The song features Brian Wilson's surfing-related lyrics set to the music and basic lyrical structure of
Chuck Berry's "
Sweet Little Sixteen". According to Wilson: With this idea, "Surfin’ U.S.A" uses the comparison of California to the rest of the United States to drive its stereotypical images of California. The song opens by posing an alternative reality: “If everybody had an ocean across the USA, then everybody’d be surfin’ like Californi-a.” These opening lyrics show California in a favorable light, theorizing that if everyone in the U.S. had the same California-like privileges to a beach, they would enjoy going surfing. Additionally, "Surfin’ U.S.A." uses a recognizable steady, upbeat drum tempo seen in many
surf rock songs that seems to “drive” the music forward. The Beach Boys popularized this staccato drum style, and is reminiscent of “a locomotive getting up to speed”. This technique was seen earlier in
Jan & Dean’s 1963 hit “
Surf City”, which was the first Surf song to achieve the number one position on the
Billboard Hot 100.
Authorship When the single was released in 1963, the record only listed Brian Wilson as the composer although the song was published by
Arc Music, Chuck Berry's publisher. Later releases, beginning with
Best of The Beach Boys in 1966, listed Chuck Berry as the songwriter. Later releases list both writers although the copyright has always been owned, since 1963, by Arc Music. Under pressure from Berry's publisher, the Wilsons’ father and manager,
Murry Wilson, had given the copyright, including Brian Wilson's lyrics, to Arc Music prior to the release of the single. Despite tensions with Berry at the time, Carl Wilson said the Beach Boys "ran into Chuck Berry in Copenhagen and he told us he loves 'Surfin' U.S.A.'." In 2015,
Mike Love stated that "Surfin' U.S.A." was one of the Beach Boys songs he helped write but for which he did not receive credit. However, it has been difficult to quantify his contribution, as Love has in the past claimed that contributing 2-3 words to a song represents a songwriting credit. Love claimed he wrote the lyrics to the song but was not able to be credited in
his successful lawsuit against Wilson and Almo/Irving Music in 1994 because the copyright was owned by Arc Music. In a 1974 radio interview, Brian said "When we first got going, Mike was a Chuck Berry fan, so ... he and I turned the lyrics into a surfing song.".
Surfing spots In the song the following surfing spots are mentioned, mostly in California, as well as one in Hawaii (possibly two) and one in Australia: == Reception ==