Al Jardine: Difference between revisions

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==Early life==
==Early life==
Jardine was born in [[Lima, Ohio]]. His family moved from Ohio to San Francisco, California, and later to [[Hawthorne, California]]. At Hawthorne High School, Jardine met a fellow student, [[Brian Wilson]] where, recognising Brian's unigue musical gifts, he first posited the idea of forming a band. Jardine's primary musical interest was folk, and he learned banjo and guitar specifically to play folk music. When the seminal Beach Boys formed at Brian Wilson's home, Al says, he pushed the band toward folk, but was overruled by the move to rock n' roll. An all-rounder on string instruments, Al played stand-up bass on The Beach Boys' first recording, the 1961 song "[[Surfin' (song)|Surfin']]." Following his brief departure from the band in early 1962, he dabbled with a career in the air industry in Los Angeles. Popular belief suggests he was replaced by [[David Marks (musician)|David Marks]], but in fact the two guitarists worked more or less concurrently with the evolving Beach Boys and the confusion arises from Al's temporary abandonment of the band. Al fully rejoined the Beach Boys in the summer of 1963 at the request of Brian Wilson. Al worked alongside Marks with the band until October 1963, when Marks quit the Beach Boys after an altercation with the band's manager, [[Murry Wilson]].
Jardine was born in [[Lima, Ohio]]. His family moved from Ohio to San Francisco, California, and later to [[Hawthorne, California]]. At El Camino College, Jardine met a fellow student, [[Brian Wilson]] where, recognising Brian's unigue musical gifts, he first posited the idea of forming a band. Jardine's primary musical interest was folk, and he learned banjo and guitar specifically to play folk music. When the seminal Beach Boys formed at Brian Wilson's home, Al says, he pushed the band toward folk, but was overruled by the move to rock n' roll. An all-rounder on string instruments, Al played stand-up bass on The Beach Boys' first recording, the 1961 song "[[Surfin' (song)|Surfin']]." Following his brief departure from the band in early 1962, he dabbled with a career in the air industry in Los Angeles. Popular belief suggests he was replaced by [[David Marks (musician)|David Marks]], but in fact the two guitarists worked more or less concurrently with the evolving Beach Boys and the confusion arises from Al's temporary abandonment of the band. Al fully rejoined the Beach Boys in the summer of 1963 at the request of Brian Wilson. Al worked alongside Marks with the band until October 1963, when Marks quit the Beach Boys after an altercation with the band's manager, [[Murry Wilson]].


==With The Beach Boys==
==With The Beach Boys==

Revision as of 10:12, 14 June 2012

Al Jardine
Al Jardine performing and singing with his Endless Summer Band at the Quick Chek New Jersey Festival of Ballooning Reddington, New Jersey on July 24, 2009.
Al Jardine performing and singing with his Endless Summer Band at the Quick Chek New Jersey Festival of Ballooning Reddington, New Jersey on July 24, 2009.
Background information
Born
Alan Charles Jardine

(1942-09-03) September 3, 1942 (age 83)
OriginLima, Ohio, U.S.
GenresRock and roll
OccupationsSinger, musician, composer
InstrumentsVocals, guitar, bass, double bass, piano, keyboards, synthesizers, banjo, ukulele, mandolin, drums, saxophone, percussion
Years active1961–present
LabelsCapitol, Warner-Reprise, Columbia
Websitewww.aljardine.com

Alan Charles "Al" Jardine (born September 3, 1942) is a founding member of the American music group The Beach Boys, a guitarist, composer and occasional lead vocalist. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988.

Early life

Jardine was born in Lima, Ohio. His family moved from Ohio to San Francisco, California, and later to Hawthorne, California. At El Camino College, Jardine met a fellow student, Brian Wilson where, recognising Brian's unigue musical gifts, he first posited the idea of forming a band. Jardine's primary musical interest was folk, and he learned banjo and guitar specifically to play folk music. When the seminal Beach Boys formed at Brian Wilson's home, Al says, he pushed the band toward folk, but was overruled by the move to rock n' roll. An all-rounder on string instruments, Al played stand-up bass on The Beach Boys' first recording, the 1961 song "Surfin'." Following his brief departure from the band in early 1962, he dabbled with a career in the air industry in Los Angeles. Popular belief suggests he was replaced by David Marks, but in fact the two guitarists worked more or less concurrently with the evolving Beach Boys and the confusion arises from Al's temporary abandonment of the band. Al fully rejoined the Beach Boys in the summer of 1963 at the request of Brian Wilson. Al worked alongside Marks with the band until October 1963, when Marks quit the Beach Boys after an altercation with the band's manager, Murry Wilson.

