L.A. (Light Album) is the 23rd studio album by the American rock band the Beach Boys, released on March 16, 1979, and their first issued through CBS Records. Recorded during a period of acrimony between the band members, it was a critical and commercial failure, peaking at number 100 in the U.S. and number 32 in the UK.
The album largely consists of solo recordings by the individual band members, including two from Dennis Wilson ("Love Surrounds Me" and "Baby Blue") that were lifted from his unreleased second solo album, Bambu. Brian Wilson was not present for much of the L.A. sessions. The production was credited to returning Beach Boy Bruce Johnston, the band itself, and their manager James William Guercio.
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1
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Good Timin'
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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2:15 |
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2
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Lady Lynda
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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4:01 |
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3
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Full Sail
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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3:00 |
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4
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Angel Come Home
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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3:44 |
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5
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Love Surrounds Me
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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3:45 |
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6
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Sumahama
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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4:34 |
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7
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Here Comes The Night
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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10:54 |
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8
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Baby Blue
Beach Boys •
The Beach Boys • 1979
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3:28 |
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9
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Goin' South
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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3:20 |
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10
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Shortenin' Bread
Beach Boys •
The Beach Boys • 1979
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2:50 |
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1
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Here Comes The Night
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The Beach Boys • 1967
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10:54 |
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Baby Blue
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• 1967
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3:28 |
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2
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Love Surrounds Me
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• 1979
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3:45 |
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1
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Good Timin'
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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2:15 |
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2
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Full Sail
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• 1979
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3:00 |
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1
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Lady Lynda
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The Beach Boys • 1979
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4:01 |
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L.A. (Light Album) | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | March 16, 1979 | |||
Recorded | April 29, 1974 – January 24, 1979 | |||
Studio | ||||
Length | 41:33 | |||
Label | Brother/Caribou/CBS | |||
Producer |
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The Beach Boys chronology | ||||
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Singles from L.A. (Light Album) | ||||
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L.A. (Light Album) is the 23rd studio album by the American rock band the Beach Boys, released on March 16, 1979, and their first issued through CBS Records. Recorded during a period of acrimony between the band members, it was a critical and commercial failure, peaking at number 100 in the U.S. and number 32 in the UK.
The album largely consists of solo recordings by the individual band members, including two from Dennis Wilson ("Love Surrounds Me" and "Baby Blue") that were lifted from his unreleased second solo album, Bambu. Brian Wilson was not present for much of the L.A. sessions. The production was credited to returning Beach Boy Bruce Johnston, the band itself, and their manager James William Guercio.
Leer másL.A. produced three singles: an 11-minute disco rerecording of "Here Comes the Night" from their 1967 album Wild Honey, the Brian and Carl Wilson collaboration "Good Timin`", and Al Jardine`s "Lady Lynda". "Here Comes the Night" and "Good Timin`" charted at numbers 44 and 40, respectively, while "Lady Lynda" was a top 10 hit in several territories abroad, including the UK.
