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Introduction
A New Interpretation of SMiLE
Zen and Pet Sounds
The Elements
The Koan/The Hallucination
Bio Based SMiLE
The Opposites
Ego
Zen and The Beatles' Revolver
East Or West Indies
Cool Links
The Trip
The SMiLE=Zen koan
idea forced us to view SMiLE as a matter of
personal experience.
People who experimented
with psychedelic drugs
were viewed as
"enlightened" people.
It is assumed then, that
the "enlightened"
state
of consciousness that Brian's SMiLE koan would originate from
could be connected to the use of psychedelic drugs.
The kind of inside
information needed to match Brian Wilson's personal experiences
to SMiLE was contained in
his often discredited biography.
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"I told him (Van Dyke Parks) the new
album was tentatively titled Dumb Angel and explained
that my goal was to surpass Pet Sounds. Musically and
philosophically. I imagined myself creating a whole new form
of music, religious, white, spiritual music."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.148.)
SMiLE is based upon Brian Wilson's spiritual
experiences and the events surrounding those experiences. His
religious awareness shifted from
a Western understanding to an Eastern one, from understanding
only part of the picture to understanding the bigger picture.
"...I knew the direction
I wanted to head with the next album. Up and farther out. Creatively,
I was at the pinnacle of a streak that was heading into its third
year. I'd climbed the ladder and stood at the top, all alone,
imbibing on the thin air. But none of that satisfied my fundamental
need to prove myself.
I had to go farther. Now
I wanted to jump off the ladder and...fly!"-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.148.)
Bio Based SMiLE
- Heroes And Villains (intro)
~ "Several days before Christmas 1965, I pulled
my Corvette out of the garage, wound down Laurel Canyon, and,
twenty minutes later, parked in front of Pickwick Bookstore in
Hollywood."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.128.)
This music is best matched to Brian's bookstore (inspiring the
SMiLE album's storefront front cover) flashback.
"Oh my God! The room began to spin. I was in
the center of a giant spinning top. Turning, turning, turning.
The moment was completely surreal."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.129.)
"It had been months since
I'd taken acid. But I was having a flashback."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.129.)
"As the buzz subsided
into a manageable burned-out sensation, I remembered Loren once
explaining that hallucinations were comparable to Zen riddles,
mysteries full of meaning..."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.129.)
The SMiLE concept was based upon
this experience.
The album is an hallucination comparable to a Zen riddle. Van
Dyke Parks' lyrics form hallucinations based upon Brian Wilson's
religious LSD experiences.
- Heroes And Villains ~ This song has its own Zen Interpretation
page here.
"Go near him (Loren),"
my dad warned, "and I'll call the cops."'-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.115.)
There were more than a few battles taking place during the SMiLE
era.
"In summer 1966 the
Beach Boys and I occupied two different worlds, merging occasionally
in the studio."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.144.)
There is also some "Heroes And Villains" material
here.
- Barnyard ~ "Hit
the dirt and do a two and a half, next time I'll leave my hat
on..." is a veiled
reference to Brian's two and a half LSD trips.
- Our Prayer ~ "The night arrived. Loren set
the scene at his apartment: low lights, Lava Lites, music, something
to drink..."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.116.)
This piece, considered an "intro to the album" during
its recording, immediately establishes a sacred atmosphere like
that of Brian's first LSD trip.
"There was a sacredness
to it all--from the way we said hello to the way Loren handed
me a small paper stamp and told me to swallow it."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.116.)
"The purity of the blending of the voices made the listeners
feel spiritual." ~Brian Wilson, from the 20/20
CD liner notes.
"Loren was always
discoursing on spirituality, religious books, inspiring me to
make music that would would evoke such feelings."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.131.)
- Child Is The Father Of
The Man ~ The title-phrase
of this song is taken from the following Wordsworth poem;
My heart leaps up when
I behold
A rainbow in the sky:
So was it when my life began;
So is it now I am a man;
So be it when I shall grow old,
Or let me die!
The Child is father of the Man;
And I could wish my days to be
Bound each to each by natural piety.
