‘A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys’ Review: A Special That Gets Around to Performances Fit for a Wilson

  2024-06-30 04:50:13

‘A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys’ Review: A Special That Gets Around to Performances Fit for a Wilson1

God only knows it was a matter of time until the Recording Academy picked the Beach Boys as the recipient of one of its annual all-star tributes, and the groups legacy isnt done any shame with A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys, airing Sunday night at 8 ET/PT on CBS (and for on-demand streaming on Paramount+). No wrong harmonies are struck, literally or figurative, in a two-hour show that starts out feeling a little bit by-the-numbers but eventually lands on a series of knockout covers fit for a Wilson.

Are you surprised that Brandi Carlile would be the highlight of a tribute special? Then come out from under your rock and do stay up late enough to catch both of her performances on the show, since she is one of a handful of artists granted both solo and duet slots in the setlist. First in the running order, she has a version of In My Room that cant really be considered solo, since shes joined by bandmates Phil and Tim Hanseroth for an arrangement that has their modern mastery of three-part harmony paying homage to the Boys sub-incarnation as a balladic vocal trio. You hope for something transformative in tribute performances like these, and you know youre getting the moment Carlile lends her perfectly subtle vibrato to the roo-oo-oom and a-frai-ai-aid to some of the opening lines. She and the Hanseroths make the bridge feel youre doing a gentle waltz while enveloping yourself in a self-assuring hug, before the falsetto ending spoils that warmth with a chill down your spine. Yeah, its that good.

‘A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys’ Review: A Special That Gets Around to Performances Fit for a Wilson2

Phil Hanseroth, Brandi Carlile and Tim Hanseroth perform onstage during A GRAMMY Salute to The Beach Boys at Dolby Theatre on February 08, 2023 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for The Recording Academy) Getty Images for The Recording A And so it the duet that ends the show, with John Legend on God Only Knows, where two pros show what can be done with simpler two-part harmony, honoring the spirit of the unsurpassable Pet Sounds original with blended vocals that, for a couple of bars in the chorus, almost make it sound like a brand new song. (But dont worry, still a great one.)

The other collaborative efforts are strong, too: You cant exactly say that Jim James of My Morning Jacket and Beck do anything transformative with the penultimate Good Vibrations, but you realize that it does really take two to pull that particular number off in any fashion, and to succeed with such an essentially un-coverable song at all deserves some credit.

‘A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys’ Review: A Special That Gets Around to Performances Fit for a Wilson2

Jim James and Beck perform onstage during A GRAMMY Salute to The Beach Boys at Dolby Theatre on February 08, 2023 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for The Recording Academy) Getty Images for The Recording A In contrast, a medley of Surfin USA and Fun Fun Fun is not going to require such heavy lifting, and its lead singers, the Struts Luke Spiller and the Pretty Reckless Taylor Momsen, freed up by the less sophisticated demands of those two early 60s songs, bring just the right amount of actual rock n roll attitude to make something fresh out of them. Theyre bringing a bit of glam to the beach, and it doesnt wilt in the sun.

The Momsen/Spiller team-up is one of four numbers out of the 21 in the show that lean a little harder into rock. Another is Fall Out Boys cover of the Beach Boys cover of Bobby Freemans late 50s hit, Do You Wanna Dance (also known as Do You Want to Dance, for the sticklers out there who study old 45 labels to see how titles get changed). As the Ramones proved with their own cover later on, its a song that transmutes well into anything vaguely in the field of punk, and FOB does not blow it. It would be reasonable to hope for something similarly thrashy when Weezer takes on California Girls, but, a little disappointingly, they play it about as straight as any house band would.

My Morning Jacket gets to tackle I Get Around toward the end of the show (Jim James being one of those handful of people who is allowed double-duty), and it feels for a while like theyre going to be painting that golden oldie kinda by numbers, too. But before its over, MMJ suddenly turn it unexpectedly into a guitar jam, one that may not have a lot to do in those few bars with what Brian Wilson and Mike Love wrote, but still a good deal of fun fun fun. Out in the audience, Carlile is seen striking the traditional fanboy posture of head down with pinky-and-forefinger extended above her head, and all is right with the rockin world.

But, good car-and-beach times notwithstanding, its abject beauty that you really come to the Beach Boys for, if youre any kind of Brian Wilson head. Who provides that, in this show, in the prettiest concentrated doses, besides Carlile, of course? Since you ask, lets name a few. LeAnn Rimes slays Caroline No no frills, just a fantastic voice wringing all the pathos there is to wring out of a tragic ballad about a girl who has betrayed the world by getting a haircut.

‘A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys’ Review: A Special That Gets Around to Performances Fit for a Wilson2

LeAnn Rimes performs onstage during A GRAMMY Salute to The Beach Boys at Dolby Theatre on February 08, 2023 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for The Recording Academy) Getty Images for The Recording A St. Vincent, who is becoming a surprising but welcome veteran of these all-star salutes, gives the shows arguably most dramatic reading with You Still Believe in Me, seeming a little like a porcelain ballerina whos just been brought to life and let out of the music box that the tunes arrangement has always evoked. Of course, its actually one of the Beach Boys least naive early classics the hero is admitting hes been a cad but St. Vincent nicely catches the dumbstruck-ness of a narrator whos shocked to be forgiven and offers one of the 1960s great melodies as thanks.

