What should you say to another Beach Boysâ âBest Ofâ release? The Warmth Of The Sun is 28-track compilation, a âcomplementâ to the groupâs release from 2004, Sounds Of Summer: The Very Best Of The Beach Boys. But Warmth boasts six tracks mixed in stereo for the first time, along with songs not only handpicked by the surviving band members themselves, but sequenced by them as well. This is supposedly a collection showcasing âthe creative arcâ of this seminal California rock and roll group.
I might get thrown out of the country for admitting this, but I ainât and never have been the biggest Beach Boys fan. I appreciate Brian Wilsonâs songwriting and production abilities. I recognize the world-class harmonies, and own Pet Sounds and Smile. During those rare moments when I listen to these guys, I usually go for the more âexperimentalâ stuff, even if itâs popular songs, like âGood Vibrations,â âSloop John B,â or really anything on Smile. What we have on The Warmth Of The Sun though, with a handful of exceptions (and Iâll note them later), is the old sun-and-sand, 2:50 minute epics that made the boys so beloved but what eventually brought Brian Wilson to madness (or near to it).
With songs that span three decades, there are definitely some gems here. âThe Little Girl I Once Knew,â one of my personal faves â409,â the sumptuous âDisney Girls (1957)â and âAll This Is Thatâ (in my humble opinion these last two are the best tracks here), and even âCalifornia Dreaminââ Then there are the real special moments. âAll Summer Longâ revisits the sun-and-sand themes, but with its new stereo mix, the song has an unusual percussion backing that illustrates what the boys were capable of. âSail On Sailorâ is fun, sung by Blondie Chaplin. And I just love the way âItâs OKâ grooves. We are treated to the depth of what these boys from the west coast were capable of; I just wish within the 28 selected songs, we were given even wackier, more experimental examples. Then again, the Smile and Pet Sounds packages that have been released in recent years have plenty of that.
If youâre looking for a user-friendly Beach Boys collection, Iâd highly recommend this CD. If you are looking for stereo mixes on âWendyâ and âAll Summer Long,â this is the one to have. Want the Beach Boysâ take on âThen I Kissed Herâ? Then rush out and buy this release. When another greatest hits package appears from a band like the Beach Boys, I question whether Capitol isnât simply flogging its old catalog or selling an exhausted horse. Either way, Warmth Of The Sun will either crash on the shore or ride out the never-ending wave.
~ Ralph Greco, Jr.












