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But long gone are the days of the Beach Boys: R.I.P. I grew up on the Beach Boy's music, and in my opinion there has been nothing better to come out of California since them. California - You were once the best, and now you have sunk to the bottom. For kids these days who insist on avoiding classical, I don't know if there could possibly be a better option for them. It expresses a good spirit and sentiment, friends living by the ocean, nice cars, fun, love, surfing, relaxation. As much fun as you and I have had in the past, I would rather be in a desert than this. Though I must leave you now, you'll always have a place in my heart, a memory of the golden days when life was untainted and all about innocent fun.
He loved it. I bought this CD to introduce my 5 yr. old to some different music that I could also listen to. It has some really great songs on the CD and we will be listening to it as a family for a long time to come. It will definitely be with us on our long road trip this summer.
arrived in good condition but it was slow in getting here and wasn't sure it wuld arrive before Christmas
It starts with the simple pleasures of "California Girls," moves to Brian's stunning brilliant "pocket symphonies" like "Sloop John B" as well as the 70/80's comeback nostalgia fests of "Good Timin'" and "Kokomo." While the lure of the oldies-circuit and baby-boomer cash may have been the cause of some of the post 60's albums, the band often tried to create something other than easy albums (IMHO, 15 Big Ones and Keepin' The Summer Alive were fine works), it will still be those songs that popped from those tinny AM radios that will always be at the front of the band's legacy."The Sounds of Summer" does its best to balance the two periods. As one of the big three American 60's pop/rock bands (The Byrds and Simon & Garfunkel), The Beach Boys defined a California Dream in sun soaked harmonies and the creation of a mythos that has never quite died. From the nostalgic Capitol orange and yellow Yin/Yan label artwork to the collection of pictures, this works hard to invoke that innocent freedom the music stirred up when it was brand new. This despite the admitable oddness that surrounds the band and its members (the abusive Dad who sold off the music rights, Brian's fall into mental disease, the drugs, the latter day internal squabbles). None of the quirks (or a couple noticeably absent songs) matter when you listen to the 30 chart hits on "The Sounds of Summer."Covering all the Beach Boys' multiple labels (Capitol, Reprise and Columbia), this is the best band for the buck short of splurging for the Good Vibrations: Thirty Years of the Beach Boys box set. Several of the songs are here in their mono-mixes (Brian, who was partially deaf, often mixed in mono) which, when you think about it, is how you probably heard them in the car anyway. At an hour and a quarter running time, you can pop "Sounds of Summer" in the car player and take a psychic road trip back to when gas was 2o cents a gallon, the surf was up and we all wanted to be California guys.
The sound quality is outstanding and the inclusion of some mono tracks is a plus. This is the Beach Boys at their best. With few exceptions -- most notably FOREVER -- this 30 track compilation is a nicely packaged package of their best and most remembered songs. Mono is how some of these songs were meant to be heard which is something that should carry some weight. An outstanding value for ~10 dollars.
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