>listens to rubber soul once
>>63710387
Rubber Soul wasn't even as great as everyone says.
(Still a five-star album though.)
>Listens to Sgt Peppers once
>listens to strawberry fields forever once
>>63710428
You Won't See Me is so amazing
>>63710387
it was Revolver tho
>listens to Helter Skelter once
>>63710437
Considering that Keith Moon was a huge Beach Boys fan, this must've been one interesting encounter.
>>63710569
No, it was Rubber Soul, and it was the U.S. version
>>63710770
I fail to understand the reasoning behind your post.
>>63710473
See above post
>>63710902
No, Revolver influenced Pet Sounds which Influenced SP
>I fail to understand the reasoning behind your post.
It's because Helter Skelter was Paul trying to out-heavy the heaviest band at the time
>>63711121
>Pet Sounds
>release date: May 16, 1966
>Revolver
>release date: August 5, 1966
>>63710770
I love the who so much tbqh
>>63711866
>Brian Wilson
>not a time traveling wizard
>Following the example of Pet Sounds, the Beatles recorded, from February to May 1967, Sgt. Pepper, disregarding two important factors: first that Pet Sounds had been arranged, mixed and produced by Brian Wilson and not by an external producer like George Martin, and second that, as always, they were late. They began assembling Sgt. Pepper a year after Pet Sounds had hit the charts, and after dozens of records had already been influenced by it.
>The Beach Boys and the Beatles are often stated to have directly reciprocated each other's musical developments during the 1960s. Echoing this, Beatles producer George Martin said, "No one made a greater impact on the Beatles than Brian." Wilson later clarified his side of the matter: "The Beatles inspired me. They didn't influence me."
>Wilson has said that the main difference between him and the Beatles is that the Beatles "will simplify to its skeletal form an arrangement," whereas Wilson would be "impelled to make it more complex," and that if he had arranged "Norwegian Wood", he would have "orchestrated it, put in background voices, [and] done a thousand things". Musicologist Philip Lambert called the Beatles' general sound and style "vastly different" from Pet Sounds.
>Author Michael Zager wrote that Pet Sounds is more reminiscent of the productions of Phil Spector, recycling many of his Wall of Sound production watermarks.
>Carl elaborated: "[Phil Spector] was Brian’s favorite kind of rock; he liked [him] better than the early Beatles stuff."]
>In 2014, Brian stated that he thought "Strawberry Fields Forever" was "a weird record ... I liked it," though denied rumors which said that the song had crippled him emotionally.
>On the subject of the Beatles' Revolver (1966), Mike Love responded: "No, I don't think he was influenced by Revolver. Brian was in his own world, believe me. If he were influenced by the Beatles, there'd be more fuzz tone and a few sitars on our records, but there never have been, really."
>listens to beach boys once
>>63712217
>quotes scaroofi
stopped reading right there
>listens to laughing stock once
>>63710387
>>63710473
>>63710516
>>63710770
sad to see people persisting with this meme in the year 2016
>>63712217
honestly this
>>63710770
Actually it was the other way around
>listens to master of reality once
>listens to a public restroom once
>>63712217
>Wilson has said that the main difference between him and the Beatles is that the Beatles "will simplify to its skeletal form an arrangement," whereas Wilson would be "impelled to make it more complex," and that if he had arranged "Norwegian Wood", he would have "orchestrated it, put in background voices, [and] done a thousand things". Musicologist Philip Lambert called the Beatles' general sound and style "vastly different" from Pet Sounds.
But what about when you strip down Brian's arrangements?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCDONGlQoV4
>>63716057
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXPXd7jLCek
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTifX3mpnV4
>>63716079
This man was born touched by God
No kidding, I saw no purpose in life until I heard Pet Sounds
My only qualm is that I'll never be able to write anything nearly as elegant as Surfs Up
That video of him playing it in his house in 67 belongs in the Smithsonian