"Loren had certain
qualities I wanted to absorb...(he) possessed knowledge, hipness,
a line to some mysterious trove of ideas I wanted to know more
about. He had unlocked the doors of perception for me..."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.115.)
The Doors Of Perception's author, Aldous
Huxley, was hip to the the work of fellow Englishman William
Wordsworth.
"The change that
took place in Wordsworth as he passed from Zen through Pantheism
to Orthodoxy, is almost unparalled in the history of culture."-R.H.Bylth,
Zen In English Literature And Oriental Classics,
(pg.412.) SMiLE, as presented here, is Blyth's
evolving Wordsworth...in reverse.
The inward focus of Pet Sounds was suggested by
Brian's astrologer;
"I then told the
astrologer about the hallucination I'd had in the bookstore last
December, presenting it as a riddle. Genevelyn thought about
it for a moment, then explained something that made perfect sense
to me. If I wasn't able to find inspiration for songs outside
myself, as in books, then I had to look someplace else. I had
to look inward. I had to write about the spirituality I felt
in my heart."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.131.)
SMiLE reversed Brian's focus, feeding inspiration
from outside sources such as books. Perhaps "Child Is The Father Of The Man"
salutes the influence of these sources on Brian's religious
conversion.
Books, after all, were a big part of the acid flashback that
eventually led to SMiLE;
"Moving slowly into
the aisles, I concentrated on reading the book titles and their
authors. In the philosophy section, I paged through books by
Sartre, Camus, Kant. I tried the religion section and picked
up the Bible, the Bhagavad Gita, and the I Ching.
I stared at the pages, tried to read, but the letters all vibrated
on the pages and I couldn't make sense of anything."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.128.)
"I freaked out that
there was too much knowledge confronting me. I was being overwhelmed
by all the information contained in the books on the shelves.
There was no way I could ever know everything."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.129.)
"I extended my arms,
wanting to run my hand through the information, wanting to stain
my skin with words written by mankind's greatest minds. But all
I felt was air. The knowledge was eluding me."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.129.)
Even though the ultimate answer to Brian's bookstore flashback
riddle would be a spiritual one, his original question was a
literary one. Van Dyke Parks supplied SMiLE with
lyrics reminiscent of the classics. When SMiLE fans
cite great works in their attempts to understand SMiLE
they are, in essence, revisiting Brian's bookstore experience.
"Child Is The
Father Of The Man"
may also be related to "Love To Say Da Da."
Both numbers owe their existence to a beatific display in
the Heavens (a rainbow and a sunrise) along with seeing the fundamental
relationship between "child" and "father"
in a new light.
- Do You Like Worms ~ "I
stood up and didn't move for what Loren later told me was almost
an hour, doing nothing more than stare at the undulating liquid
in the Lava Lite until I had absorbed its slow rhythm."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.117.)
This song begins with a kettle drum's "slow rhythm."
Brian's first trip involved "lava" that when Westernized
(remember, "hallucinations
were comparable to Zen riddles") became Plymouth Rock. The lava, at times resembling
worms, rocks...rolls...and rolls over.
"My brain was a morass
of rubber thoughts."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.117.)
Perhaps these "rubber thoughts" were expressed as this
song's chants.
"...just as suddenly
as I'd checked into the sounds I had to play Loren's piano. I
sat down in front of the keyboard..."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.117.)
The song's "Bicycle Rider" music is played on
piano.
"Seeing a strange-looking
man turn a corner, I convinced myself he was God, leading me
on a journey of my entire life, showing me the tiny seed I'd
once been and taking me to the place where I'd finish my life."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.117.)
Brian's "life journey" is morphed into
the
chronological
Manifest Destiny trip of "Do You Like Worms."
- The Old Master Painter/You
Are My Sunshine ~
"Seeing a strange-looking
man turn a corner, I convinced myself he was God"-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.117.)
The "Old Master Painter"
is God.
"Then he vanished.
I was lost."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.117.)
You were my sunshine.
The Old Master Painter
from the faraway hills,
Painted the violets and the daffodils,
He put the purple in the twilight haze,
Then did a rainbow for the rainy days.
Once again, like the
poem that inspired "Child Is The Father Of The Man,"
we have a rainbow reference.
