{"id":2161,"date":"2012-11-05T13:00:20","date_gmt":"2012-11-05T13:00:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/arpjournal.com\/?p=2161"},"modified":"2012-11-05T09:42:28","modified_gmt":"2012-11-05T09:42:28","slug":"smile-brian-wilson%e2%80%99s-musical-mosaic","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/smile-brian-wilson%e2%80%99s-musical-mosaic\/","title":{"rendered":"SMiLE: Brian Wilson\u2019s Musical Mosaic"},"content":{"rendered":"<h3><strong>Introduction<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>One of the most well documented recording projects in the history of rock music is one that was never actually completed. <em>SMiLE<\/em> was to be the follow-up album to The Beach Boys\u2019 first million-selling single \u201cGood Vibrations\u201d (1966). Described by its producer, Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys, as a \u2018pocket symphony,\u2019 \u201cGood Vibrations\u201d had taken an unprecedented seven months to complete, (Leaf, 1993). Likewise, with <em>SMiLE<\/em>, Wilson resolved to take his time. Conducting some eighty or so sessions between August 1966 and May 1967, he adopted the same montage-like compositional technique used to good effect on \u201cGood Vibrations,\u201d but this time over the scale of an entire album. Despite being eagerly awaited by fans, contemporary musicians and the band\u2019s record label alike, and with Wilson working at his creative peak (Badman, 2004, Bell, 2004), the project was scrapped after ten months of sessions had produced approximately fifty hours of tape.<\/p>\n<p>Such extravagance must be understood in context of the times however. 1966 was not only the year the term \u2018psychedelia\u2019 entered the lexicon of popular culture (DeRogatis, 2003), but also, rock music\u2019s status as a disposable distraction for teens was being challenged by albums such as Dylan\u2019s <em>Blonde on Blonde<\/em> (1966) and The Beatles\u2019 <em>Revolver <\/em>(1966). Newcomers such as The Mothers of Invention, The Doors and The Pink Floyd were likewise taking risks, pushing the boundaries of what rock was capable of expressing, as well as, integrating musical and conceptual elements derived from outside of the pop-culture domain. Indeed, 1966 was the year that both Wilson and The Beach Boys\u2019 status had been suddenly upgraded from <em>pass\u00e9<\/em> to progressive thanks to their album <em>Pet Sounds <\/em>(1966),<em> <\/em>a work strongly influencing the English music scene at the time (Abbott, 2001). As a fledgling new member of the rock <em>avant-garde,<\/em> Wilson decided to surround himself with a \u2018hip\u2019 new group of collaborators whilst The Beach Boys were out \u2018on the road\u2019 promoting <em>Pet Sounds<\/em>. In this way, he attempted to buffer himself from those around him wanting a return to the tried-and-tested, formulaic songwriting\/production style of earlier Beach Boys surf-themed records.<\/p>\n<p>In contrast to the previously high-pressured, production line manner in which Wilson was obliged to deliver a new Beach Boys album every few months, he was determined to take a more unhurried approach with <em>SMiLE<\/em> and to focus on the <em>process <\/em>of creativity as something to be enjoyed<em>. <\/em>The overall mood of the project (at first titled <em>Dumb Angel<\/em>)<em> <\/em>was both comic and spiritual. That is, Wilson believed laughter lowered people\u2019s ego defenses and opened them up to new experiences and perspectives (Leaf, 2004). To this end, a variety of imaginative and often child-like means were employed to inspire a playful frame of mind in not only himself, but also those whose help he enlisted at the time. Some in The Beach Boys camp however, including ex-Beatles publicist Derek Taylor, Beach Boy Mike Love and father-cum-manager Murry Wilson were less than sympathetic to Wilson\u2019s increasingly unpredictable whims, wondering where all this fun and games might be leading the band. In particular, Beach Boys front man (and sometimes lyricist) Mike Love openly resented Wilson\u2019s collaboration with the actor, composer\/arranger, session musician and poet Van Dyke Parks, who provided lyrics for the project (Priore, 1997, 2005).<\/p>\n<p>Instead of working on whole songs with clear large-scale syntactical structures, the <em>SMiLE<\/em> sessions were intentionally limited to recording short interchangeable fragments, or \u2018modules.\u2019 These short audio passages &#8211; many of which lasted only seconds &#8211; were somewhat analogous to single motion picture \u2018takes,\u2019 with content ranging from musical (instrumental or vocal), to spoken word, or even sound effects and role-playing. Whereas it is commonplace for filmmakers to shoot scenes according to a storyboarded structure, Wilson approached each fragment somewhat as an \u2018end-in-itself\u2019 (where near enough was not good enough) rather than as a mere musical \u2018function.\u2019 In this way, any number of larger structures, and divergent moods could be produced at a later time through a process of combining, and re-combining, the modules in a variety of linear sequences (Doggett, 2003). Very often, the syntactical basis of certain key modules was returned to several times, reinterpreted with a quite divergent new arrangement or merely refined &#8211; though not always for the better.<\/p>\n<p>Whilst <em>SMiLE <\/em>contained songs in the traditional sense, it\u2019s difficult to say exactly where each one starts and another ends. They are not always mutually exclusive entities, but rather, each constitutes a loosely unified group of interchangeable musical themes, rhythmic patterns, sound recordings and lyrics. Listening to the session tapes, it is possible to hear how an incidental idea might emerge in the context of one song, only to turn up again months later further developed as the centerpiece of another. Wilson states (regarding \u201cGood Vibrations\u201d): \u201cwe got so into it that the more we created, the more we <em>wanted<\/em> to create\u2026there was no real set direction we were going in\u201d (Zollo, 1997: 131). The process itself was clearly of-the-moment.<\/p>\n<p>The problem with <em>SMiLE<\/em> was that Wilson never actually got around to the secondary process of combining the modules into a releasable sequence. He had the skills necessary to create an abundance of material, but stitching it all together was clearly a challenge too great at the time. In fact, not one song was completed to his satisfaction by May 1967, when the project was finally scrapped. Nonetheless, many of the <em>SMiLE<\/em> modules have since surfaced in a variety of contexts, both commercial and as bootlegs. By far the most significant however was in 2004 when Wilson and Van Dyke Parks finally sequenced many of the modules into a three movement \u2018symphonic\u2019 configuration using Wilson\u2019s backing band to re-record the various fragments.<\/p>\n<p>Additionally, the recent release of over seven hours of session highlights in <em>The Beach Boys: The Smile Sessions<\/em> (2011) has made analysis of the original 1966\/67 recordings a much more viable proposition. This material, along with recently published session logs (Badman, 2004; Slowinski &amp; Boyd, 2011) and anecdotal evidence from those involved (from a variety of print, film &amp; audio documentary sources) constitutes a most useful body of data. The historical context provided by both the <em>SMiLE<\/em> sessions and the \u201cGood Vibrations\u201d single<em> <\/em>must be of particular interest to any consideration of the art of popular music-making since both occurred at a time of great change in record production practice &#8211; a change which this modular approach helped bring about (Martin, 2001).<\/p>\n<p>This multiplicity of forms that <em>SMiLE<\/em> has taken on over the years also provides crucial insight into the relationship of the parts to the whole within artistic composition in general. And because <em>SMiLE<\/em> can be said to have failed long before it succeeded \u2013 being based upon a non-linear recording method in the days of linear tape playback &#8211; this project highlights the crucial role that digital technology plays in today\u2019s, so often, non-linear record production processes.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Background: Mid-sixties record production practice<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>According to The Beatles\u2019 producer George Martin, the \u201cultimate aim\u201d of record making in the 1950s and early sixties, was an exercise in producing an audio facsimile of a live performance that was \u201cas accurate as possible\u201d (Badman, 2000: 256). In the case of rock music, records at that time were all about capturing a \u2018vibe\u2019 or \u2018feel\u2019 &#8211; the proverbial \u2018lightning in a bottle.\u2019 Arrangements and sound balance issues had to be sorted out <em>before <\/em>committing them to tape. Editing, whilst used extensively, was strictly a linear affair involving \u201cthe splicing together of the best pieces, no matter how small\u201d (Southall, Vince &amp; Rouse, 2002: 65). Recording sessions were generally conducted in three hour blocks and according to Helen Shapiro (an English pop starlet of the early sixties) it wasn\u2019t uncommon to \u201ceasily\u201d record four songs in a single session (p. 63).<\/p>\n<p>This isn\u2019t to say that there weren\u2019t exceptions to the rule. Certain record producer <em>auteurs<\/em> existed who\u2019d somehow attained a high level of creative autonomy (and autocracy). Phil Spector &#8211; famous for his \u2018wall of sound\u2019 &#8211; was one such notable American example. He was a record maker fashioning soundscapes that seemingly defied the limits of sonic reality and normal conventions of ensemble performance. In England, Joe Meek was a similarly innovative and eccentric maverick. During the years 1964-5, Spector\u2019s influence on Wilson\u2019s record production style cannot be overstated; as Wilson later explained: \u201cWhen I got really familiar with Spector\u2019s work. Then I started to see the point of making records. You design the experience to be a record rather than just a song. It\u2019s the record that people listen to\u201d (Leaf, 1990). Wilson even went to the extent of adopting the same group of session musicians (\u2018The Wrecking Crew\u2019); studio (Gold Star in Hollywood); and engineer (Larry Levine), in his efforts to emulate Spector.