Brian Wilson (song)
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"Brian Wilson" | ||
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Single by Barenaked Ladies | ||
from the album Gordon, Rock Spectacle | ||
Released | 1992, 1997 | |
Format | CD; 7" (US) | |
Recorded | 1992, 1997 | |
Genre | Alternative rock | |
Length | 4:48, 3:57 | |
Label | Reprise Records | |
Producer(s) | Barenaked Ladies, Michael Phillip Wojewoda |
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Chart positions | ||
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Barenaked Ladies singles chronology | ||
"Enid" (1992) |
"Brian Wilson" (1992) |
"What a Good Boy" (1992) |
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"The Old Apartment" (1997) |
"Brian Wilson Live/2000" (1997) |
"One Week" (1998) |
"Brian Wilson" is a song by the Canadian musical group Barenaked Ladies.
The song was written by singer/guitarist Steven Page in his parents’ basement on his twentieth birthday, in 1990. The first lines of the song chronicle one of his many late-night journeys to the Sam the Record Man on Yonge Street.
The song tells the story of a man whose life parallels that of Beach Boys member Brian Wilson, particularly during his time spent with psychologist Eugene Landy after Wilson was diagnosed with mental illness.
Steven Page stated in the liner notes for Disc One: All Their Greatest Hits 1991-2001 that the song has more “official” recordings than any other song in their repertoire, saying that there are at least five. The song was first recorded for the never-released 1990 BNL cassette, Barenaked Recess. After Tyler Stewart joined the band in 1991 as a drummer, it was re-recorded for the band’s platinum-selling Yellow Tape, again the following year for Gordon, again in 1996 live for Rock Spectacle, and yet again in 1997, for a version which was called “Brian Wilson 2000” and released as a single.
The “2000” version was a shortened form of the song for radio play, recorded to sound more like their live performance than the original Gordon version did. The band's management worried that radio stations would not play the live version that had recently gained popularity. The most noticeable differences are that “2000” replaces the first verse with an 8-bar instrumental intro, and the outro is considerably shortened as well. However, most radio stations decided to play the live version instead, which is probably the reason it was the version included on Disc One.
Brian Wilson rearranged and sang this song a cappella with his new band at live concerts, one of which was recorded for a live album he recorded in 2000. One of the stories the band often tells is about the time he came to their studio while they were recording Maroon (having an association with producer Don Was) to play the track for the band. They played him a bunch of their new songs, and then he played them his version of "Brian Wilson". At the end, he turned to them and asked, "is it cool?" Upon his departure, his advice to the band was "don't eat too much." The band described the entire experience as surreal[1].
In honour of his covering their song, in recent performances the band has started singing the first chorus a cappella, eliminating all instrumentation (the rest of the song continues as normal).
[edit] References
- ^ Robertson, Ed & Frohman, Lorne (Interviewer/Host). (2005). Distinguished Artists [TV-series]. Toronto, Canada: Humber College School of Media Studies.