On-Air Now
On-Air Now
Coming Up Next
Coming Up Next
Listen Live

Flint’s Classic Rock – 103.9 The Fox

Getty Images

It was 57 years ago today (July 12th, 1965) that the Beach BoysBrian Wilson began recording the group’s 1966 hit “Sloop John B,” the first song tracked for the group’s legendary Pet Sounds album. It was the group’s rhythm guitarist Al Jardine, the folk music aficionado in the band, who suggested the group cover the standard, which had been recorded by the Kingston Trio, among many others. In the group’s 1998 documentary Endless Harmony, Jardine recalled, “I tried persuading Brian to record the track a year before we finally cut it. I sat and played these chord progressions, basically three chords done on a guitar, banjo and keyboards. I knew it had to have keyboards, otherwise I knew it wouldn’t get his attention.”

Despite Jardine providing the inspiration and basic arrangement of the tune, he was shut out of receiving a “traditional copyright” credit for the tune along with Wilson.

For the vocal sessions for the song, Wilson recorded versions with lead vocals by each of the Beach Boys — Mike Love, Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson, Jardine, and himself — and ultimately selected his own and Love’s vocals for the final version. The song, which was released on March 21st, 1966, peaked at Number Three. In Britain, it hit Number Two.

Brian Wilson told us that he included the band’s then-current single “Sloop John B.” on Pet Sounds at the Beach Boys’ record company’s request: “No, I wanted it to be a single but when they said ‘album,’ I said ‘fine,’ that was okay with me. I said it would help the album. Y’know, it would help it sell and it would fit perfectly.”

In 2005 Jardine released an illustrated children’s book based on the song, titled Sloop John B – A Pirate’s Tale, and explained why he thinks the song continues to appeal to fans of all ages: “Well, it’s an escapist fantasy, y’know, and that’s probably what the appeal was in the beginning, when I first heard it. It kinda took me away from my present circumstances, y’know? And now the story, from a children’s point of view would be compelling because it’s about hero worship. We revere our grandfathers — and if we can be a hero to them, that’s what we’d all like to be.”

“Sloop John B” has been a mainstay of the group’s live show for over 50 years. During the ’60s, Jardine often took the lead; in the early ’70s Carl Wilson took over lead vocals; and in the ’80s, Jardine and Brian Wilson often performed it as a duet.

FAST FORWARD

Newly released is the Beach Boys deluxe and expanded release of its 2003 Sounds Of Summer: The Very Best Of The Beach Boys collection. The set — which originally peaked at Number 16 on the Billboard 200 and has sold nearly 4.4 million copies to date — has now been expanded to include two additional discs boasting 50 additional tracks — many of which have been completely remixed and/or featured in stereo mixes for the first time.

Additionally, all 30 songs on Disc One of Sounds Of Summer have been mixed in immersive Dolby Atmos. The new, expanded version has peaked at Number 31 on the Billboard 200 albums chart.