Friends (Beach Boys album)

Friends is the 14th studio album by American rock band the Beach Boys, released on June 24, 1968 through Capitol Records. The album is characterized by its calm and peaceful atmosphere, which contrasted the prevailing music trends of the time, and for its brevity, with five of its 12 tracks running less than two minutes long. It sold poorly, peaking at number 126 on the US Billboard charts, the group's lowest US chart performance to date, although it reached number 13 in the UK. Fans generally came to regard the album as one of the band's finest.

Friends
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 24, 1968 (1968-06-24)
RecordedFebruary 29 – April 13, 1968
StudioBeach Boys Studio and ID Sound, Los Angeles
Genre
Length25:32
LabelCapitol
ProducerThe Beach Boys
The Beach Boys chronology
Wild Honey
(1967)
Friends
(1968)
The Best of the Beach Boys Vol. 3
(1968)
Singles from Friends
  1. "Friends" / "Little Bird"
    Released: April 8, 1968

As with their two previous albums, Friends was recorded primarily at Brian Wilson's home with a lo-fi production style. The album's sessions lasted from February to April 1968 at a time when the band's finances were rapidly diminishing. It was written, performed, or produced mainly by Brian, Dennis, and Carl Wilson with Al Jardine. Some of the songs were inspired by the group's recent involvement with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and his Transcendental Meditation practice. It was the third consecutive album to credit "the Beach Boys" as producer instead of Brian, and the first to feature songs from Dennis.

One single was issued from the album: "Friends", a waltz that reached number 47 in the US and number 25 in the UK. Its B-side was the Dennis co-write "Little Bird". In May, the group scheduled a national tour with the Maharishi, but it was canceled after five shows due to low ticket sales and the Maharishi's subsequent withdrawal. A standalone single, "Do It Again", was released in July. It reached the US top twenty, became their second number one hit in the UK, and was included on foreign pressings of Friends.

Friends received favorable reviews in the music press, but like their records since Smiley Smile (1967), the album's simplicity divided critics and fans. It was the last LP in which Brian was credited on most of the tracks until 1977's The Beach Boys Love You. Despite the failure of a collaborative tour with the Maharishi, the group remained supporters of him and his teachings. Dennis contributed more songs on later Beach Boys albums, eventually culminating in a solo record, 1977's Pacific Ocean Blue. In 2018, session highlights, outtakes, and alternate takes were released for the compilation Wake the World: The Friends Sessions.

Background

The Beach Boys in July 1967. From left: Carl Wilson, Al Jardine, Brian Wilson, Mike Love, and Dennis Wilson.

In September and December 1967, the Beach Boys released Smiley Smile and Wild Honey, respectively. Music fans were generally disappointed that the band twice failed to deliver on the hype surrounding their unreleased album Smile, which was advertised as the follow-up to the sophistication of Pet Sounds and "Good Vibrations" (both 1966). Instead, the group were making a deliberate choice to produce music that was simpler and less refined.[3] Commenting on Wild Honey, Mike Love said the band made a conscious decision to be "completely out of the mainstream for what was going on at that time, which was all hard rock/psychedelic music. [The album] just didn’t have anything to do with what was going on."[4]

Wild Honey saw a reduced share of involvement from the group's producer and principal songwriter, Brian Wilson.[5] Brother Carl Wilson summed up the album as "music for Brian to cool out by. He was still very spaced."[6] Although Wild Honey charted higher than Smiley Smile in the US, it was ultimately the group's lowest-selling album to that point.[3] Apart from a two-week US tour in November 1967,[7] the band was not performing live during this period, and their finances were rapidly diminishing.[8] That same month, the group stopped wearing their longtime striped-shirt stage uniforms in favor of matching white, polyester suits that were similar to a Las Vegas show band.[9][nb 1]

Dennis Wilson, Al Jardine, and Mike Love were among the many rock musicians who discovered the teachings of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi following the Beatles' public endorsement of his Transcendental Meditation technique in August 1967.[10] In December, the touring group attended a lecture by the Maharishi at a UNICEF Variety Gala in Paris[10] and were moved by the simplicity and effectiveness of his meditation process as a means to obtaining inner peace.[11] They were invited to meet the Maharishi in his hotel room the same day, and according to Brian, "they came back and [Carl was] just floating. ... it got to me through him."[12][nb 2] He recalled that he had "already been initiated" beforehand, but "for some ridiculous reason I hadn't followed through with it, and when you don't follow through with something you can get all clogged up. ... we're all meditating together now."[12]

