A teenage symphony to hank?

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Brian Wilson returns to his lost 1970 country album. Collaborator Fred Vail explains all.

WHEN BRIAN WILSON called Beach Boys manager Fred Vail in early 1970, Vail figured it was to discuss business. Sometimes called ‘The Sixth Beach Boy’, he’d worked with them since 1963, and was a fly on the wall for such memorable moments as the writing of The Warmth Of The Sun and the first playback of Pet Sounds.

“Brian said, ‘I want to do a country album, and I want you to be the vocalist,’” recalls Vail, who had no recording experience but adds, “I’m no Carl Wilson, but I can carry a tune.”

As they talked, Vail realised that Wilson didn’t have a plan. “I asked, Did you write any songs? ‘No.’ Do you have a band? ‘No.’ He said, ‘You pick the songs, you get the musicians, and we’ll go into Wally Heider’s studio.’”

Vail reached back to his days as a country DJ, selecting favourites by Hank Williams and Elvis, plus contemporary tunes by James Taylor and Bacharach & David. For musicians, he called “players who knew country music,” such as James Burton and Glen D Hardin.

Basic tracks and scratch vocals were cut for 14 songs, with Wilson guiding the proceedings. “The sound was traditional country, with a pop edge,” Vail says. “Remember the time – LA in 1970 was going through a country rock era. Linda Ronstadt, The Ozark Mountain Daredevils. We were channelling some of that.”

But two weeks in, Wilson lost interest. “It was unknown territory for him,” says Vail. This was also Brian Wilson’s bed-and-bathrobe period of weight gain, drugs, seclusion. In 1971, he’d abandon another extracurricular production, for American Spring, his wife Marilyn’s duo with her sister. Vail says, “I figured, Maybe we’ll get back to recording when he’s in the mood. That never happened.”

Ed Thrasher/Mptvimages/Eyevine, Jason Denton, Mike Davidson/Fred Vail

In the years after, the project took on the name Cows In The Pasture. Vail moved on to various music biz gigs, and later opened Treasure Isle Studio in Nashville. In 2014, a call came from The Beach Boys’ management. While clearing the vaults, they’d found five boxes of tape from the sessions with Wilson. Vail said, “Don’t th

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