After 38 years, Wilson finally musters 'Smile'
By Chris Morris, Reuters
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Surf's up, aboard a tidal wave of events
tied to this past Tuesday's release of Brian Wilson's finally completed magnum
opus "Smile" from Nonesuch Records.
On Sunday, two full performances of the work were taped at a Burbank
soundstage for a DVD release in April by Warner Home Video.
Thursday (Sept. 30), Wilson kicks off a monthlong tour featuring complete
performances of "Smile"; stops will include Carnegie Hall in New York (Oct.
12-13) and Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles (Nov. 2-3).
And on Tuesday,
Showtime will premiere "Beautiful Dreamer: Brian Wilson and the Story of Smile," a
startling feature documentary about the arduous birthing of the album,
directed by David Leaf, Wilson's longtime Boswell.
It took only 38 years to realize the project.
Wilson says today: "I absolutely love it. ... The musicians in 1967 were
nowhere near as good as the musicians I have now. They're more angelic singers
than the Beach Boys."
"Smile" was of course earmarked as a project for Wilson's band, the Beach
Boys. The back story is the stuff of legend.
In 1966, as the group toured without him, Wilson was cutting a complex suite
of songs co-authored with lyricist Van Dyke Parks. A wave of advance stories
hailed "Smile" as a work of genius.
But Wilson's own apprehension and objections from the other Beach Boys about
the album's impressionistic content led to the abandonment of the project in
June 1967 -- just as the Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was
released.
Only last year did Wilson decide to complete the album. He turned to his
bandleader, Darian Sahanaja, and Parks to pull together the uncompleted third
movement of the work. It received a triumphant first public performance at
London's Royal Festival Hall in February.
Filmmaker Leaf notes, "It was always a two-act story in search of a happy
ending, and Brian wrote the happy ending in the last year."
On record and in live performance, "Smile" -- anchored by three classic
Wilson songs, "Heroes and Villains," "Surf's Up" and "Good Vibrations" -- is
glorious stuff, and every bit the masterwork it was advertised to be.
But greatness comes at a great price, as "Beautiful Dreamer" makes plain. The
film reveals that Wilson almost checked himself into the hospital after
renewing work on "Smile" this year.
Leaf says, "It was very scary for those of us who love and know Brian to see
him fighting his way through this."
To this day, Wilson, who suffered a massive breakdown after he dropped
"Smile" in the '60s, gets butterflies when he performs the album.
"I get nervous as hell," he says. "I get very nervous and very scared."
But, in the end, the story of "Smile" is the story of an artist's victory.
"To tell the story, you have to go into the dark ages of Brian's life, and
it's painful to watch," Leaf says. "(But) he's in a place unlike any I've ever
witnessed him in before. He's so happy. ... He says he's healed, and it's true."
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
Smile
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This Smile thing is wonderful. I have a friend of mine here in Atlanta that is a Brian Wilson freak and keeps me abreast of what Wilson is up to.
The night that "Smile" came out my friend went into a recording studio and did a solo piano recording of all the songs on the Smile record. He started at 12 midnight. THAT is a Brian Wilson fan if I ever heard of one!
The night that "Smile" came out my friend went into a recording studio and did a solo piano recording of all the songs on the Smile record. He started at 12 midnight. THAT is a Brian Wilson fan if I ever heard of one!
- Greg Simmons
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Just picked up the album at lunch...Thank you and God bless you, Brian Wilson
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 08 October 2004 at 01:33 PM.]</p></FONT>
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 08 October 2004 at 01:33 PM.]</p></FONT>
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I agree... this album is pretty darn phenomenal. I'm thrilled it finally saw the light of day in an official form. Must admit I was a bit tentative when I heard it was all going to be rerecorded for the release (not compiled from the old '67 tapes), but those fears were totally unfounded. And I recently read that Brian and Paul McCartney will be recording an album together next year. I'm glad to see Brian is still out there raising the bar for pop music.
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My wife and I saw Brian Wilson and his band last night at the Keswick Theater in Glenside, PA. It was an amazing musical experience. The show was sold out and the audience was thrilled with the Smile symphony. He's a source of inspiration to me in that despite his many health problems, he had the determination to complete this 37+ year old musical project and HAS the strength to tour. God bless Brian Wilson!