The Beach Boys performing a concert in Michigan, August 1978
In the late 1970s, the Beach Boys were in a state of professional and personal disarray, with the Wilson brothers struggling with drug abuse and, alongside Mike Love, each facing an imminent or ongoing divorce from their wives.[1][2] In March 1977, the group signed an $8 million deal with CBS Records, with their first album expected for delivery before January 1, 1978.[3] Dennis Wilson released his first solo album, Pacific Ocean Blue, in September 1977, after which the band recorded M.I.U. Album to finish off their contract with Reprise.[4]
The Beach Boys missed their CBS album deadline and, from February to March 1978, embarked on a three-week tour of Australia and New Zealand.[5][6][nb 1] While the tour was a commercial success, tensions within the band were disastrous and nearly resulted in another breakup when the group discovered Dennis had purchased heroin for Brian Wilson with funds allegedly acquired from Carl Wilson.[8][9] During an argument regarding this incident, Brian`s bodyguard Rocky Pamplin punched Carl in the face.[10][11] Band manager and business advisor Stephen Love, who felt that Pamplin`s actions were justified, was subsequently fired.[12]
After returning to Los Angeles, Brian ran away on a days-long drug binge and was later discovered lying under a tree at Balboa Park in San Diego without shoes, money, or a wallet.[13] Biographer Steven Gaines writes that Brian was then admitted to a local hospital, and when discharged, immediately joined his bandmates at Criteria Studios in Miami, where they were recording their long-overdue first album for CBS.[14] Peter Ames Carlin, another biographer, supports that sessions had already been underway in Miami,[15] but Mike`s 2016 memoir, Good Vibrations, gives a different timeline:
We had not delivered any music to CBS Records and were summoned to Black Rock, the company`s headquarters in New York. Joined by our tour manager, Jerry Schilling, we waited in the office of CBS Records president Walter Yetnikoff. When he finally walked in, bearded and rumpled, he leaned against his desk and said, "Gentlemen, I think I`ve been fucked." We all looked at Jerry, and he looked at us. Then Brian raised his voice and said, "Mr. Yetnikoff, I`ve got some ideas for some songs, and I want to do them at the Criteria Studios in Miami." "Okay," Yetnikoff said. "We`ll be down there in two weeks." Brian defused the crisis, and we traveled to Miami.[16]
From January 11 to August 22, 1978, members of the band held sessions at various studios in Los Angeles.[17] In Dennis` case, he was focused on recording his second solo album, Bambu.[18] From August 28 to September 1, the group recorded at Criteria Studios in Miami and subsequently compiled a tape of their work for CBS.[17][nb 2] Yetnikoff and CBS vice president Tony Martell then visited the studio and were previewed the songs.[7] Carlin writes that the sessions and the meeting "did not go well".[19] Martell remembered, "We sat there and listened to the tunes. ... At one point, it was a little volatile, because of what we heard. They told us it was one of their finest efforts."[7] Brian`s other bodyguard, Stan Love, said that when Yetnikoff heard the tapes, "he turned to the group and said, `I think I`ve been fucked.`"[19]
Carl Wilson and Bruce Johnston backstage with Roy Orbison, late 1979
The Wilson brothers` cousin Steve Korthof recalled, "Brian was real weird then, real quiet, not saying much. Real depressed. I think he just realized he wasn`t going to be able to pick up the slack. Brian eventually suggested that Bruce Johnston be brought back in to help produce the album."[20] His bandmates agreed to the suggestion based on the strength of Johnston`s success writing the 1975 hit "I Write the Songs".[19] According to Gaines, "When everyone else returned to Los Angeles to continue recording at Western Studios, Brian wanted to stay in Florida by himself. The group agreed that this was out of the question and forced him to return to L.A."[20]