In a January 1968 interview, Brian stated that the group was unsure what their next production would be, but that "it won't be very long now until I come up with a song about meditation. It shouldn't be more than a month."[12] He also expressed an interest in "pull[ing] out of conventional sound making and get[ting] into sounds that have never been made before ever."[12] In early February, the group performed scattered gigs in the US with Buffalo Springfield.[13] The Beach Boys attended the Maharishi's public appearances in New York[14] and Cambridge, Massachusetts, after which he invited Love to join the Beatles at his training seminar in Rishikesh in northern India.[15] Love stayed there from February 28 to March 15.[14] In his absence, the rest of the group began recording the album that would become Friends.[16]

Production and style

Bel Air, Los Angeles, where Brian Wilson resided in 1968

Friends was recorded primarily at the Beach Boys' private studio, located within Brian's Bel Air home, from late February to early April 1968.[17] In author Jon Stebbins' description, the album "reflects the peaceful and quietly centered aura" that the band had gained from their introduction to Transcendental Meditation.[18] Bruce Johnston described the album as a conscious attempt to make something "really subtle ... that wasn't concerned with radio".[19] Retrospectively, the album may be viewed as the final installment in a consecutive three-part series of lo-fi Beach Boys albums.[2] Columnist Joel Goldenburg believes the lightly produced album was the closest the group ever came to sunshine pop, a genre they had influenced but never fully embraced.[20]

The album was written, performed, or produced mainly by the Wilson brothers with what Stebbins terms "a strong assist" from Al Jardine.[18] Jardine remembered how he still "felt that [Brian] had a lot to offer. ... We wrote [most of the Friends music] at his house right under that beautiful stained glass Wild Honey cover window."[21] It was the first Beach Boys album not to consistently have Brian as primary composer,[5] the first to feature significant songwriting contributions from other group members,[22] and the first to be mixed and released exclusively in true stereo, as the band's releases since The Beach Boys Today! (1965) had only been available in mono or Duophonic.[5] When asked as to the level of Brian's input, Beach Boys archivists Mark Linett and Alan Boyd said that Brian led the entire project, even on the songs that he did not compose.[23]

For the album's 1990 CD liner notes, Brian recalled that he "had a good thing rollin' in my head. The bad things that had happened to me had taken their toll and I was free to find out just how much I had grown through the emotional pain that had come my way. ... I think that the Beach Boys’ sound was evolving right along."[22] The few tracks where he served as primary author contained his usual composing trademarks, such as unexpected harmonic changes, descending stepwise progressions, and unusually structured musical phrases.[24] As on much of his compositions of the period, there was a heavy influence drawn from Burt Bacharach.[23] The LP has a relatively short length; only two of its 12 tracks last longer than three minutes, and five run short of two minutes.[24] Session musicians were used more than on Smiley Smile and Wild Honey, but in smaller configurations than on the Beach Boys' records from 1962 through 1966.[25] Stephen Desper was recruited as the band's recording engineer, a role he would keep until 1972.[24] He was recently contacted to convert Brian's semi-portable home recording set-up to a more permanent "full-fledged recording studio with the capacity of any other".[26]

Subject matter ranges from Transcendental Meditation to bearing children and "doin' nothin'".[27] Rolling Stone's Jim Miller characterized Friends as a "return to Smiley's dryness, minus the weirdness". Musicologist Daniel Harrison said Miller's observation was only true of "Meant for You", and that the remaining songs "have few of the formal or harmonic quirks of the earlier album, though there is no lack of clever and interesting effects, such as the bass harmonica line in 'Passing By' or the repetitive monophonic organ line in the break of 'Be Here in the Morning.'"[28] The group's influences, according to rock critic Gene Sculatti, seemed to derive "primarily from Pet Sounds, Smiley Smile, Wild Honey, and little else. The characteristic innocence and somewhat childlike visions imparted to their music are applied directly to the theme of the album: friendships. As usual, the lyrics tend to be basic, yet as expressive as they need to be; words, like individual voices or instruments, are all part of the larger whole of music".[29]

Johnston was unhappy with the group's "wimpy" songs and opined that the new material—with the sole exception of the title track—did not represent Brian "at full strength".[30] When asked why the band did not pursue harder rock styles, Jardine responded that "for Carl and me, we were painting a canvas. Jimi [Hendrix] was one of the best in the world, but they were more of a performance phenomenon, representing an era. ... We didn't have that need, because I think it’s a need."[31] Brian similarly felt no pressure to make "heavy" music: "We never needed to. It's already been done."[32]