<\/p>\n<p>With Spector\u2019s influence well and truly assimilated by early 1966, Wilson found his own production voice with the album <em>Pet Sounds &#8211; <\/em>a work that sustains a consistent reflective mood from beginning to end. It\u2019s as a whole that the album succeeds, and begs to be listened to in one uninterrupted sitting. When the disc ends, one gets the feeling of having come back to \u2018reality\u2019 &#8211; not unlike surfacing from a darkened cinema after watching a beautiful, deftly-paced movie. <em>Pet Sounds<\/em> diverges from previous Beach Boys\u2019 efforts in several ways: its sound field has a greater sense of depth and \u2018warmth;\u2019 the songs employ even more inventive use of harmony and chord voicings; the prominent use of percussion is a key feature (as opposed to driving drum backbeats); whilst the orchestrations, at times, echo the quirkiness of \u2018exotica\u2019 bandleader Les Baxter, or the \u2018cool\u2019 of Burt Bacharach, moreso than Spector\u2019s teen fanfares.<\/p>\n<p>Although the album was slightly less successful than previous Beach Boys efforts in the US, it found a new market for the band in the UK and Europe. Just as Spector had once set the benchmark for Wilson, <em>Pet Sounds <\/em>was now having a similar effect upon other prominent bands at the time. The Who, Eric Clapton (and his band Cream) and particularly, Paul McCartney &#8211; who along with Beatles producer George Martin cited it as a major influence on that band\u2019s seminal <em>Sgt. Pepper\u2019s Lonely Hearts Club Band<\/em> album (1967) &#8211; were all singing <em>Pet Sounds\u2019<\/em> praises (Leaf, 1990; Abbott, 2001). Martin has since gone as far as describing the album as \u201cthe criterion of excellence\u201d in the popular music world (Martin, 2001). One major benefit of <em>Pet Sounds\u2019 <\/em>resounding critical acclaim in England was that it convinced Capitol to trust Wilson\u2019s new direction. For a time at least, he now was free to take even greater creative risks, knowing the label would finance and promote his next effort regardless. Beach Boy Bruce Johnston recounts his reaction to the first commercial fruits of Wilson\u2019s new indulgent approach in October 1966: \u201cWhen we finally heard \u2018Good Vibrations\u2019 edited and mixed, we thought we were going to have the biggest hit in the world or the career was over\u201d (Abbott, 2001: 113).<\/p>\n<h3><strong>DISCUSSION<\/strong>: <strong>What is <em>SMiLE <\/em>? <\/strong><\/h3>\n<blockquote><p>It was pieces of music. That\u2019s why I\u2019ve had trouble over these years, in terms of people trying to put a SMiLE record together. It\u2019s my recollection that Brian was still experimenting with units of music. Just from the musical point of view, there never was a SMiLE. As a finished product. &#8211; David Anderle<em> <\/em>(quoted in Boyd, 2011)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Trying to describe <em>SMiLE<\/em> isn\u2019t an easy task, simply because it has no definitive<em> <\/em>form and content. For several decades, it was a most elusive thing, seemingly changing its size and shape as the years progressed. What can be said about <em>SMiLE<\/em> is that it <em>isn\u2019t <\/em>a specific album, nor is it a particular group of songs. Possibly the best term offered yet to describe the project is: \u201csonic menagerie\u201d (Wolfe, 2011). According to Mark Linett &#8211; the person chiefly responsible for collating the session tapes since 1988 &#8211; all that remained from the eighty or so sessions conducted between August 3<sup>rd<\/sup>, 1966 and May 18<sup>th<\/sup>, 1967 was \u201ca bunch of bits and pieces &#8211; a few songs that were more or less completed later\u201d (Peters, 2011). By the time the project was scrapped, Wilson states that he\u2019d recorded more than enough backing tracks to fill an entire album but The Beach Boys hadn\u2019t sung on most of these at that point (McCulley, 2003: 198). Another reason given by Wilson for the album not being completed in 1967 was the difficulty he experienced finding an acceptable sequence for all the many component parts (Leaf, 2004). Nonetheless, over the years various <em>SMiLE <\/em>modules &#8211; and the various superstructures that can be made from them &#8211; have made their way into the public arena.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson once described his compositional process as one emerging from playing with fragments:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>I go to the piano and play \u2018feels.\u2019 \u2018Feels\u2019 are specific rhythm patterns, fragments of ideas. Once they\u2019re out of my head and into the open air. I can see them and touch them firmly. Then the song starts to blossom and become a real thing. (quoted in Leaf, 1990: 8 )<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In particular, his evoking the senses of touch and sight as metaphors for shaping ideas is noteworthy. Wilson\u2019s modular record production technique &#8211; first used during the \u201cGood Vibrations\u201d sessions &#8211; can, arguably, be interpreted as a logical extension of Wilson\u2019s earlier\u00a0 \u2018feels\u2019 approach. In fact, <em>SMiLE\u2019s<\/em> modules can be defined as the primary artefacts of a compositional process adopted by Wilson during this project \u2013 not unlike <em>musique concr\u00e8te<\/em> \u2013 whereby musical idea fragments could be transformed (long before any final song form has been envisaged) into, not only, ephemeral sound waves to be heard, but also, pieces of tape to be touched, seen, held, scrutinized, torn apart and recombined like pieces of clay shaped by an artist\u2019s hand. Record producer\/composer Brian Eno has gone as far as stating that once music is recorded onto tape it becomes a \u201cplastic art\u201d (Tamm, 1995: 41), and describes any such \u2018empirical\u2019 compositional process so dependent upon recording technology as constituting a new artform altogether.<\/p>\n<p>The, at times, tenuous relationship between the <em>SMiLE<\/em> songs &#8211; music \u2018written\u2019 by Wilson with lyrics by Van Dyke Parks &#8211; and their manifestations as recordings (whether as modules, complete songs or parts of larger \u2018movements\u2019) finds a parallel in the Russian Formalist distinction between a unifying, overriding abstract pattern (<em>fabula<\/em>) and the specific linear sequencing of the various substructures inspired by it<em> <\/em>(<em>syuzhet<\/em>) (Holmberg, 1996). <em>SMiLE\u2019s <\/em>basic, unifying theme<em> <\/em>was, arguably, the national myth of the \u201crelentless European expansion across America, westward from Plymouth Rock to Hawaii\u201d (Badman, 2004:151). This explains, not only, the abundance of \u2018tack\u2019 pianos featured in the recordings (mimicking the saloon pianos of Hollywood Westerns) and ukuleles, but also, more imaginative references to Americana such as a musical evocation of the \u2018iron horse\u2019 in \u201cCabin-Essence.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Much of the material recorded for <em>SMiLE <\/em>has little, if anything, to do with this Americana theme however. And even if it did &#8211; a theme is not quite a story. There are no central characters. No Black Jack Daveys or House Carpenters populate the <em>SMiLE<\/em> pantheon. Nor do any specific pilgrims progress onwards westward from Plymouth Rock with whom the listener can relate. Names arise, but only in passing. It\u2019s the potential experience rather than actual resulting narratives that hold <em>SMiLE<\/em> together. For example, the many modules specifically inspired by the \u2018song\u2019 \u201cHeroes and Villains\u201d (produced between November 1966 and March 1967) admirably demonstrate the <em>divergent<\/em> quality claimed by both Guilford (1975) and Ziv (1983) as a key component of creative action. However, clear patterns of convergence necessary to inform their sequencing was sorely lacking. Without such limitations as the adoption of clear, even arbitrary, criteria with which to evaluate the suitability of these various modules for inclusion into subsequent \u201cHeroes and Villains\u201d structures, attempts to compile them must have seemed like an insurmountable task.<\/p>\n<p>Even a work as inscrutable as Joyce\u2019s <em>Ulysses <\/em>(1922)<em> <\/em>&#8211; likewise famous for its many playfully divergent perspectives and styles<em> &#8211; <\/em>adopted the overall story<em> <\/em>of Homer\u2019s <em>Odyssey, <\/em>as well as, featuring key episodes based upon that epic\u2019s structure (though, compressed into the 24 hour sequence of \u2018Bloomsday\u2019 &#8211; June 16<sup>th<\/sup>, 1904). The mention of historically accurate events that took place in actual locations within the limited arena of Dublin that day, also further support an otherwise fragmented text, making it more manageable for both writer and reader alike. The early Cubist paintings of Braque and Picasso, similarly, limit their gaze to the restricted field of a particular \u2018still life\u2019 scene. The <em>SMiLE<\/em> modules that are most successful are the ones that simply evoke a singular setting. The more they restrict their figurative gaze to a particular limited zone the more detailed and sensuous they become.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>What does <em>SMiLE <\/em>sound like? <\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>If SMiLE is best considered a sonic menagerie, then describing how \u2018it\u2019 sounds is a pointless exercise. Rather, it\u2019s preferable to describe the many musical inhabitants of this complex, nebulous macrocosm. Sometimes the music might sound not unlike a Renaissance-era vocal motet by Carlo Gesualdo, filled with manneristic, unpredictable chromatic turns (though treated with a typically glissandi-laden Beach Boys approach). Other modules sound like young men pretending to be animals or performing an \u2018underwater\u2019 chant populated by word-beasts such as \u201cswim swim fishy\u201d \u201cunderwater current\u201d \u201cjellyfish\u201d \u201cshark\u201d \u201cdolphin\u201d \u201cgoldfish\u201d and \u201ceel\u201d. Some fragments are reminiscent of a \u2018panoramic\u2019 wild-west movie score or The Beach Boys faking a group orgasm. A musical \u2018sound painting\u2019 of a steam locomotive gives way elsewhere a spoken word skit portraying a man trapped inside a microphone. Some modules feature the guttural chanting of cartoon-esque cavemen or a group of french horns \u2018talking\u2019 and \u2018laughing\u2019 with each other.