Sessions resumed at various other studios from September 18, 1978, to January 24, 1979.[17][21] In between these sessions, Mike also recorded two unreleased solo albums, First Love and Country Love.[17] Brian, who is barely present on L.A.,[22] was institutionalized at Brotzman Memorial Hospital from November 1978 to early 1979[23] following an incident in which he attacked his doctor during a visit.[24][25] In Carlin`s description, "if Brian sang a note anywhere on the album, his voice is so far down in the mix as to be completely unidentifiable."[22]
Love described L.A. as "mainly a collection of solo efforts".[16] These included songs from Mike Love’s unreleased album “First Love” and Dennis Wilson’s in progress album “Bambu”. The album`s centerpiece was "Here Comes the Night", an 11-minute disco reworking of an original R&B song that the band had released on their 1967 album Wild Honey.[22][26] Dennis was opposed to the recording, and Brian did not participate.[27] Another older song, "Good Timin`", had dated from the band`s aborted 1974 sessions at Caribou Ranch.[28] Brian`s rendition of "Shortenin` Bread" featured Dennis on lead, and was a different recording from the version on the unreleased Adult/Child album.[29]
Among the newer songs, Carl contributed three – "Angel Come Home", "Full Sail", and "Goin` South" – that he wrote with songwriter Geoffrey Cushing-Murray, whom he had met through touring member Billy Hinsche.[30] Dennis` two songs – "Baby Blue" and "Love Surrounds Me" – were lifted from his in-progress Bambu album. Biographer Jon Stebbins states that the songs were included at the insistence of Dennis` bandmates, and quotes music journalist Domenic Priore, who surmised, "They obviously didn`t have enough good material for their debut album on their new label, so they nicked some of the better [songs from Bambu]".[27]
Love`s "Sumahama" is lyrically inspired by his fiancé at the time, a woman named Sumako, and is "about a young girl who wants to go with her mother to a place called `Sumahama` in search of her father." Sumahama was re-recorded from the version recorded on his unreleased album First Love. [31] Although some of the lyrics are in Japanese, Sumako was of Korean descent.[31] Al Jardine`s "Lady Lynda" is a tribute to his then-wife that is based musically on Bach`s "Jesu, Joy of Man`s Desiring".[30]
Among the outtakes, a re-recorded version of "Santa Ana Winds" appeared on their next album, Keepin` the Summer Alive (1980),[17] "Brian`s Back" (another First Love outtake) was released on the 1998 compilation Endless Harmony,[17] and "California Feelin`" was released on the 2013 compilation Made in California.[32] "Rock Plymouth Rock/Roll" [sic], a song from the band`s unfinished Smile album, was also considered for inclusion as the opening track of L.A..[33] Still-unreleased tracks from the L.A. sessions include "Looking Down the Coast/Monterey", "I`m Begging You Please", "Basketball Rock", "Bowling", "There’s a Feeling Through the Air", and renditions of "Calendar Girl" and "Drip Drop".[34][17]
In the liner notes, it is explained that the L.A. (Light Album) title refers to the "awareness of, and the presence of, God here in this world as an ongoing loving reality".[19][30] The initials also allude to Los Angeles, the band`s native home.[30] Carlin writes that the title "evoked both Los Angeles and the city`s long-standing position as a capital of vaguely New Age religions".[19]
The sleeve design features an assortment of illustrations drawn individually by Gary Meyer ("The Beach Boys"), Jim Heimann ("Light Album"), Drew Struzan ("Sumahama"), Dave McMacken ("Lady Lynda"), Steve Carver ("Full Sail"), Nick Taggart ("Here Comes the Night"), Howard Carriker ("Angel Come Home"), Peter Green ("Good Timin`"), Neon Park ("Baby Blue"), Blue Beach ("Shortenin` Bread"), Mick Haggerty ("Here Comes the Night"), and William Stout ("Goin` South"). Troy Lane is credited as "cover artist", while Gary Meyer is credited with art direction and design.[30]
The group at a 1979 photoshoot.