From February 29 to March 13, the band tracked "Little Bird", "Be Here in the Mornin'", and "Friends". After Love returned from his retreat, they began recording "When a Man Needs a Woman", "Passing By", "Busy Doin' Nothin'", "Wake the World", "Meant for You", "Anna Lee, the Healer", and "Be Still".[33][nb 3] By the spring of 1968, the Beach Boys were overdue to submit an album to Capitol, and so Brian rushed to finish the Friends album while his bandmates were on tour.[23] Sessions concluded with "Transcendental Meditation" on April 13.[33]

Content

Side one

Friends begins with the 38-second introduction "Meant for You", which Ira Kaplan of Yo La Tengo compared to Thelonious Monk's "Abide with Me" from the 1957 album Monk's Music.[36] The track was originally titled "You'll Find it Too",[37] was almost two minutes long, and featured additional lyrics about a pony and a puppy.[38][nb 4] The song features organ played by Brian and piano played by Johnston; unusual for a Beach Boys song, the instrumentation and vocals were recorded simultaneously.[39] The next track, "Friends" is a waltz that was first conceived in 4/4 time.[35] The song was arranged and co-written by Brian,[22] who described it as his favorite on the album.[40] "Wake the World" was the first original songwriting collaboration between Brian and Jardine. It was another song that Brian said was "my favorite cut [on the album]. It was so descriptive to how I felt about the dramatic change over from day to night."[22] The song is the first on the album that demonstrates his then-recent "a-day-in-a-life-of" songwriting habit.[41][nb 5]

"Be Here in the Mornin''" and "When a Man Needs a Woman" were written about some particular comforts of Brian's daily life.[24] The former is another waltz[24] and features the Wilsons' father Murry contributing a bass vocal.[43] The song makes a passing lyrical reference to the Wilsons' cousin Steve Korthof, road manager Jon Parks, and Beach Boys manager Nick Grillo.[22] Parks and Korthof themselves shared a writing credit on "When a Man Needs a Woman".[21] The song was inspired by Marilyn Wilson's pregnancy with her and Brian's first child Carnie, although the lyric suggests that Brian thought it would be a boy.[13] "Passing By" is wordless, but was originally written with the lyric "While walking down the avenue / I stopped to have a look at you / And then I saw / You were just passing by".[22] The organ was played by Brian, while Johnston also contributed keyboards.[44][45]

Side two

Side two opens with "Anna Lee, the Healer", written about a masseuse Mike Love encountered in Rishikesh.[46] Its arrangement consists only of vocals, piano, bass, and hand drumming.[47] "Little Bird" was composed by Dennis Wilson with poet Stephen Kalinich, which Brian said "blew my mind because it was so full of spiritualness. He was a late bloomer as a music maker. He lived hard and rough but his music was as sensitive as anyone's."[22] The bridge section incorporates elements of "Child Is Father of the Man", a then-unreleased song from Smile.[2] Brian received no official credit on "Little Bird".[48] "Be Still", another Dennis/Kalinich song, only features Dennis' singing[49] and Brian playing organ.[2] Biographer Peter Ames Carlin compared the song to a "Unitarian hymn" and interpreted the lyrics to be a description of "the sacred essence of life and the human potential to interact with God."[50]

The final three tracks are genre experiments[47] that break stylistically from the rest of the album.[46] "Busy Doin' Nothin'" is a flirtation with bossa nova, one of several autobiographic slice-of-life songs written by Brian during this era, and one of the only tracks on the album where he exclusively used session musicians.[22] Its lyrics contain step-by-step instructions on how to find his house, albeit without mentioning where to start: "Drive for a couple miles / You'll see a sign and turn left / For a couple blocks ... "[52] "Diamond Head" is an instrumental exotica lounge jam[46] that echoed the use of extended forms from Smile,[53] and is the album's longest piece at 3 minutes and 39 seconds.[46] The final track "Transcendental Meditation" contrasts all that comes before it with its raucous tone.[46] When asked about the song, Dennis explained that the group "wanted to get away from anything that sounded too pompous, too religious. It would have been easy to do something peaceful, very Eastern, but we were trying to reach listeners on all levels."[54]

Leftover

Leftover tracks from the sessions include "Untitled #1", "Away", "Our New Home" (or "Our Happy Home"), "New Song" (unofficially known as "Spanish Guitar"), "You're As Cool As Can Be", covers of Burt Bacharach and Hal David's "My Little Red Book" and Buffalo Springfield's "Rock & Roll Woman", a demo for "Time to Get Alone", and an early version of "All I Wanna Do".[33] "Our Happy Home" was described by music journalist Brian Chidester as "a short, bouncy riff that maintains the gentle air of the Friends sessions".[2] It was later reworked as "Our Sweet Love" for their 1970 album Sunflower.[55] "All I Wanna Do" was also reworked for Sunflower. "New Song" contains a melody that was recycled for "Transcendental Meditation". "You're As Cool As Can Be" is an instrumental of unknown authorship that features an upbeat piano melody played by Brian.[2]

