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Dennis Wilson worked on his own time, by his own rules, and in a life that had much to offer
By Dan MacIntosh
9/17/2008

McClatchy Newspapers (www.mctdirect.com)

PopMatters.com (MCT) - The late Dennis Wilson is best known for a variety of different personality characteristics. He was the only Beach Boy _ in the world's most famous surf music band, no less _ who actually knew how to surf. Yet this beach-friendly musician ended up drowning.

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To others, especially women, he might be remembered as the cute Beach Boy. No doubt, many girls enjoyed watching Wilson _ with his long, flowing hair _ pounding away at his drum kit while playing in the band.

What is rarely discussed is Dennis Wilson, the musician. Hopefully that will change with the recent reissue of "Pacific Ocean Blue," Wilson's lone solo album, and "Bambu," its unfinished follow up

Wilson's untimely death came in 1983, before he could release "Bambu," which _ it is said _ he believed to be superior to "Pacific Ocean Blue." Sony/Legacy has released the two albums together as "Pacific Ocean Blue (Legacy Edition)." Now fans can finally judge for themselves the level of Wilson's talent.

To mark the occasion, we talked with two men who knew Wilson extremely well, and who each contributed to Wilson's artistic output. Gregg Jakobson produced Pilson's recorded work, while Dean Torrence (of Jan & Dean fame) took the cover photograph and accompanying photos for "Pacific Ocean Blue."

"God, what would it be like if Dennis had lived these last 30 years?" wonders producer Jakobson. "Because he was just starting to scratch the surface, musically."

What Jakobson says next may come off like rock & roll blasphemy to many: "I'm convinced he would have gone well past his teachers, his brothers and so on," Jakobson continues. "You couldn't ask for a greater teacher than Brian Wilson, of course, but I'm sure he would have gone past Brian."

"It would be hard to beat Brian Wilson," Torrance responds, when asked to comment on Jakobson's bold assertions. "Unfortunately, Dennis was Brian's little brother, so he will probably forever be compared to Brian. You're talking about somebody _ Brian Wilson _ that gets compared to Lennon and McCartney. That's just conjecture. I would expect that from Gregg; Gregg and Dennis were very, very close and I know Gregg totally believed in Dennis' music."

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

In his favor, nevertheless, Dennis Wilson did not experience the same tortured upbringing Brian endured. "He didn't have to suffer with all the rules and regulations that Brian lived with," Jakobson elaborates. "Dennis was a much freer spirit, and that would always reflect in his music, of course. I can't imagine another 30 years in the studio with Dennis writing and creating. I don't know where it would have gone. It would have gone out of this world."

Jakobson adds, "I suppose, maybe, that's why he's gone."

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

While Dennis never fought to please his father, he did live in the mighty big shadow of Brian. Perhaps thoughts of how he might be compared to his older brother prevented Dennis from making his own music sooner in life.

"Well, think about it," Jakobson begins, "you grow up in the shadow of somebody like Brian Wilson, your big brother who is considered a musical genius. We all travel at our own speeds, so Dennis had a lot of things to live with. And that would certainly be one of them. In the meantime, that music was just sitting there kind of on the backburner, like good stew or a soup, it was just coming along. And when it finally came out, I mean there was no shortage of it.

"When we would write, if I came up with a lyric idea or a song idea, (such as) "I looked at her and I thought she should/She looked at me and I knew we would," Dennis would say, 'Oh yeah, great. Let's find a piano.' The nearest one, even if we had to go into a music store to find a piano. And in 10 or 15 minutes we'd have a song. He was never short of a melody line; it was like melody line after melody line. It was amazing to me. I've worked with other writers, but they'd have to think about it for a while. But with Dennis, it was always right there, and more than one. He would say, 'Ah, that didn't work. Let's try this one.' He would always have two or three melodies that would pop right out at him."

Jakobson says he witnessed Wilson's artistic birth as though it was happening overnight.

"It was like, one day he couldn't play the piano _ you know, he could plink on it like I do _ and the next day he could sit down and play you a whole complicated melody line of blues- or a jazz- or a rock & roll-influenced melody line," Jakobson says, amazed. "The Captain (Daryl Dragon), of Captain and Tennille _ and he's a trained classical pianist, his father's Carmen Dragon _ it used to blow his mind watching Dennis. He'd say, 'Where's that stuff come from?' And it just came. It was just there. All of a sudden it was ready to come out. It's like when the peaches are ready, they're there. You don't have to worry about them."

Unlike Jakobson, Torrence never foresaw all of Wilson's amazing musical output. Nevertheless, he did have his suspicions.

"I suspected that whole family was pretty damn musical," Torrence says. "I would have been surprised if he didn't have ...


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