Beach Boys fans know this as a tune originally from Wild Honey but some insane aficionados prefer this 1979 rerecorded disco version. The legendary Curt Boettcher (The Millennium/Sagittarius) along with Bruce Johnson were behind the production on this one. A ten minute version took up most of side two of the L.A. (Light Album) however this is the 7 inch single edit of the tune. Many fans hated this. I like.
[1967]
The Wild Honey LP is an underrated masterpiece. Its got a harder stripped back r&b vibe compared to the sophisticated psych pop of the previous two records. Like the rest of the album Here Comes The Night is heavy on the piano, bass and organ: A very nifty proto lo-fi sound. I do love it when Brian has a sing on Beach Boys songs.
This is a neat medley of the record that the Beach Boys scheduled to put out to follow up the strange synth pop odyssey Beach Boys Love You (1977) but Mike Love and Al Jardine ixnayed Brian's plans for that and made a different album instead called M.I.U. Album (1978).
The Beach Boys - Hey Little Tomboy [1978]
The one tune they salvaged from the abandoned Adult/Child project for the M.I.U. Album was this peak weird Brian tune. A lost classic. Many don't realise that Brian is a fucking hilarious dude because he's often so deadpan. He was one funny fellow!
A dark psychedelic dream pop classic. Mournful tones give way to a mesmerising kaleidoscope of ecstatic sound that gets so fervent it spirals off into the stratosphere leaving the gloom behind for the heavens.
Every Road Leads Home - Breathless (1986)
Another soaring hypnotic tune that detours into hair raising menacing sonic excursions before returning to the waves of celestial atmosphere and empyrean euphoria. Then the swirling gets so frenzied it's confusing and hard to distinguish if it's ominous or uplifting. An incredible dreamscape depiction where puzzling emotions are conjured: Foreboding joy.
Breathless – The Glass Bead Game (Full Album) [1986]
Breathless? Who were they again? You may ask. Well for a start singer Dominic Appleton sang The Jeweller, The Strength Of Strings and I Am The Cosmos on the second and third This Mortal Coil albums. Surprisingly however they weren't signed to 4AD despite being the archetypal 4AD band. Breathless bridged the gap between goth-y post punk and dream pop. At once a throwback and a glimpse into the future, the tried and true gloomy atmosphere and the future ecstatic sonic spirit that groups like Slowdive, The Church, Panda Bear etc. would later incorporate into their sound.
It's surprising a group like Breathless weren't more famous back in the day or even now while Chameleons, The Sound, And Also The Trees, Sad Lovers And Giants etc. who also weren't all that renowned either have fanatical cult followings amongst the younger generations online today. Breathless don't seem to be as highly regarded for some reason yet they might be more innovative with their sonic explorations expanding beyond the limitations of genre. Perhaps it's because those aforementioned groups were more about successfully nailing the tone of the style in that specific moment rather than experimenting by pushing the boundaries and creating new possibilities. Transcending the gloom of the era by injecting surreal trip-outs and euphoria into the mix was their masterstroke.
On The Glass Bead Game gloomy post-punk, eerie tribal ominousness, ecclesiastical tones and dreamy neo-psych gloriously collide in a splendid atmospheric vision....
The debut Neats EP came out the same year as spiritually similar records like Mission Burma's Vs, Dream Syndicate's Days Of Wine And Roses,Chronic Town from REM etc. yet today many aren't aware of these Boston legends. Evocative and moody lyricism was combined with clean edgy dark strumming. These driving instrumental workouts would go on a really intense journey with chiming jangles offering a reprieve. This was supreme shadowy art rock.