Hey, all you surfin dudes and hardbody wahinis, check out this thing on TNT. Its a tribute to the surf god, Brian Wilson! An American genius! The wizard of Bellagio Drive, sonic sorcerer, creator of perhaps the most perfect rock album of them allPet Sounds. A unique event! A long-awaited, star-studded special! Two hours of encomiums, cover versions, old footage of the Beach Boys when they were the Beach Boys, publicity stills. Oh boy! Or, uh, I dunnois this really such a good idea?
To begin with, the tribute thingonce you get over the contrived anticipation of the occasion, the celebrity debris and all the sports utility vehicle adsyou have to ask yourself, "Whatother than a kind of celebration of itselfis the point of this?" All these famous peopleBilly Joel, Paul Simon, Elton John, David Crosby (any time you see David Crosby in something, beware)all these cool guys and hip chicks paying homage to Brian, their idol (more or less). Or are they? I mean, you could also come away with the feeling that, hey, Brian Wilson is a great artist because we dig him. A bunch of famous people saying that this guy is good because we like him so much were gonna sing his songs. A tribute to us, basically. Gee, what famous friends this guy Brian has. Ach! Too much monkey business. This stuff really brings out the Grinch in me.
But, wait. First thing, on comes the Boys Choir of Harlem singing what seems like a celestial alphabet. Harmonized phonemes! A kabalistic chant! Perfect. Because Brian really is a religious composer in the tradition of Saint Teresa of Avilathe quest of the soul toward the divine. But you know they aint gonna pursue that route. And, sure enough, the next thing they do is run into it and wreck it.
Ricky Martin singing "Help Me, Rhonda." He should have called it "Check Me Out, Rhonda." Jeez, Louise! Its a hyperactive lounge lizard in plastic pants searching for the inner meaning of the damn thingas if it were some Johnny Mercer lyric that needed Sinatras phrasing to pull it out. There is no hidden meaning, you idiot, its a pop songI yam what I yama clean Southern California soft machine. Help me, Rhonda, indeed! It made you long for go-go dancers like the ones seen in an old Beach Boys clip they showed. There in all its hokey innocence was body language that meshed perfectly with Rhondas sonic gears. That was meaning in the Zen-surf sense of the word, baby.
Paul Simon comes out and does a dignified acoustic "Surfer Girl" but, of course, making it sound like "Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme." In other words, kinda deconstructing it back into the folk chords it so plaintively and ingeniously leapt out of. Pleasant, unassuming, archaizingbut what is the point? Actually missing the point of Brians transforming spell.
Dont worry. Im not going to go through the whole deal, song by songwhat would be the point of recapitulating the excruciating agony? Ill just hit on a few true horrors and leave it at that.
Elton John, how about that? And God only knows why, too. Hes become the Sylvia Miles of our time. The man will show up to the opening of an envelope. And that suit, Reg! It looks like your tailor hadnt finished the alterations. And, by the way, what is Jann Wenner doing singing backup vocals? Get out! Please, Jann, dont tell me its all come down to this. And then theres Billy Joel, looking like Bluto in a tuxedo, oozing and Copacabanaing through "Dont Worry Baby." Hey, I am worried, man, very worried. Somewhere along the line, this guy compromised with the mystery tramp.
Then theres the leaden, oleaginous narration supposed to fill you in a bit on Brians curriculum vitae. Brain freeze! The gears of my mind actually seized up. I went into a kind of trance that can only be induced by an excess of droning, banal, misguided, rock-lit formulaic pap. Dear Recording Angel, I heard phrases such as "Brians genius finally allowed rock to be art"I really did. Yes, lets give rock an MFA, for gods sake. Listen, the guy who wrote this stuff, David Leaf, a Beach Boys biographer I do believe, probably wrote some profound stuff and then the producer came along and said, "Dumb it down, this is television, boy."
Cmon, wasnt there anything you liked at all in this tribute? Sure. My two favorites (aside from the opening) were Wilson Phillips (you cant go wrong with genes like that from Dad and Mom) and, of course, Brian himself. Its painful to watch Brian these days with one side of his face paralyzed from a stroke, but he looked good, actually. And his one song was pure Brian: soulful, reflective, compassionate, simple as a parablethe kind of story the Buddha might have sung if hed come from Southern California.
One of the problems with a Brian Wilson tribute is that you really cant tinker with the celestial machinery of his songs. Most cover versions of Brians songs fail because they wont let the song be. In a sense, the only thing you can do is try and flawlessly duplicate his songsbut what in the end would be the point of that? They are perfect to begin withall youll end up doing is cluttering the impeccable sine waves of the original with your own jangled vibrations. Brians sound is unique to him; its like the cry of a very complicated bird whose call encompasses everything hes experienced and transmuted into an ineffable frequencyplaintive, otherworldly and resonating, as if it were some extraterrestrial code beamed from the furthest reaches of inner space.
I hung out with the Beach Boys for a while in 1967, trying to decipher the Brian enigma. I never did, but I glimpsed pieces of it. Brian approaches sound with an almost kabalistic fervor. The world was fast becoming transparent, and surf, for him, had by then transubstantiated into a mystic essence. In "Surfs Up," waves represented, he said, "the eternal now," a Heraclitan analog for the ceaseless lapping of a hallucinated present on an ever- receding consciousness. He carried around a childs plastic tape recorder on which he played the opening notes of "Be My Baby." Over and over again, Brian would play those four Masonic notes. Boom boom-boom pow! Boom boom-boom pow! Boom boom-boom pow! They followed him wherever he went, like the leitmotif of a character in an opera. They possessed for Brian an almost mystical significance. He saw them as some sort of cosmic code. He felt that through this sonic key he had unlocked a universal mystery, as if all sounds participated in some mysterium tremendum, a sort of pre-verbal language that intimately links humans, animals and inanimate things.
What the whole dopey puffed-up tribute thing missed was the essential sweetness and ingenuousness of Brian. In some ways, Brian is the most elusive of all rock stars. By now, were familiar enough with Dylan playing three-card monte with his identity to have stopped trying to guess which shell hes under. Brians inscrutability is of a different order entirely. For one thing, he never really developed a public persona like other rock stars. His tract-house, kid-next-door manner was somewhat akin to Andy Warhols "dumb" act, a way of letting people patronize him while leaving the boy inside alone. It isnt as if Brian was trying to be deliberately deceptive; hes just the kid who never came out to play.
He lived in his headwhere else would you go as a child with a monster-of-a-father like Murray Wilson? And thats why he adapted so effortlessly to the studiothe studio was a materialization of Brians brain, a model of the room inside his head where he first heard those celestial sounds.