On a Holiday

"Holidays" (later renamed "On a Holiday") is an unfinished instrumental composed by Brian Wilson for American rock band the Beach Boys. Intended for the aborted studio album Smile, it would not be completed until 2004 for the album Brian Wilson Presents Smile, as "On a Holiday", with new lyrics by Van Dyke Parks.

"Holidays"
Instrumental by The Beach Boys
from the album The Smile Sessions
ReleasedOctober 31, 2011 (2011-10-31)
RecordedSeptember 1966  July 1967
LabelCapitol
Songwriter(s)Brian Wilson
Producer(s)Brian Wilson

Background

The original Beach Boys' version of "Holidays" was recorded in September 1966. It is one of the few pieces from Smile where every section was performed as part of one whole take.[1] Wilson's 2004 version contains mostly the same arrangement. The hook of another Smile track, "Roll Plymouth Rock", is repeated in the chorus.[2] In the opinion of Consequence of Sound's Dean Essner, the original "has no vocals at all, allowing for the track’s wind instruments and marimbas to gorgeously swell at the front of the mix. But on Brian Wilson Presents SMiLE, Wilson sings a forgettable line about pirates, cluttering up the otherwise simple, feathery melody."[3] PopMatters' Sean Murphy characterized the song as a "Zappa-esque romp".[4]

gollark: Yes, you would indeed use the Github API.
gollark: I mean, there are lots of ways to look at sin/cos/tan which can help for various different things - the unit circle thing, just simple triangles, the graphs of each...
gollark: ... of course it won't embed SVGs properly, hold on.
gollark: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8f/Unit_circle.svg
gollark: I think the unit circle thing is probably a better way to think about it than your weird vaguely circle-looking things.

References

  1. Shenk, Lou. "Smile Primer". alphastudio.com. Archived from the original on December 12, 2011. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  2. Moore, Allan F. (2016). Song Means: Analysing and Interpreting Recorded Popular Song. Routledge. p. 300. ISBN 978-1-317-05265-4.
  3. Essner, Dean (September 27, 2014). "Brian Wilson's SMiLE vs. The Beach Boys' The Smile Sessions". PopMatters.
  4. Murphy, Sean (August 28, 2012). "'SMiLE' and Brian Wilson's Very American Dream". PopMatters.
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