L.A. (Light Album)
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L.A. (Light Album) | ||||
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Studio album by The Beach Boys | ||||
Released | March 19, 1979 | |||
Recorded | July 1978 - January 1979 | |||
Genre | Rock, pop rock, disco | |||
Length | 41:33 | |||
Label | Brother/Caribou/CBS | |||
Producer | Bruce Johnston, The Beach Boys, James William Guercio | |||
The Beach Boys chronology | ||||
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Singles from L.A. (Light Album) | ||||
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L.A. (Light Album) is the twenty-third studio album by The Beach Boys, released on March 19, 1979. Produced by Bruce Johnston, James William Guercio and the band itself, the album was The Beach Boys' first on CBS Records, and the first to feature contributions from Johnston since his departure from the band in 1972. Johnston was brought in when it became clear that the ailing Brian Wilson was in no fit state to produce the album, and has remained in the band ever since.
L.A. (Light Album) reached #100 in the US during a chart stay of thirteen weeks, and #32 in the UK.
Contents
Background and recording
Despite a new $8 million contract with CBS Records calling for Brian Wilson to write and produce 75% of the songs on each new album, his contributions to L.A. (Light Album) are minimal. His presence on the album as a vocalist has only been confirmed on one song, "Angel Come Home", though he probably played piano on the single "Good Timin'" which was co-written by him with brother Carl, but the origins of the recording go back to five years earlier. His arrangement of the traditional song "Shortenin' Bread" was also older, although the recording was more recent. The vocals for both songs were recorded without Brian. "Good Timin'" hit #40 in the US.
The first song attempted for L.A. (Light Album) was entitled "California Feelin'". It would remain unreleased until 2013 for the compilation Made in California.[1] Both "Baby Blue" and "Love Surrounds Me" were originally recorded for Dennis Wilson's never-released second solo album, Bambu. These would be the last Dennis Wilson songs released before his death in 1983.
L.A. (Light Album) spawned a top-ten hit in the UK with Al Jardine's Bach-inspired "Lady Lynda", written for his wife, and later rerecorded as "Lady Liberty" after their divorce. Jardine recently[when?] revealed that Dennis Wilson made an uncredited contribution to the song's lush string arrangement.[citation needed] Mike Love's Japanese-flavored "Sumahama" was also a UK single chart entry later in 1979.
Possibly the album's most controversial moment[according to whom?] was an eleven-minute disco recasting of Wild Honey's "Here Comes the Night" that caused considerable consternation among fans. The song was only played live during a few dates at New York City's Radio City Music Hall in March 1979 before being dropped from the live set due to adverse audience reaction. Nevertheless, an abridged 4:34 version made the charts in the US as the lead single, peaking at #44.
Release and reception
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [2] |
Robert Christgau | C+ [3] |
Rolling Stone | (Negative)[4] |
Although Brother Records was still in operation during the time of the albums's release, the band's manager, former Chicago producer James William Guercio, had his own label, Caribou Records, distribute the album in conjunction with Brother. L.A. (Light Album) peaked at #100 in the US, and #32 in the UK.