<\/p>\n<p>What <em>is<\/em> consistent about <em>SMiLE <\/em>is that it usually sounds \u2018playful\u2019 or \u2018colourful\u2019 &#8211; not unlike what you might expect to hear in an animated <em>Sesame Street<\/em> segment. The music often simultaneously employs instrumental and vocal elements that are widely varied with respect to timbre and pitch range, combining them in a somewhat contrary \u2018interlocking\u2019 fashion. That is, they fit but also feel autonomous. A plethora of sound densities result from these combinations. The vocal arrangements create a kind of \u2018tapestry\u2019 of sound, using a wide range of pitch centres, antiphonal effects, rhythmic variations, juxtapositions of legato and staccato figures, rounders-like echoes, and vocal effects not usually associated with mid-sixties rock records. Harpsichords and \u2018tack\u2019 pianos abound (often played in unison); mallets are also used extensively, as is quirky\/echoey percussion. <em>SMiLE <\/em>exemplifies a somewhat na\u00efve and playful ongoing search for novel ways of recombining elements. It could just as well be titled \u2018Things to do for composers on a rainy day.\u2019<\/p>\n<p>When one compares <em>SMiLE &#8211; <\/em>and indeed <em>Pet Sounds &#8211; <\/em>to earlier Beach Boy records, their unique sense of rhythm becomes evident. Whereas, the Beach Boys surf and hotrod songs displayed a constant, rollicking sense of metre\/pulse well suited to dancing, <em>SMiLE<\/em> never lets the listener settle into a groove for too long. Even the <em>Smiley Smile <\/em>version of \u201cHeroes and Villains\u201d (released as a single in mid-1967) only runs for 40 seconds before the strident, and typically 1960s-sounding, instrumental backing disappears, leaving only a barbershop quartet-like <em>ritardando <\/em>cadence and then, silence, which is followed by a genteel 18<sup>th<\/sup> century dance feel (the ever-present \u201cBicycle Rider\u201d theme), so on and so forth.<\/p>\n<p><em>SMiLE <\/em>sounds in many ways \u2018visual.\u2019 That is, many of the modules constitute \u2018word painting\u2019 or allude to visual concepts or physical entities. For example, the four elements are evoked in the tracks \u201cWind Chimes,\u201d \u201cFire,\u201d the earthen \u201cVega-Tables\u201d and \u201cCool Cool Water\u201d (<em>aka <\/em>\u201cI Love To Say Da Da\u201d &amp; \u201cIn Blue Hawaii\u201d). By lyricist Van Dyke Parks\u2019 own admission, the project was approached in \u201ccartoon terms. To me it was a musical cartoon\u201d (Priore, 2005: 102). <em>SMiLE<\/em>\u2019s individual modules are indeed analogous to cartoon panels, though each module is like a panel without a fixed narrative to attach itself to. Like Roy Lichtenstein\u2019s Pop Art painting <em>Drowning Girl <\/em>(1963), each module seems to have been granted a sense of autonomy from the start. They are detached both in the sense that they\u2019re not linked, and also with their zen-like lack of emotional charge. They are <em>meditations<\/em> upon a scene, rather than commentaries. Whether or not the modules are embedded within a larger whole is a secondary concern &#8211; they are, as David Anderle has pointed out, \u201cof the moment\u201d (Leaf, 2004). And their sense of singularity is evident in the disjointed and abrupt fashion with which they\u2019re often spliced together.<\/p>\n<p>The boldness of \u201cGood Vibrations\u2019,\u201d and <em>SMiLE\u2019s, <\/em>many jumpcut edits is, indeed, their most striking characteristic. Due to the relative lack of multitracking options in sixties-era record making practice, modern day listeners might be surprised to learn that tape editing was at that time a fine art and extensively used as a means of compiling the best takes from recording sessions into a seamless, sequential whole. Pink Floyd manager Peter Jenner (cited in Cavanagh, 2003: 48) recalls that EMI Records engineers in 1967 were so expert at the art of editing it was impossible to discern a tape splice even in the most delicate of instrumental passages. <em>SMiLE\u2019s <\/em>highly noticeable edits therefore, must be acknowledged as compositional statements in themselves, giving the music a sonic signature every bit as noticeable as the performances themselves. There was no way this music could be \u2018real.\u2019 Wilson was therefore echoing the techniques of <em>musique concr\u00e8te<\/em> and seemed to be breaking the audio \u2018fourth wall\u2019 &#8211; if there can said to be such a thing.<\/p>\n<p>This isn\u2019t to say that the modules don\u2019t share any sense of unifying structure. Many musical themes featured in <em>SMiLE<\/em> are given some sort of development, re-arrangement or recontextualisation &#8211; bringing certain, otherwise divergent, modules a subtle sense of unity. The 2004 \u2018symphonic\u2019 remake of <em>SMiLE, <\/em>in particular, recognises their homogeneity and structures the modules accordingly. One gets the impression with <em>SMiLE <\/em>of a seemingly inexhaustible source of creativity and inspiration that is nonetheless, defiantly anti-intellectual and of-the-moment. Wilson\u2019s child-like ability to find wonder in the ordinary fills this musical cornucopia unselfconsciously to the brim. No idea seems too silly, or incidental, to be tried out, and no one version of any idea seems to be accepted as definitive &#8211; everything is \u2018fair game.\u2019<\/p>\n<p>Wilson recently chose the following words to describe the project: \u201cChildhood. Freedom. A rejection of adult rules and adult conformity. Our message was,\u00a0 \u2018Adults keep out. This is about the spirit of youth\u2019&#8221; (Myers, 2011). It was this rejection of the usual \u2018rules of the game\u2019 that ultimately caused <em>SMiLE <\/em>to remain in a state of limbo for so long. The standard verse\/chorus\/middle-eight <em>schtick<\/em> of mid-sixties pop song forms clearly wouldn\u2019t suffice here, but that isn\u2019t to say <em>SMiLE <\/em>required structures of great sophistication. Rather, a means of organisation that honoured the regressive nature of the modules and their reluctance to form unequivocally meaningful<em> <\/em>statements was what was needed. This lack of clear, logical meaning was a key problem for Mike Love, as epitomised by his reaction to Van Dyke Parks\u2019 lyrics, particularly for \u201cCabin-Essence\u201d and \u201cSurf\u2019s Up.\u201d He simply couldn\u2019t fathom what all this was supposed to \u2018mean\u2019 and fretted that Beach Boy fans would feel the same (Badman, 2004: 149 &amp; 163; Priore, 2005). The fact is <em>SMiLE\u2019s <\/em>many musical and lyrical elements don\u2019t really <em>mean<\/em> anything. Its modules, when considered as discreet units, represent a return to the pre-grammatical, non-linear and analogical (as opposed to logical) thinking of early childhood (Meares, 2005) &#8211; they are artefacts of <em>play<\/em>.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Technology and frame of mind<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Notwithstanding the practice of linear editing &#8211; commonplace ever since magnetic tape replaced direct-to-disc recording (Southall, Vince &amp; Rouse, 2002) &#8211; multitrack recording (though long extant by the late sixties) facilitated a means of joining together many disparate musical utterances \u2018as if\u2019 they were one (albeit, now in a concurrent manner). Such developments in technology alone however, didn\u2019t inspire practitioners to fully exploit the potential of the medium. Instead, a thoroughly <em>playful <\/em>frame of mind also informed such fanciful productions as \u201cGood Vibrations,\u201d <em>SMiLE<\/em> and The Beatles\u2019 <em>Sgt. Pepper\u2019s Lonely Hearts Club Band<\/em>. And in doing so, these key works ushered in new standards of popular record making practice (Miles, 1998; Leaf, 2004) whereby ever-increasingly it was required of listeners to suspend their disbelief of the productions\u2019 obvious acoustic implausibility. If this were not the case, then the Beatles should have attempted a tape-loop filled \u201cTomorrow Never Knows\u201d (1966) instead of the energetic rave-up \u2018performance\u2019 of \u201cI Want To Hold Your Hand\u201d in late 1963 when four-track recording was first made available to them.<\/p>\n<p>Not surprisingly perhaps, in today\u2019s world where analogue tape recording is largely all but a memory, turning original compositions into record productions &#8211; even for skilled musicians &#8211; has less in common with traditional real-time performance than, for example, the process of film making (with all of its story-boarding, multiple takes, various camera angles and editing). This synchronisation of quite separate audio events to create the impression of concurrency, or cutting and pasting together musical takes sequentially, can now be achieved with programs as rudimentary as <em>GarageBand<\/em> or similar. Nor, is it uncommon for even novices to combine their own audio recordings with virtual instruments in software, \u2018played\u2019 by programmable sequence recordings: a process that can be either implemented in real-time (using the computer keyboard to input notes), or stepwise fashion. When mixed together, these interdependent parts should, at best, integrate sufficiently to create the illusion of a unified musical event.<\/p>\n<p>However, if the proliferation in recent years of low-cost, broadcast quality Digital Audio Workstations (DAWs) is to facilitate anything more than greater convenience for practitioners, a corresponding challenging of certain tacit assumptions must be forthcoming. The manipulation of sound so well facilitated by DAW technology (which brings multitrack recording, non-linear editing, looping and automated mixing to the masses), potentialises a process of <em>combinatorial play<\/em> (Hadamard, 1945). Such an approach however, is equally dependent upon a frame of mind where \u201cimplications beyond the present moment\u201d are temporarily banished from awareness (Apter, 1991: 14). In this way, developing any given musical arrangement using a program such as Logic Pro (where the central editing window is its linear time-line based \u201cArrangement\u201d window) might produce very different results to that made using a similar software application which additionally provides a virtual workspace encouraging a decidedly more non-linear approach to accessing\/triggering audio files (such as Ableton Live\u2019s \u201cSession View\u201d window wherein multiple loops and samples can first be playfully combined in real-time before the serious task of committing them to any concrete linear organization rears its head).