Maharishi tour

On April 5, 1968,[33] the band began "the Million Dollar Tour", a series of self-financed concerts across the US South.[56] These shows, which included Buffalo Springfield and Strawberry Alarm Clock as supporting acts,[33][57] were poorly attended due in part to the political mood following the assassination of Martin Luther King that April.[16] Six of the 35 dates were canceled, while two were rescheduled.[33] They lost $350,000 in expected revenue (equivalent to $2.57 million in 2019).[58] Mike Love arranged that the group tour the US with the Maharishi in May. According to Nick Grillo, the band hoped that touring with the Maharishi would recuperate some of their financial losses.[59] The Beatles also became disenchanted with the Maharishi and the Spiritual Regeneration Movement and publicly expressed their concerns around this time, which had a detrimental effect on the guru's standing among music fans. In Stebbins' description, the Maharishi became a pariah.[60]

The shows with the Maharishi were advertised as "The Most Exciting Event of the Decade!" and comprised a set of songs by the Beach Boys followed by the Maharishi's lecture on the benefits of meditation.[61] The tour started on May 3 and ended abruptly after five shows. A performance at the Singer Bowl in Queens, New York was canceled twenty minutes before the group were scheduled to perform when only 800 people showed up to the 16,000-capacity venue.[62] Writing in New York magazine, Loraine Alterman reported on the hostile audience reaction to the Maharishi but said that the songs the band included from Friends worked well beside the group's previous hits "because they were happy and full of love". She added that, unlike the Maharishi's lecture, the song "Transcendental Meditation" "did not tax anyone's brain. It just repeated how transcendental meditation 'makes you feel grand' against a moving beat."[63]

Because of the disappointing audience numbers and the Maharishi's subsequent withdrawal to fulfill film contracts, the remaining 24 tour dates were canceled at a cost estimated at $250,000 for the band (equivalent to $1.84 million in 2019).[8] Afterward, Love and Carl told journalists that the racial violence following King's assassination was to blame for the tour's demise. Carl said: "A lot of people just would not let their children out. Nobody wants to get hurt." He added that the group's goal was to appeal mainly to young people, "but not the teeny-boppers", while Love commented that the shows were "not put together for commercial purposes".[64] In his 2016 autobiography, Love wrote: "I take responsibility for an idea that didn't work. But I don't regret it. I thought I could do some good for people who were lost, confused, or troubled, particularly those who were young and idealistic but also vulnerable, and I thought that was true for a whole bunch of us."[65][nb 6]

Release

Friends came out just after Hendrix and Cream. The whole country had discovered drugs, discovered words, discovered Marshall amplifiers, and here comes this feather floating through a wall of noise.

—Bruce Johnston, 2007[19]

Lead single "Friends" was issued on April 8 and reached number 47 on the Billboard Hot 100,[18] making it their lowest-charting single in six years.[19] On June 4, the Beach Boys appeared on The Les Crane Show and discussed their support of the Maharishi.[67][nb 7] The Friends album followed on June 24.[49] On July 2, the group embarked on a three-week US tour, and then another throughout August, with some stops in Canada.[33] Their setlists included "Friends", "Little Bird", and "Wake the World". Several supporting musicians accompanied the group (keyboardist Daryl Dragon, bassist Ed Carter, percussionist Mike Kowalski, and a brass section).[68] Bruce Johnston said performing the Friends songs caused him to "wince" and that it was difficult to maintain the "subtle" nature of the songs in a live setting.[30]

The LP was packaged with a cover artwork, designed by David McMacken, that depicted the band members in a psychedelic visual style.[69] Love remembered that the group lacked "savvy marketing and design", and that while in Rishikesh, Paul McCartney had urged him "to take more care of what you put on your album covers".[70] Matijas-Mecca said the artwork "did nothing to convince anyone that the Beach Boys were in touch with anything in particular".[17] Johnston opined that the cover came second to Pet Sounds for the worst "in the history of the music business".[30]

On July 6, Friends debuted on the Billboard Top LPs chart at number 179[71] and subsequently peaked at number 126 while artists such as the Doors and Cream occupied the top positions.[49] On July 8, the band released "Do It Again" as a standalone single backed with "Wake the World". "Do It Again" was recorded within the prior two months as a self-conscious throwback to the group's early surf songs, and the first time they had embraced the subject matter since 1964.[72][nb 8] It reached the top twenty in the US and was a number one hit in the UK. When Friends was issued in Japan, the song was included in the album's track list.[21]

