Tag Archives: #CarlWilson

Wouldn’t It Be Nice: Celebrating 60 Years of Pet Sounds (May 16, 1966) From “Sloop John B” to “God Only Knows,” a return to the album that reshaped the Beach Boys’ identity and set the benchmark for pop music as a fully realized studio art form.

Feature Image: By leveraging the legendary Wrecking Crew and an arsenal of unconventional instruments, Brian Wilson transformed The Beach Boys from a surf-pop act into the architects of “symphonic pop.” Released on May 16, 1966, Pet Sounds didn’t just alter the band’s trajectory; it redefined mid-60s music and famously challenged The Beatles to respond with Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. The Beach Boys – Pet Sounds. PHOTO: “The Beach Boys – Pet Sounds” by Jacob Whittaker is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.

Introduction.

Released on May 16, 1966, The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds is a landmark,11th studio album—and a pioneer of pop-rock concept albums. Crafted by 23-year-old Brian Wilson with lyricist Tony Asher, the project explored bittersweet love, longing, and lost innocence through sophisticated, avant-garde arrangements that blended pop, jazz, and exotica. While featuring a romantic, progressive, and at times psychedelic sound, it still retained the band’s signature vocal harmonies.

By 1966, the Beach Boys were a polished, matured unit, with the members playing a significant role in both studio recording and live performance, marking a significant artistic leap from their 1962 beginnings.

Despite producing both this masterpiece and the masterpiece single “Good Vibrations” (October 1966) between July 1965 and May 1966, the evolution to “pocket symphonies” initially received a mixed reception. While critics and artists like The Beatles adored it, the general public was slow to embrace the change. Band member Mike Love famously questioned how to replicate the complex studio sound live, and Capitol Records found more commercial success with the Best of the Beach Boys compilation, which outsold Pet Sounds upon its release.

When Pet Sounds, the Beach Boys’ 11th studio album, was released in May 1966, reviews were generally negative and sales were poor. It took 30 years for the album — on which Brian Wilson and Tony Asher’s God Only Knows appears — to be certified Gold. In 1966 critics were praising Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde, the Rolling Stones’ Aftermath, the Beatles’ Revolver, rock and pop’s new masters that were easily recognizable. In contrast, Brian Wilson who continued to invent himself, was viewed as a poignant and possibly tortured pop artist. In 1967 Jules Siegal may have best captured the gaps between the group’s musical development and the audience when he wrote in the debut issue of Cheetah magazine: “Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys were still too square. It would take more than “Good Vibrations” and Pet Sounds to erase three and a half years of “Little Deuce Coupe” – a lot more if you count in those…custom tailored, kandy striped sport shirts they insisted on wearing on stage.” Later reevaluations of Brian’s work in Pet Sounds by critics, including God Only Knows which artists covered immediately and down through the decades to today, is recognized as the work of a genius. Pet Sounds missed the top-five peak of previous albums, yet still reached the top 10 (No. 2 UK) and was certified RIAA Gold/Platinum in 2000.

AUTHOR’S NOTE: I am deeply indebted to the scholars, historians, archivists, and dedicated fans whose research has preserved the factual record of the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds sessions. The narrative presented here draws on their meticulous documentation of dates, locations, personnel, and production details listed in the Sources. While I’ve shaped these facts into a continuous story, the underlying information comes from the work of others who have spent decades assembling session logs, interviews, studio records, and contemporary reporting. Any clarity or cohesion in this account is my own; the factual backbone belongs to the sources that made this history accessible.

At its heart, “Wouldn’t It Be Nice”—the opening track of Pet Sounds—is a daydream or child’s rhyme, its music likely remotely influenced by Burt Bacharach. The song captures two young lovers longing for the freedom and certainty of adulthood, wishing to skip ahead to a life shared together. What emerged was a recording that felt both innocent and intricate—an opening statement that announced Pet Sounds as something deeper, more ambitious, and more emotionally searching than anything the band had attempted before. To give this adolescent daydream musical form, Brian Wilson spent the early months of 1966 meticulously building the track, layering the Beach Boys’ signature harmonies over an ensemble of sixteen elite studio musicians. By marrying a radiant “Wall of Sound” shimmer with weightless vocal clarity, this Wilson-Asher-Love collaboration strikes a perfect balance between sonic joy and a subtle lyrical ache and remains a foundational moment for power pop, bridging towards the sophisticated world of progressive pop. Released as a single in July 1966, “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” peaked at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100, sharing airplay and acclaim with its legendary B-side, “God Only Knows.”

Following the November 8, 1965, release of the Beach Boys’ tenth album, Beach Boys’ Party!, Brian Wilson plunged headfirst into the sessions for Pet Sounds. The studio became his personal laboratory, a space where ideas spilled out faster than he could capture them.

The first experiment was a quirky instrumental inspired by the James Bond craze. Initially titled “Run James Run,” it was reborn in March 1966 as the album’s namesake track, “Pet Sounds.” Wilson approached the recording like an artist at a canvas, using long, free-form sessions to chase the sounds in his head—layering rhythms and textures until they clicked.

Supported by Carl Wilson and occasionally Dennis, Al Jardine, and Bruce Johnston, Brian leaned heavily on the Wrecking Crew, the elite L.A. session musicians capable of translating his most avant-garde impulses into music. Recorded on November 17, the track was tuneful, offbeat, and unmistakably Wilson. Its percussion featured a pair of empty Coca-Cola cans, shaken and tapped to add a playful metallic rattle that fit perfectly into the song’s collage of unconventional sounds.

Immediately after recording the instrumental “Pet Sounds,” the Beach Boys departed for a “Thanksgiving Tour” (Nov 18 – Dec 4, 1965), playing arenas from Boston to Albuquerque. During the tour, Brian’s avant-garde single “The Little Girl I Once Knew” hit the airwaves. Its experimental “dead air” segments spooked radio programmers, causing it to stall at No. 20. The modest reception disappointed Brian and fueled the band’s fears that his “new music” might alienate their fans.

TURNING POINTS. The Sonic Bridge to Pet Sounds: The Story Behind “The Little Girl I Once Knew.”

Backing Track Session, 1965 – The Beach Boys
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ol5Tfbq4Kkc

Before Brian Wilson changed pop music forever with Pet Sounds, he took a radical, often-forgotten creative gamble in October 1965. Recorded between October 13–24 at Hollywood’s Western Recorders, “The Little Girl I Once Knew” stands as the definitive bridge between The Beach Boys’ sunny surf-pop past and their future as studio avant-gardists. Released as a standalone single on November 22, 1965, the track offered a fascinating glimpse into a musical mind operating on a completely new frequency.

A New Creative Horizon

The song marked a massive shift in Brian Wilson’s personal and professional life. Having recently retired from touring to focus entirely on production, Wilson found himself with the time and freedom to truly master Hollywood’s best tracking spaces alongside legendary engineer Chuck Britz.

It was also a period of profound internal expansion. Conceived after Wilson’s first experience with LSD, the track accelerated his departure from formulaic radio pop, steering him toward dense, non-traditional song structures that mirrored his evolving worldview.

Breaking the Rules of Pop Production

Architecturally, “The Little Girl I Once Knew” was dangerously bold for 1965. The song opens with a burst of vibrant, fully orchestrated energy—only to instantly collapse into two separate, four-second blocks of near-total silence right before the verses.

To anchor this experimental arrangement, Wilson bypassed the touring Beach Boys on instruments, calling in the elite session musicians of the Wrecking Crew. Carol Kaye’s driving electric bass lines, Hal Blaine’s precision drumming, and Don Randi’s organ provided a sophisticated foundation. On top of this canvas, the group delivered a masterclass in vocal tracking. With lead parts split between Brian and Carl Wilson, and backed by layered harmonies from Mike Love, Al Jardine, and Bruce Johnston, Brian would later look back on these sessions as the absolute peak of the band’s vocal abilities.

The Radio Backlash and “Barbara Ann”

Despite its brilliance, the single ran into the wall of Top 40 radio. In the mid-1960s, “dead air” was a strict industry taboo. As the single stalled at a disappointing No. 20 on the Billboard charts, Capitol Records executives panicked. Eager to reclaim their reliable hitmakers, the label rushed out a party-vibe cover of “Barbara Ann” just weeks later. The high-energy, safe alternative immediately dominated the airwaves, completely eclipsing the momentum of Wilson’s most ambitious work to date.

Today, “The Little Girl I Once Knew” remains a thrilling artifact—the exact moment the Beach Boys stopped riding the waves and started rewriting the rules of the recording studio.

TURNING POINTS. The release of the Beatles’ Rubber Soul (Dec. 6, 1965).

The Beatles’ Rubber Soul (Dec. 6, 1965) marked a turning point, prompting Brian Wilson to recognize a shift in the industry toward the concept album. Seeking to top it, Brian and Carl turned to prayer for inspiration. Brian then hired jingle writer Tony Asher to redefine his lyrical voice. At their first meeting, Brian played Rubber Soul, declared his intent to surpass it, and introduced the “Sloop John B” backing track and “In My Childhood” (later “You Still Believe In Me”), launching the Pet Sounds sessions in January 1966.

For Brian Wilson, the piano was where raw intuition met technical strategy. He would begin with simple “feels”—rhythmic patterns and melodic fragments—nurturing them until a song began to blossom into a complete structure. Working in near‑total isolation, Wilson built the arrangements himself—every chord, every voicing, every instrumental line—then walked into the studio with fully formed blueprints. The Wrecking Crew would cut these intricate tracks long before the rest of the band even heard what he was creating. Even in those early stages, his creative vision was anchored by a practical awareness of the Beach Boys’ specific vocal range and capabilities, ensuring his most ambitious ideas always remained tailored to the band’s unique sound. PHOTO: Rock Dreams: Brian Wilson” by Jim the Chin is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.

