Product Details
Today/ Summer Days (and Summer Nights)

Today/ Summer Days (and Summer Nights)
The Beach Boys

Price: $11.94 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

56 new or used available from $5.65

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Do You Wanna Dance
  2. Good To My Baby
  3. Don't Hurt My Little Sister
  4. When I Grow Up (To Be A Man)
  5. Help Me, Rhonda - (LP version)
  6. Dance, Dance, Dance
  7. Please Let Me Wonder
  8. I'm So Young
  9. Kiss Me Baby
  10. She Knows Me Too Well
  11. In The Back Of My Mind
  12. Bull Session With "Big Daddy"
  13. The Girl From New York City
  14. Amusement Parks U.S.A
  15. Then I Kissed Her
  16. Salt Lake City
  17. Girl Don't Tell Me
  18. Help Me, Rhonda - (single version)
  19. California Girls
  20. Let Him Run Wild
  21. You're So Good To Me
  22. Summer Means New Love
  23. I'm Bugged At My Ol' Man
  24. And Your Dreams Come True
  25. Little Girl I Once Knew, The - (stereo track, single version)
  26. Dance, Dance, Dance - (stereo, bonus alternate take)
  27. I'm So Young - (bonus track, alternate take)
  28. Let Him Run Wild - (stereo, bonus track, alternate take)
  29. Graduation Day - (bonus track, studio version)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #45622 in Music
  • Brand: Beach
  • Released on: 2001-03-13
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Extra tracks, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
  • Dimensions: .23 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential recording
Put simply, this is the Beach Boys at their mid-'60s prime. Ironically, the band's greatest evolutionary leap was spurred by its leader, Brian Wilson, who decided to drop out of the band's live performances after a December 1964 nervous breakdown to concentrate on honing the Beach Boys' studio sound. With Wilson's productions gaining a significant new depth and confidence (note the innovative modulations on "Dance, Dance, Dance"), the first half of Today seems a logical, upbeat step forward from its predecessors. But it's the album's second act that steals the show, setting the stage for the triumph of Pet Sounds. Indeed, it's easy to imagine gorgeous, introspective tracks such as "Please Let Me Wonder," "She Knows Me Too Well," and "In the Back of My Mind" intertwined with the best of Sounds. Set against that standard, the follow-up, Summer Days, feels like a step backward, despite the presence of another Wilson world-beater production, "California Girls," and the band's second No. 1 single, "Help Me, Rhonda." Ever pressured by commercial concerns, Wilson and the band created what was in essence the true follow-up to the All Summer Long album. Still, there's a level of musical sophistication to tracks such as "The Girl from New York City," the Phil Spector tribute "Then I Kissed Her," and especially "Girl Don't Tell Me" and "Let Him Run Wild." Reissued (with 24-bit digital remastering) in a long out-of-print twofer edition to mark the band's 40th anniversary and Lifetime Achievement Grammy, this set features several bonus tracks as well as the insightful notes of David Leaf (The Beach Boys and the California Myth). Bonus cuts include the spectacular "The Little Girl I Once Knew" and revealing outtakes of "Dance, Dance, Dance," "I'm So Young," and "Let Him Run Wild," along with a studio version of a song previously only available on the Beach Boys Concert collection, "Graduation Day." --Jerry McCulley


