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Vinyl LP - Remastered / Special Edition
| 1 | Don't Go Near the Water 2:42 |
| 2 | Long Promised Road 3:34 |
| 3 | Take a Load off Your Feet 2:31 |
| 4 | Disney Girls (1957) 4:11 |
| 5 | Student Demonstration Time 4:01 |
| 6 | Feel Flows 4:49 |
| 7 | Lookin' at Tomorrow (A Welfare Song) 1:57 |
| 8 | A Day in the Life of a Tree 3:10 |
| 9 | 'Til I Die 2:44 |
| 10 | Surf's Up 4:12 |
The Beach Boys' catalog is littered with forgotten 1970s LPs that barely scraped the charts upon release but matured into solid fan favorites despite -- and occasionally, because of -- their many and varied eccentricities. Surf's Up could well be the most definitive, beginning with the cloying "Don't Go Near the Water" and ending a bare half-hour later with the baroque majesty of the title track (originally written in 1966). The LP is a virtual laundry list of each uncommon intricacy that made the Beach Boys' forgotten decade such a bittersweet thrill -- the fluffy yet endearing pop (od)ditties of Brian Wilson, quasi-mystical white-boy soul from brother Carl, and the downright laughable songwriting on tracks charting Mike Love's devotion to Buddhism and Al Jardine's social/environmental concerns.
Those songs are enjoyable enough, but the last three tracks are what make Surf's Up such a masterpiece. The first, "A Day in the Life of a Tree," is simultaneously one of Brian's most deeply touching and bizarre compositions; he is the narrator and object of the song (though not the vocalist; co-writer Jack Rieley lends a hand), lamenting his long life amid the pollution and grime of a city park while the somber tones of a pipe organ build atmosphere. The second, "'Til I Die," isn't the love song the title suggests; it's a haunting, fatalistic piece of pop surrealism that appeared to signal Brian's retirement from active life. The album closer, "Surf's Up," is a masterpiece of baroque psychedelia, probably the most compelling track from the Smile period. Carl gives a soulful performance despite the surreal wordplay, and Brian's coda is one of the most stirring moments in his catalog. Wrapped up in a mess of contradictions, Surf's Up defined the Beach Boys' tumultuous career better than any other album. [Surf's Up was made available in 2000 as half of the two-fer collection Sunflower/Surf's Up.] John Bush, All Music Guide