Saturday, 16 May 2015

Child Is Father of the Man

From Saikalyan, the free encyclopedia
For the album by Blood, Sweat & Tears, see Child Is Father to the Man.
"Child Is Father of the Man"
Song by The Beach Boys from the album   The Smile Sessions
ReleasedNovember 1, 2011
RecordedOctober 1966, United Western Recorders and July 1971, Brian Wilson's home studio, Los Angeles
GenrePsychedelic rock, baroque pop
Length2:14
LabelCapitol
ComposerBrian Wilson
ProducerBrian Wilson
The Smile Sessions track listing
Music sample
"Child Is Father of the Man"

"Child Is Father of the Man" is a song by American rock band the Beach Boys, written by Brian Wilson to be included in the band's Smile project. Due to the project's abandonment, the intended nature of this song is mostly unknown. The result left is a nearly-instrumental piece with the words "child" and "father of the man" sung over the chorus. Biographer Jon Stebbins describes the track: "a brooding and expansive aura, with a plaintive harmonica line not dissimilar to those heard on Ennio Morriconespaghetti western soundtracks."[1]

Composition[edit]

"Child is father of the man" is an idiom originating from the poem "My Heart Leaps Up" by William Wordsworth. In a 1966 interview, Wilson mistakenly attributed it to Karl Menninger, and added that the saying had fascinated him.[2] There exist many different interpretations of the phrase, the most popular of which is man being the product of habits and behavior developed in youth. According to collaborator Van Dyke Parks, he brought up the idiom to Wilson.[3]
Brian had a fervent desire to re-invent himself as an individual, not as a boy, and that's what happened, I think. By the time I met him, he had already done "When I Grow Up (To Be A Man)"; he'd already raised the questions about being a man, and when I met him, that crisis was acute. I knew it was psychologically complex and over my head. The only way I could help with any of this, whatever it was he was going through, was refer him to that poem by Hawthorne [sic] from which the phrase "the child is father to the man" comes. He used it as part of his inquiry of Smile, as a lyric.[3]

Recording[edit]

Several sections of the song were recorded, but aside from a group piano demo, only one variation of the chorus's backing track was overdubbed with vocals sung in elaborate musical rounds.[3] The structure was never finalized. According to The Smile Sessions compiler Mark Linett, "When he's not singing, you can hear faint background vocal parts that no longer exist on the multitrack. They must have been in his headphones, and were picked up by the vocal mic. It could be that Brian decided he didn't need them, or that he was going to re-record them, but never did. You hear this sort of stuff throughout the tapes."[4] The song was worked on between October and December 1966. After one more revisit in April 1967, the track was abandoned forever by the group.
Decades later in both The Smile Sessions and Brian Wilson Presents Smile, the song was included as the third track of the second movement. "Child Is Father of the Man" precedes "Surf's Up" and follows "Look (Song for Children)". On The Smile Sessions, some vocals from "Surf's Up" were digitally inserted into the instrumental track. When rerecorded by Wilson in 2004, he sung newly written lyrics by Parks (Easy, my child / It's just enough to believe / Out of the wild / into what you can conceive / You'll achieve).[3][5]

Legacy[edit]

The song's chorus was later rewritten and rerecorded as the chorus for "Little Bird", a song on the band's 1968 Friends album released as a single.[6] It was then quoted within the closing section of "Surf's Up", which ended up appearing on their 1971 album of the same name.[1]

Personnel[edit]

The Beach Boys
  • Carl Wilson – vocals (The Smile Sessions)

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