In the mid-1970s, the unexpected success of two back-to-back Top 10 greatest hits albums pushedĀ The Beach BoysĀ toward their early surf-and-cars past, fueling hits-laden nostalgia tours at sold-out stadiums and arenas across the U.S. Amidst this era, Americaās Band, led byĀ Brian Wilsonās return to songwriting and producing, quietly made some of the rawest, unexpected, and most emotionally exposed studio recordings of their career at their recording haven, Brother Studio in Santa Monica, Calif. Across a period defined by intense touring, shifting internal dynamics, and the highly publicized āBrianās Back!ā campaign, all five principal members āĀ Brian Wilson,Ā Dennis Wilson,Ā Carl Wilson,Ā Mike Love, and Al Jardine ā contributed to a body of work far more complex than the eraās public narrative suggested.
Following the revelatory ā70s-era box setsĀ Feel FlowsĀ ā centered on the albumsĀ SunflowerĀ andĀ Surfās UpĀ ā andĀ Sail On Sailor, which explored theĀ Carl and the Passions ā āSo ToughāĀ andĀ HollandĀ sessions,Ā We Gotta Groove: The Brother Studio YearsĀ turns to the next chapter of the bandās evolution. The expansive new collection, due February 13 via Capitol/UMe, gathers this pivotal period, recorded between 1976-77 at Brother Studio into one place for the first time, anchoring itself around a newly remastered edition ofĀ The Beach Boys Love YouĀ (1977) and the album sessions, the first-ever official release of the long-shelvedĀ Adult/ChildĀ sessions, and a wealth of outtakes and alternates from the transitionalĀ 15 Big OnesĀ (1976) sessions. These recordings powered the eraās āBrianās Back!ā campaign ā launched to rebalance the bandās commercial fortunes ā which presented Brian as returning to full creative command even as his participation in the studio remained uneven and, at times, fragile.
The six-disc box set (3CD & 3LP), co-produced by acclaimed producer/mixing engineer James SĆ”ez and longtime Beach Boys historian Howie Edelson, with artist direction from band archivist Alan Boyd, offers an in-depth look at Brianās late-ā70s burst of songwriting and producing while also showcasing the essential contributions of Mike, Al, Carl, and Dennis. The 73-track collection, boasting 35 unreleased and 22 newly mixed tracks, presents the majority of the album sessions across three LPs with additional outtakes, alternate mixes and demos on three CDs, which also include the same tracks as the vinyl. The albums are packaged in a handsome 12.75ā x 12.75ā slipcase emblazoned with a picture of the stunning stained-glass window that hung in Brother Studio and features a 40-page booklet with extensive, illuminating liner notes by co-producer Edelson that draws on new and archival interviews with all of The Beach Boys and the Brother Studio engineer team of Stephen Moffitt, Earle Mankey and John Hanlon to tell the story of this integral and influential era. The booklet is filled with a slew of rare photos, tape box images and artifacts of the era and a complete sessionography detailing when and where every recording was made.
āWe Gotta Groove,ā the song that gives the set its name, is available to listen to now. An upbeat outtake of the Love You sessions, written and produced by Brian Wilson, the track, which has been newly mixed by co-producer SĆ”ez, was recorded to 2ā 24-track tape between October-November 1976 at Brother Studio and features Mike Love on lead vocal, with backing vocals and electric guitar by Billy Hinsche, and Brian on vocals and all other instrumentation, including Baldwin electric harpsichord, drums, tack upright piano, Hammond B-3 organ, electric bass and tambourine.
In celebration of this historic release, the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles will host a special evening on Thursday, February 12, bringing together the compilation producers Edelson and SƔez in conversation with the original Brother Studio engineers, Stephen Moffitt, Earle Mankey and John Hanlon, who will reunite for the first time since these recordings were made 50 years ago to talk about this pivotal and underappreciated period of The Beach Boys catalog. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit: INSERT LINK
Upon returning home from Holland where they recorded their 1973 album of the same name, The Beach Boys relocated their homebase from Brianās Bel Air mansion to a former X-rated movie theater at 1454 5th St. in Santa Monica, Calif., that they christened Brother Studio. The studio was designed and headed up by Stephen Moffitt who had previously created Geordie Hormelās Village Recorders ā a West L.A. mainstay for so many top acts over the years. In addition to The Beach Boys, Brother hosted sessions by Elton John, Eric Carmen, The Runaways, Helen Reddy, The Paley Brothers, and The Quick, among others.
