Let's go down memory lane here (to me it's like yesterday!)rog43win wrote:I remember when the Chantays' Pipeline came out...//...still gotta be the surfing national anthem..........

Let's go down memory lane here (to me it's like yesterday!)rog43win wrote:I remember when the Chantays' Pipeline came out...//...still gotta be the surfing national anthem..........
bumblebeetwist wrote:This might be a bit of a stretch but I think surf music was an exploration of rock 'n roll that ventured (heh) outside of the roadhouse or bar format. Like any great soundtrack music it inspires the listener to create a setting and place for the mind to wander within, and like any great soundtrack it isn't merely dependent upon the visual scene is may accompany to get the point across. 'Til that point most guitar-based rock was centered around the vocalist to provide a motive for the song, but especially the sound seemed to come from within a honky-tonk and the lyrics centering on relations 'n such.
Surf music can be seen as the guitarists leaving the windowless saloon and channeling the outside world, making music from and for a bigger picture. Reverb is space and dimension, it's less about music that originates from a stage, and more about a tone that exists in a large panorama or sometimes within the small deep recesses of the mind..
This question probably has already been brought up, but doesn't the rise of surf music coincide chronologically with the availability of portable reverb units?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 56 guests