<\/p>\n<h3><strong>The parts and the whole: Non-linearity, regression and emergence <\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>The 2011 <em>SMiLE Sessions<\/em> box set demonstrates that since the release of Wilson\u2019s \u2018symphonic\u2019 remake in 2004 there are now, arguably, two <em>SMiLEs<\/em> &#8211; the linear and the non-linear versions. These could also be described, respectively, as the quasi-narrative and the <em>ludic <\/em>versions. The original modules (as featured on the 2011 CDs 2 to 5) are like the many rooms within <em>Steppenwolf\u2019s <\/em>\u201cTheatre of the Mind\u201d &#8211; for madmen only (Hesse &amp; Creighton, 1929). Willingness is required on the listener\u2019s part to leave preconceptions of linear flow behind and take each module as a discreet experience, just as one might take the separate rooms of a funhouse. They possess no logical connection. In their unorganised state, one module doesn\u2019t modify or contextualize the other, in order to form a statement or argument. They <em>resonate<\/em> rather than respond to each other &#8211; like pictures hanging side-by-side on the same wall.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>The Metaphor of Play<\/em> psychiatrist Russell Meares (2005) contrasts the \u2018inner\u2019 non-linear language of playful thought with the linear language of mundane public discourse. He writes: \u201cThe language of the playing child has a peculiar form. It shows abbreviations, it jumps, and it is not grammatical. It moves by analogy, resemblance, and other associations\u201d (p. 38). Similarly, Giv\u00f3n uses the term \u201cpre-grammatical\u201d to describe a form of communication common to both \u2018pidgin\u2019 speech and that of young children at an early stage of language acquisition (cited in Robert &amp; Chapouthier, 2006: 165). Here, words are starkly juxtaposed rather than integrated into the complex syntactical relationships of true language.<\/p>\n<p>Koestler explains that pre-grammatical communication is inherently visual, like the unfolding panels in a cartoon strip, and states that the reason that the highest compliment possible is to call a thinker \u2018visionary\u2019 stems from the fact that \u201ctrue creativity often starts where language ends\u201d (1964: 177):<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u2026the poet who reverts to the pictorial mode of thought is regressing to an older and lower level of the mental hierarchy &#8211; as we do every night when we dream, as mental patients do when they regress to infantile fantasies. But the poet, unlike the dreamer in his sleep, alternates between two different levels of the mental hierarchy\u2026The poet thinks both in images and verbal concepts, at the same time and in quick alternation\u2026The dreamer floats among the phantom shapes of the hoary deep; the poet is a skin-diver with a breathing tube.<em> <\/em>(p.168)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Just as the Koestler\u2019s poet is the master of two evolutionary realms, Meares (2005) suggests that in normal development, children, after about the age of four or so, manage these two modes so that \u201cembedded in the linear language of social speech are the elements of&#8230;non-linear language, which relates to inner life\u201d (p. 39). He strongly qualifies that this developmental process occurs within the context of a nurturing environment. However, in cases where individuals experience particularly adverse circumstances in their early lives, the various parts of their personality may not be sufficiently integrated into a unified whole. This might result in individuals displaying varying degrees of \u2018discontinuity\u2019 of consciousness, ranging from cases that are not behaviorally evident to, in extreme situations, multiple personality disorder. In such instances, life is experienced devoid of a sense of \u2018innerness,\u2019 with their consciousness being at the mercy of outer stimuli. Meares suggests that \u201cplay, or a playlike activity of mind, may be a crucial element in linking together\u2026the distinct and separable facts of ordinary existence\u201d necessary to forming a coherent sense of \u2018self\u2019 (p. 51).<\/p>\n<p>This coherency can be described as an <em>emergent<\/em> property, residing in none of the component parts, but only \u201cin the pattern that emerges from their interaction\u201d (Capra, 2002: 36). In simple terms, the whole can be said to be qualitatively different to \u2018the sum of the parts.\u2019 In this way, an understanding of the parts themselves cannot sufficiently explain complexity. In order for any analysis of non-linear systems to be successful, an additional consideration of the dynamic <em>processes<\/em> involved must also be forthcoming. Natural systems ranging from the simple, such as vortexes (thermodynamics), up to complex ones like the human body (biological), as well as, social systems, and cultural phenomena such as language, and artistic works-in-progress can all be described as behaving in a non-linear fashion. Even consciousness itself is an ongoing <em>process, <\/em>an emergent phenomenon whereby neural mechanisms alone (the parts) cannot explain the whole &#8211; despite being experienced as a \u2018unity\u2019 (Capra, 2002; Meares, 2005; Robert &amp; Chapouthier, 2006; Chapouthier, 2009).<\/p>\n<p>The 2004 \u2018symphonic\u2019 sequencing of <em>SMiLE<\/em> displays a complexity that none of the parts themselves could hint at. Its overall affect is an emergent property, displaying a surprising sense of flow, given the varied, and disjointed nature of the modules. Capra states: \u201cEmergence results in the creation of novelty, and this novelty is often qualitatively different from the phenomena out of which it emerged\u201d (2002: 36). Equipped with <em>ProTools<\/em> digital editing facilities, and urged on by supportive and nurturing (new) family, friends and co-artists (Leaf, 2004), Wilson finally displayed the artistic agility of Koestler\u2019s proverbial, masterly skin-diver. There is a necessary trade off, however. Something grand is gained, but the <em>SMiLE-as-game<\/em> phenomenon has perhaps, since been overshadowed somewhat by this aesthetically successful integration of the modules. What for so long had been a lively subject of speculation, as well as a source of great interactivity, was now in danger of being mistaken for an audio fossil. Similarly, Meares suggests: \u201cWords for affect are dead metaphors\u201d (2005: 182). It could be argued then that the \u2018symphonic\u2019 <em>SMiLE <\/em>constitutes dead play &#8211; concretised process. The 2011 <em>SMiLE Sessions<\/em> box set has clearly addressed this situation by including both the linear sequence and the separate modules.<\/p>\n<p>Not all cultural artefacts necessarily display this degree of fit, or compositional integration &#8211; this artistic <em>integrity.<\/em> As creativity scholar Teresa Amabile explains (1983), whenever practitioners approach their work, they may chose to follow, on one hand, a tried-and-tested path to a clearly identified goal, or at the other extreme, they might not only design their own path, but even define the goal itself. The degree with which any creative process leans towards the former or latter scenarios can be described as representing (predominantly) <em>algorithmic <\/em>or<em> heuristic<\/em> approaches respectively. It\u2019s this latter heuristic (a \u2018whatever works\u2019) method that best allows creative products to slowly emerge into complexity, rather than hurriedly rushing into banality and predictability.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Feedback<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>A key element of emergence is feedback. That is, creative individuals need to occasionally, figuratively \u2018stand back\u2019 and observe what\u2019s developing before them. Only after considering what is gradually coming together can the artist know how to proceed in a way that honours the integrity of the piece. Csikszentmihalyi (1990) expands:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Whereas a conventional artist starts painting a canvas knowing what she [sic] wants to paint, and holds to her original intention until the work is finished, an original artist with equal technical training commences with a deeply felt but undefined goal in mind, keeps modifying the picture in response to the unexpected colors and shapes emerging on the canvas, and ends up with a finished work that probably will not resemble anything she started out with. If the artist is responsive to her inner feelings, knows what she likes and does not like, and pays attention to what is happening on the canvas, a good painting is bound to emerge. On the other hand, if she holds on to a preconceived notion of what the painting should look like, without responding to the possibilities suggested by the forms developing before her, the painting is likely to be trite.<em> <\/em>(p. 208)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The occasional, or (optimally) moment-to-moment, awareness necessary to allow a work to emerge somewhat on its own terms &#8211; instead of merely following a formula &#8211; achieves its aim by sending a flow of valuable feedback to the artist. In this way, the artist responds, observes again, responds once more and so on. Such feedback loops are a key characteristic of non-linear systems in general. Whereas in the case of simple thermodynamic systems, for example, the system is open with regard to the flow of energy, it is information that feeds back into the artist\u2019s consciousness in the above example (Capra, 2002).