The Beach Boys - Surfin' Safari + Surfin' USA
WavPack+CUE+LOG+Covers or mp3 CBR 320 | 318 or 125 MB
Original Year: 1962 + 1963 / Capitol Records 2001
| “ | Re-mastered again in 2000, the Beach Boys' first album may sound somewhat embryonic. In the context of its time, however, SURFIN' SAFARI is a solid and entertaining listen filled with songs based on everyday middle-class teen life in early-1960s California. Foremost among these is the group's first hot-rod tune, "409". In some ways an even better song than "Surfin' Safari" (the bigger hit on the other side of their first Capitol single), "409" isn't as full of car-spotter lingo as the group's later hot-rod singles (most of them co-written by L.A. disc jockey and car nut Roger Christian), but it has a stripped-down, almost punky garage-rock sound that thunders along mightily behind the chanting background singers and one of Mike Love's better lead vocals. The usual perception of the Beach Boys' early albums is that they're primarily for completists and principally of historical interest. This CD goes a long way toward dispelling that myth. The group's first two LPs were originally compiled together on one CD in 1990 as part of a reissue of their complete Capitol output, and were upgraded in March of 2001. Although neither album shows the group near its very best, they hold up remarkably well 40 years later. Surfin' Safari was recorded in such a rush after the title track became a hit that the group was forced to draw on whatever songs Brian Wilson and collaborator Gary Usher had come up with as part of their weekly writing sessions. Still, there's some very good music here beyond "Surfin' Safari", "409", and "Surfin'": the lost surf hit "Chug-a-Lug"; the doo wop-style "Little Miss America", on which Dennis Wilson and company step into Dion & the Belmonts territory; and a credible cover of "Summertime Blues". Even the slightly lesser material such as "Moon Dawg", a cover of a surf classic by the Gamblers that's one of Carl Wilson's best early guitar showcases, "Cuckoo Clock", and "The Shift", all generic surf/beach music, is attractive. Surfin' U.S.A. was done with a little more time and more control by the group and Brian, and it shows. From the opening title cut, the album never lets up -- "Farmer's Daughter" is a gorgeous surf tune with a killer lead falsetto by Brian; "Miserlou", "Stoked", "Honky Tonk", "Surf Jam", and "Let's Go Trippin'" were brilliant instrumentals showing off the group's (especially Carl Wilson's) virtuosity even at this early date; "Lonely Sea" was the first example of Brian writing and singing in a melancholy, reflective mood, and was a distant prelude to songs like "Don't Worry Baby" and the entire Pet Sounds album; "Shut Down" was their second great car song ("409" being their first); and "Noble Surfer", "Lana", and "Finders Keepers" were great rockers with beautiful vocal and instrumental hooks, the latter's chorus a good-natured send-up of the Four Seasons' sound on "Big Girls Don't Cry". The bonus tracks include a hit that should have been, a surf-style cover of the 1950s Tarriers and Eddie Fisher hit "Cindy, Oh Cindy" that's worth the price of the CD just to get it; and "Land Ahoy" is an achingly beautiful rock & roll ballad that, for reasons impossible to fathom, never made the cut from the Surfin' Safari album, but was later transmuted into "Cherry, Cherry Coupe". ~ Bruce Eder, all media guide | ” |
Tracklist:
01. Surfin' Safari
02. County Fair
03. Ten Little Indians
04. Chug-A-Lug
05. Little Miss America
06. 409
07. Surfin'
08. Heads You Win, Tails I Lose
09. Summertime Blues
10. Cuckoo Clock
11. Moon Dawg
12. The Shift
13. Surfin' U.S.A.
14. Farmer's Daugher
15. Misirlou
16. Stoked
17. Lonely Sea
18. Shut Down
19. Noble Surfer
20. Honky Tonk
21. Lana
22. Surf Jam
23. Let's Go Trippin'
24. Finders Keepers
25. Cindy, Oh Cindy [Bonus track]
26. The Baker Man [Bonus track]
27. Land Ahoy [Bonus track]
Reissue produced & coordinated by Mark Linett
Originally Recorded at Capitol, Western, Conway Studios, Hollywood, California (Oct 4, 1961 - Mar 7, 1963)
Digitally Remastered by Joe Gastwirt at Oceanview Digital Mastering, Los Angeles, CA (2000)
Original Release Date: October 1962 | March 1963
Re-Release Date: March 13, 2001 (1990)
Format: Digitally remastered using HDCD technology
Label: Capitol Records
Catalog No.: 31517-2
lossless*
http://rapidshare.com/files/175862368/TBB162SSSU755VC.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/175864129/TBB162SSSU755VC.part2.rar
lossy.mp3
http://rapidshare.com/files/175862336/TBB162SSSU20G.rar
* EAC Image, standard LOG, embedded cuesheet, foobar2000 ready, etc
http://rapidshare.com/files/175862368/TBB162SSSU755VC.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/175864129/TBB162SSSU755VC.part2.rar
lossy.mp3
http://rapidshare.com/files/175862336/TBB162SSSU20G.rar
* EAC Image, standard LOG, embedded cuesheet, foobar2000 ready, etc



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