This is really a "From The Archives" repeat, although I didn't use that title since I'm only re-running a portion of a previous column rather than the whole thing. Sadly, when I looked it up, it was published (10 years ago, in February) right after Leonard Nimoy died (and began with: "Mr. Spock is dead. Long live Mr. Spock!").
Today also marks a sad passing, as the world lost Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys today. He will be missed. Requiescat In Pace.
The Beach Boys were one of those rare iconic bands that pretty much everyone loved to some extent or another. To put it another way, you could play their songs at any random party and it'd be rare than anyone objected. There aren't many such bands around (Creedence Clearwater Revival, the Beatles, maybe the Steve Miller Band and a handful of others) and their rarity is due to their being able to create music that was pretty universally appreciated. It's pretty hard to hate a song like "Good Vibrations," right? Their harmonization was second to none as well. Their music was dated, to be sure (it arose from the surf craze of the 1950s), but it was the best of the era (although Jan and Dean fans might quibble with that statement, to be fair). For the most part, it just made people happy to hear it. Which is exactly why Brian Wilson will indeed be missed.
Personally, the only times I heard the Beach Boys perform live was at free concerts given on the National Mall as part of Independence Day celebrations in the early 1980s. Which brings me to the reason I am re-running the following column excerpt. Through absolutely no fault of their own, the Beach Boys became the center of a small controversy during the Reagan administration (when they were regularly performing at the July 4th celebrations). While researching a subject only tangentially related, I came across the controversy once again, so I included it.
This column was written in honor of protests. In fact, after it ran in the Huffington Post, I was contacted by one of the original Youth International Party (Yippies) founders, who not only thanked me for writing it and chronicling this history but also told me a few amusing stories about the earliest of these events (which I was too young to attend).
I figured, what with everything else going on this week it would be a good time for an interlude of music and fun in the sun. We'll get back to the much-more-serious protests currently happening tomorrow, but for now, I would recommend finding the album Pet Sounds on YouTube, cue it up, and travel back with me to when the Beach Boys became ensnared in Washington politics (again, through no fault of their own!).
An Incomplete History Of Washington's July Fourth Smoke-In
[Originally published February 27th, 2015]
What could be a better way to pass a summer's afternoon than to sit across the street from the White House and smoke lots of pot?
This very simple idea birthed an annual tradition that continues to the present day. Now that Washington has legalized recreational use of marijuana, one can only imagine how festive this year's gathering will be. The organizers even have a Facebook page, if you're interested.
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