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| May 11, 2025, 09:55:41 PM |
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: Brian has been placed in a conservatorship (likely suffering from dementia)
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on: February 24, 2024, 04:57:51 AM
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It seems to me that if Brian had been diagnosed with dementia, the court filing would have said so -- not that he suffers a "major neurocognitive disorder (such as dementia)". Clearly the filing needs to establish a basis for a conservatorship to achieve its purpose, and the legal hurdle to be cleared is that his cognitive challenges be in the ballpark of dementia. Presumably it's for the courts to decide if that's the case, but the filing tells us only that Brian indeed has such challenges, a fact that's been obvious for decades.
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: The board
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on: November 13, 2023, 09:41:43 AM
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I check in every couple of days, because scanning through Recent Posts here is still the most efficient way of seeing if any real consequence has happened recently in BBs-world, which these days means deaths and news of archival releases.
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: The legacy of \
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on: August 10, 2023, 01:03:50 AM
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You can read RS's reviews of Friends and Sunflower in volume 12 of Contemporary Literary Criticism (along with a whole bunch of contemporary reviews/critiques of the BBs, Beatles, Dylan, Led Zep, Stevie Wonder and Joni Mitchell -- unfortunately, CLC's interest in popular culture was not maintained in later volumes), which is available at archive.org (search under "Books"). But I don't believe I've ever seen its review of 20/20. Guitarfool2002 -- is it available online anywhere you're aware of?
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: The Beach Boys Party unplugged and uncovered thats not on Unsurpassed Master 10
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on: March 09, 2023, 09:22:49 AM
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I'm never going to be a scholar of this album, but when I eventually got around to listening to Uncovered and Unplugged I was struck by how good a lot of the outtakes were and what a missed opportunity the album was as a result. If they'd dropped guff like Papa Oom Mow Mow in favour of slightly more polished versions of things like Satisfaction and She Belongs To Me, the album could have fit in with the 1965 folk rock boom and helped them pivot to a more hip image going forward. Instead they got a big hit out of the retrograde Barbara Ann right when they needed it least.
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: SMiLE was ready in 1967 - discuss
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on: July 20, 2022, 04:19:31 AM
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Honestly it kinda broke my heart when that small snippet of the original melody for DYLW was unsurfaced when the Smile Sessions came out. It is so different from the BWPS version (and so much better)...it really is a tragedy that the lead vocal was never recorded. I'm so glad that the melody was brought to light, but it also shows us a glimpse of what could have been.
Pardon my ignorance, but what does this refer to? Where specifically can I find it on The Smile Sessions?
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: Sounds of Summer 6LP Announced
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on: June 16, 2022, 01:02:01 PM
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Great to hear about 'Baby Blue' - can't wait to hear that too! It's probably not a coincidence that my favourite of the new 1970s mixes is a song with no drums. ETA: Listening to the original version on LA now after a couple of plays of the new mix, and I hardly describe how inferior it is.
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: Sounds of Summer 6LP Announced
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on: June 16, 2022, 09:56:18 AM
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If you were offended by the Marcella mix, you'll no doubt feel the same way about Let Us Go On This Way -- it's got a big reverb-y drum sound that's clearly meant to play to the contemporary listener in a way that the entire Love You album distinctly does not.
But Baby Blue -- oh my. Gorgeous. Fully lives up to Howie Edelstein's hype. I'll never want to hear the original mix again.
I like the new mix of Mess of Help -- drums maybe a bit too conspicuous, but dispels the muddiness of the original without committing sacrilege.
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: Celebrate The News on Feel Flows box set
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on: September 17, 2021, 01:36:50 PM
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The remix of Celebrate the News is one thing I don't like about FF. Why bother trying to improve on perfection? The vocals sit oddly in the mix, whether because of being mixed too loud or the reverb they seem to have added to them (correct me if I'm wrong here). It's great to hear the vocals in isolation at the end, of course, but that just confirms me in my view that they should have made this a vocals-and-instrumentals deconstruction track rather than a straight-up remix. Also, at the risk of losing friends here: is it wrong of me to wonder how Dennis produced tracks of the precision and complexity of Celebrate the News and San Miguel in 1969 that he never matched later? Do his production credits on these songs belie a fair bit of involvement from Brian? By the same token, surely Sunflower is rich in Brian Wilson vocal arrangements, even where they aren't his songs or production credits. This seems to be to be an under-appreciated (see what I did there?) fact about the album. Definitely a Spector-esque vibe, but also it's got somewhat of a sinister and extremely rocking vibe. Perfectly described.
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Smiley Smile Stuff / General On Topic Discussions / Re: Feel Flows box set
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on: September 09, 2021, 01:30:01 PM
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Mark Lewisohn on the tale about Brian Epstein hyping Love Me Do into the British charts: North-west sales this first Friday and Saturday – with the epicentre in Liverpool – sent Love Me Do straight into the Top Fifty, the one compiled for the following Thursday’s Record Retailer: it snuck in at 49 ... So freakish was all of this, rumours quickly took grip that Brian was hyping the chart, buying in boxes of Love Me Do to fake its position ... No one considered Brian’s membership of a committee that challenged suspicions of chart malpractice, or his resistance to faking My Bonnie into even his own shop’s published Top Twenty, or – most striking of all – the fact that, in 1962, it made no difference how many copies a shop sold of any record because the charts weren’t computed that way. Nems had been a ‘chart return’ operation for years – it still provided data to Melody Maker and also now to Record Retailer – but those papers’ weekly phone calls or printed questionnaires didn’t ask for sales figures, only for a shop’s bestselling records ranked from 1 to 30; the papers awarded thirty points to the number 1 record down to one point for the number 30, and calculated an overall national total. All the charts were produced this way, as they still were in America. Brian Epstein had no need to buy ten thousand Love Me Dos to fake it into the charts; he didn’t even need to buy one. He did buy a couple of thousand copies, because the majority of Beatles fans wanted to buy it from Nems’ three stores, and because he was the manager and agent of this band and EMI had sent him one free copy.
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