Love recalled that the album's commercial failure caused Capitol to "panic".[73] On August 5, the label issued the greatest hits album Best of the Beach Boys Vol. 3 to recuperate from the LP's poor sales. Matijas-Mecca wrote that this was a sign that the label had "given up" on the group, repeating a tactic they used after the release of Pet Sounds and again with Smiley Smile.[74] While the first two volumes were quickly certified as gold records, biographer David Leaf said that the label was "more than a little horrified to watch [the third volume] sink like a stone, unable to even outperform Friends."[22] A collection of Beach Boys backing tracks, Stack-o-Tracks, was issued by Capitol on August 19. The album became the first Beach Boys LP that failed to chart in the US and UK.[75] Friends ended its 10-week stay on the Billboard charts on September 7.[22] Ultimately, the album's record sales in the US (estimated at 18,000 units)[76] were the group's worst to date.[22] In the UK, the album fared better, reaching number 13 on the UK Albums Chart.[22]

Critical reception

Contemporary

Friends received a number of positive reviews, but according to historian Keith Badman, most were published "too late to influence sales".[77] According to a Mojo retrospective, the band's remaining fanbase reacted to the album with the abandonment of "any hope that Brian Wilson would deliver a true successor to his 1966 masterwork", Pet Sounds.[19] Stebbins noted that its "quirky gentleness in the context of political protests, race riots, and the war-torn social landscape of 1968 [made] it about as square a peg as one can imagine".[49] Music critic Richie Unterberger said that the group lost most of their audience by being "less experimental" with their music.[78]

Upon release, a Billboard reviewer predicted that "the group should score high on the charts" with the album and highlighted "Anna Lee, the Healer" and "Transcendental Meditation" as "catchy numbers".[1] Rolling Stone's Arthur Schmidt wrote in his review of the album: "Everything on the first side is great. ... Listen once and you might think this album is nowhere. But it's really just at a very special place, and after a half-dozen listenings, you can be there."[79] Jazz & Pop's Gene Sculatti reported that there were detractors of the Beach Boys who most frequently took issue with the band's "apparently excessive immersion in and identification with mass culture and 'commercialism'". In spite of such criticisms, he deemed Friends "[perhaps] their best" work yet, calling it "the culmination of the efforts and the results of their last three LPs. ... It is another showcase for what is the most original and perhaps the most consistently satisfying rock music being created today."[29]

In his review for NME, Allen Evans commented on the brevity of several of the tracks and described "Transcendental Meditation" as "a weirdo piece" and "Passing By" as "quite delightful" in its use of "voices … as instruments". He concluded: "Varied and interesting, though maybe not their best LP."[80] Writing in the same publication's annual for 1968, Keith Altham reported that "Do It Again" "seemed like two steps backwards" but had nevertheless re-established the Beach Boys as hit-makers, while Friends received "considerable criticism from critics who complained that one entire side of the album lasted just a few minutes longer than the hit single 'MacArthur Park'".[81] In Disc & Music Echo, Penny Valentine wrote of the "Friends" single, "Whither the progressive Beach Boys? ... If The Beach Boys are as bored as they sound, they should stop bothering ... They are no longer the brilliant Beach Boys. They are grey and they are making sad little grey records."[82] Record Mirror's David Griffiths referred to "Transcendental Meditation" as "the most disappointing Beach Boys track of the year".[54]

Retrospective

Retrospective professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[78]
Blender[83]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[84]
MusicHound3/5[85]
Q[86]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[87]

In its 1990 liner notes, David Leaf wrote that Friends was since reevaluated as "one of the Beach Boys' finest artistic efforts,"[22] whereas critic Will Hermes wrote in 2019: "The music from this period has generally been considered subpar by the impossible-to-match standards set by Pet Sounds".[23] AllMusic's Donald A. Guarisco described the album as a "cult favorite" among hardcore fans and highlighted the title track as "mellow", "lovely", and "a good example of the Beach Boys' late-'60s output: it is far less musically complex than 'California Girls' or 'Wouldn't It Be Nice' but possesses a homespun charm all its own."[88]

An uncredited writer for Mojo opined that "Given distance and hindsight ... Friends is a uniquely rewarding Beach Boys album that, excepting Pet Sounds, is the group's most sonically and thematically unified."[19] Music journalist and Saint Etienne co-founder Bob Stanley called the album a "lost gem" with a "timeless quality in its simplicity, underlined by the basic instrumentation".[76] The A.V. Club contributor Noel Murray said the album was "lovely" and one of the group's "warmest and most spiritual records".[27] Brooklyn Vegan's Andrew Sacher characterized it as "the most underrated Beach Boys album", "prettier and less quirky" than Smiley Smile and Wild Honey, and lamented that it is not as widely praised as the Byrds' contemporary effort The Notorious Byrd Brothers.[47]

