in a promotional shot used for their 1964 single "
I Get Around" {{listen The genesis of the California sound is said to be
the Beach Boys' debut single "
Surfin'" in 1961. While the band's leader
Brian Wilson then collaborated with
Jan Berry for several hit singles written and produced for other artists, they recorded what would later be regarded as the California sound.
University of Southern California history professor
Kevin Starr has stated that the band was historically important for embodying the era of the
Silent Generation, which he described as unpolitical. He explained that the group "could not help but mythologize a landscape and way of life that was already so surreal, so proto-mythic, in its setting. Cars and the beach,
surfing, the
California Girl, all this fused in the alembic of youth: Here was a way of life, an iconography, already half-released into the chords and multiple tracks of a new sound." The California sound was thus a musical translation of the California myth. In the book
Pioneers of Rock and Roll: 100 Artists Who Changed the Face of Rock, Harry Sumrall summarized: The Beach Boys' surf music was not entirely of their own invention, being preceded by artists such as
Dick Dale. However, previous surf musicians did not project a worldview as the Beach Boys did. Wilson once said of its myth: "It's not just the surfing; it's the outdoors and cars and sunshine; it's the society of California; it's the
way of California."
Al Jardine of the Beach Boys argued that "It's not entirely a myth. There are still some elements that are certainly true, especially for a first-time observer. But to be able to come here and to drive that coast on Route 1 ... you experience the water and the animals and the sea life, the whole thing. It's really magical. It really is."
Capitol Records staff producer
Nick Venet, who worked with the group early on, believed that most of the group's lyrical inspiration was drawn from Hollywood films.
AllMusic's review of the group's "
All Summer Long" calls it a "potent example" of the California myth's "idyllic dream world of sun, surf, and fun" while containing qualities of
sunshine pop. Author Luis Sanchez believes that the entirety of the album
All Summer Long (1964) was "the nearest the Beach Boys ever got to a perfect version of the California myth." David Howard wrote that "
Don't Worry Baby" was a "subtle harbinger for the growing dichotomy within the California sound. While '
I Get Around' symbolized the sunshine ideal in all its carefree splendor, 'Don't Worry Baby' suggested something entirely more pensive and even slightly dark underneath its pristine facade." ==Cultural expansion==