<\/p>\n<p>The Beatles producer George Martin uses the analogy of a painter looking at their canvas to explain the Beatles\u2019 creative process on their Sgt. Pepper album (cited in Badman, 2000):<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>[it] grew of its own accord. I don\u2019t think they really knew what they were doing on it, and I didn\u2019t have a great deal of an idea either\u2026They would come in and say, \u2018We\u2019ve got an idea for a bit here, but we\u2019re not quite sure how it\u2019s going to develop. So, let\u2019s put it down and we\u2019ll go away and think about it\u2026In many incidences this just grew\u2026It was rather like painting an enormous canvas in a way, and putting a bit of extra colour on it every day and standing back and looking at it, saying, \u2018Yes, I think we\u2019ll do a bit more here.\u2019<em> <\/em>(p. 258)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The emergent work can be described as a \u2018dissipative structure\u2019 (Prigogine &amp; Stengers, 1984). That is, it is simultaneously changing-yet-stable. At first, the system can be said to be structurally constant but open with regard to the flow of feedback. However, if the flow continues to increase past a certain critical point, the system in its present state can\u2019t accommodate the stress, and one of two things must happen: it either (a) breaks down into chaos; or (b) spontaneously changes into a complex new ordered state, qualitatively different to its predecessor. Importantly, it\u2019s impossible to predict in advance what form such transformations might take (Capra, 1997).<\/p>\n<p>Whilst a psychological application of Prigogine\u2019s dissipative structures model, as described by B\u00fctz (1997), justifies stress and anxiety as necessary to the creative process, there is only so much an individual might choose to tolerate before giving up. Despite demonstrating the ability to complete many of the actual <em>SMiLE<\/em> modules (in particular the backing tracks, for which he wasn\u2019t dependent upon the Beach Boys\u2019 help), Wilson\u2019s ability to withstand the emotional and psychic stress necessary to facilitate the metamorphosis of the modules into finished songs, and a pop album of appropriate length, wasn\u2019t forthcoming in 1967.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, Wilson wasn\u2019t an island, but was accountable to the larger network of both Capitol Records and The Beach Boys as the commercial vehicle for his artistry. By January of 1967, the label was anxious to further exploit the recent success of the single \u201cGood Vibrations\u201d before it faded from the public\u2019s memory, even going to the extent of printing up four hundred thousand record covers, complete with full-colour photographic booklet inserts (a lavish package for the time), and taking out trade advertisements heralding the imminent arrival of the album (Priore, 2011). Wilson was therefore increasingly under pressure to finish the project quickly and to do so in a manner that didn\u2019t adversely effect The Beach Boys\u2019 innocuous public personae by being <em>too<\/em> \u2018far-out.\u2019<\/p>\n<p>Additionally, the process of trialing tape edits, with razors, was a much more time consuming, and potentially destructive practice at the time than today\u2019s high-speed, non-linear computer editing process &#8211; as was the need to cut trial acetate discs to play outside the studio. Wilson was also concurrently juggling the multiple roles of composer, arranger, performer, musical director, producer and mixdown co-engineer. It\u2019s not surprising he simply scrapped the project in May 1967, unable to bridge the gap between his artistic vision and the confines of 1960s pop formulae. Perhaps it wasn\u2019t so much Wilson who couldn\u2019t withstand the mental and emotional chaos of the creative journey any longer but those around him. He later claimed he felt <em>SMiLE<\/em> was too self-indulgent and feared he was letting The Beach Boys down: \u201cIt was too fancy for the public. I was getting too fancy and arty and doing things that were just not Beach Boys, at all. They were made for me\u201d (Badman, 2004: 163).Thirty-seven years later, in 2003, within the context of a new supportive environment, Wilson was finally able to stand back and look at <em>SMiLE<\/em> for what it was, or might be, rather than what some less visionary individuals wanted to reduce it to.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Mosaic structure<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Whereas Capra (2002) describes the manner in which emergent forms display characteristics not inherent within their parts, Chapouthier (2009), conversely, highlights the fact that whilst being integrated into a larger whole, the component parts of many complex systems, living or otherwise, retain a surprisingly large degree of autonomy. This uneasy sense of belonging together and yet remaining apart can be described as a <em>mosaic <\/em>quality. For example, he describes a cell as a mosaic of organites, an organ as a mosaic of cells, an organism a mosaic of organs, and so on. When a higher level of complexity has emerged, the parts may be said to have \u2018integrated.\u2019 In cases however where no new level of interaction has emerged, the parts can be described as merely being \u2018juxtaposed.\u2019 Whilst such a distinction might be obvious within simple systems, situations where the component parts are more strongly integrated requires a much greater discerning facility to detect &#8211; as for example, in complex systems such as consciousness and memory (Robert &amp; Chapouthier, 2006).<\/p>\n<p>Likewise, whilst it\u2019s easy to ascertain this mosaic quality in <em>SMiLE<\/em> due to the widely varied sonic textures of each module, this is in fact a characteristic of all works of art on their journey from inspiration to completion. As in the case of more complex systems described above, it can be difficult for analysts to perceive the joins, which are smoothed over as the work is refined, giving the impression of inspired genius, rather than repeated interaction with the materials or concepts. Indeed, if the component parts have been ordered well enough, they\u2019ll display a sense of \u2018belonging,\u2019 as if somehow predetermined. Certain combinations seem to possess a kind of fit that is simultaneously aesthetically pleasing, appropriate and functional. The ongoing <em>activity<\/em> of combinatorial play, rather than abstract logic, provides the opportunity for vital clues to emerge during the process that hint at possible fruitful paths onward through the chaos. As <em>SMiLE<\/em> lyricist Van Dyke Parks states: \u201cBrian\u2019s music had an \u2026 audio novelty to it. The invention was Edisonian, empirical &#8211; it had to be toughed out by this process of trial and error\u201d (Priore, 2005: 80).<\/p>\n<p>Whereas the affect of <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em> (2004) is that of a well integrated symphonic whole, it was nonetheless, famously, an afterthought. Thirty-seven years of cognitive incubation preceded the process, a period of time that allowed recording technology to catch up with Wilson\u2019s artistic vision. Whilst the primary process of creating the modules themselves &#8211; as separate texts &#8211; was one of combinatorial play, the task of fashioning these resultant texts into larger structures was a similar, but secondary, compositional process of combinations and associations, albeit on a larger scale. Once again, the process was a heuristic one rather than algorithmic. When a high degree of fit is evident however, analysts can mistake it as the product of conscious adherence to deterministic principals.<\/p>\n<p>A key example of such a successful join, one that gives the impression of real premeditated compositional intention, is the 2<sup>nd<\/sup> movement segue from the \u201cChild is Father to the Man\u201d (2004) into the \u201cSurf\u2019s Up\u201d (2004) section. This is achieved by the inclusion of a thirty-six second long module best described as containing a \u2018wandering\/searching\u2019 piano figure. In this context, the fragment functions as a bridge between the two sections. In the <em>SMiLE Sessions <\/em>(2011) CD 1 sequencing however, this module is featured earlier on in the piece (see CD 1: Track 11) resulting in a less convincing sense of integration. In this way, even though the modules featured are the same, simply re-arranging their order can make an easily discernable, qualitative difference to the whole. This asymmetrical phenomenon has its counterpoint in language. Robert &amp; Chapouthier (2006) use the term \u2018anchoring\u2019 to explain how \u201cthe development of the meaning of an utterance emerges<em> <\/em>from a series of connections between the different component parts\u201d (p. 162).\u00a0 The initial polysemy of any given term is reduced by its linear context; and so too, it can be argued that the musical<em> <\/em>function of any given motif can, likewise, be transformed by its placing. Robert &amp; Chapouthier go on to say that \u201clanguage is nothing more than relationships\u201d (p. 162).<\/p>\n<p>The term \u201ccompositional morphology\u201d can be used to denote how a new emergent whole displays characteristics not reducible to the \u2018sum of its parts\u2019 -whilst the parts themselves have their own individual characteristics (p.161). Though this concept has above been described in terms of linear organisation, it can also occur within a musical context in a <em>concurrent <\/em>fashion. Brian Wilson discusses how by studying the work of Phil Spector he learnt to produce new emergent sounds:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>achieving one sound out of two, mixing two things to become one. Making a guitar and a piano sound like a third thing. Rather than, \u2018Hey! I hear that as a guitar and piano.\u2019 They say, \u2018Hey! Dig that sound! (Brian Wilson interview 2, 1997).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h3><strong>Conclusion<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Whilst <em>SMiLE\u2019s <\/em>\u2018modular\u2019 methodology was quite an innovation for pop music practice in 1966 (Martin, 2001), it\u2019s nonetheless simply an externalisation of what many artists and thinkers do during the process of cognitive \u2018combinatorial play.