Dick Dale – Surfer’s Choice
By Andrew Duncan • Sep 19th, 2008 • Category: Categories, Greatest Album In The Universe, SurfDick Dale and His Deltones
Surfer’s Choice
1962 – Deltone
Origin: Boston, Massachusetts
Style: Surf

When I heard Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction Soundtrack and noticed that the piece de resistance was Dick Dale’s “Miserlou,” I think I did an air high-five to an imaginary Tarantino that day. I thank the man for turning that song into a fistful of rock and roll chaos because it wasn’t like the movie A Swingin’ Affair did the trick (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIU0RMV_II8). Robert Palmer’s girls swing harder than those cats behind him.
Unlike a lot of kids in the ‘90s who would say Dick who(?), Pulp Fiction was not the first time I heard Dick Dale, and “Miserlou” was not my initiation to the man with that developed surf reverbagasm. The song that immediately hooked me in was “Let’s Go Trippin’.”
It was late at night, a cigarette haze filled a room. It was about as cold as a late autumn Indiana night could get, but the house party that lit up every weekend was particularly jiving this night as a crazy surf sound rocked the house. Poets, musicians, burn outs, and up and comers mingled to the sleek sounds of a guitar and sax blaring like a Coup de Ville roaring out of control. Cash Flagg adorned a TV on the back of the room. 2 a.m. and we were white-hot man. Even all of these years later, Dale’s sound still rings out like a teenage riot. I made the person running the shindig to play that album over again. Little did I know at the time that it was Surfer’s Choice.
In the mid ‘50s, when Leo Fender asked Dale to beat his Fender Stratocaster model to death, who knew that it would create a surf music tsunami and give out that signature “reverberation” sound (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverberation). “(Fender) became like a dad to me,” said Dale (http://www.gearwire.com/media/dick-dale.mov).
During his early days, in his plight to blow up one amp after another, Dale developed the “chopping” method of guitar playing by using 50- and 60-gauge strings (http://www.roctober.com/roctober/greatness/dickdale.html). And it came the kids running to his gigs.
Much like Jimi Hendrix, Dale was forced to play a right-handed guitar for a left-handed guitarist. Instead of re-stringing the guitar, unlike Hendrix, he played the guitar upside down and re-interpreted the notes from his mind to his hands. This and the heavy string gauges prompted him to play hard and loud. He wanted to mimic the sound of the waves, and for him that is what defines the surf sound. It’s not the reverb.
For Surfer’s Choice, there is no reverb to be had. Dale had not developed it yet. There was nothing to get in front of the his unique playing, which created some of the most timeless songs in his career, including the illustrious “Miserlou,” which there are two versions on the release. There is the one we are all familiar with and then there is “Miserlou Twist,” a version that has an added string section and slight changes in the song construction. The strings give the song boundaries as to where the guitar can go and sounds like the basis for many Bollywood songs. While Martin Denny was creating exotic sounds in a lustful orchestrated canopy, Dick Dale was bashing it over the head with power and force.
Dale shows that he does not need be a steam train with his strumming and the non-surf songs provide as much a delight. “Mr. Peppermint Man” is a great doo wop rock and roll song. “Night Owl” is this quirky pop rock ditty that makes it irresistible not to swoon to.
And peppered in between all of this are great surf stomps like “Shake ‘N’ Stomp,” the hot rod rocker “Del-Tone Rock,” and another timeless classic “A Run For Life,” to end the album with a archaic bang.
If this album is not somewhere in your personal rock and roll albums of all time list, then it should be.
Cross-Reference: The Ventures, Gene Grupa, The Defenders
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Andrew Duncan is a journalist who has migrated to the forces of academia. He has written for various publications including Chord, Heckler, Readyset...Aesthetic, and a vast array of alternative press contributions. When not roaming the streets of Indianapolis, he is either addicted to KXCI, making music, or striving to watch every film listed on IMDB.
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