You mean a Disney production is false and inaccurate? Shocking.
So just know some of the story offers a fascinating glimpse into the real musicians of our youth.
The Tedesco documentary is great, and Kaye comes off very well in it. Getting mad about what year the nickname was invented seems to miss the point that everyone is praising you and you should receive it graciously.
Truth is, the whole thing is based on fake and phoney. Virtually everyone buying those records looked at those photos and did so believing they were hearing th actual Beach Boys playing and singing (an illusion the record companies work hard to maintain). So I don’t much care about Carol’s butthurt over the specifics of the fakery. The important thing was they were well paid and the checks didn’t bounce.
What does it matter, Carol? Most people assume the recording is done if not all performing at once, then very close together. Just paying attention to how the Beatles and most of Motown produced records back then, I always knew that wasn’t so. Some stars don’t want to cut their vacations short just to fly back and record together.
After some group members hit the big time, they may have tired of working together any more than absolutely necessary, so they create new work in various stages and various studios.
Why be so bitter, Carol, when your legacy continues to be appreciated and to live on?
Oh, and I guess any money you get is kinda nice too, huh?
Poppa Doo Run Run does Beach Boys better than the Beach Boys.http://www.papadoo.com/
Playing notes on bass that somebody else created makes you a musician... It doesn’t make you a genius. The person who created the notes, Brian Wilson, is the genius. Some others added lyrics and those are important too... But Brian Wilson was the genius behind the Beach Boys and the documentary makes that more than clear. Others were along for the ride, but he was master of that circus
The Wrecking Crew was a great group of very talented studio musicians who played his music very well. Period!
Soon as I saw the headline, I knew it was Kaye. As a bass player myself (but of the “local band” variety), I’ve always had an interest in her stuff, but she’s quick to call out the BS even when the BS is just how things are done. It’s like an actor saying a movie is BS because the actor wasn’t doing his own stuff. “That’s not really him!”
Yes, we know a lot of male actors were standing on boxes during some scenes with their leading ladies. It’s not a conspiracy.
However, she’s a good source to call it out. And presenting it the way they apparently did in this movie does make it a case of “based on a” true story, but not the real story.
interesting that most of these musicians wanting to claim some fame were no where to be found at the MANY live performance concerts. having grown up as a performing musician and spending an uncomfortable amount of time on stage just doing my job at the time, it really doesn’t matter who wrote or did the studio version of any song. either you can pull it off successfully on stage or you can’t and SUCK! THAT is the reality. live albums have the musicians on stage performing the songs. that is a simple fact. signed:been there, done that...and the life of a musician mostly sucks.
“ Kaye re-emphasized that the session instrumentalists and the bands they played for never crossed paths in the studio”
That’s the crux of it. And all of it.
These musicians were hourly workers. That’s all.
And she has every right to call b.s. on Disney or anyone else who says they played on the recording when they didn't.