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Reading: Brian Wilson was greater than a genius. His sound epitomized the lore of SoCal
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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > Brian Wilson was greater than a genius. His sound epitomized the lore of SoCal
Brian Wilson was greater than a genius. His sound epitomized the lore of SoCal
Entertainment

Brian Wilson was greater than a genius. His sound epitomized the lore of SoCal

Last updated: June 12, 2025 12:31 am
Editorial Board Published June 12, 2025
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Brian Wilson didn’t create the solar or the ocean or the sea-sprayed landmass we name Southern California. He didn’t invent the automotive or the surfboard. He wasn’t the primary particular person to expertise the chilly pang of isolation or to fall in love with someone so deeply that the one factor to do is remorse it.

Take heed to a music by the Seashore Boys, although — to one of many tortured and euphoric classics that made them a very powerful American pop group of the Sixties — and I guess you’d be keen to imagine in any other case. I guess you’d insist on it.

Wilson, who died Wednesday at 82, was one in every of music’s true visionaries, if that’s the appropriate phrase for a man who dealt within the countless chance of sound. As a composer of melodies, a constructor of textures, an arranger of vocal harmonies — as somebody who knew the way to pull difficult parts collectively into songs that one way or the other felt inevitable — he was up there with Phil Spector, George Martin and the Motown group of Holland-Dozier-Holland.

The Seashore Boys’ hits are so embedded into American tradition at this level that you just don’t actually need me to offer examples. However let’s do this for second — let’s savor the start of “Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” the place an eerily out-of-tune electrical guitar conjures a dreamlike environment till the arduous thwack of a snare drum breaks the spell. Let’s take into consideration the terrifying theremin line that snakes by way of “Good Vibrations” prefer it’s tugging a flying saucer down onto Dockweiler Seashore.

What we must always actually do is go over to YouTube and pull up the remoted vocals from “God Only Knows,” which let you luxuriate in Wilson’s obsession with the human voice. The music is a cathedral of sound that you may stroll into 500 instances with out absolutely greedy how he constructed it.

For all his architectural craft, Wilson’s important genius was his management of emotion — his capacity to articulate the sensation of being overwhelmed by affection or worry or disappointment. “Pet Sounds,” the Seashore Boys’ 1966 masterpiece, represents the apotheosis of Wilson’s expressive powers: the trembling anticipation he layers into “Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” the sting of betrayal in his singing in “Caroline, No,” the understanding beneath these celestial harmonies in “God Only Knows” that something valuable is destined to die.

To my ears, even the group’s earlier stuff about browsing and vehicles is laced with the melancholy of an outsider wanting in. I attempted out that concept final yr on Wilson’s cousin and bandmate Mike Love, who wasn’t shopping for it: “If you’re talking about ‘Fun, Fun, Fun’ or ‘I Get Around’ or ‘Surfin’ U.S.A.,’” he informed me in an interview, “there ain’t no melancholy in them.” That Love recognized no disappointment within the songs solely makes it simpler to know why Wilson the lonely younger pop star was writing tunes as brazenly forlorn as “In My Room.”

Wilson fashioned the Seashore Boys in Hawthorne in 1961 with Love, his brothers Dennis and Carl and the Wilsons’ neighbor Al Jardine; the band rode rapidly to success as avatars of a form of postwar suburban prosperity. In 1964, after struggling a panic assault on an airplane, Wilson determined to stop touring and focus his efforts within the recording studio, the place he made so many advances that quickly he was holding his personal in a inventive rivalry with the Beatles. (Because the story goes, the Beatles’ “Rubber Soul” impressed Wilson to make “Pet Sounds,” which in flip drove the Beatles towards “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.”)

But Wilson’s panic assault will also be seen as the beginning of a lifelong battle with psychological sickness that threatened to derail his profession within the wake of “Pet Sounds.” Certainly, not not like that of Sly Stone, who additionally died this week, the Seashore Boys’ peak hit-making period seems to be comparatively transient looking back: After “Good Vibrations” in 1966, the band didn’t rating one other No. 1 single till 1988 with “Kokomo,” which Wilson wasn’t concerned in.

Even so, the late ’60s and the Seventies remained a fertile interval for Wilson — not simply with “Smile,” the infamously bold LP he’d lastly full and launch in 2004, however with quirky and soulful albums like “Friends” and “Sunflower”; “Surf’s Up,” from 1971, options one in every of Wilson’s most stirring songs within the wistful title monitor, whose extravagantly wordy lyric by Wilson’s pal Van Dyke Parks is sort of unattainable to parse in something however a pure-emotion sense.

The ’80s had been darker — you possibly can watch the 2014 film “Love & Mercy” for a have a look at Wilson’s experiences with the therapist Eugene Landy, whom the file exec Seymour Stein as soon as described to me as “the most evil person that I ever met” — and but no Wilson fan ever wished to cease believing that Brian would come again, a hope he saved alive by way of a long time of intermittently good work on his personal, with Parks and even generally with the Seashore Boys. (Dig out Wilson and Parks’ 1995 “Orange Crate Art,” in the event you haven’t shortly, for a robust dose of bittersweet California whimsy.)

I interviewed Wilson as soon as, at his residence in Beverly Hills in 2010. He was getting ready to launch a beautiful album of Gershwin interpretations that was twice nearly as good because it wanted to be — and possibly thrice higher than most anyone anticipated. Years of life and every thing else had taken a lot of his conversational ease from him, not less than when he was speaking to journalists. However I can nonetheless see him lighting up as he defined how he discovered to play “Rhapsody in Blue,” which he mentioned he’d beloved since his mom performed it for him when he was 2.

“It took us about two weeks,” he mentioned of himself and a good friend who helped him be taught the music. “I’d play a little bit from the Leonard Bernstein recording, then I’d go to my piano, then back to Bernstein, then back to my piano, until I got the whole thing down.”

A technical wizard along with his arms open huge to a merciless and exquisite world, Brian Wilson at all times acquired the entire thing down.

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