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All Summer Long (The Beach Boys song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"All Summer Long"
Song by the Beach Boys
from the album All Summer Long
ReleasedJuly 13, 1964 (1964-07-13)
RecordedMay 6–7, 1964
StudioUnited Western Recorders, Los Angeles
GenreRock, Surf, California sound
Length2:06
LabelCapitol
Songwriter(s)Brian Wilson, Mike Love
Producer(s)Brian Wilson
Audio sample
Visualizer
The Beach Boys – All Summer Long on YouTube

"All Summer Long" is a song written by Brian Wilson and Mike Love for the American rock band the Beach Boys. It was released on their 1964 album All Summer Long, and as a single in the UK in February 1965.[1]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
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    1 410 480
    63 799
  • All Summer Long (Remastered)
  • The Beach Boys ~ All Summer Long (1964)
  • All Summer Long (Stereo)

Transcription

Composition

According to AllMusic, "All Summer Long" contains beguiling teen fantasy lyrics; the narrative catalogs a series of happy events enjoyed by a guy and his girlfriend during the summer and punctuates them with the observation "every now and then we hear our song/we been having fun all summer long." The cheery sentiment of the lyrics carries over to the melody whose swirling bounciness provides a solid musical backdrop for the narrative's sunny tone, while its instrumental track is driven by boogie-woogie piano lines and some xylophone hooks.[2] According to Songfacts, the instrument used is not a xylophone but rather a marimba.[3]

Personnel

Track details courtesy of session archivist Craig Slowinski.[4][5]

The Beach Boys
Additional session musicians and technical staff

Variations

On disc 5 of Good Vibrations: Thirty Years of The Beach Boys, there is a version of "All Summer Long" where the backing track and the vocals are separated onto two different speakers.

Use in media

  • The song is featured in the 1973 film American Graffiti as the closing credits roll, although the movie is set in the summer of 1962, two years before the song's release. The song was included in the film to be a metaphor for the end of the time period that the movie celebrates. There was a comparatively fast changing of the cultural and music scene as the basic rock and roll and relative innocence of the 1950s and early 1960s in America gave way to the actual cultural end of the 1950s in America, signaled by the assassination of President John Kennedy—a popular, youthful, and charismatic president, impending American civil rights legislation, the arrival of the Beatles and their influence on America – on the popular music and style of the time, including that of Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys – as well as the beginning of American's divisive involvement in the Vietnam War and its subsequent impact, leading to the greater political involvement of young Americans, which was to then be reflected in the culture of the time. Shortly before the ending credits of the film begin, there is silence as a montage shows how Vietnam and the future directly affects certain characters in the film. The tacit, sobering reality brought to the audience at this point is made even greater when it is broken by the bright, upbeat opening marimba of this energetic and positive Beach Boys song as the ending credits begin, with the song's nostalgic lyrics of idyllic summers past creating a certain bittersweet tone that effectively washes over the audience.[6]
  • It also appears as the closing credits roll on The Simpsons season 7 finale episode "Summer of 4 Ft. 2". The episode makes a number of American Graffiti references.

References

  1. ^ "Beach Boys UK single discography 1964–1966 (black label)". beachboys45.nl.
  2. ^ "All music review". AllMusic. Archived from the original on December 11, 2010. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  3. ^ "All Summer Long by The Beach Boys". Retrieved July 4, 2022.
  4. ^ Craig, Slowinski (2014). Keep an Eye On Summer 1964 (Digital Liner). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. Mirror
  5. ^ "Brian the instrumentalist".
  6. ^ Icons of Rock: An Encyclopedia of the Legends Who Changed Music Forever By Scott Schinder, Andy Schwartz, page 110

External links

This page was last edited on 29 December 2023, at 04:01
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