Lead single "Here Comes the Night" (backed with "Baby Blue") was issued on February 19, 1979, and peaked at number 44.[27] L.A. (Light Album) followed on March 16[35] and reached number 100 in the U.S.[5] The next month, "Good Timin`" (backed with "Love Surrounds Me") was issued as a second single and reached number 40, becoming the band`s first top 40 hit since "It`s OK" in 1976.[36] Stebbins summarized this juncture in the band`s career,
Dennis`s fans hated disco and thought Mike`s songs were silly. Mike`s fans thought Dennis`s voice was awful and found his songs too depressing. Brian`s fans wanted more Brian. ... Despite being heralded with the fanfare of a major-label debut, the LP was no more than a reflection of a band in disarray. No one agreed on anything, and nothing complemented anything else. Now the Beach Boys would have to go on the road and try to sell a product that nobody wanted.[37]
In April, the group appeared on The Midnight Special, where they performed their past hits alongside "Baby Blue", "Here Comes the Night", and "Angel Come Home".[38] In August, "Lady Lynda" (backed with "Full Sail") was issued as the album`s third and final single. It failed to chart in the U.S., but was a top 10 hit in several territories abroad, including the UK.[5]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [39] |
Blender | [40] |
Christgau`s Record Guide | C+[41] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [42] |
MusicHound Rock | woof![43] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [44] |
The album received mostly unfavorable reviews from music critics. In his review for Rolling Stone, Dave Marsh wrote, "The Beach Boys have not made great rock music since Wild Honey [and have not] made competent pop music since Holland", concluding that the album "is worse than awful. It is irrelevant."[45] The New York Times concluded that "the songs here are better than some recent albums by the group; they`re gentle, tuneful and innocently charming... But they`re pretty trivial, too."[46]
AllMusic reviewer John Bush felt, "The Beach Boys ended the decade by releasing the worst album of their career", describing it as "yet another oddball attempt to push the Beach Boys into the contemporary mainstream despite their many songwriting and production flaws."[39] Blender`s Douglas Wolk decreed that L.A. was "practically a self-parody" with "Here Comes the Night" being the only enjoyable track.[40] Jeff Tamarkin, who penned liner notes for the 2000 CD reissue, said of the album: "There is undeniable brilliance here if one dares to look."[30] Stebbins praised the Wilson brothers` contributions and derided the songs by Love and Jardine, calling the album "an uneven and disappointing affair. If you liked one part of it, then you were sure to hate others."[47] Carlin opined that L.A. was "a big improvement over M.I.U.. ... the album`s strength came largely from its diversity of voices".[19] Critic Richard Williams referred to "Angel Come Home" as "the most beautifully textured and exquisitely pain-racked white soul music ever made".[48]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Lead vocal(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Good Timin`" | Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson | Carl Wilson | 2:12 |
2. | "Lady Lynda" | Johann Sebastian Bach, Al Jardine, Ron Altbach | Al 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" | Dennis Wilson, Cushing-Murray | D. Wilson | 3:41 |
6. | "Sumahama" | Mike Love | Mike Love | 4:07 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Lead vocal(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Here Comes the Night" | B. Wilson, Love | C. Wilson | 10:51 |
2. | "Baby Blue" | D. Wilson, Gregg Jakobson, Karen Lamm | C. Wilson and D. Wilson | 3:25 |
3. | "Goin` South" | C. Wilson, Cushing-Murray | C. Wilson | 3:16 |
4. | "Shortenin` Bread" | Traditional; arranged by B. Wilson | C. Wilson and D. Wilson | 2:49 |
Total length: | 41:33 |
Credits from Craig Slowinski[49]
The Beach Boys
Touring members
Guests
Additional session musicians
Chart (1979) | Peak position |
---|---|
Dutch Album Chart[50] | 43 |
UK Top 40 Album Chart[51] | 32 |
US Billboard Top LPs & Tape[5] | 100 |
L.A. (Light Album) is the 23rd studio album by the American rock band the Beach Boys, released on March 16, 1979, and their first issued through CBS Records. Recorded during a period of acrimony between the band members, it was a critical and commercial failure, peaking at number 100 in the U.S. and number 32 in the UK.
The album largely consists of solo recordings by the individual band members, including two from Dennis Wilson ("Love Surrounds Me" and "Baby Blue") that were lifted from his unreleased second solo album, Bambu. Brian Wilson was not present for much of the L.A. sessions. The production was credited to returning Beach Boy Bruce Johnston, the band itself, and their manager James William Guercio.
L.A. produced three singles: an 11-minute disco rerecording of "Here Comes the Night" from their 1967 album Wild Honey, the Brian and Carl Wilson collaboration "Good Timin`", and Al Jardine`s "Lady Lynda". "Here Comes the Night" and "Good Timin`" charted at numbers 44 and 40, respectively, while "Lady Lynda" was a top 10 hit in several territories abroad, including the UK.