‘A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys’ Review: A Special That Gets Around to Performances Fit for a Wilson2

St. Vincent performs onstage during A GRAMMY Salute to The Beach Boys at Dolby Theatre on February 08, 2023 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for The Recording Academy) Getty Images for The Recording A Norah Jones nails the essence of The Warmth of the Sun while adding a piano part thats a little sly; at first youre thinking its the jazz influence, as one would, and then youre thinking, no, maybe its countrypolitan. Either way, its a welcome new take on something you probably werent expecting to be taking any twists in 2023.

Mumford and Sons take an even bigger departure with I Know Theres an Answer, treating it as a folk-trio ballad while the house band takes six, accompanied by a fellow blowing into an upright wind instrument that looks like a mis-sawed piece of lumber youd find in the discard pile behind Home Depot. Its cool.

If the show has a truly surprising knockout punch, though, its Pentatonixs version of Heroes and Villains maybe not so shocking if youre a day-one megafan of the a cappella quintet, but still pleasingly so for those of us who wouldnt necessarily to expect them to take on something so edgy. And maybe thats the wrong word for something thats as close to an all-out vocal symphony as the one hit from the legendary Smile material is, but watching the fivesome settle in in front of music stands with charts (which they rarely glance at) doesnt really prepare you for the great, loud blast of exquisite sound theyre about to provide, passionately singing Van Dyke Parks tumble of words as if they made perfect sense.

‘A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys’ Review: A Special That Gets Around to Performances Fit for a Wilson2

(L-R) Kevin Olusola, Kirstin Maldonado, Scott Hoying, Mitch Grassi and Matt Sallee of Pentatonix perform onstage during A GRAMMY Salute to The Beach Boys at Dolby Theatre on February 08, 2023 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for The Recording Academy) Getty Images for The Recording A Beyond that, the remaining songs mostly sound like you think theyre going to sound credible and comfortingly familiar. Country vocal groups Little Big Town and Lady A do Help Me Rhonda and Surfer Girl, respectively, as a polite rave-up and a lullaby. The guys from Hanson lend family vocals to the party anthem Barbara Ann, ironically the Wilson brothers song that least benefits from blood harmony. Performing in collaboration with Take 6, Michael McDonald gets the words of Dont Worry Baby just a little bit off, but the song is not even a little bit worse for the wear. Becks Sloop John B and Charlie Puths Wouldnt It Be Nice are just a little bit boring in playing it safe, but they are still nice. Foster the People doesnt mess with Do It Again too much, but it remains one of the Beach Boys best rabble-rousers. No one will ever sing Sail on Sailor nearly as effectively as Blondie Chaplin did, but Legend (in his other turn at bat on the show) does a good job of starting a party with it.

And although no one will accuse Andy Grammars version of Darlin' of doing anything even slightly off from the original version, full kudos to anyone who can take one of the late Carl Wilsons gustiest lead vocals and make you say hey, that guy does not completely pale in the shadow of Carl Wilson.

The most pleasant surprise of the show might not be any of the performances, but how good the band is at leaning toward faithful replications without sounding at all like theyre recording karaoke backdrops. Early on, if youre a student of players, you will recognize faces like that of Abe Laboriel Jr., the longtime drummer for Paul McCartney, and guitarist Jason Falkner, whos lately played in the touring bands of St. Vincent and Beck, and his Jellyfish partner, keyboardist Roger Manning, and know that youre in good hands. Savvy fans will definitely be waiting till the end credits to see who the musical director was, but heres a spoiler on that the very proficient Mike Elizondo.

Props, also, to the specials camerapeople and editors, who know that viewers will want to see not just the front-people but some of these classic licks on-camera, whether its a French horn or the synth guy recreating a theremin or just Elizondos hands as he plays the bass lick that makes God Only Knows start to come alive even before the singers appear.

What about the Beach Boys themselves? Theyre up there in a box at the Dolby Theatre, waving and clapping but not, disappointingly for many, performing. Besides Wilson and Love, placed on opposite ends of the row, its nice to see Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston and the less often visible early member David Marks, together again at last to celebrate their 60th anniversary. Why dont they perform? We can speculate about a half-dozen very possible or probable reasons why thats not happening; we fear we missed any window for that. In real life, things dont always end in fun fun fun, individually or collectively. But theres still something sweet about having them all there to soak in the warmth of the room. From surf-and-cars to a celebration that ends with Carlile air-kiss goodnight if this is it for reunions,, not a bad way to go out.

‘A Grammy Salute to the Beach Boys’ Review: A Special That Gets Around to Performances Fit for a Wilson2

The Beach Boys: Brian Wilson, Al Jardine, David Marks, Bruce Johnston and Mike Love. (Photo by Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty Images) CBS via Getty Images

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