяца назад

    Never heard the SMiLE-Sessions, only 'Smiley Smile', which is just charmingly weird and lo-fi, and later on Brian's official 'Brian Wilson presents SMiLE'. Even though it may not be the original finished recordings, I still believe it is the closest we get to what his artistic vision for it was. And yes, I think it would have been greater than 'Pet Sounds'. Probably a commercial failure had it been released in 1967, but ultimately a masterpiece!

  • @mattgregory971
    @mattgregory971 10 месяцев назад

    Great video Matt! I been a Smile fan since the mid 80’s I like your knowledge of The Beach Boys! Smile was Brian trying to Keep up with The Beatles! Too bad in 67 Brian couldn’t trim the album to 12 tunes. Plus he revisited Heroes and Villains too much. Take care Matt!

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks Matt - I appreciate the comment.

  • @greggildersleeve3484
    @greggildersleeve3484 10 месяцев назад +2

    I think it's interesting that the Beach Boys' refusal to play Monterrey proved to be a turning point. Like the Association, they were rapidly becoming uncool and unhip as the music scene changed by the minute. Striped shirts certainly looked like a thing from the past even though it had only been two or three years since the Beach Boys defined California cool. It's a shame, really. The Beach Boys had so much talent with and without Brian. But a contrast can be drawn with the Beatles since Lennon and McCartney always had each other to bounce off of and to keep each other in check (and George and Ringo to complete what the Beatles were). In the Beach Boys, it looked very much like Brian Wilson was the be-all and end-all. The pressure on him must have been enormous. When you're 24 and the world calls you a genius, where do you go from there? Devolving into perfectionism and second-guessing, apparently. This was the beginning of a long personal decline for Brian and of the Beach Boys adapting a little too late to the changes in popular music. To their credit, they stuck with it and stuck it out. I'm glad you've chosen to take a multi-video look at their history, Matt. They certainly deserve it.

  • @impalaman9707
    @impalaman9707 10 месяцев назад +1

    I always gave Mike Love credit for being a good sport and singing (albeit grudgingly) the songs that he didn't like with lyrics he thought were questionable, on both Pet Sounds and Smile. He could have walked out on Brian at any moment and refuse to participate. Some people would. But he went along with the program to humor his cousin Brian, and that is to his credit

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, the "Brian is a Genius' cultists really blame Mike Love for everything, which is the height of ridiculousness.

    • @burlingtonbill1
      @burlingtonbill1 3 месяца назад

      @@popgoesthe60s52 I think we reallty should try to define the "genius" label a little more clearly. Musically, he was/is one. Creatively (concepts, lyrics) - not so much. Personal life - no. Mike is loyal, but is imperfect in other ways.

  • @UnderTheCovers1
    @UnderTheCovers1 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great breakdown on the making or unmaking of SMiLE.

  • @jeffclement2468
    @jeffclement2468 10 месяцев назад +2

    Been waiting for this one, and you did not disappoint. Thanks
    Personally, I think "Smile" is head and shoulders more sophisticated and generally more adventerous musically and lyrically than "Pepper."
    But had it been released at that time...I think it may have gone over people's heads, who knows...🤷‍♂️✌

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you, Jeff. I do find Smile more sophisticated than Pepper, but as history shows, by 1967 guitar rock trumped symphonic sophistication, so I think Smile would have given way to Pepper based on that trend alone.

  • @KittyPurrfect100
    @KittyPurrfect100 10 месяцев назад

    Smiley Smile was used at a clinic in Fort Worth to help people get off bad acid trips. I think it helps out in stressful situations and brings relaxation.

  • @rppvt
    @rppvt 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for a considerate and intelligent perspective of VanDyke. He'd been diminished and maligned in recent bio-pics, and this is refreshing and honest.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Yeah, Park is occasionally razzed - some deserved, some not. I will be continuing some more discussion on Smile that will speak more about the reasons Smile didn't happen and also to review the project.

  • @edwardmeradith2419
    @edwardmeradith2419 10 месяцев назад +5

    I just listened to your mix/sequencing of SMiLE -
    I love it! Damn, there’s SO MUCH substance in those 39 minutes, it’s hard to think of it as unfinished- of course it is, but you sequenced it in a cohesive and masterful way.
    Thank You !! 😘

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      My pleasure. Thank you for listening to my mix!

  • @strose2002
    @strose2002 10 месяцев назад +3

    Great information Matt! I'm really surprised Brian Wilson is still alive. We've heard some stories, but holy shit. Money, booze and drugs. Ya baby, let's make an album! Looking forward to the next video Matt. Thanks for your hard work.#1

  • @kc0lif
    @kc0lif 10 месяцев назад +1

    i like beach boys wonderful music. thanks.

