My Beach

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (24 ratings)
My Beach album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Surf Punks (See All Albums by Surf Punks)
  • Date Released: Jun 13, 1989

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Rock

  • Label: Epic

Total Tracks: 17   Total Length: 43:05

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Valley?

rickstervc

There's some pretty solid musicianship and Dennis Dragon's sound mix had some punch, making this quite listenable. I still find myself humming "Teenage Girls" or "Big Top" after buying this 30 years ago. It's dumb but fun! And in spite of what the AMG critic says, their next album, "Locals Only," was even better.

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Great Light-Hearted Album

larrycompton

This is still a great light-hearted album. The songs are not serious, but it's an easy listen and after all these years is still very enjoyable.

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Oh My God YES!!!!!!!!!

EMUSIC-00B17E62

I rocked this album when I was a grom... GREAT album, super-fun in every way! Let's get more Surf Punks on eMusic!!!!

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They Say All Music Guide

When Surf Punks hit the California underground scene in the late ’70s, surf and skate culture had developed a strong undercurrent of radical purists trying to preserve its integrity. Sounding off on dummies from the valley who infiltrated sacred surf spots became somewhat of a twisted art form for founders Dennis Dragon and Drew Steele, who re-released this slightly altered album originally pressed on their own Day-Glo label. A demented warping of surf legends Jan & Dean mixed with the Ramones, My Beach is drenched with immature, beer-belched vocals combining electro-drumming, cheesy keyboards, and laser sound effects. Novelties like “Bird Bathroom,” “Beer Can Beach,” “Teenage Girls,” and “Punch out at Malibu” exude adolescent absurdity without boundaries. All in good fun, cult-status anthems “Somebody Ripped My Stick,” “My Beach,” and “My Wave” are irreverent classics spewing venom at anyone outside a two-mile limit from the Pacific. As an added bonus, the liner notes include the inane lyrics and a helpful glossary outlining terminology adopted by the locals. Unfortunately this hilarious opus was the only worthwhile outing; subsequent albums were simply rehashed rants that never saw Surf Punks mature as musicians. – Craig Curtice

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