Track Listing 1. California Girls 2. I Get Around 3. Surfin' Safari 4. Surfin' U.S.A. 5. Fun, Fun, Fun 6. Surfer Girl 7. Don't Worry Baby - (single version) 8. Little Deuce Coupe 9. Shut Down 10. Help Me, Rhonda - (single version) 11. Be True to Your School - (single version) 12. When I Grow up (To Be a Man) 13. In My Room 14. God Only Knows 15. Sloop John B 16. Wouldn't It Be Nice 17. Getcha Back 18. Come Go With Me 19. Rock and Roll Music 20. Dance, Dance, Dance 21. Barbara Ann - (single version) 22. Do You Wanna Dance 23. Heroes and Villains 24. Good Timin' 25. Kokomo 26. Do It Again 27. Wild Honey 28. Darlin' 29. I Can Hear Music 30. Good Vibrations
| Details | | Distributor: | EMI Music Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes The Beach Boys: Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston, David Marks. Producers include: Brian Wilson, Murry Wilson, Nik Venet, Steve Levine, The Beachboys. Recorded between 1962 & 1988. Includes liner notes by Anthony DeCurtis. This collection perfectly captures on a single disc the career arc of one of America's most important pop groups. Stuffing 30 songs into a small space, SOUNDS OF SUMMER checks in with these West Coast sunshine pop wizards at each phase of their development. There's the early chicks-and-cars, Chuck Berry-influenced material ("I Get Around," "Little Deuce Coupe"), the surf songs on which the Beach Boys' early reputation is based (the genre's national anthem "Surfin' Safari," the surprisingly transcendent "Surfer Girl"), and more. Of course the celebrated "teenage symphonies to God" era is covered nicely, with such untouchable moments as "God Only Knows," "Good Vibrations," and "Wouldn't It Be Nice." The fact that the band didn't dry up and blow away after the 1960s is not lost on SOUNDS OF SUMMER either, as witnessed by the inclusion of Chuck Berry cover "Rock and Roll Music" and the latter-day summer-fun hit "Kokomo."
Editorial Reviews 5 stars out of 5 - ...The overall effect of this thirty-track overview of the Beach Boys' career is similar to that of the Beatles' 1: Both compilations strive to blow you away with the sheer amount of hit singles at hand, and both succeed... Rolling Stone (06/12/2003)
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