We Gotta Groove β The Brother Studios Years, a new 73-track box set, picks up the story of the Beach Boys at a deeply peculiar juncture in their career. On the face of it, they were back on top. Their commercial fortunes had been revived by the huge success of some timely compilations: in the US, 1974βs Endless Summer sold 3m copies, while 20 Golden Greats became Britainβs second-biggest-selling album of 1976. Their leader Brian Wilson was apparently, miraculously, match fit after years of addiction and mental health struggles. βBRIAN IS BACK!β ran the advertising slogan for 15 Big Ones, the first Beach Boys album to bear his name as sole producer since Pet Sounds, and the first to be made at their newly founded Brother Studios. Buoyed by a media campaign that included an hour-long TV special, it duly became their most successful album of new material in 11 years.
View image in fullscreen The artwork for We Gotta Groove. Photograph: Capitol Records
But, as ever with the Beach Boys, it was more complicated than it initially seemed. As a succession of features noted, Wilson didnβt seem to be terribly well at all.
Continue Reading on The Guardian
This preview shows approximately 15% of the article. Read the full story on the publisher's website to support quality journalism.