Jason Fine wrote in the 2004 edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide: "If you can get past sappy wannabe-hippie tracks such as 'Wake the World' and 'Transcendental Meditation', the album is gorgeous, with standout moments including 'Meant for You', one of Mike Love’s finest vocals, and Brian’s 'Busy Doin' Nothin''".[87] In his review for AllMusic, Richie Unterberger said that, relative to its unveiling in 1968, "Today [the album] sounds better, but it's certainly one of the group's more minor efforts", adding that the production and harmonies "remained pleasantly idiosyncratic, but there was little substance at the heart of most of the songs."[78] In 1971, Robert Christgau dismissed Friends as the band's "worstever" work.[89] Biographer Steven Gaines described the LP as "boring" and "emotionless".[90] It was voted number 662 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums 3rd Edition (2000).[91]

Legacy

Friends signified Dennis Wilson's emergence as a creative talent in the group.[22]

In his book Turn Off Your Mind: The Mystic Sixties and the Dark Side of the Age of Aquarius, Gary Lachman describes Friends as "the Beach Boys TM album" and considers their public association with the Maharishi to have been a "disastrous flirtation" that, for Dennis Wilson, was soon superseded by a more damaging personal association with the Manson Family cult.[92] Despite the ignominy of the tour, the Beach Boys remained ardent supporters of the Maharishi and Transcendental Meditation.[93] They continued to record songs inspired by the Maharishi or his teachings, including both "He Come Down" and "All This Is That" on 1972's Carl and the Passions,[94] and both "Everyone's in Love with You" and "T M Song" on 1976's 15 Big Ones.[95][nb 9] Subsequent albums would also see Dennis contribute more songs, eventually culminating in a solo record, 1977's Pacific Ocean Blue.[22]

Stebbins recognizes Friends as marking "the true beginning of the Beach Boys as a group of six relatively equal creative partners".[18] It was the last Beach Boys album where Brian held most of the writing or co-writing credits until 1977's The Beach Boys Love You.[97] Friend and Three Dog Night singer Danny Hutton recalled that Brian expressed suicidal wishes at the time, and that it was "when [his] real decline started".[98] Afterward, Brian admitted himself to a psychiatric hospital, where he was prescribed Thorazine for severe anxiety disorder.[99] His issues were not disclosed to the public.[100] Once discharged, he rarely finished any tracks for the band, leaving much of his subsequent Beach Boys output for Carl Wilson to complete.[99] Dennis said that the group were forced "to find things that Brian worked on and try and piece it together. That's when [he started having] no involvement at all."[101] The band's following album 20/20 was released in February 1969, with a substantial portion of the LP consisting of leftover singles recorded in 1968 and outtakes from earlier albums. Brian produced virtually none of the newer recordings.[102]

In late 1969, Wilson worked with Stephen Kalinich to produce a spoken-word LP, A World of Peace Must Come, which included an extended run-through of "Be Still". The album was not released until 2008.[2] In the early 1970s, friend Stanley Shapiro persuaded Brian to rewrite and rerecord a number of Beach Boys songs to restore his public and industry reputation. After contacting fellow songwriter Tandyn Almer for support, the trio spent a month reworking cuts from Friends[103] ("Passing By", "Wake the World", "Be Still", and the album's title track).[2] As Shapiro handed demo tapes to A&M Records executives, they found the product favorable before they learned of Wilson and Almer's involvement, and refused to support the project. Most of these recordings remain unreleased.[103]

In November 1974, a double album reissue that paired Friends and Smiley Smile hit number 125 on the Billboard 200.[104] Brian cited Friends as his favorite Beach Boys album,[105][19] and said that while Smile "had potential ... Friends has been good listening no matter what mood I'm in."[24] He rerecorded "Meant for You" for his 1995 solo album I Just Wasn't Made for These Times[53] and is scheduled to perform the entire Friends album for a series of concerts in 2019.[106] Among cover versions of the Friends tracks: Pizzicato Five recorded "Passing By" for their album Sister Freedom Tapes (1996),[107] and the High Llamas contributed a version of "Anna Lee, the Healer" to the tribute album Caroline Now!: The Songs of Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys (2000).[108] Noel Murray remarked that without Friends, "the High Llamas probably wouldn't exist."[27][nb 10] Lo-fi musician R. Stevie Moore based his 1975 song "Wayne Wayne (Go Away)" on Friends.[111]