The first disc of We Gotta Groove features The Beach Boys Love You which has been newly remastered from the original 1977 mix, alongside 10 period outtakes, providing a fuller picture of the fruitful album sessions that lasted from October 1976 to January 1977. Recorded largely at Brother Studio with Brian at the console and playing most of the instruments, Love You strips the group to blocky analog synthesizers, pounding piano, and close-micād vocals. Its distinctive sound world ā driven by ARP and Oberheim synths rather than traditional Beach Boys instrumentation ā has since become one of the most studied and influential aspects of the album, turning songs about parenthood (āI Wanna Pick You Upā), romance (āRoller Skating Childā), the cosmos (āSolar Systemā), and talk show hosts (āJohnny Carsonā) into something both childlike and unexpectedly modern. Mike and Alās unmistakable vocal signatures ā from Mikeās bass and baritone leads to Alās crystalline high parts ā play a crucial role in grounding Brianās synthesizer-driven arrangements, while Carlās controlled, elegant leads and Dennisās rough-edged emotional intensity add depth and contrast throughout.
While divisive among critics and fans at release, Brian frequently cited Love You as his favorite Beach Boys record, calling it āthe best album we ever made.ā Over the ensuing nearly five decades since its release, it has become a cult classic and a touchstone for musicians far outside classic rock circles. R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck has also singled it out as his favorite Beach Boys album, and generations of indie and alternative artists have gravitated toward its cracked vocals, minimal synth-pop textures, and outsider sincerity ā hearing in it a proto-new-wave sensibility as much as a late-period Beach Boys LP. As Edelson writes in the liners, āUpon the initial release of The Beach Boys Love You, non-believers picked up on the D.I.Y. punk ethos from the Lower East Side all the way to the hipper enclaves across Europe. Today, Brian Wilsonās left field use of keyboards in the 1970s is considered to be an early influence for 1980ās New Wave, Synth Pop, and New Romantic record makers.ā
If Love You is the eraās officially released peculiar masterpiece, Adult/Child is its whispered legend. Recorded in 1977 with arranger Dick Reynolds, whose sophisticated Four Freshmenāstyle charts Brian had idolized since youth, the shelved album leans into big-band swing, lounge textures, fitness jingles, and some of Brianās most disarmingly intimate originals, including āStill I Dream of Itā and āItās Over Now.ā Brian sidestepped the electronic buzz found on Love You and instead tapped into a simpler era. āI wrote a song for Frank Sinatra once called āStill I Dream Of It.ā He didnāt say yes to the song. It was a beautiful song about loneliness and hope. The song ended up on an album named Adult/Child, which was filled with those kinds of songs. It was a Beach Boys album that never came out,ā Brian remarked in an interview.
Prepared for release but ultimately vetoed and left in the vault, Adult/Child circulated for decades only through collectorsā tapes and bootlegs, attaining near-mythical status among fans. Its mixture of big-band pastiche, autobiographical confession, and unabashed eccentricity left both the label and parts of the band uncertain how to present it, resulting in its quiet shelving. We Gotta Groove finally assembles the material in a coherent album sequence for the first time, supplemented by new 2025 backing-track mixes and session highlights. The groupās distinctive vocal blend, including prominent contributions from Mike, Al, Carl and Dennis adds warmth and cohesion to Brianās idiosyncratic material, revealing Adult/Child as more of a Beach Boys project than its mythology has often implied.
We Gotta Groove also offers a new perspective on 15 Big Ones through its wealth of studio material rather than its familiar running order. Combining oldies covers with new Brian-penned compositions, the 1976 album, which marked the groupās first long player to feature a āProduced by Brian Wilsonā credit since 1966ās Pet Sounds, divided critics even as it returned The Beach Boys to the U.S. Top 10 and produced a major hit with āRock and Roll Music.ā 15 Big Ones was mostly recorded between March through May 1976 at Brother Studio and released quickly after in July of that year. The new set offers the opportunity to hear a variety of covers that were in contention for the album but ultimately didnāt make the cut, including āMony Mony,ā āRunning Bear,ā āShake, Rattle & Roll, āOn Broadway,ā and āSea Cruise.ā Hearing these outtakes reveals the muscular band interplay and dense vocal arrangements beneath the mid-ā70s production gloss ā including Mikeās dominant lead on the hit single, Alās powerful vocal contributions, and Carlās pivotal production leadership ā reconnecting the album to the groupās deep studio-craft traditions.
This period also coincided with The Beach Boysā transformation into one of Americaās most successful touring acts, playing massive summer-circuit shows even as their studio recordings grew stranger, more insular, and more Brian-centric behind the scenes. Across its six discs, We Gotta Groove places these contradictions into context, highlighting parallel creative threads in the Beach Boys universe: Dennisās haunting āHoly Man,ā Carlās developing compositions that would later evolve on L.A. (Light Album), Mike and Alās essential vocal and conceptual contributions, and a suite of Brianās studio-cassette demos that reveal Love You and Adult/Child in their most vulnerable form ā just voice and keyboard, unvarnished and immediate.
