Dick Dale, a Great American Original, RIP
The king of surf guitar transformed music (and himself) in a quintessentially American way.


Dick Dale was born in Boston in 1937 as Richard Anthony Mansour, but he died on Saturday as "The King of the Surf Guitar." His life encapsulates so much that is great about America, especially our part-mythic, part-real ability to invent and re-invent who we want to be. It's fantastic, and totally to-be-expected, that a son of the Middle East and Central and Eastern Europe ended up creating one of the most purely "American" strains of popular music. That's worth pondering, especially in a moment when xenophobia is on the rise.
Dale was Lebanese on his father's side, Polish and Belorussian on his mother's. He became entranced by Hank Williams as a kid and his paternal uncle bought him a tarabaki and an oud, a Middle Eastern drum and stringed instrument respectively, and he started developing a highly personal guitar style in which he used the guitar as both a lead and percussive instrument.
His family moved to Southern California in the mid-1950s and Dale started blending Middle Eastern music with rock and country. Along the way, he was christened Dick Dale by "Texas Tiny" Cherry, himself a short-lived, 640-pound country music legend. Dale didn't just reinvent himself and popular music styles. He also reinvented the technology to play rock, country, surf, you name it, by helping Leo Fender perfect the first 100-watt guitar amplifier that was not just incredibly loud but precise and durable.
In the early 1960s, Dale became a sensation but, as in all rock stories, tragedy was just a beat or two away. Surf music became a craze and took a hit from the British invasion (even as the Brits marketed bands like The Shadows to co-opt American surf). He contracted rectal cancer, stopped touring and recording, and became a club owner. (In the liner notes to the anthology Better Shred than Dead, he claims that Jimi Hendrix's line in the psychedelic classic "Third Stone from the Sun" that "you'll never hear surf music again" was a lament over his impending death.)
Even if he somewhat disappeared from the scene, his guitar and sensibility completely infused West Coast punk. If the Ramones on the East Coast were essentially a tribute band to early '60s girl groups, California punks ranging from X to the Dead Kennedys to the Angry Samoans and beyond were doing an ironized-yet-serious homage to Dick Dale. He bottomed out in 1986, after another serious health scare and a bankruptcy, but in 1987 scored a comeback hit with a version of "Pipeline," recorded for Back to the Beach, a winking call-back to '60s-era beach movies starring Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon as parents and a young Lori Loughlin (now best known for buying her daughter's way into USC) as their kid. His 1963 hit "Misirlou" was used in the opening for Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction (1994), reigniting his career in a major way. He toured and recorded ever since, despite a recurrence of rectal cancer that made playing both a necessity to pay his medical bills as well as a physical torment. In 2015, he told Pittsburgh City Paper,
"People come to my shows and they show me their scars. I've had paralyzed kids come in on gurneys because they want to see me, and I take time to talk with all of them," he says. "I met a man who was sick and dying, and began talking with him on the phone. He said, 'Dick, you're my idol and I plan to outlive these hospice workers if I have to, but I will be at your show.' And he was.
"I get that. Because I was told 20 years ago that I wouldn't live much longer, but here I am. I believe our maker has kept [wife] Lana and I alive to give hope. We're like Johnny Appleseed, crossing the country and sowing the seeds of survival."
Characters like Dale do more than sow "seeds of survival," of course. If American freedom means anything, it means the ability not simply to persist but to reinvent oneself into some bizarre melange of everything that came before us while alchemizing the past into something unique and different and lovely, which in turn becomes the next generation's base material that it will in turn transmute into some new gold.
Like Prince and David Bowie, Dale was an emissary from a future we didn't know was possible until he invented it. There's no going back to the precise moment or forces that produced Dick Dale and his early hits, which were suffused with a sense of danger, optimism, and adventure. Though there is a vibrant subculture of neo-surf bands, we can't make surf music great again, and we (and he) wouldn't want to. But we can the use example of the former Richard Mansour to create a future that is as loud, lovely, and inviting as the music he played even when in excruciating pain.
Here's a 1995 live version of "Misirlou":
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
nice tribute. Fender reportedly tested amps by whether they could withstand Dick Dale.
every time I hear Holiday In Cambodia (which is daily) I think of Dick Dale. top of the guitar family tree.
I am creating an honest wage from home 3000 Dollars/week , that is wonderful, below a year agone i used to be unemployed during a atrocious economy. I convey God on a daily basis i used to be endowed these directions and currently it's my duty to pay it forward and share it with everybody, Here is I started??.
>>>>Click THIS WEBSITE>>>> http://www.AproCoin.CoM
Google is now paying $17000 to $22000 per month for working online from home. I have joined this job 2 months ago and i have earned $20544 in my first month from this job. I can say my life is changed-completely for the better! Check it out what i do
So I started....>>>>>>> http://www.Just4Work.com
I am creating an honest wage from home 3000 Dollars/week , that is wonderful, below a year agone i used to be unemployed during a atrocious economy. I convey God on a daily basis i used to be endowed these directions and currently it's my duty to pay it forward and share it with everybody, Here is I started??.
>>>>Click THIS WEBSITE>>>> http://www.payshd.com
I respect the man, but pretty much can't stand any of that music (except Hendrix).
Slayer is just surf music in minor key with distortion.
JFC, Nick, you can't mention Pipeline and not link to it.
video had *everybody* in it
That's Richard Dale, to you.
In the included video clip, it's important to note how tight that drummer was.
yes. saw that.
I saw him a couple of years ago. He was really good.
There was enough reverb on that guitar to kill most people.
xenophobia is on the rise.
Evidence?
Another old-timer who shocked me when I found out is - until recently - still alive.
A recent shock for me was that DORIS DAY is still alive.
Kirk Douglas!
If the Ramones on the East Coast were essentially a tribute band to early '60s girl groups
The Shangri-Las. Every 1970s rock band from Queens was a Shangri-Las tribute band. Hell, Donald Trump is a Shangri-Las tribute president !
I might add two things.
1) An ol' commenter of yesteryear, here, who went by "smacky" was a friend of Dick Dale, and smacky, wherever you are, I hope you're well, and I'm sorry to hear about your friend.
2) Speaking of Dick Dale's influence on punk rawk from SoCal, we should also mention his impact on the Rockabilly revival. I know guys from Texas aren't supposed to be influenced by SoCal, but I hear Dick Dale in everybody from Junior Brown to The Reverend Horton Heat.
The Rev: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qn4lJqbv7So
Junior Brown: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_wLVCLPx0M
If you gave a guitar intelligence and the ability to play itself, it would try to sound like Dick Dale was playing.
love it.
Nice article, Nick. And Dick Dale's jacket is better than yours!
Wow.
That brings back so much.
Best Reason article today.
I still remember hearing real surf music for the first time and just blown away, I think I was around 12 years old. One thing that inspired me to have what amounted to a lifelong hobby in drums. Never regretted one minute of it.
Who?
I love Dick Dale.
Nice tribute and love the back story. I had thought I had heard middle eastern music influences but never new his ethnicity nor roots of it.
Thank you
Wow, you can't even give a nice tribute without injecting some baseless TDS.
"It's fantastic, and totally to-be-expected, that a son of the Middle East and Central and Eastern Europe ended up creating one of the most purely "American" strains of popular music. That's worth pondering, especially in a moment when xenophobia is on the rise."
So he was part Lebanese, and drew from Arab music, but was he a Muslim? Was his father a Muslim? There are plenty of Christians in Lebanon, and other parts of the Middle East. My Congressman, who is one of the best libertarians in Congress is of Syrian and Palestinian descent - and 100% Christian.