The Beach Boys’ Party! album peaked at No. 6 on the Billboard 200, but Capitol still wanted a stronger commercial follow‑up after the disappointing performance of “The Little Girl I Once Knew.” To fill the gap, the label pulled “Barbara Ann” — a loose, good‑humored cover of the Regents’ 1961 doo‑wop hit, recorded on September 23, 1965, during the Party! sessions — and released it as a single on December 20, 1965. Its B‑side, Brian Wilson’s “Girl Don’t Tell Me,” sung by Carl, came from the earlier Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!) album issued that July.

The single exploded on both sides of the Atlantic, reaching No. 2 in the U.S. and the U.K., held off the top spot only by the Beatles’ standalone smash “We Can Work It Out” recorded during Rubber Soul sessions. Brian, however, distanced the band from the cover track. He was baffled that a casual cover of a 1961 Fred Fassert tune was suddenly overshadowing the more adventurous music he was trying to make — and frustrated that Capitol wanted more of the same.

Instead of repeating the formula, Brian pushed forward. He turned his attention fully to the new, more ambitious sound he’d been chasing, the work that would become the most important album of his career: Pet Sounds.

In 1963 or 1964, a friend snapped a real candid photograph of Brian Wilson washing his 1963 Pontiac Grand Prix in the driveway of the Wilson family home at 3701 W. 119th Street in Hawthorne, California. Brian had bought the Grand Prix new, choosing the high‑performance Trophy V8 421 HO, a 375‑horsepower engine capable of pushing the car past 119 mph. The car’s split grille, stacked headlights, and formal, squared‑off roofline made the ’63 model instantly recognizable.

The enthusiasm ran in the family — Carl Wilson soon picked up a 1964 Grand Prix of his own. Brian’s earlier cars included a 1957 Chevrolet Impala, and later, a 1966 Ford Mustang and 1966 Chevrolet Corvette Sting Ray. Inside, the ’63 Grand Prix featured bucket seats, a center console, and a floor shifter, giving it a sporty, upscale feel.The photograph freezes a small but vivid moment: Brian, early in the Beach Boys’ rise, tending to the car he loved — a slice of his real, everyday life amid the band’s growing success.

The Beach Boys performing in Montreal on February 19, 1965. From left to right: Glen Campbell (temporarily replacing Brian Wilson), Carl Wilson, Al Jardine, and Mike Love. By this point, Brian had stepped off the touring schedule, but he stayed closely connected to the group, keeping them updated on the studio developments while they continued fulfilling their tour dates on the road. The spark for Pet Sounds ignited the moment Brian Wilson heard the Beatles’ Rubber Soul in December 1965. The album stunned him — not because of one standout track, but because every song felt purposeful, unified, and artistically alive. Wilson walked away convinced of one thing – the Beach Boys had to create an album that matched it, and if they could, surpassed it. By then, Brian had been a professional musician for five years, long enough to sense that the pop industry was shifting beneath his feet. Practically overnight, the market that once revolved around disposable singles opened itself to ambitious, album‑length artistic statements. Brian Wilson recognized the shift immediately and moved fast. He began gathering ideas already in motion: the instrumentation for “Sloop B” (tracked in July 1965, with vocals added that December); “In My Childhood,” which would evolve into “You Still Believe in Me”; and “Run James Run,” later transformed into “Pet Sounds,” the album’s title track — both recorded in November 1965. But the real momentum didn’t begin until mid‑January 1966, when the Pet Sounds sessions officially got underway. PHOTO: “Les Beach Boys en concert à l’aréna Maurice-Richard. 19 février 1965. De gauche à droite : Glen Campbell (qui remplace Brian Wilson), Carl Wilson, Al Jardine et Mike Love. VM94-S32-008. Archives de la Ville de Montréal.” by Archives de la Ville de Montréal is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.

The new year 1966 started with Capitol presenting the Beach Boys with three gold record albums signifying one million dollars each (about $10 million each today) in sales – Surfin’ USA (March 1963), Surfer Girl (September 1963), and The Beach Boys Today! (March 1965). The next month the RIAA in the United States certified gold the Beach Boys’ earlier album Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!).

Following the Beach Boys’ first tour in Japan, The Beach Boys begin the recording for Pet Sounds on January 18, 1966. The Pet Sound sessions will end four months later over 27 sessions, using four different recording studios.

Sloop John B; mono alternate mix, Carl sings first verse.

JANUARY 1966: The first major recording session for Pet Sounds is January 22, 1966.

Studer J37 4-track tape recorder (1964-1972), Abbey Road Studios” by Josephenus P. Riley is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

For the sessions Brian used a Scully 280 Tape Machine with 4 tracks – track 1 for drums, percussion, keyboards, track 2 for horns, track 3 for bass and guitars, and track 4 for a rough mix of the 3 other tracks. Then another 4-track machine mixed the instrumentation to mono ready for vocal overdubs. Pet Sounds is the first album that Brian provided worked out songs for each session that he thoroughly explained to the sometimes dozen or more session musicians. PHOTO: “Stax Records Memphis recording equipment” by Mr. Littlehand is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

In the first three‑and‑a‑half‑hour morning session on January 18, 1966, at Western Recorders on Sunset Boulevard, Brian Wilson built the instrumental foundation for “Untitled Ballad” — later titled “Let’s Go Away for Awhile” — a lush, meticulously shaped piece he viewed as his personal tribute to Burt Bacharach.

The following afternoon, during a six‑hour overdub session, Brian supervised an array of unconventional sounds: a guitarist drawing a coke bottle across the strings, alongside more traditional orchestral instruments.

Across these two days, the music made one thing unmistakably clear: Brian wasn’t crafting just another Beach Boys record. He was pushing further down his avant‑garde path, building something far more daring.

Let’s Go Way For Awhile” was Brian’s tribute to Burt Bacharach who was one influence on Brian’s work.

Western Recorders (now EastWest Studios) at 6000 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles, served as the primary recording home for The Beach Boys’ landmark Pet Sounds LP, with production spanning from January 18 to April 13, 1966. The iconic Studio 3 was the venue for the first, crucial sessions on January 18 and 19, where Brian Wilson—leading a “Wrecking Crew” of world-class session musicians—began crafting the pop album’s sophisticated orchestral sound. PHOTO: “Exterior of 6000 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles” by Blz 2049 is marked with CC0 1.0. (Public Domain).

The third Pet Sounds session took place on the morning of January 22, 1966, at Gold Star Recorders on Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles. Brian Wilson specifically wanted to work with engineer Larry Levine, and across 21 takes he shaped the instrumental backing track — plus one vocal overdub — for the first session of “Wouldn’t It Be Nice.” The fourteen session musicians needed several early takes simply to grasp what Brian was after: an intricate, interlocking instrumental language that stretched from drums to accordions.

Gold Star Recording Studioshttps://goldstar-studios.com/ retrieved May 6, 2026.

Two days later, Brian returned to Western Recorders for the album’s fourth session. Here he pushed his players toward unusual timbres and techniques — including plucking the strings of a normally percussive instrument like the piano — as he began work on “You Still Believe in Me.” The track required 23 takes for the instrumental foundation, followed by Brian’s overdubbed vocals.

“You Still Believe in Me” landed as one of Pet Sounds’ most intimate moments, with Brian Wilson’s fragile lead vocal carrying a quiet emotional weight. The song distills guilt, insecurity, and unconditional love into a spare, tender arrangement, tracing a narrator who marvels at a partner’s steadfast loyalty even as he confronts his own shortcomings.

On the final day of January, Brian was back at Western for the afternoon’s fifth Pet Sounds session. This time he focused on “Caroline, No,” which demanded 17 takes for the instrumental and insert tracks before he recorded his lead vocal. If “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” was a fantasy about Brian’s secretary, “Caroline, No” — written with Tony Asher — was its emotional opposite: a portrait of a disillusioned man reflecting on a lost love whose fading innocence leaves behind a tender, aching sadness.

Like “You Still Believe in Me,” Brian’s vocal was double‑tracked live‑to‑tape as engineer Chuck Britz mixed the mono master on or before February 9, 1966. The recording is distinguished by its striking instrumentation: Billy Green’s bass flute, Glen Campbell’s 12‑string electric guitar, Al De Lory’s muted harpsichord, and Hal Blaine’s deep, hollow opening created by striking an overturned Sparkletts water bottle. The track closes with the sound of a passing train and Brian’s dogs — the final sonic image of the album.

FEBRUARY 1966: Brian Wilson builds the instrumental core of Pet Sounds, shaping intricate tracks with top L.A. session players at Western Recorders and Gold Star before the Beach Boys added their vocals.

On February 2, 1966, Brian returned to Western Recorders (Studio 3) in Hollywood for the sixth Pet Sounds session, beginning at 2 p.m. with no scheduled end time. He continued shaping “Caroline, No”, overdubbing keyboards, a second bass, drums, and a saxophone onto the January 31 track. Four key session players were present: Hal Blaine on drums, Al De Lory on harpsichord, Steve Douglas on tenor sax, and Carol Kaye on bass guitar.

The following afternoon, during the seventh session at Western, Brian finished the tracking for “Caroline, No”, starting work at 12:30 p.m.

Meanwhile in Los Angeles, 19‑year‑old Carl Wilson secretly married 16‑year‑old Annie Hinsche, sister of Billy Hinsche. Carl hoped to keep the marriage out of the press, but entertainment and teen magazines quickly picked up the story. Soon after, Carl and Annie moved into his newly purchased home in Coldwater Canyon, Beverly Hills.

