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Revision as of 13:31, 4 February 2003 by 144.87.143.3 (talk)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The Beach Boys were an enormously successful pop group of the 1960s, whose popularity lasted into the twenty-first century. Originally formed in 1961 by brothers Carl, Dennis and Brian Wilson with cousin Mike Love and friend Al Jardine as Carl and the Passions, the group's signature was a close harmony vocal sound, strongly influenced by The Four Freshmen.
At first their career was steered by father Murry Wilson who engineered their signing with Capitol Records. The early material focused on the Californian youth lifestyle (e.g. California Girls, Fun Fun Fun), cars (Little Deuce Coupe) and, as often as not, Dennis's hobby of surfing (as heard on Surfin, Surfing Safari and many others).
As the 1960s progressed the always introspective Brian began to withdraw from touring, concentrating on producing studio recordings of ever increasing complexity. This mastery of the recording studio culminated with Pet Sounds (1966), and a sequence of tracks (including God Only Knows, Good Vibrations) whose meticulously layered and inventive instrumentation set a new standard for popular music, pushing The Beatles towards Sgt. Pepper. On top, Brian's lyrics were now intensely personal expressions of his isolation from the world. The album still widely regarded as a classic.
Seeking to improve upon Pet Sounds proved too much for Brian. A perfectionist in the studio, he suffered a nervous breakdown whilst working on Smile, not helped by his reliance on both prescription and illegal drugs. Some of the tracks were salvaged for Smiley Smile.
Despite Brian's deteriorating health the band continued to work, recording the albums, including Friends, 20/20 and Sunflower, prior to a return to greatness on 1971's Surf's Up, a collaboration with cult songwriter Van Dyke Parks which touched on politics, ecology and nostalgia. 1973's Holland received mixed reviews as throughout the 1970s Brian retreated into reclusion. Brian returned to touring in 1976, but the mental illness that haunted him remained a problem until the 1990s when a doctor found a medication that controlled his symptoms.
Dennis Wilson died in 1984 from a boating accident; Carl Wilson died in 1998 from cancer. Without the Wilsons, the band continues to tour, and occasionally record, into the 21st century, essentially performing a greatest hits package from their earlier success.