Stack-o-Tracks is an instrumental album release by the Beach Boys containing backing tracks to fifteen of their songs spanning their career to that point. As it was issued during one of their lowest commercial ebbs in the US, Stack-o-Tracks became the first Beach Boys album to fail to reach the US charts. Until 1992's Summer in Paradise, it would remain their only official release to have this distinction.
The US versions of the album included a booklet with the bass lines, lead lines, chords and lyrics (to sing along with), whereas European editions contained just the lyrics and a different cover. Stack-o-Tracks quickly disappeared and was out of print for two decades. In 1990, Capitol Records re-issued it on CD, and again in 2001 - both releases without the booklet that accompanied the vinyl edition.
Stack-o-Tracks was only available in Duophonic, or fake stereo.
Carl Wilson said of the album in 1971: "You'd probably be surprised at what was under the vocals. It was what was really behind them, too. Just the music tracks from our records — I like that."
Availability
Stack-o-Tracks was hurriedly withdrawn after its original release, but was released in the United Kingdom in 1977, a version which was then imported back to the United States. Uncut critic Ian MacDonald felt that its inclusion in the 2001 series of remastered 1960s Beach Boys albums was at the expense of 1964's Christmas Album.
Critical reception
Many writers identified Stack-o-Tracks as a collection of instrumental remixes of famous Beach Boys songs, over which listeners could sing the removed lyrics, In 1973, New Musical Express critic Jonh Ingham noted that, although initially issued during a lull in the group's activities, it had become their rarest album. He believed "it offers interesting insight into how BB songs are constructed. Were you aware nearly all the melody lines are supplied by voices?" The Evening Mail deemed it a "curious" release that allows listeners to pretend to be "a real Beach Boy", deeming it fun for "a singalong Christmas party." David Barron of Tyler Morning Telegraph dismissed it as "one of the true examples of corporate gall of this century", questioning why anyone would "pay $7 or $8 for a glorified version of 'Sing Along with Mike, Brian, Dennis, Carl and Al'?"
Stack-o-Tracks has gone on to be considered a precursor to karaoke, or as a karaoke album itself. San Francisco Examiner critic Joel Selvin considers it "one of the strangest albums ever made by a major group". In The Rolling Stone Album Guide (1983), Dave Marsh described Stack-o-Tracks as "an oddity: instrumental tracks only from a variety of the group's best known songs—perfect for aspiring vocalists." In the 2004 update of the book, Jason Fine described it as "essentially just a Beach Boys karaoke record containing just instrumental backing tracks that 'you can play along to' – fascinating for Beach Boys obsessives, perhaps, but unnecessary for anyone else."
Track listing
Beach Boys' Party! / Stack-O-Tracks bonus tracks
In 1990, Stack-o-Tracks was paired on CD with Beach Boys' Party!, with bonus instrumental tracks. While Stack-o-Tracks was originally available only in mono or Duophonic sound, the CD includes true stereo mixes of several tracks. The Party! / Stack-o-Tracks CD was reissued in 2001.