Then came his masterpiece
and when he was through,
He smiled out in Heaven and he gave me you,
What a beautiful job on that wonderful day,
The Old Master Painter from the hills far away.
Added on, is reference
to the sun.
You were my sunshine
my only sunshine,
You make me happy when skies were grey,
You'll never know dear how much I love you,
How could you take my sunshine away.
"We were young,
Marilyn nearing twenty and me closing in on twenty-four, yet
I thought we'd lost the innocence of our youth in the heavy seriousness
of our lives. The lightness that had once been ours was fading."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.134.)
"Returning home a
bewildered mess, I was immediately chastised by Marilyn. She
didn't mince words in telling me how angry she was at me for
having gone through with the LSD."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.118.)
'"I saw God, Mare,"
I said. "I blew my fucking mind. I saw God. I actually saw
him. Felt him. I realized God."'-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.118.)
'"Marilyn shook her
head. She started crying again. "What's happening to you
Brian?" she sobbed. "I feel as if I don't even know
you."'-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.118.)
- Wonderful ~ This song explores/rediscovers
Brian's wife's lost innocence and holds hope that she'll eventually
discover a spiritually motivated innocence regardless of the
company she keeps.
"Finally, Marilyn
issued an ultimatum--it was either her or Loren. I couldn't handle
that and ignored her. Frustrated, exhausted, and downright mad,
Marilyn packed her belongings and moved..."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.122.)
"She belongs there
left with her liberty, never known as a non-believer."
"My drug use added
to our problems, luring me father out into the abstract world
than all but the farthest out, most patient, and intellectual
characters could handle. Marilyn certainly wasn't among that
group. But my friends were, especially Loren. Marilyn hated him
even more than she did the drugs."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.122.)
Brian's new group of friends (the non-believers?) contrasted
with Brian's old "square" friends and family.
- Cabin Essence ~ "One
night toward the end of our separation, a friend asked if I wanted
to trip...Despite the lingering sense of fear and confusion the
first dosage had left me with, I was game to experiment again."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.122.)
Much like "Do
You Like Worms," this song is an LSD trip painted
in an antiquated Western fashion. Brian's second trip began with
the same "timely
hello" that kicked
off his first trip.
"...welcomes the
time for a change."
"As the LSD kicked
in, I remember hearing fire trucks from the station across the
street rumbling out of the driveway, their sirens wailing louder
and louder."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.123.)
The "fire mellow" beginning anticipates the fire experience that will
eventually turn the heat up turning home into "home on the range."
Brian's friend's abode = the cabin.
The fire trucks = the iron horse.
"I got scared, more
profoundly, deathly scared than ever in my life. Paranoid. There
was nothing to be scared of. Just noise outside that was dissipating
in the distance. But I sensed danger."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.123.)
"Who ran the Iron
Horse?"
'"You better not
drive," my friend called as I ran out the front door, keys
jangling in my hand."'-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.123.)
Brian driving his car = truck driving man.
"I visualized myself
drifting back in time....I continued getting smaller....And then,
finally, I was gone."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.123.)
"In the vast past,
the last gasp."
'"I had written the
words, see, and I was seeking the threshold for "over and
over the crow cries uncover the cornfield."'-Van Dyke Parks, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.70.)
"Those Chinese laborers
working on the railroads, like they'd be hitting the thing (spike)...but
looking away too, and noticing, say a crow flying overhead...the
oriental mind going off on a different track."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.103.)
Brian Wilson wrote this track from the point of view of the 'spike.'
Perhaps this is the golden spike that joined West to East.
"I visualized myself
drifting back in time. Getting smaller and younger. I saw myself
as a teenager, then a young boy....I continued getting smaller.
I was a baby. An infant."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.123.)
- He Gives Speeches ~ The "he" of this song
is an infant.
"I can't imagine
how I managed to navigate a car, but I drove straight to Marilyn's
parents' house. I walked in the front door, expecting to find
Mae and Irving. But they weren't there. Only Barbara lying on
the sofa, watching TV. I took a moment to stare at her, the object
of so many of my fantasies."'-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.123.)
