LOVE YOU

| The Beach Boys

Cabbagescale

100%
  • Reviews Counted:14

Listeners Score

0%liked it
  • Listeners Ratings: 0

LOVE YOU

The Beach Boys Love You is the 21st studio album by American rock band the Beach Boys, released on April 11, 1977. Originally planned as a Brian Wilson solo outing named Brian Loves You, the album is almost entirely written and performed by Wilson and was penned during a process of mental and drug rehabilitation for him. Synthesizers are featured heavily in its arrangements, while the lyrics tend to be autobiographic or conversational. It was initially received with a sharp divide between fans and critics, peaking at number 53 on US record charts. One single was issued from the album: "Honkin' Down the Highway" backed with "Solar System". Love You has been recognized as a work of "proto-synth pop," a forerunner to new wave experiments, and an idiosyncratic and creative oddity in the Beach Boys' canon. After being asked where somebody should begin with the Beach Boys discography, Wilson answered: "Pet Sounds first, then listen to The Beach Boys Love You." A follow-up album, Adult/Child, was completed by the group, but left unreleased. Love You would remain the last album written and produced by Wilson for the next 11 years his debut solo LP Brian Wilson (1988) marked his comeback.-Wikipedia

Critic Reviews

Show All
  • RollingStone

    1977 - Love You is a truly wonderful album, and it is Brian’s show from beginning to end. 

    See full Review

  • Pitchfork

    Love You stands in sharp contrast to the albums that preceded and followed it, because it was a product of genuine inspiration on Brian Wilson's part, with little outside interference.  

    See full Review

  • AV/MUSIC

    2007 - This is clearly a band dedicated to working every crazy Brian idea—from instrumental flourishes to an arrested-development mentality—until its genius became apparent. 

    See full Review

  • ALL MUSIC

    What makes Love You one of the best Beach Boys LPs of the 1970s, though, is the return to an uncommonly Brian Wilson sense of romantic naïveté and "adult child" wonder at the world.  

    See full Review

  • Dangerous Minds

    2016 - The Beach Boys Love You, it’s called that because it was dedicated to Brian Wilson by the other members of the band. 

    See full Review

  • sputnik music

    2015 - Raspy, juvenile, and for better or worse, unadulterated Brian Wilson. 

    See full Review

  • Adrian Denning

    Lyrically this is a very simple record. The music, although with weird synthesizer backing, is always great fun.  

    See full Review

  • popMATTERS

    2006 - Essentially a Brian Wilson solo effort, on which the ravaged, troubled genius takes a few more painful steps toward a purifying simplicity. 

    See full Review

  • No Smoking

    Love You offers a rare, one-time-only sound, that of the innocent, optimistic, and naive cries of Brian Wilson, that then (and now) (mostly) hoarse man-child featuring the prominent backing of minimoog synthesizers. 

    See full Review

  • spectrum culture

    2014 - What grounds the album’s rich sound is Brian’s synthesizer work, led by a Moog bass that sends good vibrations through the floorboards and provide a delivery system for an aging pop choirboy who valiantly reaches for notes he hit easily a decade before. 

    See full Review

  • SC Times

    2016 - "Love You" is one of the most divisive albums in The Beach Boys' catalog. But if you're willing to be open-minded, you might find it incredibly fascinating, engaging, fun, bizarre and oddly charming. 

    See full Review

  • Mark Prindle

    It's good. If you like fuzzy synths and childish songs.  

    See full Review

  • Culture Sonar

    2017 - a totally fascinating and enjoyable glimpse into the mind of a genius (arguably) past his prime. 

    See full Review

  • Aphoristic Album Reviews

    Love You is a fascinating record – Wilson making worthwhile music without his signature sophisticated harmonies and studio wizardry.  

    See full Review

Rate This Album and Leave Your Comments