On Monday the 7th, Brian Wilson held Session 8 for Pet Sounds at Western Recorders Studio 3 in Hollywood, starting at 1:00 p.m. with no set end time. The focus was “Hang On to Your Ego”—also known as “Let Go of Your Ego” and that will be “I Know There’s An Answer” on the album During this session, Brian recorded a lead vocal and completed two alternate mono mixes, with take 12 marked as the preferred version. The song, written by Brian and road manager Terry Sachen, predates his important partnership with Tony Asher on Pet Sounds.

A large group of top Los Angeles session players contributed, including Hal Blaine (drums), Glen Campbell (guitar/banjo), Al De Lory (piano), Steve Douglas, Jim Horn, and Jay Migliori (saxophones), Barney Kessel (guitar), Larry Knechtel (organ), Tommy Morgan (bass harmonica), Ray Pohlman (bass guitar), Lyle Ritz (upright bass), and Julius Wechter (percussion).

Returning from their Far East tour, the Beach Boys went directly to Western Recorders on February 9, 1966, to work on vocals for what would become “I Know There’s an Answer.” Despite Glen Campbell joining on guitar and banjo and Chuck Britz engineering, the session was marked by tension. The band remained skeptical of Brian Wilson’s new, sophisticated direction, with Mike Love—working with lyricist Tony Asher—worrying that the material had strayed too far from their signature surf sound. While Brian pushed for artistic evolution, Mike, Al Jardine, and Bruce Johnston were visibly unsure of the shift.

Beach Boys in 1965. Public Domain.

The chaotic, lengthy session saw frequent interruptions from laughter and chatter, delaying takes of the vocal inserts. An impatient Brian finally intervened, demonstrating the precise vocal part at the piano. After 17 takes, he approved Al’s lines, followed by four more passes. Later, the group joined Brian to record the short vocal insert, capping off a session that focused on layering the backing vocals that would help define Pet Sounds.

“I Know There’s An Answer” included some of the first vocals the Beach Boys did for Pet Sounds.

L.A.’s Finest: The Wrecking Crew on Pet Sounds

Though never pictured on the album sleeve, interviewed in teen magazines, or standing under stage lights, The Wrecking Crew was the smooth engine powering Pet Sounds. When Brian Wilson stopped touring in late 1964, he didn’t just escape the road; he opened the door to a new, experimental studio world where he could build songs with meticulousness. The architects of this sound were Los Angeles’ finest session musicians.

By early 1966, Wilson had developed a near-telepathic rapport with these players. The Wrecking Crew was indispensable not merely for their technical mastery, but for their ability to translate Wilson’s abstract, emotional language into music. When he bypassed traditional chords to say, “Make it feel like the sun coming up,” or “Play it like you’re underwater,” they understood. They turned metaphors into rhythm and moods into harmonic shifts.

Before a single Beach Boys vocal was added, the tracks already breathed with life. The Wrecking Crew didn’t just play notes; they provided the album’s pulse, architecture, and emotional weight. They were the unseen collaborators on one of the most ambitious pop records ever made—an orchestra of specialists who transformed Brian Wilson’s imagination into a sonic reality that still resonates over sixty years later.

Rhythm Section
Hal Blaine — drums, percussion
Jim Gordon — drums (select sessions)
Frank Capp — percussion
Gary Coleman — percussion, timpani, temple blocks
Lyle Ritz — upright bass
Carol Kaye — electric bass, 12‑string guitar
Ray Pohlman — electric bass
Bill Pitman — Danelectro 6‑string bass, guitar
Guitars & Keyboards
Glen Campbell — 12‑string guitar
Billy Strange — electric 12‑string guitar
Jerry Cole — guitar
Don Peake — guitar
Al De Lory — piano, organ, harpsichord
Larry Knechtel — organ, piano
Don Randi — piano, tack piano
Mike Melvoin — organ, keyboards
Horns
Steve Douglas — tenor saxophone
Jay Migliori — saxophone
Plas Johnson — saxophone
Roy Caton — trumpet
Tony Terran — trumpet
Ollie Mitchell — trumpet
Lew McCreary — trombone
Strings
Sid Sharp — violin (concertmaster)
Leonard Malarsky — violin
Ralph Schaeffer — violin
William Kurasch — violin
Harry Hyams — viola
Justin DiTullio — cello
Featured Instruments
Jim Horn — flute, clarinet
Billy Green — bass flute (“Caroline, No”)
Paul Tanner — Electro‑Theremin (“I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times”)
Julius Wechter — vibraphone, percussion
Gene Estes — percussion

In preparation for what would be Pet Sounds, Brian’s extraordinary musical instincts were at this moment in the band’s evolution transforming not only their repertoire but that of mid-1960s rock pop. On February 11, 1966, at session 10 for Pet Sounds Brian worked on a song the band first rehearsed on October 13, 1965: “Don’t Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder).” Starting at 9 a.m. and with no fixed finish time, Brian supervised the instrumental tracking and vocal recording and completed inserts as well as Brian’s lead vocal. As usual at Western, Chuck Britz engineers the date.

WHAT ARE VOCAL INSERTS? Brian Wilson used them as modular building blocks to achieve his signature “Wall of Sound” vocal density. Vocal inserts are short —sometimes just a few seconds—of a specific harmony or a brief vocal line recorded as overdubs to be “inserted” into the main track to fix a line or create a richer, choir-like texture.

The song’s orchestral arrangements and lyrical themes of “Don’t Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)” highlight Brian Wilson’s shift toward deep introspection and musical complexity.

On February 14, 1966, the 11th and 12th sessions for Pet Sounds took place across two different studios. The day began at Western Recorders, where Brian Wilson supervised the instrumental tracking for “I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times” from noon until 6:00 p.m. When another artist’s booking forced them to move, Brian relocated to Gold Star Studios to finish the session with engineer Larry Levine. There, they completed the instrumentation, Brian’s lead vocal, and the group’s backing vocal overdubs and inserts.

Coordinated by contractor Diane Rovell, the Gold Star session featured an impressive lineup of “Wrecking Crew” musicians, including Hal Blaine on drums, Glen Campbell on guitar, and Michael Melvoin on harpsichord. Notably, this session marked Brian’s first use of a theremin-style sound. While the original 1920s theremin was known for its eerie sci-fi tones, musician Paul Tanner used a simplified “electro-theremin.” Invented in 1958, this version used a sliding mechanism and volume knob rather than hand gestures, allowing for the precise control Brian required.

Left to right: Buce Johnston, Terry Melcher, Tony Asher, Brian Wilson in Western Recorders, during a session for Pet Sounds. Cashbox advertisement for the Pet Sounds album, published May 7, 1966. Public Domain. This advertisement (or image from an advertisement) is in the public domain because it was published in a collective work (such as a periodical issue) in the United States between 1931 and 1977 and without a copyright notice specific to the advertisement.

Tanner, a veteran jazz trombonist with the ABC Orchestra, admitted he had never heard of The Beach Boys before the session. Despite this, his distinct electro-theremin contribution became a hallmark of the track and would later define the sound of “Good Vibrations” and “Wild Honey.”

“I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times” emerges as one of the most revealing documents of Brian Wilson’s inner life, an archival window into the alienation that shadowed his most creative period. With Tony Asher’s melancholy lyrics and Wilson’s plaintive, multi‑tracked vocals, the track frames mid‑1960s pop as a vessel for anxiety, artistic isolation, and the feeling of moving out of step with the world around him.

On February 15, 1966, the Beach Boys began their day at the San Diego Zoo, where photographer George Jerman captured the iconic cover for Pet Sounds. Because of contractual restrictions with Columbia Records, Bruce Johnston was unable to appear in the shot. Although Brian Wilson intended the “Pet Sounds” title to represent his favorite musical textures, Capitol Records interpreted it literally, resulting in the petting zoo theme.

Later that afternoon, between 2:00 and 5:00 PM, the band moved to Western Recorders for session 13. Brian took charge of the instrumental tracking for “That’s Not Me,” eventually marking take 15 as the master. This track stands out in the Pet Sounds sessions as the only one featuring the Beach Boys themselves as the primary instrumentalists: Brian played organ, Carl handled guitar, and Dennis was on drums. The day concluded with instrumental inserts and a lead vocal overdub by Mike Love.

On February 16, 1966, Brian spent the day at Western Recorders in Hollywood. Though the studio was booked, no new recording took place; instead, he focused on creating alternate mixes of “You Still Believe in Me” and “Hang On to Your Ego,” alongside a rough mono mix of “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” with engineer Chuck Britz, which notably featured swapped verse lyrics in Brian’s lead vocal.

“That’s Not Me” reads like a field report from the fault line between youth and adulthood, an archival snapshot of a young man testing the promise of independence and finding mostly loneliness in its wake. Built on a stark, almost skeletal arrangement and carried by Mike Love’s steady lead, the track dramatizes the moment when ambition—being “big in the eyes of the world”—gives way to a deeper search for authenticity, belonging, and the self he nearly lost in the chase.