"He gives speeches
always reaches out a lot..."
"...I reached out
to hug her. That was the last thing she wanted. She dodged my
grasp, clawed my arm with her long fingernails, and grabbed my
hand so hard that she tore a big wart right off my finger. It
hurt like a mother-fucker, and the pain caused me to beat a hasty
retreat out of there."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.123.)
"...led him to discover..."
"After my attack
on Barbara, I'd started spending more time with Diane..."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.130.)
"...she was nice
and didn't bite, I fell into her friendly persuasion..."
'"...wouldn't it
be nice if I could lie down beside her and nestle myself in her
long hair?"'-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.135.)
"...silken hair fell
on his face
"
A speech given by an infant
might go something along the lines of "ta, ta, ta"
or "da, da."
- I Wanna Be Around/Friday
Night ~ Rebuilding
after the fire.
"I sank into a dark,
lonely depression and wanted someone to comfort me and tend to
my hypersensitive, childlike wants. I went to Marilyn's apartment."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.124.)
The music from "I
Wanna Be Around" may
have been used to imply its titular meaning as the song contains
rather spiteful lyrics.
"It was past midnight,
and her lights were off. I knocked at the door anyway. After
a minute or so, Marilyn answered wearing her nightgown."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.124.)
Perhaps this meeting happened on a "Friday Night."
'"Think about
it, Mare. We have enough money now to do anything. We'll get
a house and start a family. We can have a normal life. Everything
you want.."'-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.124.)
The saws and hammering sounds represent both the rebuilding of
the relationship and the couple's new house.
"Two weeks later
Marilyn and I went shopping for a house and purchased the second
one the realtor showed us. It was up a windy road, on Laurel
Way, in the Hollywood Hills, and had a panoramic view of the
San Fernando Valley."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.124.)
"...I pulled my Corvette
out of the garage, wound down Laurel Canyon, and, twenty minutes
later, parked in front of Pickwick Bookstore in Hollywood."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.128.)
"Oh my God! The room began to spin. I was in
the center of a giant spinning top. Turning, turning, turning.
The moment was completely surreal."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.129.)
"I was having a flashback."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.129.)
"As the buzz subsided
into a manageable burned-out sensation, I remembered Loren once
explaining that hallucinations were comparable to Zen riddles,
mysteries full of meaning. What had mine meant?...If that was
a riddle, I wanted to know the solution."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.129.)
It is assumed at this point that Brian
Wilson begins to research and discover some of the possibilities
of Zen.
Brian's second trip had been a bad one,
and he had avoided acid since then.
"It had been months
since I'd taken acid."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.129.)
But after the flashback Brian's search for an answer (to his
personal Zen riddle question) led to his taking LSD for a third
time. This trip would give him the solution: the answer.
"...this trip was
the ultimate in LSD joyrides..."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.144.)
- Well, You're Welcome ~
"Well, you're well, you're welcome."
'"Now Al Jardine
was in the car with me getting angrier every time I circled the
block, which was up to twenty five times. "Stop the car
and let me out," he demanded. "Not until you promise
me you'll drop acid," I said. "It'll change your life!"'-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.144.)
"Well, you're well,
you're welcome."
Like Brian's car, this four line chant circles the block again
and again.
"Well, you're well,
you're welcome."
'"I pulled the car
to the side. Al hopped out and slammed the door shut. I called
him back. One more thought.
"Al," I asked, "do you believe in God?"
"You know what, Brian?" he said. "You're full
of a lot of weird ideas. You better stop taking drugs."'-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.144.)
"Well, you're welcome
to come."
- Good Vibrations ~ "'The new pastoral landscape
suddenly being uncovered by the young generation provided a quiet,
peaceful, harmonious trip into inner space. The hassles and frustrations
of the external world were cast aside, and new visions put in
their place. "Good Vibrations" succeeds in suggesting
the healthy emanations that should result from psychic tranquility
and inner peace. The word "vibrations" had been employed
by students of Eastern philosophy and acid-heads for a variety
of purposes, but Wilson uses it here to suggest a kind of extrasensory
experience.'" ~Bruce Golden, The Beach Boys: Southern
California Pastoral
"Good
Vibrations" was
going to be the summation of my musical vision, a harmonic convergence
of imagination and talent, production values and craft, songwriting
and spirituality. I'd written it five months earlier and imagined
the grand, Spectorlike production while on the LSD trip I'd described
so enthusiastically for Al."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.145.)
