Fall Breaks and Back to Winter (W. Woodpecker Symphony)

"Fall Breaks and Back to Winter (W. Woodpecker Symphony)"
Instrumental by The Beach Boys from the album Smiley Smile
Released September 18, 1967 (1967-09-18)
Recorded June 29, 1967 (1967-06-29), Brian Wilson's home studio, Los Angeles
Length 2:15
Label Brother/Capitol
Composer Brian Wilson
Producer The Beach Boys
Smiley Smile track listing
Template:Smiley Smile tracks
Music sample
"Fall Breaks and Back to Winter (W. Woodpecker Symphony)"

"Fall Breaks and Back to Winter (W. Woodpecker Symphony)" is an instrumental composed by Brian Wilson for American rock band the Beach Boys. Released in 1967 as the second track on the group's album Smiley Smile, the composition derives from "Fire" – a piece recorded by Wilson several months earlier, but left unreleased due to his paranoia.

Composition

Wilson said of this version, "That was sort of a song about a cold winter scene. We tried to paint a picture of winter and then spring, late summer, and then broke into winter. We used the 'Woody Woodpecker' theme because it was descriptive to us of spring and summer."[1]

Biographer David Leaf noted its "bizarre woodpecking" percussion, the use of a squeeze box that emulates the iconic Woody Woodpecker laugh, and wordless vocals by the Beach Boys.[2] Musicologist Daniel Harrison described the track (along with other Smiley Smile tracks) as "a kind of protomiminal rock music", and that "the lack of formal or harmonic development makes the listener focus upon other quaities such as instrumentation, timbre, and reverberation. A concentrated listening effort thus goes quickly to subtle details.[3]

Legacy

In 1996, "Falls Breaks and Back to Winter" was included in David Toop's Ocean of Sound, a 2-CD compilation album meant to accommodate his book of the same name.

Cover versions

References

  1. Benci, Jacopo (January 1995). "Brian Wilson interview". Record Collector (UK) (185).
  2. Leaf, David (1990). Smiley Smile/Wild Honey (CD Liner). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records.
  3. Harrison, Daniel (1997). "After Sundown: The Beach Boys' Experimental Music" (PDF). In Covach, John; Boone, Graeme M. Understanding Rock: Essays in Musical Analysis. Oxford University Press. pp. 33–57. ISBN 9780199880126.
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