Pulling together newly mixed tracks like āWe Gotta Groove,ā āHey There Mama,ā and āShort Skirts,ā along with finally finished versions of long-circulating titles, We Gotta Groove: The Brother Studio Years reframes 1976ā77 as one of the most revealing and creatively restless chapters of the bandās evolution ā a moment when all five Beach Boys were navigating change, rediscovering their creative identities, and shaping a deeply human turning point in the continuing story of The Beach Boys.
WE GOTTA GROOVE: THE BROTHER STUDIO YEARS
Disc 1 ā The Beach Boys Love You Album (1977 Mix)
LP1 Side 1
1. Let Us Go On This Way
2. Roller Skating Child
3. Mona
4. Johnny Carson
5. Good Time
6. Honkinā Down The Highway
7. Ding Dang
LP1 Side 2
8. Solar System
9. The Night Was So Young
10. Iāll Bet Heās Nice
11. Letās Put Our Hearts Together
12. I Wanna Pick You Up
13. Airplane
14. Love Is A Woman
Love You Outtakes (CD Only)
15. Ruby Baby *
16. Marilyn Rovell *
17. Sherry She Needs Me *
18. Lazy Lizzie *
19. We Gotta Groove (2025 Mix) *
20. Hey There Mama (2025 Mix) *
21. Clanginā (2025 Mix) *
22. Love Is A Woman (Al Jardine Vocal) *
23. Johnny Carson (Alternate Mix With Intro) *
24. Youāve Lost That Lovinā Feeling *
Disc 2 ā Adult/Child Sessions
LP2 Side 1
1. Life Is For The Living *
2. Deep Purple *
3. Itās Over Now
4. Still I Dream Of It
5. Everybody Wants To Live *
6. Lines *
7. Itās Trying To Say *
LP2 Side 2
8. Shorteninā Bread *
9. New England Waltz *
10. Life Is For The Living (Backing Track) *
11. Deep Purple (2025 Backing Track Mix) **
12. Itās Over Now (2025 Backing Track Mix) **
13. Still I Dream Of It (2025 Backing Track Mix) **
1974 ā 1977 Select Outtakes (CD Only)
14. Holy Man (2025 Mix Carl Wilson Vocal) **
15. Carlās Song 1 (It Could Be Anything) (2025 Mix) **
16. Carlās Song 2 (Angel Come Home) (2025 Mix) **
17. String Bass Song (Rainbows) (2025 Mix) **
18. 10,000 Years Ago *
19. Gimme Some Lovinā (2025 Mix) *
20. Honeycomb (Marilyn Wilson-Rutherford Vocal) *
21. In The Back Of My Mind (1975 Alternate Take 2025 Mix) **
Disc 3 ā 15 Big Ones Outtakes and Alternate Mixes
LP3 Side 1
1. Just Once In My Life (2025 Mix) **
2. Mony, Mony (2025 Mix) *
3. Running Bear (2025 Mix) *
4. Shake, Rattle And Roll *
5. On Broadway (2025 Mix) **
6. Sea Cruise (2025 Mix) **
LP3 Side 2
7. Chapel Of Love (2025 Mix) **
8. Short Skirts (2025 Mix) **
9. TM Song (2025 Backing Track Mix) **
10. Rock And Roll Music (2025 Backing Track Mix) **
11. Had To Phone Ya (2025 Deconstructed Mix) **
12. Just Once In My Life (2025 Backing Track Mix) **
Love You Alternate Mixes (CD Only)
13. Let Us Go On This Way (Alternate Mix) *
14. Mona (2025 Deconstructed Mix) **
15. Honkinā Down The Highway (Billy Hinsche Vocal) *
16. Ding Dang (Session Highlights and Unedited 2025 Mix) **
17. Solar System (2025 Backing Track Mix) **
18. The Night Was So Young (2025 Vocals Only Mix) **
19. Letās Put Our Hearts Together (2025 Coda Mix) **
Love You Brian Cassette Demos (CD Only)
20. That Special Feeling (Demo) *
21. Itās Over Now (Demo) *
22. Theyāre Marching Along (Demo) *
23. Love Is A Woman (Demo) *
24. Mona (Demo) *
25. Airplane (Demo) *
26. Letās Put Our Hearts Together (Demo) *
27. Iāll Bet Heās Nice (Demo) *
28. Still I Dream Of It (Demo) *
* previously unreleased
** newly mixed in 2025