Still wiping out
Marisa O’Neil
Their music conjures up images of aloha shirts and sandals, big waves
and sandy beaches.
The Surfaris, best known for the surf anthem “Wipe Out,” are
playing Sunday at the American Legion Newport Harbor Post 291 and
Yacht Club for their California Beach Party. Other icons in surf
music -- Dick Dale and the Chantays will also bring their own
versions of vintage, instrumental surf music to the party.
“They were huge in the 60s and 70s,” said John Mouzakis, event
organizer and second vice commander of the club. “We grew up with
this stuff. I remember ending up at the Rendezvous ballroom in
Newport Beach. All these guys played there, Dick Dale, The Surfaris,
The Chantays. It was a big deal.”
Mouzakis is counting on some of that nostalgia to raise funds for
the VA Long Beach Healthcare System veterans hospital and the Bob
Hope Hollywood USO at LAX, a lounge for military personnel passing
through Los Angeles International Airport.
In Southern California, particularly, surf music holds a special
appeal, he said.
Surfaris saxophonist Jim Pash said he’s pushed over the years to
get surf music recognized as an indigenous art form.
“It was invented here, played here and invokes being here,” Pash
said. “It was considered an incidental non-music by rock and roll
historians, except for the Beach Boys. But the music actually played
at the beach and preferred by surfers was instrumental music. They
were a physically fit bunch. They didn’t want to shuffle along to
‘East Coast girls are...’” he said, breaking into Beach Boys hit
“California Girls.”
Pash and guitarist Jim Fuller are the two original members still
in the Surfaris. Drummer David Raven, keyboard player Rob Watson,
bass player Jay Truax and guitarist Paul Johnson -- also of the
Belairs and Duo-Tones -- fill out the rest of the lineup.
Another original band member, Bob Berryhill, splintered off from
the band and plays in another manifestation of the Surfaris with his
wife and two sons.
Pash’s incarnation of the Surfaris still plays the classic “Wipe
Out,” which contains one of the most famous drum solos in music
history. That solo came from a cadence original drummer Ronnie Wilson
played in his high school drum corps with Pash.
The Surfaris will also play some of their other well-known songs,
such as “Surfer Joe” and “Point Panic.”
“We took the liberty of rearranging some of the songs without
losing their original flavor,” Pash said. “But we haven’t lost the
heart and soul. We know how to do surgery without losing the
patient.”
First and foremost, he said, the Surfaris are a dance band.
“I tell people before the show: ‘Begin dancing, dance your heart
out, and you’ll leave smiling.’”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.