\u2019 Albert Einstein once described his creative process using exactly this phrase (Hadamard, 1945). That is, the recombining of discreet modules into unique and original larger patterns is analogous to the manner in which creative individuals move around and reshuffle known \u2018facts\u2019 and \u2018givens,\u2019 or familiar images to produce fresh new ideas and configurations. Lieberman (1977) uses the analogy of a kaleidoscope to clarify how combinatorial play operates, so that a limited number of components are continually twisted, turned and reflected to produce a myriad of new patterns. This process depends on how comfortable the individual is with \u2018playing with ideas\u2019 rather than just collecting them, and requires a level of cognitive spontaneity (one of the components of Lieberman\u2019s playfulness [PF]). Getzels and Jackson (1962) specify that, indeed, facts need not be considered immutable, explaining: \u201ctoday\u2019s fact was yesterday\u2019s fancy and today\u2019s fancy may very well turn out to be tomorrow\u2019s fact\u201d (p.127). Koestler likewise states how creativity and the act of playful combinations relate to each other:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The creative act is not an act of creation in the sense of the Old Testament. It does not create something out of nothing; it uncovers, selects, re-shuffles, combines, synthesizes already existing facts, ideas, faculties, skills. The more familiar the parts the more striking the new whole. (1964: 120)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In 1973 Beach Boy Carl Wilson discussed the combinatorial quality of <em>SMiLE<\/em>\u2018s modular process: \u201cWe did things in sections. There might just be a few bars of music, or a verse, or a particular groove, or vamp\u2026 They would all fit. You could put them one in front of the other, or arrange it in any way you wanted. It was sort of like making films I think\u201d (quoted in Boyd, 2011). Indeed, like cinema, post-\u201cGood Vibrations\u201d recording methods constitute an illusory fabrication. Whereas, multitrack recording allows the process to occur concurrently, tape editing techniques (as used during the original <em>SMiLE<\/em> sessions) rearrange recorded components in linear succession. Beatles producer George Martin states that, even in the 1970s, producers, engineers and musicians so often came together to \u201ccreate something which in terms of normal acoustics, is not possible, something which is larger than life\u201d (Martin &amp; Hornsby, 1994:<em> <\/em>243). Such productions are assemblages of recorded artefacts, the joining together of many disparate musical utterances.<\/p>\n<p>Thanks to the recent proliferation of Digital Audio Workstations, the general public today can also create music in non-linear fashion. After cutting their teeth on affordable programs such as Apple\u2019s <em>GarageBand,<\/em> novices can upgrade to more sophisticated platforms like <em>Logic Pro<\/em> &#8211; a program that provides its own sample (loop) library along with an all important (that is, <em>convergent<\/em>) search function for recalling the most appropriate ones according to various criteria (including: tempo, genre, texture, mood, instrument type, or any other quality the user wishes to define). And if discarding actual recording studio spaces in favour of the \u2018virtual studio\u2019 wasn\u2019t liberating enough, hand-held iOS platforms have now made DAW operation possible in relaxed or spontaneous situations, environments, timeframes, and in manners, truly conducive to playful music-making. Therefore, a discussion of <em>SMiLE\u2019s <\/em>playful non-linear approach; the challenges such an approach engenders; and interrelated theoretical constructs from a variety of disciplines, provides valuable insight for the makers of popular music recordings today &#8211; whether professional or amateur &#8211; who, as individuals, are increasingly, and often single-handedly, engaging the many divergent component crafts (such as songwriting, performing\/programming, arranging, recording, editing and mixing) involved in this \u201cmultifaceted creative process\u201d (Zak, 2007, 2010: 321).<\/p>\n<h3><strong>About The Author<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Marshall Heiser<\/p>\n<p>Qld Conservatorium of Music, Griffith University<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"mailto:marshall.heiser@griffithuni.edu.au\">marshall.heiser@griffithuni.edu.au<\/a><\/p>\n<h3><strong>Appendix: The Many Manifestations of <em>SMiLE<\/em><\/strong><\/h3>\n<p><em>SMiLE\u2019s<\/em> many manifestations are listed, and discussed, below in chronological order (N.B.: tracks are only dated when referring to specific commercial releases):<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li><strong>1966:<\/strong> A solo performance by Brian Wilson of the song \u201cSurf\u2019s Up\u201d (voice and piano) was filmed by producer David Oppenheim on Saturday December 17<sup>th<\/sup>, 1966 and broadcast the following April as part of the <em>Inside pop: The rock revolution<\/em> (1967) television special. This program, hosted by Leonard Bernstein, was originally to include footage recorded two days earlier at a Beach Boys vocal session for the track \u201cWonderful.\u201d The group session went badly however, and was shelved (Badman, 2004). With the TV cameras rolling, Mike Love \u201cpicked a fight\u201d with Wilson regarding the \u201cvalidity\u201d of performing the ironically titled \u201cSurf\u2019s Up\u201d for the show (Priore, 2005: 99).<\/li>\n<li><strong>1967:<\/strong> Shortly after <em>SMiLE<\/em> was scrapped, The Beach Boys hastily recorded the album <em>Smiley Smile<\/em> (1967) in two weeks mostly at Brian Wilson\u2019s home. This album features several remade <em>SMiLE <\/em>songs with stripped back arrangements (mostly organ and vocal) and a conspicuous lack of echo\/reverb (usually a key sonic signature of Beach Boy records). Only four of the <em>SMiLE <\/em>backing track modules were used on this album &#8211; two for the single \u201cHeroes and Villains\u201d (1967) and two for \u201cVegetables\u201d (1967) (Boyd, 2011).<\/li>\n<li><strong>1967:<\/strong> A <em>SMiLE <\/em>vocal module formerly known as \u201cDo A Lot\u201d or \u201cSleep A Lot\u201d<em> <\/em>is remade acapella-style and featured on The Beach Boys album <em>Wild Honey <\/em>(1967) as \u201cMama Says\u201d (1967). This piece was considered at various times to be part of both \u201cHeroes and Villains\u201d or \u201cVega-Tables\u201d (but wasn\u2019t featured in either\u2019s <em>Smiley Smile <\/em>versions).<\/li>\n<li><strong>1968:<\/strong> In November 1968, without Wilson\u2019s cooperation, two incomplete <em>SMiLE <\/em>tracks were prepared for inclusion on the Beach Boys album <em>20\/20<\/em> (1969). The song \u201cCabin-Essence\u201d<em> <\/em>(1969) was edited together from a variety of <em>SMiLE<\/em> modules (\u201cHome on the Range,\u201d \u201cWho Ran The Iron Horse\u201d &amp; \u201cThe Grand Coulee Dam\u201d) with lead &amp; backing vocals added. The October 4<sup>th<\/sup>, 1966 recording of the acapella track \u201cOur Prayer\u201d<em> <\/em>(1969) is also featured with some additional vocals overdubbed (Badman, 2004).<\/li>\n<li><strong>1970\/71:<\/strong> The Beach Boys were released from their Capitol Records contract in 1969 with Warner Bros. Records signing the band largely with the intention of releasing <em>SMiLE <\/em>(Priore, 2005).<em> <\/em>Despite the unfinished album gaining a level of speculative notoriety in the rock press at the time (Priore, 1997), Wilson was uninterested in revisiting the project. When unable to convince him otherwise, the band attempted to revive a few tracks to pacify the label. \u201cCool Cool Water,\u201d a track loosely based on SMiLE\u2019s \u201cI Love To Say Da Da\u201d\/\u201dAll Day,\u201d and dating back to October 1967 (with rehashed Mike Love lyrics) was added to the <em>Sunflower<\/em> album (1970). This was followed by the &#8211; somewhat more substantial &#8211; remake of \u201cSurf\u2019s Up\u201d (1971). Featuring only limited involvement from Brian Wilson, this new track featured several <em>SMiLE<\/em>-era modules including: (a) a<em> <\/em>backing track recorded on November 4<sup>th<\/sup>, 1966; (b) part of an outtake of a Brian Wilson solo demo of the song taped on December 15<sup>th<\/sup>, 1966 for the <em>Inside Pop<\/em> CBS television special; and (c) the coda includes a December 2<sup>nd<\/sup>, 1966 <em>SMiLE <\/em>module from the <em>SMiLE<\/em> piece \u201cChild Is Father To The Man\u201d (Badman, 2004).<\/li>\n<li><strong>1990:<\/strong> With the re-issue of <em>Smiley Smile<\/em> on CD (1990), \u201cHeroes and Villains (Alternate Version)\u201d (1990) was included as a bonus track. This piece differed considerably from the <em>Smiley Smile<\/em> version of the song and contained the \u201cCantina\u201d and \u201cWhistling\u201d modules (as included on the 2011 <em>SMiLE Sessions<\/em>: CD 2: Tracks 15 &amp; 16).<\/li>\n<li><strong>1993:<\/strong> Brian Wilson, Van Dyke Parks and The Beach Boys eventually gave Capitol Records permission to include approximately 40 minutes of previously unreleased <em>SMiLE <\/em>material as part of the <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys <\/em>box set (1993). Although this was hereto the most significant commercial release of <em>SMiLE <\/em>material, there was still much unreleased. The mixes were warm, clear and under-stated &#8211; avoiding some of the excess echo of 1960s era bounces &#8211; and with little attempt made to create a sense of flow. The modules are mostly presented \u2018as is,\u2019 as the booklet liner notes states: \u201cRemember, what you\u2019re listening to are unfinished productions, fragments, demos and tracks\u2026with a programmable CD player you can make your own order\u201d (Leaf, 1993: 42). As well as featuring previously released tracks such as \u201cOur Prayer,\u201d \u201cCabin-Essence,\u201d \u201cSurf\u2019s Up\u201d and (both versions of) \u201cHeroes and Villains,\u201d many additional <em>SMiLE <\/em>pieces were also featured, including a December 15<sup>th<\/sup>, 1966 Brian Wilson solo recording of \u201cSurf\u2019s Up\u201d<em> <\/em>from the first aborted <em>Inside Pop<\/em> TV session (1993); over 15 minutes of compiled \u201cGood Vibrations\u201d session tapes (1993); \u201cWonderful\u201d (1993), \u201cHeroes and Villains (Sections)\u201d (1993), \u201cHeroes and Villains (Intro)\u201d (1993), \u201cDo You Like Worms\u201d (1993), \u201cWind Chimes\u201d (1993), \u201cVega-Tables\u201d (1993) and \u201cI Love to Say Da Da\u201d (1993).<\/li>\n<li><strong>2004:<\/strong> In late 2003, Brian Wilson, Van Dyke Parks and Darian Sahanaja (Wilson\u2019s musical secretary) set about preparing a three movement \u2018symphonic\u2019 version of <em>SMiLE.