Elvis Presley publicity photo for The Trouble with Girls, 1968.  Toward the end of the February 16, 1966 session st Western recorders, the Beach Boys shifted to vocal rehearsals but struggled to focus. Just down the street at Radio Recorders on 7000 Santa Monica Blvd, Elvis Presley was recording for the Spinout soundtrack, covering tracks like “Never Say Yes” and “Adam and Evil.” Distracted by the presence of Brian’s idol of the last decade, the group struggled with the session. Bruce eventually went over to meet Elvis, and upon his return to Western Recorders, a captivated Brian eagerly asked for every detail of the encounter. Public Domain. This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in the United States between 1931 and 1977, inclusive, without a copyright notice.  “Publicity photos (star headshots) have traditionally not been copyrighted. Since they are disseminated to the public, they are generally considered public domain, and therefore clearance by the studio that produced them is not necessary” – film production expert Eve Light Honthaner in The Complete Film Production Handbook, (Focal Press, 2001 p. 211.).

On Thursday, February 17, 1966, Brian Wilson pushed deeper into his sonic experimentation, dividing his time between two Hollywood studios. The afternoon began at Western Recorders with continued work on Pet Sounds (Session 14), before shifting to Gold Star Studios from 11:30 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. for the very first dedicated session for “Good Vibrations.”

Wilson was already envisioning the track as a “pocket symphony,” meticulously layering ideas in fragments. At Gold Star, he collaborated with engineer Cal Harris and musician Paul Tanner to integrate the electro-theremin, a custom instrument that provided the song’s signature wavering, “sci-fi” sound. By the end of the night, this unique, psychedelic texture helped bridge the gap between pop and experimental music, setting a new greatly imitated aesthetic for the era.

While this initial “pet sound” experiment did not make it onto the Pet Sounds album, its release as a single later that year became a landmark in 1960s pop, sparking massive interest in electronic instruments and influencing contemporaries like the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in this direction. During the intense, 26-take session, Wilson also explored organ textures with musician Larry Knechtel, ending the night with a rough mono mix—an early snapshot of what would become one of his most ambitious productions.

On February 18, 1966, during the 18th session for Pet Sounds, Brian Wilson recorded a new, fuller instrumental track for “Good Vibrations.” After 28 takes, he finally marked the last as the best. However, when he began tracking guide vocals, he grew unhappy with the results and started questioning Tony Asher’s lyrics. These early setbacks foreshadowed the song’s exclusion from the album.

Major elements remained unresolved: the iconic bridge had yet to be written, the Electro-Theremin parts were unfinished, and Wilson’s “modular” recording process—eventually spanning over 90 hours of tape across multiple studios—became increasingly overwhelming. As the track grew more ambitious, Wilson began viewing it as a “pocket symphony” better suited for his next project rather than Pet Sounds.

Instead, “Good Vibrations” was released as a standalone single on October 10, 1966, with “Let’s Go Away For Awhile” as the B-side. It was an immediate sensation, selling over 230,000 copies in its first four days and topping the Billboard Hot 100 on December 12. Despite its massive success, the song didn’t appear on a studio album until the release of Smiley Smile in September 1967.

Good Vibes to Good Vibrations: The lyrical transition from Tony Asher to Mike Love.

Initially, Tony Asher—Brian Wilson’s primary collaborator on Pet Sounds—provided the song’s structural foundation. He helped define the title, changing it from “Good Vibes “ to “Good Vibrations.” Asher refined the “good, good, good vibrations” chorus, and drafted introspective verses about a psychic connection, While the lyrics fit the mood of Pet Sounds, Wilson eventually felt they lacked commercial punch.

When the project stretched beyond Pet Sounds, Wilson turned to Mike Love who grounded the song in a more commercial “boy-girl” theme. Love supplied the vivid 1966 sensory imagery of the “colorful clothes” she wears and the “sunlight” in her hair. Love provided the famous “excitations” hook, and a radio‑ready tone that carried the song to No. 1.

Mike Love Feb. 13, 1965. Public Domain. This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in the United States between 1931 and 1977, inclusive, without a copyright notice.

Good Vibrations the Lost Studio Footage.

On February 23, 1966, Brian returned to Western Recorders for Pet Sounds session 16. Still treating “Good Vibrations” as a preliminary track for the album, he devoted the third session to supervising new insert recordings. The date featured organ, drums, harpsichord, harmonica, electro‑theremin, piano, and bass guitar. Brian continued refining the arrangement — even asking the organist to play an octave higher — and completed the first basic instrumental tracks for the song’s verses, still aligned with Tony Asher’s draft lyrics.

Brian Wilson wrapped up the week at Western Recorders in Hollywood, working with The Wrecking Crew to arrange “Good Vibrations” for the Pet Sounds sessions. Despite taping rehearsals, he was dissatisfied with the track’s direction and, recognizing the immense work needed, paused it until March 24th, prioritizing the completion of the Pet Sounds album instead.

TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS.

Barbara Ann continued its strong run in Europe, reaching No. 3 in the UK and No. 2 in the Dutch charts. Around the same time, The Beach Boys’ management shifted: Nick Grillo took over day‑to‑day operations, and Brian brought in Derek Taylor as the group’s publicist. Taylor, fresh from his celebrated work with the Beatles, quickly became a key ally, championing Brian’s vision and helping shape the early positive reception of Pet Sounds. In Los Angeles, Taylor’s reputation as a sharp, witty operator preceded him, but not everyone warmed to him. He later recalled Murry Wilson bristling at a set of promotional photos, convinced Taylor was steering the band’s image in the wrong direction — an early sign of the tension that would shadow Taylor’s significant and short-lived relationship with the Beach Boys.

In late 1967, Beatles press officer and journalist Derek Taylor hosted a freeform Sunday‑evening show on KRLA 1110 AM, capturing the spirit of the “Summer of Love.” His September 17 broadcast reflected his sharp perspective on the rising psychedelic scene, which he had championed since serving as publicist for the Monterey Pop Festival. At the same time, he edited the KRLA Beat, steering it toward deeper coverage of California’s counterculture. Widely respected — often dubbed a “fifth Beatle” — Taylor returned to London in 1968 to lead publicity for Apple Corps.

MARCH 1966: The Breakneck Studio Marathon That Forged the Final Shape of Pet Sounds.

On March 1, 1966, Brian Wilson entered Hollywood’s Western Recorders to breathe life into “I’m Waiting for the Day,” a track he had first sketched two years prior. Leading the Wrecking Crew through rigorous takes, Wilson layered flutes and English horns to build the song’s intricate foundation. The following day, the action split into three high-stakes fronts: (1) Brian moved to Columbia Studios to leverage their advanced 8-track technology, where he finalized an alternate mono mix of “Wouldn’t It Be Nice”; (2) Capitol Records issued a pivotal memo, officially pulling “Good Vibrations” from the Pet Sounds lineup and replacing it with the Bond-inspired instrumental “Run James Run” (renamed “Pet Sounds”); and (3) Back at Western, engineer Chuck Britz prepped mono mixes of “I Know There’s an Answer” and “Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” capturing the album’s evolution through their incomplete vocal tracks.

The week of March 6 kicked off Sunday afternoon at Western Recorders with the 18th session for Pet Sounds. Under the guidance of engineer H. Bowen David, Brian Wilson refined “I’m Waiting for the Day,” layering new string and woodwind parts onto the previous week’s recordings before capturing the final vocal pass. Between takes, Brian also began sketching an untitled work, experimenting with new rhythmic and harmonic concepts using a fresh lineup of session musicians.

While Brian remained immersed in the studio, the rest of the Beach Boys—now led by Carl Wilson—shifted gears, hitting the road for a brief five-date tour to keep the band’s live momentum alive.

On Tuesday, March 8, the air inside Western Recorders crackled with a different kind of electricity. Brian Wilson took his post for Pet Sounds Session 19, ready to capture the soul of “God Only Knows.” Alongside engineer Chuck Britz, Brian relentlessly chased perfection through twenty grueling takes until the instrumental foundation finally locked into place. The song was still a skeleton, but even then, its heartbeat was undeniable.

The pace carried into the early hours of Wednesday, March 9, when Brian returned for a second instrumental session from 12:30 to 4:00 a.m. A small string ensemble—Harry Hyams, William Kurasch, Lenny Malarsky, and Ralph Schaeffer—added a new layer of warmth and clarity. By take 19, the blend of strings and rhythm settled into a tone Brian recognized as the right direction.

The musicians around him sensed the significance of the work. Bruce Johnston remembered the late‑night calls and the feeling, upon entering the studio, that something unusually strong was taking shape. Carl Wilson later described the sound coming through the monitors as something that changed the atmosphere of the room—music that seemed to resonate physically. To him, the song had come together in a brief moment of inspiration. To him, the song felt like a five-minute flash of divine clarity—an otherworldly gift that changed everything.

By Thursday, March 10, the sessions moved to Columbia Studio A for another late‑night stretch. This time the focus was vocals. Carl stepped up to record his lead for “God Only Knows,” followed by the group adding their harmonies with the precision that defined their sound.

Even as the track grew more assured, Brian was aware of the risk in its title. Using the word “God” in a pop song was unusual in 1966, and he hesitated. But the emotional clarity of the music pushed him forward, and the song continued to take shape exactly as he felt it needed to.

In My Life: Paul McCartney’s favorite Beach Boys song.

God Only Knows: how radio stations and the public reacted to the Beach Boys’ song in 1966 and 1967.

Brian Wilson feared the title alone might get the song banned, a valid concern in the conservative mid-1960s. Using “God” in a pop song crossed a line, making many American programmers hesitant. The reaction was drastically different in the UK, where it hit No. 2, trailing only The Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine.” British critics praised its sophistication, and Paul McCartney famously hailed it as “the greatest song ever written,” directly influencing the creative momentum behind Sgt. Pepper.

In America, however, southern radio stations dismissed the title as blasphemous, leading to a slow, uneven rollout. Capitol Records buried it on the B-side of “Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” resulting in a disappointing No. 39 peak on the Billboard Hot 100. Furthermore, its baroque arrangement and honest opening line—”I may not always love you”—were unheard of in pop music.

