Los Angeles Times

Dick Dale powered a tsunami of surf music

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birth a new American sound: surf music, which with its hurtling grooves and overdriven tremolo brought listeners around the world into the psychic landscape of Dale’s adopted home of Southern California.

His playing influenced countless other musicians, including the Beach Boys, who famously added harmonized vocals to surf music but still made room for a version of the instrument­al “Misirlou” on their “Surfin’ USA” album in 1963.

(Followers of vintage West Coast pop will note that Dale’s death comes just a week after that of Hal Blaine, whose drumming powered many of the Beach Boys’ hits.)

And that California vibe went global — sometimes spread by U.S. Armed Forces Radio — to places as far-flung as Japan, Peru and Southeast Asia, the last of which spawned its own robust psych-rock scene.

Yet despite how widely he was imitated, the intensity of Dale’s sound ensured that he remained an instantly identifiab­le presence — and not only during surf music’s brief commercial peak, when copycats were hurrying to cash in before the Beatles and the Rolling Stones forced a wipeout.

Put on “Tribal Thunder,” released in 1993, to get a sense of how he could still make his strings scream well into middle age.

In addition to his family’s roots in the Middle East, Dale had the ocean in mind as he developed his style. A real-deal surfer (as opposed to most of the Beach Boys), he often said he was seeking to capture what it felt like to be inside a wave.

And to get that vast, pummeling sound, he used strings far thicker than most guitarists’ — and attacked them much harder.

“Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Mac once said to me, ‘My God, you’re the most percussive guitarist I’ve ever seen in my life,’ ” Dale told “Fresh Air’s” Terry Gross with obvious pride, and indeed one of the guitarist’s earliest inspiratio­ns was Gene Krupa, the splashy big-band drummer.

Dale also worked with Leo Fender, whose namesake Fullerton-based company cemented the electric guitar’s place in rock music, to create specialize­d instrument­s, including a custom Stratocast­er nicknamed the Beast, and amplifiers that could deliver the roar he heard in his head.

In that quest for new tones and textures, Dale laid the groundwork for later guitarists from well beyond the realm of surf music — players such as Eddie Van Halen and Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore, who took up Dale’s belief that the instrument had revealed only a fraction of what it could do (and only a fraction of the abuse it could take).

He also inspired future generation­s of surf preservati­onists, from Best Coast to Ty Segall to Orange County’s Growlers, who put on a local festival every year called Beach Goth.

Yet Dale’s forward-facing stance didn’t prevent him from looking back when the time — or the price — was right.

Many younger fans were introduced to the guitarist when he turned up in “Back to the Beach,” the 1987 movie comedy that reunited him with Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello, with whom he’d appeared in ’60s-era teensploit­ation flicks like “Beach Party.”

For the film’s soundtrack, Dale recorded the Chantays’ surf classic “Pipeline” with Stevie Ray Vaughan, and if the guy was ever presented with an opportunit­y to coast, the song’s music video — with Dale in big hair and a salmon-colored suit — would seem to have been it.

Listen to his lightnings­trike playing, though, and it’s clear he was still plugged in.

 ?? Rob Verhorst Redferns ?? DICK DALE, who toured until his death Saturday at age 81, in Amsterdam in ’95.
Rob Verhorst Redferns DICK DALE, who toured until his death Saturday at age 81, in Amsterdam in ’95.

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