Pacific Ocean Blue

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Pacific Ocean Blue
File:POBCover.jpg
Studio album by Dennis Wilson
Released August 22, 1977 (1977-08-22)
Recorded <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • 1971 (1971) ("River Song")
  • February 12, 1975 (1975-02-12) – March 22, 1977 (1977-03-22)
Studio Brother Studios, Santa Monica, CA
Genre Rock,[1] pop[1]
Length 37:15
Label Caribou
Producer Dennis Wilson, Gregg Jakobson
Singles from Pacific Ocean Blue
  1. "River Song"
    Released: 1977
  2. "You and I"
    Released: 1977

Pacific Ocean Blue is the only studio album by American musician Dennis Wilson, drummer and co-founder of the Beach Boys.[2] When released in August 1977, it was warmly received critically,[3] and noted for outselling the Beach Boys' contemporary efforts.[4] Two singles were issued from the album, "River Song" and "You and I", which did not chart.

The album remains a focal point of Wilson's legacy,[5] being referred to as a "lost classic."[2][6][7][8] It has appeared on several "Best-of" lists[9] including Robert Dimery's "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die,"[10] and Mojo's "Lost Albums You Must Own"[11] and "70 of the Greatest Albums of the 70s" lists.[12] In 2005, it was ranked #18 in GQ's "The 100 Coolest Albums in the World Right Now!" list.[13]

Wilson intended to record a follow-up, entitled Bambu, but the album was left unfinished at the time of his death in December 1983.[14][5]

Background and recording

After several attempts, starting in 1970, to realize his own project, some of which made it to the finished album, Wilson recorded the bulk of Pacific Ocean Blue in the months spanning the fall of 1976 to the following spring, at the Beach Boys' own Brother Studios. At the time of recording, Dennis' hard living had begun affecting his looks and more importantly his singing voice, which now delivered grainy and rough, yet still deeply soulful, vocals.[3][15]

Recalling the time Wilson spent working on the album, co-producer Gregg Jakobson said, "This was when he fully accepted himself as an artist. Brian had shown him chords on the piano, but as he'd become more proficient the music that came forth was not derivative of that. Having his own studio helped tremendously. With a little encouragement, and the right tools, Dennis took off."[16]

Brian reported that his reaction when Dennis played him early mixes of the album was "Dennis, that's funky! That's funky!"[17]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars[1]
Bloomberg L.P. 4/4 stars[18]
PopMatters 8/10 stars[19]
Pitchfork Media 8.5/10 (reissue)[20]
The Onion AV Club A-[21]
Robert Christgau (dud)[22]
Uncut 5/5 stars[23]
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars[24]
Spin 4/5 stars[25]

Released in August 1977, Pacific Ocean Blue received glowing reviews for its depth and emotion.[3] It has allegedly been praised by his older brother Brian Wilson, but in a 2008 interview with Pitchfork Media, Brian denied knowing that Dennis had recorded an album at all.[26][14] The album also performed poorly in the U.S. charts peaking at a disappointing #96 during a short 12 week chart run, and eventually went on to sell fewer than 5,000 copies.[27] The poor performance of the record, combined with Wilson's increasingly unreliable professional behavior, led his record label to pull support for a modest West Coast tour that had been scheduled to promote the album.

Release history

Issued by Caribou/CBS Records on CD in 1991, Pacific Ocean Blue went out of print within a year[3] due to ongoing disagreements over copyright ownership; the album was virtually unavailable for more than fifteen years. Copies of the extremely rare 1991 CD sold for over $200.[7][28]

Legacy Recordings released a special 30th anniversary, 2-disc edition of Pacific Ocean Blue on June 17, 2008.[29] It includes material from the Bambu sessions.[30][8] A limited edition 180-gram vinyl multi-LP box set was also released on the Sundazed label.[7][31]

Notable on the reissue is the inclusion of the song "Holy Man", recorded for Pacific Ocean Blue in 1977, in two versions. Wilson had completed work on the instrumental backing track but never finished a satisfactory vocal, erasing an original attempt. For the reissue, Taylor Hawkins of the Foo Fighters was recruited to record a vocal version in Wilson's style given their similarities. The song's original lyricist, Gregg Jakobson, was tapped to help recall the song's original melody and to write lyrics for the song.