Yet, its brilliance was undeniable. When added to the live set in 1966, audiences responded differently; from D.C. to Hawaii, they listened with rapt attention, waiting for the final chord to fade before applauding. This quiet, sincere appreciation proved that while the chart impact was slow, the music had found its mark. What began as a misunderstood track soon became a cultural fixture, appearing in countless films, TV shows, and retrospectives. Today, it is revered as a masterpiece.

Carl Wilson in Cashbox advertisement for the Pet Sounds album, published May 7, 1966. Public Domain.

On March 7, 1966, “Caroline, No” was released as Brian Wilson’s debut solo single, backed with the instrumental “Summer Means New Love” from Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!). The audience response was tepid, similar to “The Little Girl I Once Knew” in November 1965. It debuted at no. 37 on the Billboard Hot 100 in April 1966 and ultimately peaked at no. 32 during its seven‑week chart run.

On Sunday, March 13, 1966, while the touring band kept to the road, Brian Wilson spent the afternoon and evening in Western Recorders, Studio 3, mixing a rough “God Only Knows” and speaking with reporter Ken Gravatt. He said his focus had shifted fully to production — the reason he’d stepped off the stage — and described the past five months as a golden creative stretch, influenced by producer Phil Spector’s dense, layered, and resonant “Wall of Sound” and the Beatles’ artistic evolution and studio focus. Working from his hillside home at 1448 Laurel Way, he was already shaping new singles, including “Sloop John B.” While the touring Beach Boys crisscrossed the country, Brian Wilson stayed behind in early 1966, locking in with lyricist Tony Asher to shape the album’s emotional palette and musical “feels.”

From mid‑March, the Beach Boys bounced between studio prep and the final leg of their winter tour. On Tuesday, March 15, Brian booked Western to refine arrangements with the Wrecking Crew, though no new tracks were cut.

Two days later, Thursday, March 17, the touring band hit the UP Fieldhouse in Dayton, Ohio, followed by a sold‑out double show at Fordham College in the Bronx on Friday, March 18, closing the tour.

The next week, Monday, March 21, Capitol issued “Sloop John B”/“You’re So Good to Me,” aiming to regain momentum after the softer reception to “Caroline, No” (released in the U.K. on April 1 it failed to chart). The marketing strategy worked — “Sloop John B” surged quickly, becoming the band’s next major hit.

Suggested to Brian Wilson by Al Jardine in July 1965, the traditional Bahamian folk song “Sloop John B”‘ is told in first person singular, a narration Brian Wilson had been increasingly using in his own songs. By 1966 Brian was changing both the perspective and the subject matter of his songs to be more personal and introspective. The single was released on March 21, entered the Billboard Hot 100 Top Ten on April 23, and peaked at no. 3 on May 7, 1966.

SETLIST FOR BEACH BOYS MARCH 11, 1966 ONE NIGHT ONLY SOLD-OUT SHOW IN CLEVELAND, OHIO.

While Brian Wilson was in Los Angeles pushing the boundaries for Pet Sounds, the touring lineup—Mike Love, Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson, Al Jardine, and Bruce Johnston—delivered a high-energy set to 3,000 screaming fans at the Cleveland Public Music Hall. Supporting acts for the 8:30 PM show included The Lovin’ Spoonful, Noel Harrison, and local act Mickey and The Clean Cuts.

Fun, Fun, Fun
Little Honda
Surfin’ U.S.A.
Surfer Girl
The Little Old Lady from Pasadena (Jan & Dean cover)
Hawaii
Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow (The Rivingtons cover)
You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away (The Beatles cover)
Then I Kissed Her
California Girls
Help Me, Rhonda
I Get Around
Do You Wanna Dance? (Bobby Freeman cover)
Barbara Ann (The Regents cover)
Johnny B. Goode (Chuck Berry cover)

Mickey & the Clean Cuts was a local band in Cleveland, Ohio, that supported the Beach Boys on stage in 1966.

The week pulsed with restless creativity as Brian chased new textures across Los Angeles. On Tuesday the 22nd, he worked with Chuck Britz at Western Recorders, shaping alternate mixes of “God Only Knows,” “I Know There’s an Answer,” and “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” to sharpen the album’s emotional core. Later, at Western, he recorded the family dogs, Banana and Louie, for the album’s closing wink. By nightfall, he was at Columbia, testing his own lead vocal for “God Only Knows” and refining “Here Today.”

Returning to Columbia on Thursday the 24th, Brian dove into the fourth session for “Good Vibrations,” resuming the complex, modular recording process as if no time had passed. Across these sessions, the pattern was clear: Brian was moving between studios, relentlessly refining both the album and the single in real time to reach a more perfect sound.

By Friday the 25th, work on Pet Sounds returned to Columbia’s Los Angeles studio, where Brian Wilson continued refining the album’s vocal architecture in session 24. With Ralph Balantin engineering, Mike Love recorded his lead for “Here Today,” completing the vocal layer that would later be paired with instrumental material tracked earlier in March and mixed on the 22nd for the master tape.

“Here Today” serves as a melancholy warning about heartbreak on Pet Sounds, utilizing a powerful arrangement of surging trombones and a high-octave bass line. The track conveys that love can vanish instantly, emphasizing the sudden nature of the emotional fall.

Accounts from the period underscore the increasingly exacting standards shaping Brian’s studio process. Mike Love recalled the repeated takes required to eliminate even the slightest pitch or timing irregularity, while Carl noted Brian’s ability to halt a performance only a few bars in after detecting a single misplaced note within a dense arrangement. These moments illustrate the heightened precision that defined the album’s late‑March sessions.

Released on March 28, 1966, Bruce & Terry’s final 1960s single for Columbia Records, “Don’t Run Away,” is driven by intricate vocal harmonies and advanced, Brian Wilson-influenced chord progressions reminiscent of The Beach Boys Today! era.

Amidst the heavy studio, touring, and publicity demands of early 1966, Bruce [Johnston] & Terry [Melchor] released “Don’t Run Away” on March 28. Co-written by Mike Love, the sophisticated single traded their early sun-soaked surf-rock sound for a mature, thoughtful style. The track stands out as a hidden gem, that blended the duo’s signature studio style of lush vocal harmonies with intricate pop arrangements.

APRIL 1966: Sprint of final vocals and rapid‑fire mixes brings a 10‑month Pet Sounds odyssey to a close.

The Beach Boys opened April 1966 by diving straight back onto the road after a brief break, launching a nine-date Southern tour alongside The Lovin’ Spoonful and Chad & Jeremy. The band hit Dallas on April 1 and moved through Fort Worth the following night. By Sunday, April 3, they were juggling the punishing, cross-country pace that defined this era. While the touring lineup rushed to Texas for two consecutive Houston shows that evening, Brian Wilson remained at Western Recorders in Hollywood for late-night Pet Sounds sessions. In the studio, Brian used previously recorded instrumental tracks to shape “Don’t Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder),” guiding a chamber-sized string section through overdubs, capturing two lead vocals, and cutting several rough mono mixes.

While Brian worked through the night in California, the touring group kept their momentum alive across Texas and into Tennessee. Stops in San Antonio on April 4 and Austin on April 5 led into a packed Easter week spectacle at Memphis’s Ellis Auditorium Amphitheater on April 6. More than 6,300 fans packed the venue, with hundreds more spilling into the balconies. Local newspapers marveled at the massive turnout, the orderly crowd, and the sheer energy of a hit-heavy setlist that included “Fun, Fun, Fun,” “Surfin’ U.S.A.,” “Sloop John B,” “Help Me, Rhonda,” and “Barbara Ann.” The tour pressed onward to Jacksonville on April 7 and St. Petersburg on April 8, keeping the band moving from city to city while Brian stayed behind, refining the album that would soon redefine their sound and legacy.

“I’m Waiting for the Day” hits with a burst of timpani, bass, and swelling dynamics, capturing the emotional turbulence at the heart of Pet Sounds. Brian Wilson builds the track around shifting moods—tender verses, explosive instrumental breaks, and lush vocal blends. Lyrically, it follows a narrator promising patience and devotion as someone heals from past heartbreak, a mix of vulnerability and optimism that deepens the album’s emotional arc.

On Saturday, April 9, Brian Wilson returned to Gold Star Studios for the fifth major tracking date on “Good Vibrations,” picking up the project sixteen days after the previous session. Working beside engineer Larry Levine at Gold Star’s custom 12‑input console, Brian drove a full ensemble of top Los Angeles session players through another round of intricate instrumental building. The studio’s famously tight acoustics and its plaster‑lined echo chambers—central to the Wall of Sound aesthetic—gave the session its distinctive density.

Capitol deemed the work substantial enough to assign a formal master number, 55949, identifying this 2:28 performance as a potentially releasable version. To capture the arrangement’s complexity, Levine tracked the ensemble live with Gold Star’s tube microphones, whose warm saturation and high headroom made them ideal for the session’s heavy sound pressure levels. As the main date wrapped, a small group of musicians stayed on while Brian experimented with tape‑delay textures and modular overdubs, refining the track’s evolving architecture.

Meanwhile, nearly 3,000 miles away, the touring Beach Boys were onstage at the Miami Beach Convention Hall, sharing a bill with The Lovin’ Spoonful and several local acts. Their nine‑date run carrying the existing hits to packed houses across the country was grossing $200,000 (over $2 million today), even as Brian remained in Los Angeles, isolated from the road and immersed in cutting‑edge studio work that was reshaping the group’s future.