Upon its release, L.A. (Light Album) received generally negative reviews. Rolling Stone critic Dave Marsh stated that, "The Beach Boys have not made great rock music since Wild Honey [and haven't] made competent pop music since Holland;" he concluded that the album "is worse than awful. It is irrelevant."[4] Allmusic writer John Bush states "The Beach Boys ended the decade by releasing the worst album of their career," describing the album as "yet another oddball attempt to push The Beach Boys into the contemporary mainstream despite their many songwriting and production flaws."[2]
Track listing
Side one | ||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Lead Vocals | Length |
1. | "Good Timin'" | Brian Wilson/Carl Wilson | C. Wilson | 2:12 |
2. | "Lady Lynda" | Johann Sebastian Bach/arr. Al Jardine/Ron Altbach | Jardine | 3:58 |
3. | "Full Sail" | C. Wilson/Geoffrey Cushing-Murray | C. Wilson | 2:56 |
4. | "Angel Come Home" | C. Wilson/Cushing-Murray | Dennis Wilson | 3:39 |
5. | "Love Surrounds Me" | D. Wilson/Cushing-Murray | D. Wilson | 3:41 |
6. | "Sumahama" | Mike Love | Love | 4:30 |
Side two | ||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Lead Vocals | Length |
1. | "Here Comes the Night" | B. Wilson/Love | C. Wilson/Jardine | 10:51 |
2. | "Baby Blue" | D. Wilson/Gregg Jakobson/Karen Lamm | C. Wilson/D. Wilson | 3:25 |
3. | "Goin' South" | C. Wilson/Cushing-Murray | C. Wilson | 3:16 |
4. | "Shortenin' Bread" | Trad., arr. B. Wilson | C. Wilson/D. Wilson | 2:49 |
Personnel
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- The Beach Boys
- Mike Love - lead, harmony and backing vocals, orchestral arrangements
- Brian Wilson - harmony and backing vocals on "Angel Come Home", piano
- Carl Wilson - lead, harmony and backing vocals, guitar
- Al Jardine - lead, harmony and backing vocals
- Dennis Wilson - lead, harmony and backing vocals, drums, percussion
- Bruce Johnston - harmony and backing vocals, vocal arrangements, production
- Additional musicians
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- Ed Carter - guitar, bass guitar
- Carlos Munoz - piano
- Bobby Figueroa - drums
- Sterling Smith - harpsichord
- Phil Shenale - oberheim
- Jim Guercio - bass guitar
- Gary Mallaber - drums
- Ritchie Zito - guitar
- Mike Baird - drums
- Joel Peskin - alto saxophone solo on "Here Comes The Night"
- Jimmy Lyons - alto saxophone solos
- Mike Meros - clavinet
- Bob Esty - synthesizer
- Wah Wah Watson - guitar
- Joe Chemay - bass guitar
- Steve Forman - percussion
- Victor Feldman - percussion
- Ron Altbach - keyboards
- Recording personnel
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- Bruce Johnston - producer
- The Beach Boys - producer
- Jim Guercio - producer
- Curt Becher - co-producer ("Here Comes the Night"), engineer
- Bill Fletcher - engineer
- Chuck Britz - engineer
- Joel Moss - engineer
- Earle Mankey - engineer
- Tom Murphy - engineer
- Chuck Leary - engineer
- Greg Venable - engineer
- Jeff Guercio - engineer
- John Hanlon - engineer
References
Sources
- M.I.U. Album/L.A. (Light Album) CD booklet notes, Jeff Tamarkin, c.2000.
- "The Nearest Faraway Place: Brian Wilson, The Beach Boys and the Southern California Experience", Timothy White, c. 1994.
- "Wouldn't It Be Nice - My Own Story", Brian Wilson and Todd Gold, c. 1991.
- "Top Pop Singles 1955-2001", Joel Whitburn, c. 2002.
- "Top Pop Albums 1955-2001", Joel Whitburn, c. 2002.
- Allmusic.com
- Smiley Smile Message Board - "The Definitive Vocal Credits Thread," posts by Beach Boys archivist Alan Boyd and others
- Music infoboxes with deprecated parameters
- Vague or ambiguous time from November 2015
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2015
- All articles with specifically marked weasel-worded phrases
- Articles with specifically marked weasel-worded phrases from November 2015
- The Beach Boys albums
- Caribou Records albums
- 1979 albums
- Albums produced by James William Guercio
- Brother Records albums
- Columbia Records albums
- English-language albums
- Albums produced by Bruce Johnston
- Albums produced by Carl Wilson
- Albums produced by Dennis Wilson
- Albums produced by Brian Wilson
- Albums produced by Mike Love
- Albums produced by Al Jardine