  • @familydogg1234
    @familydogg1234 6 месяцев назад

    A friend of mine much older went to Capitol and asked for a copy of the cover prior to - cancellation.I was unaware Van Dykes Park did all those recordings. Saw " The Swan" film. ( wonder how VDP was ablevto claim songwriting credit for Number Nine? Its a classical piece) I became interested in " Smile" around the same time it was released on bootleg- May 1984. I was hooked. A couple things about the Lp- "Barnyard" and " I Love to Say DaDa" are listed and NOT included. " Holidays" is NOT the BBs - it's GERSHWIN!( something from Porgy and Bess I think?). Our Prayer, Wonderful, Heroes, Cabin Essence and Surfs Up are all studio LP LATER recordings. George Fell into His French Horn is NOT A Smile song. My source you ask? Bbs fanzine at the time expert enlightened us. I wrote the info down at the time. Anyone remember " Sunkist" soda commercial using Good Vibrations music in the US??? Thanks Matt. Dominic Priorie wrote the best book on Smile😊

  • @davidbaise5137
    @davidbaise5137 10 месяцев назад

    The Smile show at the Warner theater in DC was great. BTW, the next album “Wild Honey” gave us “Darlin’” which was played in NY a lot.

  • @CaJoAuGy
    @CaJoAuGy 4 месяца назад

    SMiLE is an incredible album, but needs to be digested over time, years it has taken me to fully embrace it, and am still exploring it. It has to be heard through headphones and preferably in the dark (wink to Brian). A great example of the complexity of the music is 13:32 where Mike’s ”… field” perfectly harmonizes with the sitar (?) and I actually just discovered that perfection via this video (different version than on Spotify?), must have taken countless hours to get that right.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  4 месяца назад +3

      Agreed. I spent a couple years digesting this material and then I created the album so I could listen to it that way in an effort to get as close as I could to some semblance of an album. Now I’m taking a break from it and I think the distance with help me appreciate it even more when I decide to come back to it.

  • @misternewoutlook5437
    @misternewoutlook5437 10 месяцев назад +2

    What a complicated time for the Beach Boys. I had no idea of the turmoil. Matt certainly derserves credit for making sense out of all this and he isn't even done yet!

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      This was a maze of drama! I had a separate section dedicated to just the 10 reasons Smile didn't happen but it was already long enough!

  • @beatlesfan1964
    @beatlesfan1964 10 месяцев назад

    Awesome, Matt... keep them coming! I luv the image of the lads in front of the Strawberry Field gates too, lol.

  • @TheElectricfishmusic
    @TheElectricfishmusic 10 месяцев назад +6

    Great details. A lot about the Smile album that I didn't know. The delay of the release, and how the release of Strawberry Fields and Sgt Pepper displaced the Beach Boys momentum had to be heartbreaking for Brian. Also an interesting perspective on Mike Love's role as a lyricist. I've long been in the anti-Mike camp, but I can see that there is some nuance to the story.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +5

      Thank you for the comments. A common reason offered for the demise of Smile is Mike's trouble with accepting the project. I find this to be the most overblown reason. At the same time, many fans choose to ignore Brian's drug and mental issues, preferring to lay all blame on Love, which tells me they are trying to sell something. More to come!

    • @delmofritz3964
      @delmofritz3964 10 месяцев назад

      @@popgoesthe60s52 Matt I agree. I'm no fan of Love but I think he was right about the direction the music was going. And there's an early youtube interview (64ish ) where Brian takes the credit for writing ALL the lyrics which was clearly not true.

  • @erniericardo8140
    @erniericardo8140 9 месяцев назад

    Great video Matt on this chapter of The smile Album👍-When talking about The Beach Boys Smile Album and Brian Wilson's meltdown, I cant help but think of the movie Walk Hard-The Dewey Cox Story, in particular the scene that I remember about the bubbles being blown into the microphone Not sounding right 😅🤣😂

  • @kookadams85
    @kookadams85 Месяц назад

    *The whole b.s narrative of Smile wasn't released is exactly that. Half was on Smiley & by the release of Surfs Up in '71 3/4 of it was public. 22 years later Worms came out on the box.set leaving Old Master Painter(my only sunshine) & I'm in Great Shape the only official unreleased cuts. 💯*

  • @paulsurelynotsmith8179
    @paulsurelynotsmith8179 10 месяцев назад

    just caught up with these today all four parts to date compelling viewing great band thankfully got to see them live very good in depth review matt looking forward to the next 1. great videos.

  • @daledavidson8242
    @daledavidson8242 10 месяцев назад +6

    Terrific episode! I find the whole cult of fan mixes of Smile bootlegs to be hugely fascinating.
    Jules Siegel’s Goodbye Surfing, Hello God is not to me missed.

  • @rogertinker1813
    @rogertinker1813 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you I loved pt 4 as well, I had forgot about the song Heros and Villains, great song. I had always heard Brian was a bit different but the fire house thing was pretty out there.