On April 16, 1966, Brian Wilson arrived at Capitol’s mastering suite to put the finishing touches on Pet Sounds, incorporating pre-recorded train sounds and his dogs, Banana and Louie. In the dimly lit, technical room, Brian sat on the floor, guiding the engineer through the album from “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” to “Caroline, No,” adjusting levels on the fly. Following the playback, his companion, stunned by the sound, reassured a vulnerable Brian that this was his finest work, regardless of what the other Beach Boys might think.

Later, at home, Marilyn Wilson listened in silence with Brian to Pet Sounds, overwhelmed by the emotional weight of his creation. With final sessions wrapped on April 13, 1966, after months of experimentation across various studios, that mastering session sealed a project that transformed the band from surf-pop icons into studio visionaries. Pet Sounds was released on May 16, 1966.

Pet Sounds (1966) Versus Sgt. Peppers (1967).

“That’s Not Me” stands as a quiet turning point on Pet Sounds, a lean, organ‑driven track shaped by Brian Wilson’s stripped‑back production and the group’s finely layered vocals. Beneath its minimalist groove, the song captures the unease of early adulthood: Mike Love’s lead expresses the dawning realization that chasing independence and success far from home can’t replace the grounding pull of love, belonging, and the life he left behind at home.

SOURCES – ‘Pet Sounds’: The Beach Boys’ Masterpiece Explained – retrieved May 10, 2026.

The Beach Boys: The Definitive Diary of America’s Greatest Band on Stage and in the Studio, Keith Badman, Backbeat Books; First Edition, 2004, p. 95-142.

[Oliver, Myrna (November 22, 2004). “Terry Melcher; helped create surf music sound”Los Angeles TimesArchived from the original on March 1, 2020. Retrieved March 3, 2020 – via The Boston Globe.] – retrieved April 26, 2026

The Beach Boys: America’s Band, Johnny Morgan, Union Square & Co.; Illustrated edition, 2015, p. 108-127.

Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy, Penguin Publishing Group, Mike Love, 2016, pp. 131-36.

The Beach Boys FAQ, All That’s Left to Know about America’s Band, Jon Stebbins, Backbeat Books, 2011, pp. 64-81.

i am Brian Wilson a memoir, Brian Wilson with Ben Greenman, Da Capo Press, Boston, Massachusetts. pp. 124 and 180.

This explanatory article may be periodically updated.







The Heart of the Hot Rod Era: How “Don’t Worry Baby” Defined the Beach Boys in 1964 before the British Invasion.

Feature image: The site of the Wilson family home in Hawthorne, California, where Brian Wilson composed Don’t Worry Baby with lyrics by Roger Christian (a DJ at KFWB in L.A.) ver the course of a couple days in late 1963 or early 1964. The family home where Brian, Dennis and Carl Wilson grew up with their parents Murray and Audree Wilson is where they honed their musical skills and formed the Beach Boys with cousin Mike Love and friend Al Jardine in 1961. The house along with much of the neighborhood was lost to development (a new highway) in the 1980’s. Thoogh the Beach Boys had the no. 1 single of 1963 (Surfin’ U.S.A.) they had to rethink the direction of their music literally overnight following the Beatles’ first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show on February 9, 1964. The broadcast drew an estimated 73 million viewers, around 60% of all television sets in the nation, and ushered in the British Invasion that changed rock and roll and the recording industry with it forever. PHOTO: “Beach Boys Landmark – Plano general I” by tkksummers is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Beach Boys in 1963. Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson, David Marks, Mike Love. Since spring of 1963 they had 3 top-5 hits (and two more top-10 hits). “Surfin’ U.S.A.” peaked at no. 3 in May 1963 and became Billboard’s no.1 song for the year. “Little Saint Nick” released in December 1963 peaked at no. 3 on the Billboard Christmas Singles chart. It was in this time period that Brian Wilson with Roger Christian wrote “Don’t Worry Baby,” one of the Beach Boys’ finest songs pre-British Invasion about a guy who agrees to drag race but regrets it and, confiding his situation to his girlfriend, is tenderly consoled by her with the song’s title phrase. Public Domain. This is a publicity still taken and publicly distributed to promote the subject or a work relating to the subject.
As stated by film production expert Eve Light Honathaner in The Complete Film Production Handbook (Focal Press, 2001, p. 211.):
“Publicity photos (star headshots) have traditionally not been copyrighted. Since they are disseminated to the public, they are generally considered public domain, and therefore clearance by the studio that produced them is not necessary.”
Nancy Wolff, in The Professional Photographer’s Legal Handbook (Allworth Communications, 2007, p. 55.), notes:
“There is a vast body of photographs, including but not limited to publicity stills, that have no notice as to who may have created them.”
Film industry author Gerald Mast, in Film Study and the Copyright Law (1989, p. 87), writes:
“According to the old copyright act, such production stills were not automatically copyrighted as part of the film and required separate copyrights as photographic stills. The new copyright act similarly excludes the production still from automatic copyright but gives the film’s copyright owner a five-year period in which to copyright the stills. Most studios have never bothered to copyright these stills because they were happy to see them pass into the public domain, to be used by as many people in as many publications as possible.”
Kristin Thompson, committee chairperson of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies writes in the conclusion of a 1993 conference of cinema scholars and editors[1], that:
“[The conference] expressed the opinion that it is not necessary for authors to request permission to reproduce frame enlargements… [and] some trade presses that publish educational and scholarly film books also take the position that permission is not necessary for reproducing frame enlargements and publicity photographs.”

Brian Wilson’s first car was a light burgundy Mercury. It was passed down from his mother and Wilson called it “the Merc.” He failed his first driver’s test and got a reputation for being a bad driver because he was constantly distracted thinking about other things. His father tutored him behind the wheel and Brian started to get the hang of driving when he compared the car’s controls to playing a musical instrument. As the comparison dawned on him, it developed: like a musical instrument a driver had to play the car just right – not to hard or fast – so to get the results desired. But the comparison was also limited: Brian realized you could do a lot more unique things playing a musical instrument than driving a car. After he passed his driving test the second time, he drove “the Merc” for a year until he acquired a used 1957 Ford Fairlane. For Hawthorne, Brian knew it was a great car but he saw there were greater cars driven by other guys. He loved his used ’57 Ford and it was when he was in it that he first heard the Beach Boys’ first single, Surfin‘, playing on the radio in 1962. Brian said he revved and raced his Ford fast – but nobody believed it. (i am Brian Wilson a memoir, pp. 115-116).

At an August 1961 audition with Hite Morgan, a L.A. music publisher, Dennis Wilson said that Brian was working on a song about surfing. The truth was that no song existed. But the music publisher was intrigued and told the soon-to-be Beach Boys to come back when they had their new surfing song ready. “Surfin'” was recorded in October 1961 with Mike Love doing lead vocals, Brian on percussion/vocals, Carl Wilson on guitar/vocals, Al Jardine on acoustic bass/vocals and Dennis Wilson doing vocals. It was released in November 1961 on the independent label Candix. Though it peaked at no.75 on the Billboard Hot 100, its lyric which included the line”Surfin’ is the only life, the only way for me” capitivated listeners and was unique on the radio in late 1961. (Beach Boys FAQ, pp.25-26)

LYRICS Surfin’ is the only life, the only way for me
Now surf
Surf with me
I got up this mornin’, turned on my radio (Ooh, surfin’)
I was checkin’ out the surfin’ scene to see if I would go (Ooh, surfin’)
And when the DJ tells me that the surfin’ is fine (Ooh, surfin’)
That’s when I know my baby and I will have a good time
We’re goin’ surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’, surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’, surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’ is the only life, the only way for me
Now surf
Surf with me
From the early mornin’ to the middle of the night (Ooh, surfin’)
Any time the surf is up, the time is right (Ooh, surfin’)
And when the surf is down to take its place (Ooh, surfin’)
We’ll do the Surfer’s Stomp, it’s the latest dance craze
We’re goin’ surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’, surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’, surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’ is the only life, the only way for me
Now surf
Surf with me
Now the dawn is breaking and we really gotta go (Ooh, surfin’)
But we’ll be back here very soon, that you better know (Ooh, surfin’)
Yeah, my surfer knots are rising and my board is losing wax (Ooh, surfin’)
But that won’t stop me, baby, ’cause you know I’m comin’ back
We’re goin’ surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’, surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’, surfin’, surfin’
Surfin’ is the only life, the only way for me
Now come on, pretty baby and surf with me, yeah

Brian Wilson soon associated girls and cars. He was also beginning to understand the association of music and emotions after he heard Be My Baby by The Ronettes on the radio. Brian was also impressed by how simple vocal gestures, such as was achieved by Aretha Franklin and Dionne Warwick, could get maximum mileage from a listener’s reaction. (i am Brian Wilson a memoir, pp. 172).

In 1963 Brian Wilson offered Don’t Worry Baby to girl-group The Ronettes after the 21-year-old Wilson had become obsessed with their Be My Baby – a no. 1 hit (Cash Box) in August 1963. But they declined it and the Beach Boys produced it for themselves instead. It became one of the Beach Boys’s classics of the period. Wilson wrote Don’t Worry Baby as a response to Be My Baby and both songs have an affinity in pacing, structure, melodic lilt, and subject matter. Wilson wrote Don’t Worry Baby with lyrics by then-collaborator Roger Christian (1934-1991), a DJ at KFWB in L.A., over the course of a couple days at the Wilson family home in Hawthorne, California. It is ostensibly about a guy’s race car and his caring girlfriend, of which Wilson observed later: “It was a very simple and beautiful song. It’s a really heart and soul song, I really did feel that in my heart.” see – https://americansongwriter.com/brian-wilson-gods-messenger/4/ – retrieved February 24, 2025.