The "Good Vibrations"
promo film featured Brian and The Beach Boys as firemen driving
their bright red trucks down the Sunset Strip. It is assumed
here that Brian's enlightened third LSD trip vision linked his
fiery second trip to "Good Vibrations."
- The Elements (FIRE) Mrs. O'Leary's Cow ~
This instrumental was inspired by Brian's second LSD trip experience.
"As the LSD kicked
in, I remember hearing fire trucks from the station across the
street rumbling out of the driveway, their sirens wailing louder
and louder. I got scared, more profoundly, deathly scared than
ever in my life. Paranoid."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.123.)
'"Inside, more than
a dozen of the finest string musicians in Los Angeles were waiting
for me to arrive and begin work on "Fire," a section
of a longer suite titled The Elements. But for
two hours I'd refused to get out of the car. Finally, Van Dyke
lost his patience.
"This is embarrassing," he scolded me. "You're
acting like a complete amateur."
"It's just not happening, and that's it," I said.
"Why?" he asked. "Why isn't it happening?"
"Bad vibes," I said."'-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.155.)
"Instead of positive
spiritual music, I'd tapped into a dark source, an extremely
powerful fire music that emitted bad vibrations..."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.156.)
- Love To Say Da Da ~ A Zen Interpretation page, here, is dedicated to this song. The webpage
asserts that "Love To Say Da Da" is Brian's
enlightened third, and final, LSD trip.
"After two bad experiences,
this trip was the ultimate in LSD joyrides--everything it was
supposed to be, four hours of enlightenment and spirituality."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.144.)
This trip was an unsupervised
one; it was just Brian on the beach with "The Elements."
"It's only happened
to me once--early in the morning alone on the beach with the
sun coming up very red. A moment of clear light."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.98.)
Brian envisioned the production of "Good Vibrations"
during this trip. He may have also envisioned the basic SMiLE
concept during this trip. It is my contention that the basic
SMiLE concept is rooted in the Western titled "Mrs.
O'Leary's Cow" and the Eastern titled "Love
To Say Da Da." Together they form the cosmic
yin-yang basis for the SMiLE album.
"...I learned a lot
of things, like patience, understanding. I can't teach you or
tell you, what I learned from taking it. But I consider it a
very religious experience."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen! VIBRATE SMILE!,
(pg.167.)
Brian's blessed beach bound experience, the type of experience
one would want to revisit, manifested itself as Brian's sandbox
and swimming pool "obsessions." There were other so-called
"obsessions" during the SMiLE era. All
of these were symptomatic of Brian's enthusiasm for his new found
focus.
Brian Wilson re-invents himself.
- I'm In Great Shape ~ "Fresh
Zen air around my head, morning stumble out of bed. Eggs and
grits and lickety split, look at me jump I'm in the great shape
of the upper country."
"There was always
some story to the drugs Loren had....the LSD was from up north."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.117.)
The Zen lifestyle naturally
fits in with this new vision (notice the following quote's water
connection.)
"...swimming. A lot
of swimming. It's physical; really Zen, right? The whole spiritual
thing is very physical. Swimming really does it sometimes."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.91.)
- Vega-Tables ~ "Curtis (Springer) was very
big into vegetables....He was an oddity on late-night radio calling
out from the desert about returning to health and the superior
lifestyle a person could reach: You could do anything as long
as you just ate the right foods."-Van Dyke Parks quoted
in the March 2005 issue of Endless Summer Quarterly
"I want people to
turn on to vegetables, good natural food, organic food. Health
is an important ingredient in spiritual enlightenment."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.57.)
The proper lifestyle helps one prepare for spiritual enlightenment
and this 'ingestion' based number touts vegetarianism, a work
ethic, fitness, and laughter: all have ties to Zen. Laughter
is also often associated with dropping acid.
