UNCUT

THE BEACH BOYS 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow

Includes Smiley Smile outtakes and a new stereo mix of Wild Honey. By David Cavanagh

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In 1967, as the sun shone down on Southern California, the roof fell in on The Beach Boys. In April, 20-year-old Carl Wilson, who’d been drafted to fight in Vietnam, was arrested by the FBI for failing to report for military duty. In May, his brother Brian formally abandoned work on Smile, the avantgarde masterpiec­e that was supposed to leave Lennon and McCartney for dust. When, a month later, an under-rehearsed Beach Boys pulled out of a headlining slot at the Monterey Festival, citing a lack of material, it was the cue for America’s rock cognoscent­i to howl with laughter. Only eight months after stunning the world with “Good Vibrations”, The Beach Boys were now dismissed as cultural lightweigh­ts.

Their ability to take the blows and regroup in the face of adversity is the consistent subtext of 1967 – Sunshine

Tomorrow, a 2CD and digital collection featuring more than 50 previously unreleased tracks recorded between June and november. Crucially, a line had been drawn under Smile, so these are not sophistica­ted pieces of music assembled painstakin­gly with the Wrecking Crew in expensive Hollywood studios. Instead, like a Michelin-starred chef relearning how to boil an egg, The Beach Boys went back to basics, picking up guitars and basses, rearrangin­g themselves into the beat group they’d once been, and building a cocoon-like reality for themselves in the living room of Brian’s Bel Air home. Whatever the dilemmas facing them, nobody could accuse them of being unproducti­ve. They made two albums in five months (Smiley Smile and Wild Honey) and even attempted a third – a live LP,

Lei’d In Hawaii – before deciding that their all-too-candid performanc­es, like the unsolved riddles of Smile, belonged on the shelf.

Though it contains some 18 minutes of outtakes from Smiley Smile, the key selling point of 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow is its new stereo mix of Wild Honey, an album originally delivered to Capitol Records in mono. Wild Honey was more uptempo than the haunted Smiley Smile, reflecting the soul and R&B tastes of Brian and Carl Wilson, and it launched the Top 20 hit “Darlin’”, sung by Carl with irrepressi­ble abandon at the upper limit of his range. In what must have been one of the scariest years of his life, his screaming, sock-it-to-me vocal sounds like righteous catharsis. Always a bit murky in mono, “Darlin’” bursts into bloom in stereo – as do other songs such as “Aren’t You Glad”, “Country Air” and “I’d Love Just Once To See You” – to reveal all sorts of secret passages and undergroun­d tunnels. Hearing Wild Honey in its full splendour, indeed, it may strike you that this modest little 24-minute album, far from being a half-baked throwaway (as critics at the time complained), is a rocking, rolling, fully-realised statement that heralds the sounds that lay around the corner for rock in 1968-’9. The Beach Boys, you could say, were pioneering a post-psychedeli­c music while the Summer Of Love was still in full

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