Track listing

Original vinyl

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Lead vocal(s)Length
1."Meant for You"Brian Wilson, Mike LoveMike Love0:38
2."Friends"B. Wilson, Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson, Al JardineCarl Wilson with Brian Wilson2:32
3."Wake the World"B. Wilson, JardineB. Wilson with C. Wilson1:29
4."Be Here in the Mornin'"B. Wilson, C. Wilson, Love, JardineB. Wilson and C. Wilson[112]2:17
5."When a Man Needs a Woman"B. Wilson, D. Wilson, C. Wilson, Jardine, Steve Korthof, Jon ParksB. Wilson2:07
6."Passing By"B. WilsonB. Wilson, C. Wilson, and Al Jardine2:24
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Lead vocal(s)Length
1."Anna Lee, the Healer"B. Wilson, LoveLove1:51
2."Little Bird"D. Wilson, Steve KalinichD. Wilson and B. Wilson2:02
3."Be Still"D. Wilson, KalinichD. Wilson1:24
4."Busy Doin' Nothin'"B. WilsonB. Wilson3:05
5."Diamond Head"Al Vescovo, Lyle Ritz, Jim Ackley, B. Wilsoninstrumental3:39
6."Transcendental Meditation"B. Wilson, Love, JardineB. Wilson1:51
Total length:25:32

Track information per David Leaf.[22]

Wake the World

Wake the World: The Friends Sessions
Compilation album by
ReleasedDecember 7, 2018 (2018-12-07)
Recorded1966–1971
LabelCapitol
Producer
  • The Beach Boys (original recordings)
  • Mark Linett
  • Alan Boyd
Compiler
  • Mark Linett
  • Alan Boyd
The Beach Boys chronology
The Beach Boys with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
(2018)
Wake the World: The Friends Sessions
(2018)
I Can Hear Music: The 20/20 Sessions
(2018)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[113]
Rolling Stone[114]

On December 7, 2018, Capitol released Wake the World: The Friends Sessions, a digital-only compilation. Included are session highlights, outtakes, and alternate versions of Friends tracks, as well as some unreleased material by Dennis and Brian Wilson.[115] It is the successor to 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow from the previous year.[23]

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Meant for You (alternate version with session intro)"
2:17
2."Friends" (backing track)
  • B.Wilson
  • Carl Wilson
  • Dennis Wilson
  • Al Jardine
2:38
3."Friends" (a Cappella)
  • B. Wilson
  • C. Wilson
  • D. Wilson
  • Jardine
2:20
4."Wake the World" (alternate version)
  • B. Wilson
  • Jardine
2:12
5."Be Here in the Morning" (backing track)
  • B. Wilson
  • C. Wilson
  • D. Wilson
  • Mike Love
  • Jardine
2:20
6."When a Man Needs a Woman" (early take)
  • B. Wilson
  • D. Wilson
  • Jardine
  • Steve Korthof
  • Jon Parks
0:50
7."When a Man Needs a Woman" (alternate version)
  • B. Wilson
  • D. Wilson
  • Jardine
  • Korthof
  • Parks
2:08
8."Passing By" (alternate version)
  • B. Wilson
1:44
9."Anna Lee the Healer" (session excerpt)
  • B. Wilson
  • Love
1:22
10."Anna Lee the Healer" (a cappella)
  • B. Wilson
  • Love
1:54
11."Little Bird" (backing track)
  • D. Wilson
  • Stephen Kalinich
2:00
12."Little Bird" (a cappella)
  • D. Wilson
  • Kalinich
2:04
13."Be Still" (alternate take with session excerpt)
  • D. Wilson
  • Kalinich
2:09
14."Even Steven" (early version of "Busy Doin’ Nothin’")
  • B. Wilson
2:52
15."Diamond Head" (alternate version with session excerpt)
  • Al Vescovo
  • Lyle Ritz
  • Jim Ackley
  • B.Wilson
4:33
16."New Song (Transcendental Meditation)" (backing track with partial vocals)
  • B. Wilson
1:51
17."Transcendental Meditation" (backing track with session excerpt)
  • B. Wilson
  • Love
  • Jardine
2:22
18."Transcendental Meditation" (a cappella)
  • B. Wilson
  • Love
  • Jardine
1:52
19."My Little Red Book"2:48
20."Away"
  • D. Wilson
  • Billy Hinsche
0:57
21."I'm Confessin'" (demo)B. Wilson2:17
22."I'm Confessin' / You're as Cool as Can Be 1"B. Wilson1:38
23."You're as Cool as Can Be 2"B. Wilson1:14
24."Be Here In The Morning Darling"B. Wilson3:29
25."Our New Home"B. Wilson2:02
26."New Song"B. Wilson1:26
27."Be Still" (alternate track)
  • D. Wilson
  • Kalinich
1:03
28."Rock and Roll Woman"Stephen Stills2:19
29."Time to Get Alone" (alternate version demo)B. Wilson2:04
30."Untitled 1/25/68"D. Wilson1:07
31."Passing By" (demo)
  • B. Wilson
  • Stanley Shapiro
  • Tandyn Almer
2:34
32."Child Is Father of the Man" (original 1966 track mix)B. Wilson3:36