"He told me that
he felt laughter as one of the highest forms of divinity and
that when someone was laughing, their connection with the thing
that was making them laugh made them more 'open' than they could
be at just about any other time."-Michael Vosse, Look! Listen! VIBRATE SMILE!,
(pg.265.)
- Wind Chimes ~ This is an example of Brian being
'open' to an outside thing. The song mirrors Brian's first trip
experience...the Lava Lite is now Easternized into wind chimes.
"I stood up and didn't
move for what Loren later told me was almost an hour, doing nothing
more than stare at the undulating liquid in the Lava Lite until
I had absorbed its slow rhythm."-Wouldn't It Be Nice, (pg.117.)
The lyrics go back and
forth between Brian and the wind chimes, self and other, inner
and outer. Brian opens up...
"Suddenly, I clicked
into the music blasting out of Loren's stereo speakers. As I
had been promised, music had never sounded so full and tangible,
denser and heavier than any music I'd ever heard."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.117.)
The middle part of "Wind Chimes" is extra loud
and dense.
"I imagined wading
through it like a river, until I felt consumed by it, and just
as suddenly as I'd checked into the sounds I had to play Loren's
piano."-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.117.)
The sudden coda of "Wind Chimes" is a piano
piece.
"That night, in the
afterglow of the LSD, I sat at the piano...within the miasma
I began to feel the simmering of a change in consciousness."-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.119.)
- Surf's Up ~ "Surf's Up" is
SMiLE contained in a single song.
The hallucination inducing lyrics (try visualizing them), founded
upon Brian's bookstore revelation, contain antiquated warlike
images inspired, in part perhaps, by Brian's second LSD trip.
"I visualized myself
drifting back in time. Getting smaller and younger. I saw myself
as a teenager, then a young boy. I relived arguments I'd had with my dad."
-Wouldn't It Be Nice,
(pg.123.)
These images were enlarged and enhanced by Van Dyke Parks.
'"One night while
we were working, Dennis came to the house, complaining that the
Beach Boys' stage outfits, the candy-striped shirts and straight-legged
slacks that my dad had picked out in the band's infancy, had
elicited ridicule in some of London's hipper circles. I sympathized,
while Van Dyke immediately interpreted Dennis's tale on a much
broader level. He saw it as a small example of the shame the
U.S. was suffering throughout the world as a result of the Vietnam
War.
"We should hit it head-on," he said.
"I like it," I said. "I don't know much about
it, but my instincts tell me you're right."
Popping some speed, Van Dyke and I stayed up the rest of the
night and wrote "Surf's Up," a song whose title was
so utterly cliche and square that it couldn't be anything but
hip."'-Wouldn't
It Be Nice, (pg.162.)
"Then there's the
parties, the drinking, trying to forget the wars, the battles
at sea. While at port a do or die. Ships
in the harbor, battling it out. A kind of Roman Empire thing."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.89.)
The antiquated images are cast aside for a new vision. The past
doesn't exist, there is only the now.
"The music begins
to take over. Columnated ruin domino.
Empires, ideas, lives,
institutions--everything has to fall, tumbling like dominoes."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.89.)
"...all is lost,
for now."
The song reaches a climax mirroring the death of the individual,
the ego.
"A choke of
grief. At his
own sorrow and the emptiness of his life, because he can't even
cry for the suffering in the world, for his own suffering."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.89.)
Then there is hope. The answer to Brian's bookstore hallucination
Zen riddle question is found during his third LSD trip, a rebirth.
With the past gone one is, once again, like a child.
"And then, hope. Surf's up!...Come about hard and join the young and
often spring you gave. Go
back to the kids, to the beach, to childhood."-Brian Wilson, Look! Listen!
VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.89.)
So was it when my life began;
So is it now I am a man;
The Child is father of the Man;
"I heard
the word--of God; Wonderful
thing--the joy of enlightenment, of seeing
God. And what is it? A children's song! And
then there's the song itself; the song of children; the song
of the universe rising and falling in wave after wave, the song
of God..."-Brian
Wilson, Look! Listen! VIBRATE SMILE!, (pg.89.)
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