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Beach Boys

Pet Sounds

Pet Sounds Tracks
1. Wouldn't It Be Nice
2. You Still Believe In Me
3. That's Not Me
4. Don't Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
5. I'm Waiting For The Day
6. Let's Go Away For Awhile
7. Sloop John B
8. God Only Knows
9. I Know There's An Answer
10. Here Today
11. I Just Wasn't Made For These Times
12. Pet Sounds
13. Caroline No
14. Hang On To Your Ego - (bonus track)
Beach Boys - Pet Sounds
Pet Sounds Review
If you need some pointy-headed pundit to sell you on the merits of Pet Sounds, your money might be better spent on an ear specialist. Brian Wilson's gift to 20th-century music elevated this pop album into a beguiling musical and emotional cogency that still operates outside pop culture's fickle space-time continuum--and limited critical lexicon. There's never been another record to compare (Rubber Soul, its inspiration, is close; Sgt. Pepper's, its response, misses the point), and certainly no album has been as dissected, overanalyzed, and predigested for public consumption. In 1997 Capitol Records devoted an entire four-disc box set, The Pet Sounds Sessions, to its thorough deconstruction. The techno-marvel centerpiece of that project--the album's first true stereo mix, painstakingly conjured out of multitape session sources by producer-engineer Mark Linett (under Wilson's supervision)--was at once heresy and revelation. Now the label has gratifyingly seen fit to offer both mixes on a single disc (along with alternate versions of "Hang On to Your Ego," the original title of "I Know There's An Answer"), an idea that should please the orthodox and heretics alike. And while the album has always clearly been The Brian Wilson Show featuring the Beach Boys, David Leaf's concise new notes attempt to be more inclusive of a wider band perspective. The result (three of the five band members claim credit for the album title) sometimes resembles Rashomon. If Pet Sounds forever crystallized the band's various creative (in)differences, it also became Wilson's grand karmic joke on his band mates; its burgeoning reputation (Mojo magazine's panel of pop experts once elected it greatest album of all time) guaranteed they would sing its songs--and praises--until the end. And if putting two different versions of the same album on one disc seems like overkill, look at the bright side: it's a perfect excuse to listen to the glorious Pet Sounds twice. --Jerry McCulley
Pet Sounds Review
2000 Hdcd Remaster of the Original Mono Mixes. Does Not Include the Bonus Tracks that were on Previous Issues.


Users's Reviews
Feel free to add your comments about Pet Sounds
not even top 10 of 1966
3
People that were not around in 1966 have been sold a bill of goods about this so-called masterpiece. Rather than foreseeing "Sgt Peppers," Brian Wilson was just trying to keep up with "Rubber Soul" and "Revolver." Not that anybody could. But "Pet Sounds" would have had a hard time among the top-10 of that year. How about "Revolver" "Aftermath" "Fresh Cream" "Freak Out" "Fifth Dimension(5D)" "Velvet Undergound & Nico" "Love" Van Morrison's Bang album, "Face to Face" by the Kinks...and a regional masterpiece "Psychedelic Sounds" by the 13th Floor Elevators, all of which made the Boys sound pretty tame. And it hasn't improved with new-generation hype...

If you've never heard of some of these and you think "Pet Sounds" is a masterpiece, you might want to give em a listen...

jimi99
Posted by Anonymous, on 2006-01-12
One of the best albums ever recorded - most people will LOVE this! Sunshine pop at its best! - a MUST have
5
The Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds" is the best sunshine pop (let alone 60's pop) album EVER recorded. This album is SO original and SO cheerful that you can't help but love it. The most well-known songs on here are the hits "Wouldn't It Be Nice", "Sloop John B.", "God Only Knows" and "Caroline No", but the other tracks are just as good and interesting. The Beach Boys are famous for their harmonies and vocals, and this album does not disappoint. The musicianship is definitely 60's, but the audio quality and the instrumentation is perfect. Another great thing about this album is how quotable and interesting the lyrics are - they're some of the best ever written! You'll absolutely love singing along to songs like "Wouldn't It Be Nice". Fans of every genre will love this album (you'd be hardpressed not to), as this is an instant classic. Buy it now!

Highlights include:
the entire album
Posted by Anonymous, on 2006-01-05
YES, THE GREATEST ALBUM EVER RECORDED
5
Mike Love snidely commented that all this music was silly, superfluous and egotistical- he accused Brian Wilson of recording his own selfish "pet sounds". Does that mean Love, the self-loving dweeb, named the album?

It is this type of nonsense that really takes people's attention away from the greatest album ever recorded. Wilson, perhaps too deeply inspired by the Beatles' "Rubber Soul", outdid them all. And they were well aware of it. Aside from John Lennon- the only other worthy apart from Wilson- the Beatles spent the rest of their days trying to barge into Wilson's universe.

I grew up with "Pet Sounds", in a way, because I did not have a chance to hear it at first, but heard some of it in 1970. If you do not feel moved to tears listening to "God Only Knows", then you are not human. And that song nearly got canned because no one had ever used the word "God" in a song like that. Funny, because it sounds like it came straight from the Big One in the Sky.

But this music came from the mind of Brian Wilson. It cannot be classed, described or degraded in any way. What I can say is that everything I've heard since has a taste of Brian in it somewhere. Even the original "Goth" music found its origins in "Pet Sounds". And people from Philip Glass to Peter Gabriel have copied Brian.

So buy the thing and try to experience what we did when we heard it new- and don't forget that about 97% of the music at the time WAS crap.
Posted by Anonymous, on 2005-12-26