| | Beach Boys Carl And The Passions: So Tough/Holland CD Beach Boys Discography of CDs
(5 Customer Reviews)
2 LPs on 2 discs: CARL AND THE PASSIONS: SO TOUGH (1972)/HOLLAND (1973). This reissue of HOLLAND also includes the limited-edition 7" EP MOUNT VERNON AND FARAWAY that was included with the original LP. The Beach Boys: Alan Jardine, Mike Love , Ricky Fataar, Carl Wilson, Blondie Chaplin, Dennis Wilson, Brian Wilson . Liner Note Authors: Tom Petty; Elton John; Scott McCaughey. Capitol's 2000 two-fer reissue program of Beach Boys LPs continued apace with 1972's Carl and the Passions - So Tough and 1973's Holland, a pair of albums whose quality, style, and sound fit each other perfectly. After ten years of alternating sun-and-fun with doom-and-gloom, the Beach Boys were in obvious need of a musical recharge during the early '70s; the growing roots rock movement led by the Band and the Grateful Dead provided them with a new direction, and the group re-emerged by 1972 as an earthy, socially aware unit complete with long, scraggly hair (Mike Love's contributions coming from under his chin instead of on top of his head). Carl and the Passions - So Tough salutes American roots music with nods to blues-rock ("You Need a Mess of Help to Stand Alone," "Here She Comes") and gospel ("He Came Down"). Brian's lone contribution is the solid rocker "Marcella," and Dennis crystallizes his growing mastery of the ballad with the album-closers "Make It Good" and "Cuddle Up." One year later, little had changed -- this despite the relocation of the entire band (and their studio) to the Netherlands for a working holiday (or morale booster). "Steamboat" and "Leaving This Town" are generic mid-tempo rockers, and the Mike Love-Al Jardine collaborative suite known as "California Saga" is irretrievably cloying. Inconsistent contributors Brian and Dennis come through yet again, the former with a pair of comparatively good songs ("Sail On, Sailor," "The Trader") and the latter with another perfect ballad ("Only With You"). Though these two LPs don't suffer from the maudlin production and songwriting that would plague many of the Beach Boys' later albums, Carl and the Passions - So Tough and Holland were distinct disappointments (to fans and critics) after the heights of Sunflower and Surf's Up. [Kudos go to Capitol, who faced a bit of a quandary with the reissue of these albums: they would've fit perfectly on one CD, but compilers sacrificed a projected single-disc set by adding the rare "third" side of the Holland record -- a Brian Wilson fairy tale named Mt. Vernon and Fairway -- and offered the two-disc set with only a slight increase in price.] ~ John Bush These two albums, criminally underrated in their day (1972-3), make their long-overdue CD debuts in stunningly remastered versions. Even if you think you know this material, you'll still be picking up fresh instrumental and vocal details. Musically, this ranges from the merely charming to the seraphically beautiful, and the amazing thing is that Brian Wilson wrote so little of it and that the individual band members produced. Obviously there was more than enough talent in the band by this time to go around. High points include "Make it Good" and "Cuddle Up," two stunning orchestral love songs from Dennis Wilson (liner note writer Scott McCaughey accurately compares them to Richard Strauss and Scott Walker); "Marcella," one of the band's all-time best and most infectious rockers; the semi-hit "Sail On Sailor," and Carl Wilson's astonishing "Trader," which begins as a chugging blue-eyed soul number ala "Wild Honey" before switching gears into a haunting piece of minimalism with ravishing group harmonies. As a bonus, this also features the CD debut of Brian's charming little children's fairy tale "Mt. Vernon and Fairway" (originally packaged as a seven-inch bonus EP); it's deliberately slight, but the instrumental snippets that gird it have an undeniable magic.