<\/em> The work was sequenced with the aid of a non-linear computer editing system (<em>ProTools<\/em>) and rehearsed with Wilson\u2019s band before being premiered in front of a live audience in London. An album was then recorded for the Nonesuch label titled <em>Brian Wilson Presents SMiLE <\/em>(2004), with the overall process being documented on film. The TV special\/DVD release <em>Beautiful dreamer: Brian Wilson and the story of SMiLE<\/em> (Leaf, 2004) augmented this footage with interviews with many of Wilson\u2019s 1960s<em> SMiLE <\/em>collaborators &#8211; but, conspicuously, not The Beach Boys. In fact, none of the original Beach Boys tapes were used in making this new production. All necessary modules were re-recorded, once again, as separate fragments to be edited together later. Each movement was loosely unified by a theme: [i] \u2018Americana,\u2019 [ii] \u2018Ages of Man,\u2019 and [iii] \u2018The Elements.\u2019 In addition to what had already been released were: \u201cBarnyard\u201d (2004), \u201cOld Master Painter\u201d (Gillespie\/Smith)\/\u201dYou Are My Sunshine\u201d (Davis\/Mitchell) (2004), \u201cSong For Children\u201d (originally titled \u201cI Ran,\u201d or alternatively, \u201cLook\u201d) (2004), \u201cChild Is Father To The Man\u201d (2004), \u201cI\u2019m In Great Shape\u201d (2004), \u201cI Wanna Be Around\u201d (Mercer, Vimmerstedt) (2004), \u201cWorkshop\u201d (2004), \u201cOn A Holiday\u201d (2004), \u201cMrs. O\u2019Leary\u2019s Cow\u201d (originally titled \u201cFire\u201d) (2004); \u201cIn Blue Hawaii\u201d (based on \u201cI Love To Say Da Da\u201d &amp; featuring new Van Dyke Parks lyrics) (2004), and \u201cGood Vibrations\u201d (using the original lyrics by Tony Asher) (2004). A strong sense of unity and flow exist in this forty-eight minute work, with each module progressing with a true sense of compositional purpose. In particular, the second movement has a high degree of \u2018fit,\u2019 due to the presence of a unifying, rhythmic keyboard pattern throughout much of the section.<\/li>\n<li><strong>2011:<\/strong> In a recent interview (Myers, 2011) Brian Wilson claimed that due to the positive public reaction to his 2004 remake, he felt comfortable in approving the release of a sizable portion of the original <em>SMiLE <\/em>session tapes. On November 1, 2011, The <em>Smile Sessions <\/em>box set was released by Capitol Records to \u2018celebrate\u2019 the fiftieth anniversary of The Beach Boys\u2019 formation. This collection consists of two major components: the first [CD 1] is a fairly close reconstruction of Wilson\u2019s three movement 2004 sequencing, but this time using the original recordings as its source. More significantly however, is the inclusion of many hours of session \u2018highlights\u2019 across four additional CDs in the set (representing about ten percent of the total session material recorded). The modules featured on the 2011 CD 1 are often different to those used in the 1993 edits, with some songs using either alternate, or additional, fragments. For example, the new edit of \u201cWind Chimes\u201d (2011) uses the \u201cWind Chimes Version 1\u201d \u2018tag\u2019 module (2011: CD 4: Track 4) recorded on August 3<sup>rd<\/sup>, 1966; whilst the 1993 edit uses a module recorded later on October 5<sup>th<\/sup>, 1966 &#8211; referred to here as \u201cWind Chimes (Version 2 Tag)\u201d (2011: CD 4: Track 6). Whereas, the 1993 presentation featured relatively minimal editing\/mixing\/polishing, the 2011 CD 1 is clearly an attempt to present the fragments in a manner that more closely resembles a \u2018finished\u2019 product. Echo and reverb feature more prominently, and many vocals have been \u2018flown in\u2019 as overdubs from a variety of variety of post-<em>SMiLE<\/em> remakes. The <em>SMiLE Sessions<\/em> CDs are accompanied with meticulously researched studio, time\/date and personnel details.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Bootlegs [1980s &#8211; present]: <\/strong>This is where <em>SMiLE<\/em> takes on a life of it\u2019s own. For many years after the project was scrapped in 1967, Brian Wilson was reluctant to deal with the <em>SMiLE <\/em>legacy. Nonetheless, by the early 1980s a core group of enthusiasts in both the US and UK were instrumental in reviving interest in the project through fanzines and conventions. Some of these individuals have since gone on to either document the <em>SMiLE <\/em>story in the mainstream media or even assist Wilson to create his remake in 2004. These include memorabilia collector (now \u2018archivist\u2019) Peter Reum; the writers, David Leaf and Domenic Priore; musicians, Darian Sahanaja and Probyn Gregory (later to become members of Brian Wilson\u2019s backing band); and in England, members of the \u2018Beach Boys Stomp\u2019 fan club including writer Kingsley Abbott (Priore, 2005). Priore (<em>ibid.<\/em>) implies that Curt Boetcher, a record producer working with The Beach Boys in the late 1970s, had access to the band\u2019s tape vaults and was an indirect source of leaked tapes via his connection with a rock journalist. More significantly, in 1987, Andy Paley &#8211; a collaborator on Brian Wilson\u2019s first solo album &#8211; \u201cprovided an opportunity to hear hours of unreleased tapes from the <em>Smile<\/em> sessions at his home\u201d (p<em>.<\/em>153). Elsewhere, Priore admits to his part in distributing the material, dubbing \u201ctape after tape\u201d for \u201cinquiring musicians\u201d which included amongst other prominent devotees, the band XTC (Jarnow, 2011: 3). Regardless of the bootlegs\u2019 sources, a phenomenon began to build with fans constructing their own sequences of the modules and speculating on what might have been if the album had only been finished in 1967. In this way, <em>SMiLE <\/em>became \u201call things to all fans\u201d (<em>ibid.<\/em>). Van Dyke Parks states in a filmed conversation with Brian Wilson (Leaf, 2004) that together with <em>SMiLE, <\/em>they inadvertently created the world\u2019s first \u2018interactive\u2019 album. Interestingly, even only three weeks after the release of the 2011 box set, fans had started uploading their own edits of the new High Definition Compatible Digital modules to youtube.com.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<h3><strong>Bibliography<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Abbott, K. (2001). <em>The Beach Boys&#8217; Pet Sounds: The greatest album of the twentieth century<\/em>. London: Helter Skelter Publishing.<\/p>\n<p>Amabile, T. (1983). \u2018The social psychology of creativity: a componential conceptualization\u2019. In: <em>Journal of personality and social psychology, 45<\/em>(2), 357-376.<\/p>\n<p>Apter, M. J. (1991). A structural phenomenology of play. In J. H. Kerr &amp; M. J. Apter (Eds.), <em>Adult play: a reversal theory approach<\/em> (pp. 13-29). Amsterdam: Swets &amp; Zeitlinger.<\/p>\n<p>Badman, K. (2000). <em>The Beatles off the record<\/em>. London: Omnibus.<\/p>\n<p>Badman, K. (2004). <em>The Beach Boys: the definitive diary of America&#8217;s greatest band, on stage and in the studio<\/em>. San Francisco: Backbeat Books.<\/p>\n<p>Bell, M. (2004). <em>SMiLE<\/em>: Retrieved November 15, 2011 from http:\/\/www.soundonsound.com\/sos\/Oct04\/articles\/smile.htm.<\/p>\n<p>Boyd, A. (2011). \u2018Producers notes\u2019. In: <em>The Beach Boys: The SMiLE sessions <\/em>[CD Booklet]. New York: Capitol Records.<\/p>\n<p>Brian Wilson interview 2. (1997, August). <em>Mojo, 45, [CD]<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>B\u00fctz, M. R. (1997). <em>Chaos and complexity: implications for psychological theory and practice<\/em>. Washington, DC: Taylor &amp; Francis.<\/p>\n<p>Capra, F. (1997). <em>The web of life<\/em>. London: Flamingo.<\/p>\n<p>Capra, F. (2002). <em>The hidden connections: integrating the biological, cognitive, and social dimensions of life into a science of sustainability<\/em> (1st ed.). New York: Doubleday.<\/p>\n<p>Cavanagh, J. E. (2003). <em>The Piper at the gates of dawn<\/em>. New York: Continuum.<\/p>\n<p>Chapouthier, G. (2009). \u2018Mosaic structures &#8211; a working hypothesis for the complexity of living organisms\u2019. In: <em>E-Logos (Electronic Journal for Philosophy),17<\/em>: Retrieved from http:\/\/nb.vse.cz\/kfil\/elogos\/bioco smology\/chapouthier09.pdf.<\/p>\n<p>Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1990). <em>Flow: the psychology of optimal experience<\/em> (1st ed.). New York: Harper &amp; Row.<\/p>\n<p>DeRogatis, J. (2003). <em>Turn on your mind: four decades of great psychedelic rock<\/em>. Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard.<\/p>\n<p>Doggett, P. (2003). \u2018Smile: The great lost album\u2019. In: Abbott, K.\u00a0 (Ed.), <em>Back to the beach: A Brian Wilson and The Beach Boys reader<\/em> (pp. 65-74). London: Helter Skelter Publishing.<\/p>\n<p>Giv\u00f3n, T. (1998). \u2018The functional approach to grammar\u2019. In: Tomasello, M. (Ed.), <em>The new psychology of language: cognitive and functional approaches to language structure<\/em>. Mahwah, N.J.: L. Erlbaum.<\/p>\n<p>Getzels, J. W., &amp; Jackson, P. W. (1962). <em>Creativity and intelligence; explorations with gifted students<\/em>. London, New York: Wiley.<\/p>\n<p>Guilford, J. P. (1975). \u2018Creativity: A quarter century of progress\u2019. In: Taylor, I. A. &amp; Getzels, J. W.\u00a0 (Eds.), <em>Perspectives in creativity<\/em> (pp. 37-59). Chicago: Aldine.<\/p>\n<p>Hadamard, J. (1945). <em>An essay on the psychology of invention in the mathematical field<\/em>. Princeton: Princeton University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Hesse, H., &amp; Creighton, B. (1929). <em>Steppenwolf<\/em>. New York: H. Holt and company.<\/p>\n<p>Holmberg, A. (1996). <em>The theatre of Robert Wilson<\/em>. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Jarnow, J. (2011). <em>How to steal a SMiLE : An alternate history of The Beach Boys\u2019 lost classic<\/em>: Retrieved December 13, 2011 from http:\/\/www.relix.com\/features\/2011\/11\/30\/how-to-steal-a-smile-an-alternate-history-of-the-beach-boys-lost-classic.<\/p>\n<p>Joyce, J. (1922). <em>Ulysses<\/em>. London: Published for the Egoist Press, London by John Rodker, Paris.<\/p>\n<p>Koestler, A. (1964). <em>The act of creation<\/em>. New York: Macmillan.<\/p>\n<p>Leaf, D. (1990). \u2018Liner notes\u2019. In: <em>The Beach Boys: Pet Sounds. <\/em>[CD]. Los Angeles: Capitol Records.<\/p>\n<p>Leaf, D. (Director). (2004). <em>Beautiful dreamer: Brian Wilson and the story of SMiLE<\/em>. [TV]. United States: LSL Productions.