Do I need Pet Sounds?
batmon
27,574 Posts
Ive been mad curious for years.
And which version do i need.
Regular vinyl
Deluxe Box
Special Edition CD
Rent from ITunes
Just listen once and take it in and then decide if ill return?
And which version do i need.
Regular vinyl
Deluxe Box
Special Edition CD
Rent from ITunes
Just listen once and take it in and then decide if ill return?
Comments
i respect the work, but yeah, this. have never owned bb recs/cds.
i was reading an issue of Sound & Vision and these dudes are stuck on some old white dude classics talmbout dark side of the moon and shit, and they got into SMiLE new box set.
But there was some intersting comments by Wilson where he said smile is meant to be heard mono.
The Stereo steez at the time wasnt fully fleshed out and was a gimmick to attract record buyers at the time.
Yeah, it was very next level for its time - not in the "studio tech" sense so much, but in the arrangement sense. No one really understands how Brian had this stuff in his head all sorted out. Mozart level music ability.
i recommend the mono LP. either a clean original or the reish (which has a stereo and a mono LP)
you dont "need" the box sets with 400 little outtakes, thats for guys like me that like being a fly on the wall at the sessions.
But I get people who think it (and Beach Boys overall) sound to much like a well-groomed barbershop choir singing songs for a teaparty full of middle-aged women.
I also love Free Design, but I can see why some people hate them too.
I cant undestand that at all - Pet Sounds always sounded super melancholic/eerie to me. One of the best records..
Yeah same here, I find the overall mood of the album extremely melancholic. Songs such as I Just Wasn't Made For These Times are a mixture of that classic beach boy harmony sound with a production sound and lyrics tinged in darkness. The album even ends on a beautiful but incredibly depressing ballad that fades out as a half finished thought. To me the whole thing is a picture of isolation and urban loneliness. It's impossible to say whether that view is affected by the knowledge of Wilson's own mental state at the time but it's never an album I would put on to cheer me up.
I would agree that the best songs on Smile are the greatest work Wilson ever did but Pet Sounds as an end to end album is hard to beat (I remember a lengthy Forever Changes Vs Pet Sounds discussion on here once and don't think I could ever bring myself to fully go either side of the fence).
Whether or not you need it depends upon how you feel about things like this and some of the other points folks have raised. I'd suggest listening to it at least.
a tad bit, but hits the spot when you are lonely.
YOU NEED THIS IN YOUR LIFE, BATMON.
It's definitely worth listening to, but hard to say how easy it would be to enjoy given all the hype. Kind of like when someone sits you down and says "listen to this", you can't objectively listen to/assess it.
I agree - some songs on Pet Sounds seem to be more about nostalgia and rememberance of youth whereas stuff like "I just wasn't made for these times" is very heavy and melancholic - definitely one of my favourites on the album. But if you REALLY can't stand the earlier, more cheerful Beach Boys stuff then I'd understand why Pet Sounds might not sound like a contender for GOAT pop album. Pet Sounds and Smile goes way beyond the teen-heartbreak-and-surfing-style of early Beach Boys (even though there's great songs on those albums too, In my room comes to mind) but there's still similarities.
Much like if you hate Dylans voice, you probably won't go goo goo over Blonde on Blonde. And it's easy to be underwhelmed when something has "BEST ALBUM EVAR"-status among Mojo-men.
Beyond the songs you already know, mad eh.
I agree. Never pressed the buttons for me. I guess it's a slice of Americana that works best for folks who grew up living that dream?
Well I guess then in the context of everything I'm Richard Simmons.
Both Pet Sounds and Walter Jackson's Greatest Hits were spot-hitters whenever I was feeling low.
Not in a suicide-enabling way, understand - more like "I've been there and feel your pain."
My dad was way into the Beach Boys when I was a kid, so this album (and Endless Summer) got lots of burn. At first, I thought it sounded really happy-dappy, what with the barbershop harmonies and whatnot. The older I got, though, the more melancholy it seemed, especially as I understood the lyrics more.
it's historical importance meant more than my needle drops but i am really enjoying it more now