Customer Reviews

And Your Dreams Come True5
I grew up in a strict, no nonsense Italian household in rural Connecticut. You just can't get any farther from the warm California sunshine, surfing, and the quest for the California dream than that. Our family summertime treks to the beach consisted of my brother and me loaded into back seat of the family Chevy wagon on a bumpy trip to " Long Island Sound " filled with mirky, seaweed laden water and rocky( read: ouch ) beaches. But then one summer, out of the blue, a song issued from my small transistor AM radio. The song was
" Surfin' Safari " and hence my dream of sunny California became closer to reality. I was no longer trapped in rural Connecticut. I was mesmerized by the song, and with maybe two quarters to my name, pedaled my way to the local department store and bought the 45 RPM record. The flip side was " 409 " and boy was I ever in heaven, having already been a full fledged greaser by age 12.
I bought everything the boys of summer put out,the Surfin' Safari Album, Little Deuce Coupe, Surfer Girl, Concert, and Surfin U.S.A.
What struck me profoundly were the harmonies and the melodies, which in my young mind made every other record put out by others seem amateurish and rudimentary in comparison. And the themes of the songs were right up my alley. Four decades later I feel the same way. By the time the Today album and Summer Days and Summer Nights album were released, I was in high school, and these songs took on new meanings to me, ( READ: Girl Crazy ). My father was a tyrant at times, he'd scream and yell at my brother and me, and would make me " go to my room " ( to study ) whenever my report card came- I always brought home poor grades. It was from lack of interest in school, and my great interest in cars and girls that killed my grades. I prided myself in never bringing home a school book to study. I would really dread the last report card before summer- because he'd usually " ground " me to my room to study all summer long. ( no pun intended. ) I never understood this, because I had no books to study for summer. When I'd remind him of this fact, he'd scream and say, " Then you'll go to the library and find the books for next year and bring them home and study them! "
So when I heard " I'm Bugged at My Old Man. " I felt a true allegiance to BIG BROTHER Brian. I felt that he knew some of the stuff I'd been going through. And I think that is what endures with respect to the Beach Boys and their music. Our relation ships, desires, fears, and longings are reflected in their music. More than once I've gotten shivers up my spine upon first hearing a new Beach Boys song,( that's what real harmony will do to you ) that's the kind of emotion it evokes. Just think of the turmoil we felt as teenagers. Who could we talk to? Who would listen and understand our deepest fears, our longing to be loved? You guessed it. Brian and the Boys. They were beyond hip as far as I was concerned, and while others turned their attention to the Rolling Stones, Jimmie Hendrix, and the British invasion groups ( especially the Beatles. ) my loyalty never wavered from " The Boys. " While everyone was cranking up " I wanna Hold your Hand " and " She Loves You ", I was cranking up " I get Around " and " When I Grow Up to Be a Man. " I often times wonder what my adolescent years would have been like if the Beach Boys never existed. We've been through a lot together, the Boys and me. They were there when I obtained my driver's license. They stood by me when I'd get a crush on a girl, ( and the subsequent heartache of unrequited love. ) They were there when my mom died of a heart attack at age 45 ( I was 17 ). And when my BIG brother Ted lost his battle with Cancer at age 27. They were there, holding me up, allowing the tears, and the pain, and the sorrow to issue from me, and then to be replaced by joyousness, the joyousness of being alive. They never failed me, those Boys of Summer. And they will not fail you.

Regards,

Tony

A Note On The Sound Quality - from an Audio Engineer1
5 Stars for the music, Minus 4 for the transfer and mastering. Granted, most of the music on this CD ranks right up there with the Pet Sounds material. That is why this music deserves better audio! From the first time I listened to this CD, I noticed something was wrong - the music sounded dulled somehow, there was no detail or sharpness - in short: it did not sound the way I expected a year 2000 "remaster" to sound. So eventually I imported the tracks into Pro Tools to see if there was anything I could do to remedy the situation. Not a thing. What I found was exactly what I suspected upon first listen - ugly, distorted, "brick walled" waveforms! On a Beach Boys album! Either in the tape transfer in the or the supposed "remastering" process, something went horribly wrong. [In summary for the non-audio folks: your equalizer will not make it sound better - it will only emphasize the "clipped", distorted sound.] If anybody else gives a damn about these things in this day and age - speak up now! It's 9 years later and about time that the folks who own and distribute these recordings got wise to their mistakes.

Darn my Dad!4
This CD contains two (count 'em) Beach Boys albums from 1965. Both albums are great, with several hits like "Do You Wanna Dance", "When I Grow Up", "Dance, Dance, Dance", "Help Me, Rhonda" and "California Girls". And there are plenty of great songs that weren't hits, like "Please Let Me Wonder" and "Let Him Run Wild". And "I'm Bugged at My Ol' Man" is the funniest song the Beach Boys ever recorded. But the interview "Bull Session With the 'Big Daddy'" isn't something that most people will want to listen to more than once. Other than that obvious low point, Beach Boys fans should enjoy this CD a lot.