The Beach Boys performing a concert in Michigan, August 1978
In the late 1970s, the Beach Boys were in a state of professional and personal disarray, with the Wilson brothers struggling with drug abuse and, alongside Mike Love, each facing an imminent or ongoing divorce from their wives.[1][2] In March 1977, the group signed an $8 million deal with CBS Records, with their first album expected for delivery before January 1, 1978.[3] Dennis Wilson released his first solo album, Pacific Ocean Blue, in September 1977, after which the band recorded M.I.U. Album to finish off their contract with Reprise.[4]
The Beach Boys missed their CBS album deadline and, from February to March 1978, embarked on a three-week tour of Australia and New Zealand.[5][6][nb 1] While the tour was a commercial success, tensions within the band were disastrous and nearly resulted in another breakup when the group discovered Dennis had purchased heroin for Brian Wilson with funds allegedly acquired from Carl Wilson.[8][9] During an argument regarding this incident, Brian`s bodyguard Rocky Pamplin punched Carl in the face.[10][11] Band manager and business advisor Stephen Love, who felt that Pamplin`s actions were justified, was subsequently fired.[12]
After returning to Los Angeles, Brian ran away on a days-long drug binge and was later discovered lying under a tree at Balboa Park in San Diego without shoes, money, or a wallet.[13] Biographer Steven Gaines writes that Brian was then admitted to a local hospital, and when discharged, immediately joined his bandmates at Criteria Studios in Miami, where they were recording their long-overdue first album for CBS.[14] Peter Ames Carlin, another biographer, supports that sessions had already been underway in Miami,[15] but Mike`s 2016 memoir, Good Vibrations, gives a different timeline:
We had not delivered any music to CBS Records and were summoned to Black Rock, the company`s headquarters in New York. Joined by our tour manager, Jerry Schilling, we waited in the office of CBS Records president Walter Yetnikoff. When he finally walked in, bearded and rumpled, he leaned against his desk and said, "Gentlemen, I think I`ve been fucked." We all looked at Jerry, and he looked at us. Then Brian raised his voice and said, "Mr. Yetnikoff, I`ve got some ideas for some songs, and I want to do them at the Criteria Studios in Miami." "Okay," Yetnikoff said. "We`ll be down there in two weeks." Brian defused the crisis, and we traveled to Miami.[16]
From January 11 to August 22, 1978, members of the band held sessions at various studios in Los Angeles.[17] In Dennis` case, he was focused on recording his second solo album, Bambu.[18] From August 28 to September 1, the group recorded at Criteria Studios in Miami and subsequently compiled a tape of their work for CBS.[17][nb 2] Yetnikoff and CBS vice president Tony Martell then visited the studio and were previewed the songs.[7] Carlin writes that the sessions and the meeting "did not go well".[19] Martell remembered, "We sat there and listened to the tunes. ... At one point, it was a little volatile, because of what we heard. They told us it was one of their finest efforts."[7] Brian`s other bodyguard, Stan Love, said that when Yetnikoff heard the tapes, "he turned to the group and said, `I think I`ve been fucked.`"[19]
Carl Wilson and Bruce Johnston backstage with Roy Orbison, late 1979
The Wilson brothers` cousin Steve Korthof recalled, "Brian was real weird then, real quiet, not saying much. Real depressed. I think he just realized he wasn`t going to be able to pick up the slack. Brian eventually suggested that Bruce Johnston be brought back in to help produce the album."[20] His bandmates agreed to the suggestion based on the strength of Johnston`s success writing the 1975 hit "I Write the Songs".[19] According to Gaines, "When everyone else returned to Los Angeles to continue recording at Western Studios, Brian wanted to stay in Florida by himself. The group agreed that this was out of the question and forced him to return to L.A."[20]