Personnel

The Beach Boys

  • Al Jardine
  • Bruce Johnston
  • Mike Love
  • Brian Wilson
  • Carl Wilson
  • Dennis Wilson

Additional staff

  • Stephen Desper – engineer[116]
  • Jim Lockert – engineer

Charts

Chart (1968) Peak
position
UK Albums (OCC)[117] 13
US Billboard 200[118] 126

Notes

  1. From 1968 onward, Brian's songwriting output declined substantially, but the public narrative of "Brian-as-leader" continued. In the belief of Wilson biographer Christian Matijas Mecca, "it is here that the 'Brian-is-the-Beach-Boys' era comes to a close. ... After Wild Honey, the Beach Boys were no longer Brian's creative vehicle, in spite of what the band might have preferred that their fans, the press, or their successive record companies, to believe."[5]
  2. He felt that religion and meditation were the same and that "for the first time in, God, I don't know how many millions of years, or thousands or hundreds, everybody has got a personal path to God".[12]
  3. Love only appears on four songs ("Meant for You", "Wake the World", "Anna Lee, the Healer", and "Be Here in the Morning").[34]
  4. This version was released in 2013 for the compilation Made in California.[38][24]
  5. Preceded by "I'd Love Just Once to See You" and "Time to Get Alone" from the Wild Honey sessions.[42]
  6. Jon Stebbins lists the Maharishi tour—specifically, that the band "toured with the Maharishi after the Beatles had rejected him"—among the Beach Boys' major "artistic missteps" that also included their cancellation of the Smile album and their refusal to perform at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival.[66]
  7. The program was aired on the ABC network on June 13.[67]
  8. Love thought that while the group's democratic approach "allow[ed] the rest of us to grow musically, [we] would never replicate our past success", and to that end, he engaged Brian in co-writing "Do It Again".[73]
  9. 1978's M.I.U. Album was named so because it was recorded at the Maharishi International University in Iowa.[96]
  10. When they released their 1994 album Gideon Gaye, it was dubbed "the best Beach Boys album since 1968's Friends".[109][110]

References

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  2. Chidester, Brian (March 7, 2014). "Busy Doin' Somethin': Uncovering Brian Wilson's Lost Bedroom Tapes". Paste. Retrieved December 11, 2014.
  3. Leaf, David (1990). Smiley Smile/Wild Honey (CD Liner). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records.
  4. Hart, Ron (July 20, 2017). "5 Treasures on the Beach Boys' New '1967—Sunshine Tomorrow'". New York Observer. Retrieved May 27, 2018.
  5. Matijas-Mecca 2017, p. 83.
  6. Leaf 1985, p. 125.
  7. Doe, Andrew G. "Sessions 1967". Bellagio 10452. Endless Summer Quarterly. Retrieved May 27, 2018.
  8. Gaines 1986, pp. 195–197.
  9. Matijas-Mecca 2017, pp. 83, 85.
  10. Love 2016, p. 176.
  11. Badman 2004, p. 208.
  12. Highwater 1968.
  13. Badman 2004, p. 214.
  14. Badman 2004, p. 212.
  15. Shumsky 2018, p. 225.
  16. Carlin 2006, p. 135.
  17. Matijas-Mecca 2017, p. 85.
  18. Stebbins 2011, p. 115.
  19. Mojo 2007, p. 132.
  20. Goldenburg, Joel (February 27, 2016). "Joel Goldenberg: Sunshine pop offered some respite from '60s strife". The Suburban. Retrieved May 27, 2018.
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  22. Leaf, David (1990). Friends / 20/20 (CD Liner). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records.
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  28. Harrison 1997, p. 51.
  29. Sculatti, Gene (September 1968). "Villains and Heroes: In Defense of the Beach Boys". Jazz & Pop. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014.
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  42. Matijas-Mecca 2017, p. xxii.
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Bibliography

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