The McCallum Theatre presents The Beach Boys on Sunday, November 20, at 3:00pm.
You can capsulize most pop music acts by reciting how many hits they've had and how many millions of albums they've sold. But these conventional measurements fall short when you're assessing the impact of The Beach Boys. To be sure, this band has birthed a torrent of hit singles and sold albums by the tens of millions. But its greater significance is the fact that it changed the musical landscape so profoundly that every pop act since has been in its debt.
Happily for us all, The Beach Boys continue to create and perform with the same bold imagination and style that marked their explosive debut over 50 years ago. In 2013, their release Sounds of Summer was certified triple Platinum with over three million in sales and climbing, and its companion The Warmth of the Sun marks a resurgence in Beach Boys interest that again rocks the world.
Even more than the Beatles, The Beach Boys found, through their music, the key to unfading youth - and they made copies for everyone. To these guys, the beach isn't just a place where the surf comes to play, it's where life is renewed and made whole again.
Captained by Mike Love, The Beach Boys play a busy schedule of concerts, averaging 150 shows a year, ranging from summer festivals to gala New Year's celebrations and special events worldwide.
Grammy-winning songwriter Bruce Johnston joined The Beach Boys in 1965, replacing Glen Campbell, who filled-in for BrIan Wilson, on vocals/bass, when he retired from touring. Highly regarded as a singer-songwriter, Bruce's vocal work with such artists as Elton John and Pink Floyd established him among rock's elite artists.
Had this remarkable band been less committed to its art and its fans, it could have retired from the field with honor at many points along the way, confident that it had made a lasting contribution to world culture. It could have rested on the success of the epoch-shifting Pet Soundsmasterpiece in 1966, or after recording Love's co-written Golden Globe nominated "Kokomo" in 1988, or after being inducted that same year into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, or after watching worldwide album sales blow past l00 million, or after winning the NARAS Lifetime Achievement Award in 2001. And still, The Beach Boys continue to have fun, fun, fun, with no end in sight.
In 2012, The Beach Boys scheduled a 74 concert date 50th Anniversary Reunion Tour which was scheduled as a limited run reunion tour. The original members reunited and released That's Why God Made the Radio. The album debuted at # 3 on the Billboard charts, their highest chart position in 37 years and an unprecedented milestone.
The Beach Boys are led by Mike Love (lead vocals) and Bruce Johnston (keyboards/vocals), who along with Jeffrey Foskett (guitar/vocals), Brian Eichenburger (bass/vocals), Tim Bonhomme (keyboards/vocals), John Cowsill (percussion/vocals) and Scott Totten (guitar/vocals) continue the legacy of the iconic American band.
Few, if any, acts can match The Beach Boys' concert presence, spirit and performance. They were center-stage at Live Aid, multiple Farm Aids, the Statue of Liberty's 100th Anniversary Salute, the Super Bowl and the White House. On one day alone - July 4, 1985 - they played to nearly 2 million fans at shows in Philadelphia and Washington, D.C.
Mike Love's role as the band's front man sometimes overshadows his stature as one of rock's foremost songwriters. "Surfin'," The Beach Boys' first hit, came from his pen. With his cousin, BrIan Wilson, Love wrote the classics "Fun, Fun, Fun," "I Get Around," "Help Me Rhonda," "California Girls" and the Grammy nominated "Good Vibrations." Years later, he showed he still had the lyrical chops by co-writing the irresistible and chart-topping "Kokomo."
On The Beach Boys' horizon is a national/world tour and continued charity activities through Mike Love's Love Foundation,which supports national environmental and educational initiatives. Love and The Beach Boys' efforts raised over a quarter of a million dollars for the Red Cross to benefit victims of Hurricane Katrina and made contributions to the disaster relief in Haiti.
The band appeared on countless worldwide TV shows throughout the years including "The Ed Sullivan Show," "Dick Clark's American Bandstand" and "The Tonight Show." Other television appearances include Don Imus' MSNBC show "Imus in the Morning," TNT's "NBA All-Star Game," NBC's "Macy's Day Parade," "The Today Show," PBS' "A Capitol Fourth","Good Morning America,""Weekend Today," and "The O'Reilly Factor."
Tickets for the performance of The Beach Boys on Sunday, November 20, at 3:00pm are priced at $117, $97, $77 and $67. Tickets are available at the Theatre's web site at www.mccallumtheatre.com or by calling the McCallum Theatre box office at (760) 340-ARTS.
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