Despite missing the UK Album Chart on its original 1977 release, the expanded reissue of Pacific Ocean Blue entered the UK album chart at #16, also reaching #5 on the Norway album chart. In addition, the package managed to attain a high of #8 on Billboard's Top Pop Catalog Albums chart.

Track listing

Side one
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "River Song"   Dennis Wilson, Carl Wilson 3:44
2. "What's Wrong"   D. Wilson, Gregg Jakobson, Michael Horn 2:22
3. "Moonshine"   D. Wilson, Jakobson 2:27
4. "Friday Night"   D. Wilson, Jakobson 3:09
5. "Dreamer"   D. Wilson, Jakobson 4:22
6. "Thoughts of You"   D. Wilson, Jim Dutch 3:02
Side two
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Time"   D. Wilson, Karen Lamm-Wilson 3:31
2. "You and I"   D. Wilson, Lamm-Wilson, Jakobson 3:25
3. "Pacific Ocean Blues"   D. Wilson, Mike Love 2:39
4. "Farewell My Friend"   D. Wilson 2:26
5. "Rainbows"   D. Wilson, C. Wilson, Stephen Kalinich 2:55
6. "End of the Show"   D. Wilson, Jakobson 2:55
Total length:
37:15

30th Anniversary Edition

Personnel

<templatestyles src="Div col/styles.css"/>

  • Dennis Wilson — Lead, backing, and harmony vocals, piano, Hammond organ, ARP String Ensemble, Moog Taurus, Minimoog, Clavinet, Rhodes piano, drums, percussion, bass harmonica, tuba on "Dreamer", electric violin on "Time", lap steel guitar on "Farewell My Friend"; arrangements
  • Carli Munoz — Piano, keyboards, Moog synthesizer, percussion; producer
  • Carl Wilson — Lead and rhythm guitar, backing and co-lead vocals
  • Bruce Johnston — Backing vocals and vocal arrangement on "End of the Show"
  • Hal Blaine — Drums on "What's Wrong"; bass drum on "You and I"
  • Chuck Domanico — Bass
  • Ricky Fataar — Drums, tambourine on "Holy Man"
  • John Hanlon — Engineer; lead guitar on "Dreamer"
  • Gregg Jakobson — Producer; backing vocals
  • James Jamerson — Bass
  • Earle Mankey — Guitar; Engineer
  • Dean Torrence — Background vocals
  • Billy Hinsche — Rhythm guitar, backing vocals
  • Trisha Roach — Backing vocals
  • Baron Stewart — Backing vocals
  • Jim Dutch — Backing vocals
  • Karen Lamm-Wilson — Backing vocals
  • Robert Lamm — Backing vocals on "What's Wrong"
  • Gayle Levant — Harp on "End of the Show"
  • Stephen Moffitt — Chief engineer
  • Michael Andreas — Alto, tenor, and baritone saxophone; flutes; clarinet
  • Lance Buller — Trombone, trumpet
  • Sterling Smith — Keyboards
  • Tommy Smith — Drums
  • Dave Hessler — Bass
  • Ed Carter — Lead, rhythm, and bass Guitar
  • Mort Klanfer — Bass on "You and I"
  • Bobby Figueroa — Drums; congas on "You and I"
  • Wayne Tweed — Bass
  • Manolo Badrena — Percussion
  • Janice Hubbard — Oboe
  • Bill Lamb — Trumpet, cornet, trombone
  • Charles McCarthy — Tenor and baritone saxophone
  • Eddie Tuleja — Lead, rhythm, and slide guitar; banjo and mandolin on "Rainbows"; backing vocals
  • Sid Sharp — Live strings ensemble
  • Alexander Hamilton's Double Rock Baptist Choir
Per Craig Slownski.[32]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 http://www.allmusic.com/album/mw0000314145
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  16. Edmonds, Ben. "Dennis Wilson: The Lonely Sea". Mojo, November 2002
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  18. link
  19. link
  20. link
  21. link
  22. link
  23. link
  24. link at the Wayback Machine (archived April 27, 2009)
  25. Spin June 2008, p.119
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  29. Spring '08 LPs From Madonna, Coldplay, The Roots, Mudcrutch, Elvis Costello : Rolling Stone
  30. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  32. http://www.tiptopwebsite.com/custommusic2/craigslowinskicom2.pdf#page=1

External links