With The Beach Boys

Jardine was the band's rhythm guitarist and middle-range harmony vocalist. He sang lead on the Number 1 hit "Help Me, Rhonda," and thereafter regularly sang leads on tracks including "Christmas Day," "Then I Kissed Her," "Wake the World", "Cotton Fields," "TM Song," "Take a Load off Your Feet," "Lookin' at Tomorrow (A Welfare Song)," "Peggy Sue," "Lady Lynda", "Come Go With Me", "Good Time," "Honkin' Down The Highway" and "Crack at Your Love." He is significantly the co-lead singer on other notable tracks, including "Break Away," "Winds of Change," "California Calling," "Somewhere Near Japan and "I Know There's an Answer." Of the latter track, producer-writer Brian Wilson has stated that he preferred Al's vocal to his own. During the Pet Sounds sessions, it was Al Jardine who suggested to Brian Wilson that the group record "Sloop John B," a lovingly remembered song from his folk days.

Beginning with his contributions to the Friends album, Jardine wrote or co-wrote a number of songs for the Beach Boys, varying in style from straight-ahead rockers like "Susie Cincinnati" to Wilsonesque mid-tempo harmony efforts like "Island Girl." The prominence of Brian Wilson's influence on his compositions was clear on "California Saga: California" from the Holland album, which charted in early 1973. On the same album Jardine utilised the Big Sur poet Robinson Jeffers' poem, The Beaks of Eagles, as part of the so-called "California Suite." Jardine's song for his first wife, "Lady Lynda" (1978) proved a considerable success for the band beyond the US, scoring a Top Ten chart entry in the UK. After Jardine's divorce, the song was re-titled "Lady Liberty" in honor of the centennial of the Statue Of Liberty, which was celebrated in 1986.

Increasingly from the time of the Surf's Up album Al became involved alongside Carl in production duties for the Beach Boys. He shared production credits with Ron Altbach on 1978's M.I.U. Album and was a significant architect (with Mike Love) of the concept and content of the album. As with "Lady Lynda" and his 1969 rewrite of Leadbelly's "Cotton Fields," "Come Go with Me" on the M.I.U. Album was a Jardine production - and a measurable hit in the UK.

In 1986 Al Jardine instigated the recording by The Beach Boys of a cover of The Mamas And The Papas' biggest hit, California Dreamin'. The song was a major success for the band, reaching Number 8 on the Billboard adult contemporary chart. The music video for the song featured in heavy rotation on MTV, securing extensive international airplay. The video featured all the surviving Beach Boys and two of the three surviving members of the Mamas And The Papas, John Phillips and Michelle Phillips (Denny Doherty was on the East coast and declined), along with former Byrds guitarist Roger McGuinn.

On December 16, 2011 it was announced that Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston and David Marks would reunite for a new Beach Boys album and 50th anniversary tour in 2012.[1]. Within the industry word circulated that the reunited band was recording at Brian's favoured Western Studios in Los Angeles, aided by Joe Thomas, Brian's collaborator on his 1999 solo album, Imagination. Duly, as the promised worldwide reunion kicked off with a Grammy event performance in February 2012, the new album, That's Why God Made the Radio, was released on June 4, 2012. The album features prominent vocals by Al Jardine, especially on the tracks "Spring Vacation" and "There to Back Again".

Solo career and Life in Big Sur

Jardine left the touring line-up of the Beach Boys in 1998 after Carl Wilson died, but remained a member of the Beach Boys corporation Brother Records. Resident in the South Bay area of Los Angeles during the touring heyday of the Beach Boys, Jardine moved to Big Sur in Northern California in the seventies where, for a time, he bred Arabian horses and studied local environmental protection. It is notable that his self-penned songs often center on welfare or environmental issues. "Don't Go Near the Water" (co-written with Mike Love), "Lookin' At Tomorrow (A Welfare Song)," "P.T.Cruiser" and "Looking Down the Coast" are all social commentaries and Jardine professes continued interest in enviornmental causes. In the late seventies he began building Red Barn Studios on his Big Sur estate, and tracks like his "Santa Ana Winds" (which would appear on the Beach Boys' "Keepin' the Summer Alive") were first taped there.

From the late nineties, Al Jardine toured and recorded with his Endless Summer Band, in a line-up that comprised several musicians who toured with The Beach Boys, including Billy Hinsche of Dino, Desi and Billy, Ed Carter, Bobby Figueroa, and Jardine's sons, Matt and Adam. In 2001 Jardine's band released "Live in Las Vegas", featuring Beach Boys songs like "Wild Honey," previously rarely performed live.

In the fall of 2006, Jardine joined the Brian Wilson Band for a short tour celebrating the 40th anniversary of Pet Sounds.

In March 2008, Jardine settled a suit brought against him by Mike Love and the estate of Carl Wilson regarding use of the "Beach Boys" name. Mike Love had leased the Beach Boys' name and it was deemed that Al's newly-formatted band, called the Beach Boys Family & Friends (featuring sons Matt and Adam Jardine, Carnie and Wendy Wilson, Daryl Dragon, Billy Hinsche and others), was a breach of title use.[2]

In August 2010, the Red Hot Chili Peppers rehearsed their album I'm With You (released 2011) at Red Barn Studios. [3]. Other established artists, including the Fleet Foxes and Steve Miller, have also used Jardine's state-of-the-art studios in recent years, and it was here Jardine began taping his long-promised first solo album.