Sessions resumed at various other studios from September 18, 1978, to January 24, 1979.[17][21] In between these sessions, Mike also recorded two unreleased solo albums, First Love and Country Love.[17] Brian, who is barely present on L.A.,[22] was institutionalized at Brotzman Memorial Hospital from November 1978 to early 1979[23] following an incident in which he attacked his doctor during a visit.[24][25] In Carlin`s description, "if Brian sang a note anywhere on the album, his voice is so far down in the mix as to be completely unidentifiable."[22]
Love described L.A. as "mainly a collection of solo efforts".[16] These included songs from Mike Love’s unreleased album “First Love” and Dennis Wilson’s in progress album “Bambu”. The album`s centerpiece was "Here Comes the Night", an 11-minute disco reworking of an original R&B song that the band had released on their 1967 album Wild Honey.[22][26] Dennis was opposed to the recording, and Brian did not participate.[27] Another older song, "Good Timin`", had dated from the band`s aborted 1974 sessions at Caribou Ranch.[28] Brian`s rendition of "Shortenin` Bread" featured Dennis on lead, and was a different recording from the version on the unreleased Adult/Child album.[29]
Among the newer songs, Carl contributed three – "Angel Come Home", "Full Sail", and "Goin` South" – that he wrote with songwriter Geoffrey Cushing-Murray, whom he had met through touring member Billy Hinsche.[30] Dennis` two songs – "Baby Blue" and "Love Surrounds Me" – were lifted from his in-progress Bambu album. Biographer Jon Stebbins states that the songs were included at the insistence of Dennis` bandmates, and quotes music journalist Domenic Priore, who surmised, "They obviously didn`t have enough good material for their debut album on their new label, so they nicked some of the better [songs from Bambu]".[27]
Love`s "Sumahama" is lyrically inspired by his fiancé at the time, a woman named Sumako, and is "about a young girl who wants to go with her mother to a place called `Sumahama` in search of her father." Sumahama was re-recorded from the version recorded on his unreleased album First Love. [31] Although some of the lyrics are in Japanese, Sumako was of Korean descent.[31] Al Jardine`s "Lady Lynda" is a tribute to his then-wife that is based musically on Bach`s "Jesu, Joy of Man`s Desiring".[30]
Among the outtakes, a re-recorded version of "Santa Ana Winds" appeared on their next album, Keepin` the Summer Alive (1980),[17] "Brian`s Back" (another First Love outtake) was released on the 1998 compilation Endless Harmony,[17] and "California Feelin`" was released on the 2013 compilation Made in California.[32] "Rock Plymouth Rock/Roll" [sic], a song from the band`s unfinished Smile album, was also considered for inclusion as the opening track of L.A..[33] Still-unreleased tracks from the L.A. sessions include "Looking Down the Coast/Monterey", "I`m Begging You Please", "Basketball Rock", "Bowling", "There’s a Feeling Through the Air", and renditions of "Calendar Girl" and "Drip Drop".[34][17]
In the liner notes, it is explained that the L.A. (Light Album) title refers to the "awareness of, and the presence of, God here in this world as an ongoing loving reality".[19][30] The initials also allude to Los Angeles, the band`s native home.[30] Carlin writes that the title "evoked both Los Angeles and the city`s long-standing position as a capital of vaguely New Age religions".[19]
The sleeve design features an assortment of illustrations drawn individually by Gary Meyer ("The Beach Boys"), Jim Heimann ("Light Album"), Drew Struzan ("Sumahama"), Dave McMacken ("Lady Lynda"), Steve Carver ("Full Sail"), Nick Taggart ("Here Comes the Night"), Howard Carriker ("Angel Come Home"), Peter Green ("Good Timin`"), Neon Park ("Baby Blue"), Blue Beach ("Shortenin` Bread"), Mick Haggerty ("Here Comes the Night"), and William Stout ("Goin` South"). Troy Lane is credited as "cover artist", while Gary Meyer is credited with art direction and design.[30]
The group at a 1979 photoshoot.