<\/p>\n<p>Lieberman, J. N. (1977). <em>Playfulness: its relationship to imagination and creativity<\/em>. New York: Academic Press.<\/p>\n<p>Martin, G., &amp; Hornsby, J. (1994). <em>All you need is ears<\/em>. New York: St. Martin&#8217;s Press.<\/p>\n<p>Martin, G. (2001). In Gowers, B. (Director) &amp; Leaf, D. (Writer). <em>An all-star tribute to Brian Wilson <\/em>[TV]. United States: Radio City Entertainment, Turner Network Television &amp; Rachlin-Leaf-Ramone Productions.<\/p>\n<p>McCulley, J. (2003). \u2018Trouble in mind: A revealing interview with Brian Wilson\u2019. In: Abbott, K.\u00a0 (Ed.), <em>Back to the beach: A Brian Wilson and The Beach Boys reader<\/em> (pp. 187-204). London: Helter Skelter Publishing.<\/p>\n<p>Meares, R. (2005). <em>The metaphor of play: origin and breakdown of personal being<\/em> (3rd ed.). London; New York: Routledge.<\/p>\n<p>Miles, B. (1998). <em>Paul McCartney: many years from now<\/em>. London: Vintage.<\/p>\n<p>Myers, M. (2011). <em>Still picking up Good Vibrations<\/em>: Retrieved November 10, 2011 from http:\/\/online.wsj.com\/article\/SB100014240529702045246045766090 00066845070.html.<\/p>\n<p>Oppenheim, D. (Writer) (1967, April 25). <em>Inside pop: The rock revolution <\/em>[Television broadcast]. U.S.: CBS Broadcasting Inc..<\/p>\n<p>Peters, T. (2011). <em>Mark Linett &#8211; Beach Boys SMiLE<\/em>: Retrieved November 17, 2011 from http:\/\/www.iconfetch.com\/great-music-interviews\/2011-shows\/406-mark-linett-beach-boys-smile-interview.html.<\/p>\n<p>Prigogine, I., &amp; Stengers, I. (1984). <em>Order out of chaos: man&#8217;s new dialogue with nature<\/em>. Toronto; New York, N.Y.: Bantam Books.<\/p>\n<p>Priore, D. (1997). <em>Look! Listen! Vibrate! SMiLE!<\/em> San Francisco: Last Gasp.<\/p>\n<p>Priore, D. (2005). <em>SMiLE: The story of Brian Wilson&#8217;s lost masterpiece<\/em>. London: Sanctuary.<\/p>\n<p>Priore, D. (2011). \u2018SMiLE: A history\u2019. In: <em>The Beach Boys: The SMiLE sessions<\/em>. [CD Booklet]. New York: Capitol Records.<\/p>\n<p>Robert, S., &amp; Chapouthier G. (2006). \u2018The Mosaic of Language\u2019. In: <em>Marges linguistiques. <\/em>(11), 160-166.<\/p>\n<p>Slowinski, C., &amp; Boyd, A. (2011). \u2018The Beach Boys SMiLE \u2013 Sessionography\u2019. In: <em>The Beach Boys: The Smile Sessions <\/em>[CD Booklet]. New York: Capitol Records.<\/p>\n<p>Southall, B., Vince, P., &amp; Rouse, A. (2002). <em>Abbey Road: The story of the world&#8217;s most famous recording studios<\/em>. London: Omnibus.<\/p>\n<p>Tamm, E. (1995). <em>Brian Eno: his music and the vertical color of sound<\/em> (Updated ed.). New York: Da Capo Press.<\/p>\n<p>Wolfe, D. (2011). \u2018Producer notes\u2019. In: <em>The Beach Boys: The SMiLE sessions<\/em>. [CD Booklet]. New York: Capitol Records.<\/p>\n<p>Zak, A. (2007). \u2018Recording studio as space\/place\u2019. In: <em>Journal on the Art of Record Production (1)<\/em>, Retrieved February 22, 2012, from https:\/\/arpjournal.com\/2493\/recording-studio-as-spaceplace\/.<\/p>\n<p>Zak, A. (2010). \u2018Painting the sonic canvas: electronic mediation as musical style\u2019.\u00a0 In: Bayley, A. (Ed.), <em>Recorded music: performance, culture and technology <\/em>(pp. 307 &#8211; 321). Cambridge, UK; New York: Cambridge University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Ziv, A. (1983). \u2018The Influence of Humorous Atmosphere on Divergent Thinking\u2019.\u00a0 In: <em>Contemporary educational psychology, 8<\/em>(1), 68-75.<\/p>\n<p>Zollo, P. (1997). <em>Songwriters on songwriting<\/em> (1st Da Capo Press ed.). New York: Da Capo Press.<\/p>\n<p><strong>DISCOGRAPHY<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Dylan, B., <em>Blonde on Blonde<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Columbia Records, 1966.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Good Vibrations\u2019. [Vinyl 7&#8243; single] Capitol Records, 1966.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, <em>Pet Sounds<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1966.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Heroes and Villains\u2019, <em>Smiley Smile<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1967.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Mama Says\u2019, <em>Wild Honey<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1967.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, <em>Smiley Smile<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1967.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Vegetables\u2019, <em>Smiley Smile<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1967.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, <em>Wild Honey<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1967.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Cabin-Essence\u2019, <em>20\/20<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1969.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys \u2018Our Prayer\u2019, <em>20\/20<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1969.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, <em>20\/20<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Capitol Records, 1969.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Cool Cool Water\u2019, <em>Sunflower.<\/em> [Vinyl album] Warner Bros. Records, 1970.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, <em>Sunflower.<\/em> [Vinyl album] Warner Bros. Records, 1970.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Surf&#8217;s Up\u2019,\u00a0 <em>Surf&#8217;s Up<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Warner Bros. Records, 1971.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Heroes and Villains (Alternate Version)\u2019, <em>Smiley Smile\/Wild Honey<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1990.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, <em>Smiley Smile\/Wild Honey<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1990.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Do You Like Worms\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Good Vibrations (Sessions)\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Heroes and Villains (Intro)\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Heroes and Villains (Sections)\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018I Love to Say Da Da\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Surf\u2019s Up\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Vega-Tables\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Wind Chimes\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Wonderful\u2019, <em>Good Vibrations: Thirty years of The Beach Boys<\/em>. [CD] Capitol Records, 1993.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, <em>The Beach Boys: The SMiLE sessions<\/em>. [CD, vinyl singles &amp; albums] Capitol Records, 2011.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Wind Chimes\u2019, <em>The Beach Boys: The SMiLE sessions<\/em>. [CD, vinyl singles &amp; albums] Capitol Records, 2011.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Wind Chimes Version 1\u2019, <em>The Beach Boys: The SMiLE sessions<\/em>. [CD, vinyl singles &amp; albums] Capitol Records, 2011.<\/p>\n<p>The Beach Boys, \u2018Wind Chimes (Version 2 Tag)\u2019, <em>The Beach Boys: The SMiLE sessions<\/em>. [CD, vinyl singles &amp; albums] Capitol Records, 2011.<\/p>\n<p>The Beatles, \u2018I Want To Hold Your Hand\u2019. [Vinyl 7&#8243; single] Parlophone Records, 1963.<\/p>\n<p>The Beatles, <em>Revolver<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Parlophone Records, 1966.<\/p>\n<p>The Beatles, \u2018Tomorrow Never Knows\u2019, <em>Revolver<\/em>. [Vinyl album] Parlophone Records, 1966.<\/p>\n<p>The Beatles, <em>Sgt. Pepper\u2019s Lonely Hearts Club Band. <\/em>[Vinyl album] Parlophone Records, 1967.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018Barnyard\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018Child Is Father To The Man\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018Good Vibrations\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018I Wanna Be Around\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018I\u2019m In Great Shape\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018In Blue Hawaii\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018Mrs. O\u2019Leary\u2019s Cow\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018Old Master Painter\/You Are My Sunshine\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018On A Holiday\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018Song For Children\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018Surf&#8217;s Up\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n<p>Wilson, B., \u2018Workshop\u2019, <em>Brian Wilson presents SMiLE<\/em>. [CD] Nonesuch Records, 2004.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The story of Brian Wilson\u2019s aborted Beach Boy\u2019s album SMiLE is noteworthy for a number of reasons. Firstly, it pioneered a non-linear approach to pop record production decades before digital editing became the norm for record makers. Interestingly, this approach was not just a functional necessity of production, but was inseparable from its compositional process and overall aesthetic quality. Perhaps more importantly, SMiLE arguably became popular music\u2019s first interactive work, with fans making their own linear assemblies of various bootlegged (and released) \u2018modules\u2019 long before Wilson ever got around to sequencing them into a final concrete form.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[60],"tags":[24],"class_list":["post-2161","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-articles-editorials-provocations","tag-research","author-marshall-heiser"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2161","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/8"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2161"}],"version-history":[{"count":10,"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2161\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2370,"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2161\/revisions\/2370"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2161"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2161"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.arpjournal.com\/asarpwp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2161"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}