  • @Doctor_Robert
    @Doctor_Robert 6 месяцев назад

    28:50 I got into SMiLE a few years before the SMiLE Sessions release of 2012 (which I have on vinyl as well), so I got the best of the last of the big bootleg era (and being all on the interwebs at that point, it was easy to download and compare/contrast). At the time, after Brian's "completion" and before the long-belated official release, it seemed to make perfect sense to have SMiLE be a double album with these three movements (as Brian completed it in the early-2000s). With time and reflection, it's very clear now that unless you were Bob Dylan or Frank Zappa in '66/'67, you weren't gonna be able to pull off a double album...
    So, for fun, here's my personal mix of SMiLE's tracklisting:
    Side One
    Our Prayer
    Heroes And Villains
    Roll Plymouth Rock
    Cabin Essence
    Wonderful
    Child Is The Father Of The Man
    Surf's Up
    Side Two (The Elements Suite)
    Earth (I'm In Great Shape/I Wanna Be Around/Vega-Tables)
    Wind (Holiday/Wind Chimes)
    Fire (Mrs O'Leary's Cow)
    Water (Cool Water/Water Chant/I Love To Say Dada)
    Aether (Good Vibrations/You're Welcome)
    The sides come out to about 22 minutes each, which would've made Capitol balk, but they were trying to escape them anyways. Is this particularly accurate apart from running time to what would've appeared in 1967? Probably not. Am I a huge dork for The Elements Suite, to the expense of other pieces of the album? You bet. The tracklisting would almost certainly not be this, for example, Surf's Up would've most likely been album closer with Good Vibrations included only at the behest of Capitol and closing side one. You're Welcome would've remained Heroes And Villains' B-side.
    I suppose I make up for it because in my imaginary re-listing of the Beach Boys' discography, I have a SMiLEY SMiLE which is a combination of everything left off of this variation of SMiLE and what was left off Smiley Smile that it didn't share with SMiLE.

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  6 месяцев назад

      Thanks for your track listing. I think a double album would have watered down the finest material so I think that would be a stretch. I do plan to talk about Smile in future videos so stay tuned!

  • @Beerning
    @Beerning 10 месяцев назад

    6:57 First time hearing this! Love this vocal melody but I believe this song is "Barnyard." Always enjoy hearing new music from these videos!

  • @scottbettencourt6658
    @scottbettencourt6658 10 месяцев назад

    Another great installment, can’t wait for the next one! 👍

  • @jeffthewhiff
    @jeffthewhiff 10 месяцев назад

    Matt, I really enjoyed watching this video and your expertise and research on 60s bands is always top-notch, and I am looking forward to watching the rest of your Beach Boys videos!👍

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks Jeff!

    • @jeffthewhiff
      @jeffthewhiff 10 месяцев назад

      @@popgoesthe60s52 You are welcome, Matt, and I always enjoy watching your videos👍

  • @SamHarrisonMusic
    @SamHarrisonMusic 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks for sharing Mike Love's perspective so sensitively. I feel like sometimes it's easy to make a villain in a story of ordinary people. I can understand his actions better now :)

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, the 'Brian is a genius with a capital 'G' crowd' is so disparaging of Mike Love that it has become meme-like. Thanks for watching!

  • @BradyDale04
    @BradyDale04 10 месяцев назад +3

    SMiLE is a work of art!!

  • @juniperj
    @juniperj 10 месяцев назад +1

    I love your deep dives into specific bands' histories, very well researched presented and insightful and this one has been great! I've got a question, have you ever considered doing one on the Monkees? They have an extremely singular and fascinating story and I would love to see you talk about them! Thanks for all you do!

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you, Juniper. Yes, I will be covering the Monkees in my next 'biggie' which will probably get started early next year. I've already started researching!

    • @juniperj
      @juniperj 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@popgoesthe60s52 fantastic news!!!!! I know you will do them justice 😃

  • @onlysleeping8934
    @onlysleeping8934 10 месяцев назад

    Hey Matt, patiently waiting for part 5. So far this is excellent. You make such high quality videos & I enjoy all of your content. Long live The Beatles (oops wrong group)
    I love The Beach Boys too! Rock on Matt

    • @popgoesthe60s52
      @popgoesthe60s52  10 месяцев назад +1

      I am still writing part 5 so I will have some Beatles videos in the mean time so stay tuned!

  • @TheBitterSweetgr
    @TheBitterSweetgr 10 месяцев назад +1

    Splendid job as usual, Matt. a big thumbs up! The 1966-67 story of Smile and its sad demise is one of the most crucial chapters in the history of the development of pop music.

  • @MrKaywyn
    @MrKaywyn 10 месяцев назад

    Fascinating.

  • @kristian_goddard
    @kristian_goddard 10 месяцев назад

    Wow, I took that photo of Brian playing live!

  • @tylerthompson1842
    @tylerthompson1842 10 месяцев назад

    That thumbnail is hilarious lol they look like frat boy bros