Lead single "Here Comes the Night" (backed with "Baby Blue") was issued on February 19, 1979, and peaked at number 44.[27] L.A. (Light Album) followed on March 16[35] and reached number 100 in the U.S.[5] The next month, "Good Timin`" (backed with "Love Surrounds Me") was issued as a second single and reached number 40, becoming the band`s first top 40 hit since "It`s OK" in 1976.[36] Stebbins summarized this juncture in the band`s career,
Dennis`s fans hated disco and thought Mike`s songs were silly. Mike`s fans thought Dennis`s voice was awful and found his songs too depressing. Brian`s fans wanted more Brian. ... Despite being heralded with the fanfare of a major-label debut, the LP was no more than a reflection of a band in disarray. No one agreed on anything, and nothing complemented anything else. Now the Beach Boys would have to go on the road and try to sell a product that nobody wanted.[37]
In April, the group appeared on The Midnight Special, where they performed their past hits alongside "Baby Blue", "Here Comes the Night", and "Angel Come Home".[38] In August, "Lady Lynda" (backed with "Full Sail") was issued as the album`s third and final single. It failed to chart in the U.S., but was a top 10 hit in several territories abroad, including the UK.[5]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [39] |
Blender | [40] |
Christgau`s Record Guide | C+[41] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [42] |
MusicHound Rock | woof![43] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [44] |
The album received mostly unfavorable reviews from music critics. In his review for Rolling Stone, Dave Marsh wrote, "The Beach Boys have not made great rock music since Wild Honey [and have not] made competent pop music since Holland", concluding that the album "is worse than awful. It is irrelevant."[45] The New York Times concluded that "the songs here are better than some recent albums by the group; they`re gentle, tuneful and innocently charming... But they`re pretty trivial, too."[46]
AllMusic reviewer John Bush felt, "The Beach Boys ended the decade by releasing the worst album of their career", describing it as "yet another oddball attempt to push the Beach Boys into the contemporary mainstream despite their many songwriting and production flaws."[39] Blender`s Douglas Wolk decreed that L.A. was "practically a self-parody" with "Here Comes the Night" being the only enjoyable track.[40] Jeff Tamarkin, who penned liner notes for the 2000 CD reissue, said of the album: "There is undeniable brilliance here if one dares to look."[30] Stebbins praised the Wilson brothers` contributions and derided the songs by Love and Jardine, calling the album "an uneven and disappointing affair. If you liked one part of it, then you were sure to hate others."[47] Carlin opined that L.A. was "a big improvement over M.I.U.. ... the album`s strength came largely from its diversity of voices".[19] Critic Richard Williams referred to "Angel Come Home" as "the most beautifully textured and exquisitely pain-racked white soul music ever made".[48]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Lead vocal(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Good Timin`" | Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson | Carl Wilson | 2:12 |
2. | "Lady Lynda" | Johann Sebastian Bach, Al Jardine, Ron Altbach | Al 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" | Dennis Wilson, Cushing-Murray | D. Wilson | 3:41 |
6. | "Sumahama" | Mike Love | Mike Love | 4:07 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Lead vocal(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Here Comes the Night" | B. Wilson, Love | C. Wilson | 10:51 |
2. | "Baby Blue" | D. Wilson, Gregg Jakobson, Karen Lamm | C. Wilson and D. Wilson | 3:25 |
3. | "Goin` South" | C. Wilson, Cushing-Murray | C. Wilson | 3:16 |
4. | "Shortenin` Bread" | Traditional; arranged by B. Wilson | C. Wilson and D. Wilson | 2:49 |
Total length: | 41:33 |
Credits from Craig Slowinski[49]
The Beach Boys
Touring members
Guests
Additional session musicians
Chart (1979) | Peak position |
---|---|
Dutch Album Chart[50] | 43 |
UK Top 40 Album Chart[51] | 32 |
US Billboard Top LPs & Tape[5] | 100 |