Eighth row on the floor. Back in October of 2020, I was going through bins of stuff that I’ve collected since I was a teenager, and that’s when I found these tucked into some other stuff. A day can simultaneously seem like one of the best and worst of your life, but I was relieved to see I still had the tickets. Time has given me perspective, and you know what? The day still has that best/worst feeling. Fortunately for me, feelings can be processed through fiction and have a little less power.
Speaking of writing, the recent playlist.
Rufus Wainwright, Want One; The Wallflowers, Bringing Down The Horse and (Breach); Wilco, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot; Hank Williams, Icon; Brian Wilson, Brian Wilson Presents Smile, a 2004 collection of 17 works Brian created for the unreleased Smile LP in the 1960s and an accompanying booklet. Though many of the songs were later released on other Beach Boys albums, these versions are more like what Brian planned before his breakdown. The collection is a gift for fans and critics who always regretted that Smile wasn’t released.
These last two will start the Tuesday writing playlist.
Dennis Wilson, Pacific Ocean Blue, a 2-CD set that includes POB plus 4 bonus tracks, and a second disk, Bambu, the Caribou sessions, that includes 18 works Dennis intended to be on his second (unreleased) album, plus a bonus track of the late Taylor Hawkins (Foo Fighters) adding vocals to “Holy Man.” This was a beautiful composition Dennis wrote with Gregg Jakobson. Dennis and Gregg left it off POB because they never wrote lyrics, and Dennis died in 1983 without producing a second solo album. In 2008, when it was decided to put together a second album of Dennis’s music, Jakobson commissioned Taylor to write lyrics and add vocals to “Holy Man.” The first time I stumbled over the song, Taylor’s voice sounds so much like Dennis’s that I wondered how I never knew Dennis put vocals to it. A little research enlightened me that the vocalist and lyricist was Taylor. When Taylor died in March of 2022, it was a huge loss to music; to me, it felt like losing a part of Dennis again.
My second album of the day will be Paul McCartney and Wings, Band on the Run. Originally released in 1973, this one is the 25th Anniversary Edition, and includes a second disk with more than 50 minutes of voices of the band and some of the celebrities on the cover along with previously unreleased versions of some BOTR tracks. This year, the 50th Anniversary Edition has come out with more extras. (I don’t have it.)
Here’s the posthumous Dennis Wilson/Taylor Hawkins collaboration on “Holy Man.”
Yesterday, driving through the desert to work, I will blame my car for randomly playing wipeout which draws me to the Beach Boys. My car wants the beach, the ocean views, the seabreeze, and I want a vacation. I would put the two together, but I used up too much leave last year so I don’t have enough. Besides, it’s Feb-Are-You-Airy!
Make yourself a Beach Boys playlist and dream of the sand and the ocean and the beautiful people of sunny Southern California! I travel there in my mind every day for one reason or another.
It disappoints me immensely that etickets have overtaken paper tickets. I used to love keeping a cataloguing tickets. I still go through them occasionally and am reminded of concerts or performances I had forgotten about – or am shocked by how many years have passed. Like digital photography – I think a lot of social history will be lost.
I think you are right. I love seeing my tickets and remembering.
I read an article a long time ago where a historian voiced the concern that so much social history will be lost due to modern tech.