2 Cds
Entertainment Weekly (8/11/00, pp.78-9) - "...Their musical growing pains were rewarding....brimming with delights....[These 2 albums] brought in short-lived additions Ricky Fataar and Blondie Chaplin and included 'Sail On Sailor', their last great hit..." - Rating: B/B- Carl And The Passions: So Tough/Holland Music Beach Boys Carl And The Passions: So Tough/Holland Songs Carl And The Passions: So Tough/Holland Music Review Average Rating: (4 out of 5 stars)   Last Great Album by Beach Boys Essentially, "Holland" is the last album by The Beach Boys before reinventing themselves as an oldies band.
In Brian Wilson's almost complete absence, brothers Carl and Dennis rise to the occasion with "The Trader", "Steamboat" and "Only With You". Mike Love and Al Jardine team up for the epic "California Saga", a three part song worthy of the majestic Big Sur coast. It should rightly be considered Mike Love's shining moment from 1970 onward. Soon to be jettisoned members Ricky Fataar and Blondie Chaplin have their moments as well. Blondie sings lead on the should-have-been-a-big-hit "Sail on Sailor".
The lp, recorded mostly in Holland, is a fine example of early to mid 1970's album rock. The harmonies, as always, are gorgeous.
Stay away from the "Mount Vernon" fairy tale stuff - otherwise, this is a gem.
"Carl and the Passions - So Tough" comes with the package, while good, doesn't hold a candle to "Holland". It features the same basic lineup. Submitted by Rando (Columbus, OH, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 4 of 4 found this helpful.
the true believer can see and hear "Carl And The Passions - So Tough" is easily the Beach Boys' most criminally underrated and overlooked album. By the beginning of the 1970's, the Boys had become commercially unviable to the record buying public, an ironic fate considering they were turning out the most interesting and creative music of their career as a group. The addition of Blondie Chaplin and Ricky Fataar in 1972 brought a level of soul, spirituality and sophistication the Boys had long flirted with, but rarely achieved. The vibe is loose; they sound like a live band being reborn and not simply Brian Wilson's studio puppets. (For further evidence of this, check out "The Beach Boys In Concert", the 1973 double-album.) There's rock 'n roll, soul, a gospel rave-up, great songs and harmonies - everything a perfect Beach Boys album needs and more. Much more. Submitted by screamingseagulls (Cincinnati, OH) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
Holland, by the Beach Boys - a short review Quite simply, this is the most long-standing in memory LP (for me) that the Beach boys ever made, excluding the strange little Fairy Tale bit included on the CD and as an extra on the original LP.
"Trader" and "Sail on sailor" alone are worth buying it for, the rest are excellent.
Buy it and enjoy ! Submitted by a reviewer (Blackpool, Lancashire, England)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Last of the Breed I like the 'Passions' album alot. There were actually 2 more songs recorded for it but not included : CARRY ME HOME and BARBARA . Too bad to because are good tracks by Dennis. On the 'Holland' album, it's pretty good. There is a song that was recorded for this one as well and left off at the
last moment " WE GOT LOVE". A live version of this exists on the 'IN CONCERT ' cd. Both of these are good albums compared to 15 Big Ones or Love You. Submitted by TooLaneBlacktop (Little Rock, AR..USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Holland...the Beach Boys' Sgt. Pepper I know, I know. "Pet Sounds" is supposed be the Beach Boys' high water mark. But that album simply can't touch "Holland"—in maturity of vision, musical texture, or any other benchmark . A rather obscure album (out of print as of this writing [10/02]) "Holland" nonetheless captures a psychedelic edge very rare in rock recordings. Having first heard the album in 1973, it became a staple on the turntable, along with "American Beauty" by the Grateful Dead. And now, some 30 years later, I still find time to sooth my soul in the haunting masterpiece that is "Holland." Side 1 is nearly flawless, Dennis Wilson's "Steamboat" being the surprise highlight, a meandering, heavy crawl through a dark, dream landscape. "Boat roll on...forever..." indeed! "Trader" continues the ride on Side 2, albeit the last really exceptional song on the album. "Funky Pretty" regroups nicely as the final cut. Find this album and treasure it. It ranks as milestone in the genre known as rock 'n roll. Submitted by a reviewer (Aliso Viejo, CA, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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