The Beach Boys' song Paul McCartney said brings him "to tears" each time he hears it Gold Radio
There's no denying the vast impact both groups had on the evolution of popular music.
After The Beatles kickstarted the British Invasion, the entire world took notice of the Liverpudlian whippersnappers and their generational songwriting.
Opening the gateway for a number of British bands to succeed across the Atlantic and around the world, their cultural fingerprints are still felt today. Though The Beatles may have become the biggest band in popular music history, America already had their own music idols at the same time bands like The Kinks, The Rolling Stones, Small Faces, The Who, The Zombies, and many others began flooding the airwaves across the Atlantic.
The Beach Boys were a cultural behemoth in their own right, and epitomised youth values in the US - particularly on the West Coast - more than the Fab Four ever could in the beginning.
The Beach Boys reveal how Pet Sounds influenced one of The Beatles' biggest albums. Barbie's Margot Robbie refused to listen to The
In 1963, Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Dennis Wilson, Bruce Johnston, and Carl Wilson rode the wave to number three in the US Billboard charts with 'Surfin' U.S.A.'
A year later, many groups of their ilk were largely forgotten about, but The Beach Boys kept pace with their British peers.
Source: goldradio.com/Thomas Edward