LYRICS Well, its been building up inside of me
For, oh, I don’t know how long
I don’t know why, but I keep thinking
Something’s bound to go wrong
But she looks in my eyes
And makes me realize
And she says (now don’t) (don’t worry, baby)
Don’t worry, baby (don’t you worry) (don’t worry, baby)
Everything will turn out alright (now don’t) (don’t worry, baby)
Don’t worry, baby (don’t you worry) (don’t worry, baby)
I guess I should’ve kept my mouth shut
When I started to brag about my car
But I can’t back down now, because
I pushed the other guys too far
She makes me come alive
And makes me wanna drive
When she says (now don’t) (don’t worry, baby)
Don’t worry, baby (don’t you worry) (don’t worry, baby)
Everything will turn out alright (now don’t) (don’t worry, baby)
Don’t worry baby (don’t you worry) (don’t worry, baby)
She told me, “Baby, when you race today
Just take along my love with you
And if you knew how much I loved you
Baby, nothing could go wrong with you”
Oh, what she does to me
When she makes love to me
And she says (now don’t) (don’t worry, baby)
Don’t worry, baby (don’t you worry) (don’t worry, baby)
Everything will turn out alright (now don’t) (don’t worry, baby)
Don’t worry, baby (don’t you worry) (don’t worry, baby)
Everything will turn out alright (now don’t) (don’t worry, baby)
Don’t worry, baby (don’t you worry) (don’t worry, baby)

Feature Image: The Beach Boys in 1964; clockwise from left: Al Jardine, Mike Love, Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson. Trade ad for The Beach Boys’s single “California Girls”/”Let Him Run Wild.” Public Domain. Permission details The ad appeared in the 11 September 1965 issue of Billboard and can be dated from that publication; it is pre-1978. There are no copyright markings as can be seen at the full view link. The ad is not covered by any copyrights for Billboard. US Copyright Office page 3-magazines are collective works (PDF) “A notice for the collective work will not serve as the notice for advertisements inserted on behalf of persons other than the copyright owner of the collective work. These advertisements should each bear a separate notice in the name of the copyright owner of the advertisement.”

Don’t Worry Baby was one of Brian Wilson’s strongest lead vocals countered by Mike Love singing bass, and Al Jardine, and Dennis and Carl Wilson singing back up. It was one of the last songs recorded before the Beatles’ appearances on Ed Sullivan that changed rock music’s trajectory. After the Beach Boys’ Surfin’ U.S.A. was ranked Billboard’s no.1 song of 1963 (Be My Baby was no. 35), Don’t Worry Baby was the second track and likely best song on Shut Down Volume 2, promoted as a “hot rod” album and released in February 1964 that rose to no.13 on the Billboard 200 and was certified Gold. It turned out that it was the final Beach Boys’ album exploring the dark and light of the California sound before the British invasion that shook things up fundamentally. Through the demise of their car and surfer music hastened by the Beatles – it can’t be known for sure what might have happened otherwise –  Brian Wilson understood that a gauntlet for musical supremacy was thrown down to which he must respond. At first Wilson thought about quitting for he was so disappointed that what they had been working on and striving for since 1961 was eclipsed overnight. After Fun, Fun, Fun peaked at no. 5 in March 1964, I Get Around was released in May 1964 with Don’t Worry Baby on the B-side. I Get Around became the no. 1 song on the Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks in July 1964 while Don’t Worry Baby charted on its own at no.24.

The Beach Boys in concert in February 1965. “Les Beach Boys en concert à l’aréna Maurice-Richard. 19 février 1965. De gauche à droite : Al Jardine, Carl Wilson et Glen Campbell (en remplacement de Brian Wilson). VM94-S32-010. Archives de la Ville de Montréal.” by Archives de la Ville de Montréal is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.

With the Beatles in mind Brian Wilson set to work on new material, this time integrating older musical sources into something new, as well as being more open than ever before to experimenting with arrangements and instrumentation so to achieve a new sound. Wilson worked to reinvent the Beach Boys just as he had been succeeding in inventing them. By the end of 1964 it was the Beatles that secured not just the top spot on Billboard’s year-end singles (I Want To Hold Your Hand) but the second spot as well (She Loves You) though the Beach Boys were still in the top 5 with I Get Around.  

This cover by Foxes and Fossils is a good one of the Beach Boys’ 1964 top-40 hit “Don’t Worry Baby.” The song has been covered many times through the years and Brian Wilson would probably like this cover since his song was originally inspired by, and intended for, a girl group. But also because the Beach Boys were always thrilled when a new generation was introduced to their music and embraced it as their own. 

SOURCES:

The Beach Boys: America’s Band, Johnny Morgan, Union Square & Co.; Illustrated edition, 2015, p. 67.

Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy, Penguin Publishing Group, Mike Love, 2016, pp. 64-65, 96-97, and 248.

The Beach Boys FAQ, All That’s Left to Know about America’s Band, Jon Stebbins, Backbeat Books, 2011, pp. 8 and 49.

The Beach Boys: The Definitive Diary of America’s Greatest Band on Stage and in the Studio, Keith Badman, Backbeat Books; First Edition, 2004., p. 53.

Brian Wilson with Ben Greenman, Da Capo Press, Boston, Massachusetts. pp. 115-116

When I Grow Up (To Be A Man): The Beach Boys in 1964.

Feature Image: The Beach Boys in 1964; clockwise from left: Al Jardine, Mike Love, Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson. Trade ad for The Beach Boys’s single “California Girls”/”Let Him Run Wild.” Public Domain. Permission details The ad appeared in the 11 September 1965 issue of Billboard and can be dated from that publication; it is pre-1978. There are no copyright markings as can be seen at the full view link. The ad is not covered by any copyrights for Billboard. US Copyright Office page 3-magazines are collective works (PDF) “A notice for the collective work will not serve as the notice for advertisements inserted on behalf of persons other than the copyright owner of the collective work. These advertisements should each bear a separate notice in the name of the copyright owner of the advertisement.”

The Beach Boys in Europe in late 1964. The Beach Boys appearing in a Billboard magazine in 1964. Public Domain.

By John P. Walsh

On November 2, 1964 the Beach Boys invaded London, England for a television appearance and concert.

At the press conference 22-year-old Brian Wilson who in this period co-wrote, with 23-year-old Mike Love, “When I Grow Up (To Be a Man)” said he wanted to see the band someday record in England. Eventually in 1972 they did record in Holland. See – https://johnpwalshblog.com/2022/08/24/seafaring-treasure-in-classic-rock-the-backstories-of-blues-images-no-4-hit-ride-captain-ride-1970-and-the-beach-boys-twice-charting-sail-on-sailor-1973-1975/

Mike Love and Brian Wilson wrote “When I Grow Up (To be a Man)” as well as most of “The Beach Boys Today!” released in March 1965 on which it appeared. Trade ad for The Beach Boys’s single “California Girls”/”Let Him Run Wild.” Public Domain. Permission details The ad appeared in the 11 September 1965 issue of Billboard and can be dated from that publication; it is pre-1978. There are no copyright markings as can be seen at the full view link. The ad is not covered by any copyrights for Billboard. US Copyright Office page 3-magazines are collective works (PDF) “A notice for the collective work will not serve as the notice for advertisements inserted on behalf of persons other than the copyright owner of the collective work. These advertisements should each bear a separate notice in the name of the copyright owner of the advertisement.”

With the press media in England Wilson admitted the Beach Boys had written and performed music on surfer subjects as well as cars but displayed anger as he denied that they had anything to do per se with “surfer music” and certainly not in originating or perpetrating it. Besides, Wilson offered that that phase was pretty much over. Their music was just their sound that people liked to listen to. In London and elsewhere he said that the Beach Boys had found new subjects particularly on social themes surrounding what it meant to be a young person in the mid1960’s.

New gas station, Fort Worth, Texas 1964. New gas station, Fort Worth, Texas 1964” by | El Caganer – Over 8.5 Million views! is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Recorded and released as a single in August 1964, “When I Grow Up (To Be A Man)” was another song by Brian Wilson and Mike Love. Mike Love thought it may have had to do with Brian Wilson’s father’s concern for his sons’ masculinity in the glitzy music business (see Love, p. 92) as much as his criticism of Brian’s impending marriage in December 1964 to 16-year-old Marilyn Rovell, a member of the Honeys. Brian had asked for her hand in an expensive telephone call from Australia when the Beach Boys were on tour there and in New Zealand in January 1964 and more than once until the nuptials. Back in California, Wilson produced his song, “He’s a Doll,” for the Honeys who recorded it on February 17, 1964 and released it two months later, on April 13, 1964.

The Honeys (originally the Rovell Sisters) were an American girl group formed in Los Angeles. After 1962, the Rovell Sisters were rechristened “the Honeys” by Brian Wilson who served as its record producer and songwriter. He married Marilyn Rovell of the Honeys in December 1964. From left: Marilyn Rovell, Diane Rovell, and Ginger Blake.

