Pet Sounds: Most Overrated Album of All Time?


Try as I might -- and I have tried very hard -- I just don't get the "genius" of this album. I know that George Martin said that Sgt Pepper would have never happened without Pet Sounds, but I don't think the two are even in the same league. What am I missing?
jeffreybowman2k
what should we be listening to ??????

As for Pet Sounds, it will outlive you..and me
I breathe surf culture every day
stop by sometime
station #34 Carlsbad North Jetty of the powerstation.....

What brought this thread back to life ten years later?! I could say a LOT about Pet Sounds, but why bother? If one doesn’t "get" the album, so be it. Having said that, I will in fact say a few words about it; I owe that much to Brian Wilson.

I can understand why a person would find Pet Sounds underwhelming; it sounds very "old fashioned", and isn’t at all Rock music. In addition, it’s recorded sound quality is mediocre at best; it’s so veiled as to make hearing "into" the music difficult. In spite of that, it remains Paul McCartney’s all-time favorite album. Go figure! Dave Alvin (The Blasters, solo, work with John Doe of X, new album with Jimmy Dale Gilmore) said a while back that he himself never understood why others he respected liked Brian Wilson and/or The Beach Boys so much. Until, that is, very recently, when all of a sudden he had the epiphany, finally hearing what others had for decades. Better late than never!

For anyone interested in understanding why "God Only Knows" is considered one of the three greatest Pop songs ever written (by someone "close" to me ;-), head over to You Tube and find the video wherein a music professor (well la de da) sits at a piano, breaking down the song, demonstrating and explain the brilliance of it’s composition. Not as dry and academic as that may sound. Thrilling, actually. I would provide a link to the video, but remain stubbornly computer illiterate.

Up above one listener characterized Pet Sounds as depressing; I think of it rather as melancholy. Another said it was influenced by Brian Wilson’s discovery and use of LSD. Only somewhat; the Smile recordings (the never-completed follow-up album to Pet Sounds), on the other hand, are dripping with the stuff. In the Smile album (a musical dramatization of Manifest Destiny), Brian had finally found a lyricist---the brilliant Van Dyke Parks---his equal.

it's a great record, but  for me a bit monochromatic in mood and tempo to be considered the GOAT. my main issue is for all the ambitious arrangements it's always sounded compressed and a bit off to me--it just doesn't have the dynamic oomph of say, forever changes or abbey road.
The Empre State Building was a marvel in its day and still is but it now has a lot of competition. 

Though I hold Brian Wilson in as high esteem as anyone, and consider him to have written a fair number of the best songs I’ve ever heard. I don’t love Pet Sounds as much as I am "suppose to". I had loved All Summer Long, but didn’t at all like it’s two follow-ups. The British Invasion had really "toughened-up" white Rock ’n’ Roll, putting Blues back in the mix, and by 1965/6 The Beach Boys already sounded like an oldies act---passe’. By the time of Pet Sounds’ release, I wasn’t even interested enough to check it out; no one I knew did.

But then by way of a fluke (too long a story to recount), in early 1968 I happened to hear Smiley Smile (the watered-down version of the Smile album, which was to be the follow-up to Pet Sounds), and my little teenage mind was blown! There was a lot of acid-drenched music being made in 1968, but SS was more mind-altered than anything else I had heard. Very odd, deeply-revolutionary music. Give a listen to "Heroes & Villains" and "Fall Breaks And Back To Winter (W. Woodpecker Symphony)". Brian Wilson had truly---to quote BB singer Mike Love---f*cked with the formula. Their structures are more akin to Classical compositions than songs. The music on Smiley Smile make Hendrix, Syd Barrett’s Pink Floyd, or any other psychedelic music (except for perhaps the 2nd and 3rd Grateful Dead albums) sound downright traditional in comparison. In my opinion, the collapse of the Smile album is the artistic tragedy of our lifetimes. Am I being too dramatic? ;-)