The Catoosa County News

Beach Boy for a day

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Ifinally got to hang out with the Beach Boys, well, two of them anyway. Mike Love, who co-founded the group with his cousins Brian, Dennis and Carl Wilson in 1961, owns the name “Beach Boys” and was lead singer on many of the group’s classic hits. These days, he tours with Bruce Johnston (who joined the group in 1965) and some younger guys, still keeping the summer alive after 57 years of surf and sand.

Recently, en route to their Chattanoog­a show at the Tivoli Theater, Mike Love stopped by WFLI to help dedicate the National Top 40 Radio Museum, housed in the historic radio station. Several radio enthusiast­s led by Ringgold attorney Marshall Bandy and Trenton broadcaste­r Evan Stone (co-owners of WFLI) have filled the old radio station with memorabili­a to celebrate the radio stations and deejays who played the classic hits of the vinyl 45 era.

The radio station/museum is located on a narrow, two-lane residentia­l street, a bit tight for a tour bus. It was my job to retrieve Mike Love from the bus, take him to the radio station, get him in and out within an hour, and then deliver him to the theater downtown in time for his performanc­e.

Love’s touring Beach Boys are on the road constantly. Despite their relatively advanced age for the rock ‘n roll lifestyle (Love is 77, Johnston is 75), they maintain a schedule that would wear out men half their age. The Chattanoog­a show followed two straight nights in Nashville, followed by several more nights in other Tennessee cities, then into Ohio.

I had read many articles about Love and cautioned my radio friends that he has a reputation for being difficult. Despite his cheery stage persona, he once made news for firing the group’s co-founder Brian Wilson from a reunion tour. After only a few days on the road, their difference­s were irreconcil­able, so Love sent his cousin packing. Now they are indeed road warriors. The night Love was in Chattanoog­a, Wilson’s group was performing Beach Boys hits in Louisville, Kentucky.

When I met the tour bus outside the Lookout Valley Walmart, a younger band member hopped off the bus and looked me straight in the eye. “Mike doesn’t feel well today,” he said. “He’s got a cold or something, and his eyes are really red, so he’s wearing sunglasses, even inside. I just thought you should know,” he said.

Great, I thought. Mike is under the weather. I didn’t know what to expect.

A few minutes later, Mike stepped off the bus, accompanie­d by his wife Jackie, and they were a study in contrasts. Mike moved a little slowly, and he didn’t say much, while Jackie seemed lively and talkative. I had been instructed to offer Mike a jacket, featuring his name and the Hall of Fame logo. “Mike, you don’t have to wear this jacket,” I said cautiously, “but we would be honored if you would.”

He studied it for a few seconds, and his younger bandmate offered to help him try it on. “Sure,” he said, “it’s a good fit. Let’s do this.”

Sounding hoarse, he was rather quiet during the brief drive to WFLI. I told him I would tell the crowd a little about the museum, and then talk about the Beach Boys before introducin­g him. If he wanted to say a few words, the crowd would love it, I told him. He shook his head, and said, “That’s fine.”

When we arrived at WFLI, he was charming to everyone. His wife told me, “Don’t believe everything you read. He’s a nice guy.” He posed for selfies, signed autographs, and did a great interview with DJ Gene Lovin. Although Love’s band mate was nervously looking at his watch, I could see that Love enjoyed meeting his fans, each telling him how much the music meant to them. It was a rare opportunit­y to meet the voice of and cowriter of songs like “Good Vibrations,” “California Girls,” and “I Get Around.”

As I drove Love to the Tivoli Theater, his voice was even weaker than before, and I worried that all the activity might have drained him prior to the show that evening. On his way into the theater, Love’s band mate waved off an autograph seeker with a stack of memorabili­a, telling him, “Maybe some other time. Mike is sick. He needs to go inside.”

A few hours later, when the lights came on and the crowd cheered, Mike Love felt a lot better and put on a great show. It’s a get-well formula that works. Not just for famous people, but the rest of us, too. The next time a family member or a friend is under the weather, give them a standing ovation, and lots of love and attention. It really is the best medicine.

David Carroll, a Chattanoog­a news anchor, can be reached by mail at 900 Whitehall Road, Chattanoog­a, TN 37405 or by email at 3dc@epbfi.com.

 ?? / Contribute­d ?? Mike Love (center, with scissors) cuts the ribbon for the National Top 40 Radio Hall of Fame in Chattanoog­a.
/ Contribute­d Mike Love (center, with scissors) cuts the ribbon for the National Top 40 Radio Hall of Fame in Chattanoog­a.
 ??  ?? David Carroll
David Carroll

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