Jardine released A Postcard from California, his solo debut, in June 2010 (re-released with two extra tracks on April 3, 2012). The album featured contributions from Beach Boys Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson (a posthumous track), Bruce Johnston, David Marks and Mike Love. There were also guest appearances from Glen Campbell, Neil Young, Steve Miller, Scott Mathews, Gerry Beckley, Dewey Bunnell (members of America) and Flea. A spoken intermission written by Stephen Kalinich called "Tidepool Interlude" featured actor Alec Baldwin. [3]

Book

Al Jardine has authored one book, "Sloop John B: A Pirate's Tale," which was illustrated by Jimmy Pickering (Milk & Cookies Press, 2005). The book is a children's story about a boy's Caribbean adeventure with his grandfather, reworded from the original folk lyric of the song "Sloop John B." It also includes a free cd with singalong acoustic recording by Jardine.

Solo discography

Year Album details
2001 Live in Las Vegas
  • Released: 2001
  • Tracks: Dance, Dance, Dance; Do You Wanna Dance; Catch a Wave; Hawaii; Do It Again; Darlin'; Wild Honey; Come Go With Me; Surfer Girl; Don't Worry, Baby; Shut Down; Little Deuce Coupe; I Get Around; In My Room; Girl Don't Tell Me; Break Away; Sail On Sailor; God Only Knows; Sloop John B; Wouldn't It Be Nice; Good Vibrations; Heroes & Villains; Help Me, Rhonda; Surfin' USA; Barbara Ann; Fun, Fun, Fun; California Energy Blues
2010 A Postcard from California
  • Released digitally and in hard copy on demand: June 29, 2010
  • Tracks: A Postcard from California; California Callin'; Looking Down the Coast; Don't Fight the Sea; Tide Pool Interlude; Campfire Scene; A California Saga; Help Me, Rhonda; San Simeon; Drivin': Honkin' Down the Highway; And I Always Will
2012 ""A Postcard from California""
  • Released: April 3, 2012 on Fontana Records, with the additional tracks, "Waves of Love" and "Sloop John B" (revised acoustic)
  • Tracks: A Postcard from California; California Callin'; Looking Down the Coast; Don't Fight the Sea; Tide Pool Interlude; Campfire Scene; A California Saga; Help Me, Rhonda; San Simeon; Drivin': Honkin' Down the Highway; And I Always Will; Waves of Love; Sloop John B

Singles

Date of release Title Label Chart positions
December 2002 "PT Cruiser"/"PT Cruiser" (a capella)/"PT Cruiser" (track) CQ never charted
April 16, 2011 "Don't Fight The Sea"/"Friends" (a capella) Capitol never charted


A POSTCARD FROM CALIFORNIA

(Fontana, 2012; debut solo studio album)

Track details:

  1. A Postcard From California (Jardine) Featuring Glen Campbell and the White Album Chamber Ensemble – 4:59
  2. California Feelin' (Wilson/Kalinich) Featuring Adam and Matt Jardine – 2:03
  3. Looking Down The Coast (Jardine) – 3
  4. Don't Fight The Sea (Jacks/Jardine) Featuring the Beach Boys and Adam and Matt Jardine– 3:23
  5. Tide Pool Interlude (Slaughter/Kalinich) Spoken word by Alec Baldwin – 1:38
  6. Campfire Scene (Jardine) Featuring David Crosby and Neil Young – 0:44
  7. A California Saga (Jardine) Featuring David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Neil Young, Adam and Matt Jardine – 2:52
  8. Help Me Rhonda (Wilson/Love) Featuring Steve Miller and Flea– 3:47
  9. San Simeon (Jardine/Slaughter) Featuring Gerry Beckley, Dewey Bunnell, Adam and Matt Jardine– 2:48
  10. Drivin' (Jardine/Slaughter/Heger) Featuring Brian Wilson, David Marks, Dewey Bunnell and Gerry Beckley – 3:12
  11. Honkin' Down The Highway (WIlson) Featuring Adam, Matt and Mary Ann Jardine – 2:34
  12. And I Always Will (Jardine) Featuring the White Album Chamber Ensemble – 4:19
  13. Waves of Love (Jardine) Featuring Carl Wilson - 3:51
  14. Sloop John B (traditional; arranged Jardine) - 4:03


References

  1. ^ Sterdan, Darryl (December 16, 2011). "Beach Boys gear up for reunion". Sun Media. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
  2. ^ "Beach Boys - Wouldn't It Be Nice to Settle Lawsuit". TMZ.com. 2008-03-20. Retrieved 2011-11-05.
  3. ^ a b "Mike Ragogna: A Postcard From California: A Conversation with The Beach Boys' Al Jardine". Huffingtonpost.com. August 27, 2010. Retrieved 2011-11-05.

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