The Beach Boys’ first no. 1 single was one that was released in May 1964. They had been making music since 1962 and the last twelve months, since May 1963, had been busy and productive. Since spring of 1963 they had 3 top-5 hits (and two more top-10 hits). “Surfin’ U.S.A.” peaked at no. 3 in May 1963 and became Billboard’s no.1 song for the year. “Little Saint Nick” released in December 1963 peaked at no. 3 on the Billboard Christmas Singles chart. By the time “Fun, Fun, Fun” peaked at no. 5 in March 1964, everything had changed in rock ‘n roll music in America, and particularly for the Beach Boys. The change was marked by the appearance of the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show in February 1964. Literally half the country – 74 million people – tuned in and the impact was immediate. When the Beach Boys heard the hordes of screaming fans for the Fab Four, Brian Wilson thought for a moment about quitting, disappointed that so much of what the California band had been working on and striving for had suddenly been eclipsed – and by Brits no less. Brian Wilson set to work to complete more original material and was more open to experimenting with arrangements and instrumentation to achieve a new sound. Though the Beach Boys were replaced in the top spot on Billboard’s year-end singles in 1964 by the Beatles (“I Want To Hold Your Hand”) and the Beatles locked up the second spot as well (“She Loves You”), “I Get Around,” was in the top 5 that year.

“Surfin’ U.S.A.” by the Beach Boys peaked at no. 3 in May 1963 and became Billboard’s no.1 song for the year. The song expressed and informed a burgeoning surfer culture in its love of the ocean, surfboards, loud colorful print apparel and popular feature films and magazines that brought a counterculture into the mainstream. The Beach Boys’ music, particularly “Surfin’ U.S.A.” in 1963, also became emblematic of the California Sound.

The Brian Wilson-Mike Love song was released as a single on May 11, 1964, with “Don’t Worry Baby” on the B-side. “I Get Around” was on the Billboard Hot 100 by mid-June and the no. 1 song for the first two weeks of July 1964. As Mike Love saw it in his Good Vibrations: My Life as Beach Boy, “As exciting as it is to see a record climb the charts, it inevitably falls, sometimes quickly. “I Get Around” remained No.1  for two weeks. So it was all about the next new song, recording it, getting it on the radio, getting it charted, keeping the ball rolling.” (Love, p. 97)

On July 13, 1964, the Beach Boy’s sixth album All Summer Long was released on Capitol records with “I Get Around” its first track. Considered the band’s first artistically unified collection of songs, All Summer Long reached the Billboard 200 two weeks later and rose rapidly to peak at no.4 on August 22, 1964. According to Mike Love, the lyrics developed out of their experiences describing the band’s restlessness with “instant fame, some fortune” and looking to find new spaces and places “where the kids are hip.” By the second and final verses the narrator has moved from monotonous boredom in search of something more to boasting that he has the fastest car and great success with the women. In those first few months of 1964  the Beach Boys  had moved from wunderkind band to a personal and musical maturity. On “I Get Around” Dennis Wilson biographer Jon Stebbins wrote that it “is clearly ahead of its time, and it signals the speed at which Brian had developed. With its edgy guitar/sax bursts doubled with trebly reverbed Fender flicks, electric-organ fills, and an arrangement that stops, goes, accelerates, and then stops and goes a few more times, the song is nearly otherworldly in its inventiveness. Each band member’s voice is showcased, and this helps to make this single as good as any pop record ever made.” In February 1965, All Summer Long was certified gold by the RIAA. So that by the time of the Beach Boys’ American invasion of Britain in November 1964 they continued their counter to the British invasion of the Beatles in February 1964.

“Carl’s Big Chance,” the final surfer instrumental on a Beach Boys studio album, was recorded to showcase Carl Wilson’s guitar playing.

Also inspired by the Beatles’ success doing the same thing, the Beach Boys recorded “In My Room” in German so to promote their fan base there. In February 1964, the Beach Boys were in Europe doing TV and in-person appearances when the Beatles debuted on The Ed Sullivan Show in New York City.

Though released after the onset of Beatlemania in March 1964, the material for the Beach Boys’ album, Shut Down Volume Two, was conceived, written, and produced in late 1963 and early 1964. The Beatles’ impetus on the Beach Boys to more subtly integrate older musical sources to something new and original would still be several weeks and months in the offing. The lead track, Fun, Fun, Fun was recorded in the first week of January 1964 and released as a single on February 3, 1964, less than a week before the Beatles’ first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. That appearance (and the Rolling Stones’ stateside arrival in June 1964) is considered the beginning of rock music’s British Invasion and a milestone in American pop culture. Meanwhile, the lovely melancholic The Warmth of the Sun on side one of Shut Down Volume Two was written by Brian Wilson and Mike Love on the night of the Kennedy assassination in November 1963. Considered one of the finer early Beach Boys tunes, the Wilson-Love song collaboration would be kicked up more than a notch in 1964. Seemingly overnight, in front of the whole world, in that musical moment of February-March 1964, the Beatles marked the beginning of the 1960’s as we know it, and the Beach Boys, freely admitting to the passing of their car and surfer craze and, with The Warmth of the Sun, if written for JFK, Camelot, marked the era’s ending. Both were appropriate junctures for young developing bands: the Beatles, in 1964, out front of the Beach Boys to start. Although The Warmth of the Sun was on the best-selling Shut Down Vol. II (no. 13 on the Billboard 200), it didn’t get too much air play until it was placed on the B-side of the single Dance, Dance, Dance at the end of the year. This followed the release of the Beach Boys’ All Summer Long (I Get Around; Wendy) in July 1964 and anticipated The Beach Boys Today! (When I Grow Up (To Be a Man); Help Me, Rhonda) in March 1965. Both studio LPs – the Beach Boys’ sixth and eighth – grabbed back some of the rock pop critical and popular initiative they had prior to the Beatles. As the mid1960s were now in full swing, it also started the informal competition between two 20-something composers – namely, Southern Californian Brian Wilson and Liverpudlian Paul McCartney.

The Warmth of The Sun was written by Brian Wilson and Mike Love on the night of the JFK assassination. Released in February 1964 one week before the appearance of the Beatles for the first time on The Ed Sullivan Show that began the British invasion in pop music, the Beach Boys’ song marked the close of an era just as another opened.

A penultimate filler track, “Our Favorite Recording Sessions,” on All Summer Long showed the Beach Boys, like the Beatles, as just silly likeable band-mates. The Beach Boys were the first American band to do this type of humanizing perspective in their work.

Broadcast on April 18, 1964, the Beach Boys appeared on American Bandstand. They lip-synched “Don’t Worry Baby” and host Dick Clark interviewed  them. The rest of the show was dedicated to the music of the Beatles. In 1964 the Beach Boys decided it was time to move past popular surfer and car songs.

Following the release of Shut Down Volume Two, the Beach Boys appeared on the Steve Allen Show. Allen in his introduction said, “I’m sure you’re familiar with them they’ve had so many big hit records this last year. Let’s welcome the Beach Boys with Fun, Fun, Fun.”

Wilson’s “When I Grow Up (To Be a Man)” is one of the first rock songs to present a teenager thinking in the first person about serious matters on his future adulthood. It is one of the first top-40 songs (no.1 in Canada and no. 9 in the U.S.) to use the idiomatic term “turn on” (as in “Will I dig the same things that turned me on as a kid?”). It is also an intelligent question, in Mike Love’s part, of what sort of woman he will pursue in the near future as a man.

In Brian Wilson’s part, the composition’s 14-year-old narrator asks another pertinent question in the song: “Will I love my wife for the rest of my life?” As Wilson was soon getting married in real life, there is an invested urgency and emotional depth in the teenager’s question. At the same time, it is a careful, perhaps even emotionally prescient question as it does not query their marital status (Wilson and Marilyn Rovell were divorced in 1979). The lyrics are creatively astute in that “When I Grow Up” conveys these late adolescence complexities in an uplifting tone of apparent innocence, sincere interest, and hopeful enthusiasm by its serious teenage narrator.

The manager of the Beach Boys was the Wilson brothers’ father, Murry. Murry Wilson mused out loud whether his eldest son, Brian Wilson, at 22 years old, was possibly immature in his choices. Yet Brian, despite his mental breakdowns, was taking charge in his personal and professional life.

The Beach Boys Today! was recorded mostly in 1964 and released in March 1965. It peaked at no. 4 on the Billboard 200 and was certified Gold.beach boys- today!” by cdrummbks is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Before the March 1965 album, The Beach Boys Today!, was completed and whose recording began in August 1964 with “When I Grow Up (To Be A Man),” Murry was fired by Brian and didn’t return. Despite Murry’s expressed doubts and his eldest son’s impending marriage, Brian Wilson’s music was growing and developing by leaps and bounds. Surrounded by the smell of cannabis that Brian started smoking regularly, new musical insight is heard in When I Grow Up (To Be A Man). It is one of the first Beach Boys’ songs featuring those oddly changing, yet harmonious chords that do not stay in one key for more than a few measures. That musical structure characterized many of Brian Wilson’s finest compositions going forward. The young producer also again deployed a harpsichord – it can be heard in I Get Around – which was a creative use of a 16th century Baroque instrument which was unusual for a mid-1960’s pop rock song. The Beach Boys’ example, however, led to its use and that of other classical music instruments much more by rock bands afterwards. The track also features, as Jon Stebbins maintains, “one of Dennis’s best studio drum performances” (see – The Beach Boys FAQS, 2011, p. 53).

The Beach Boys Today! started recording in August 1964 and was completed in January 1965. It was recorded at three different studios in Hollywood (United Western Recorders, Gold Star Studios, and RCA Studios) using over 30 session musicians and was released on March 8, 1965. In those months Brian also suffered breakdowns that he later explained as owing to circumstances. “I used to be Mr. Everything, “he said, “I was run down mentally and emotionally because I was running around, jumping on jets from one city to another on one-night stands, also producing, writing, arranging, singing, planning, teaching – to the point where I had no peace of mind and no chance to actually sit down and think or even rest” (quoted in Badman, p. 74). Love saw it differently attributing some of it to the impending psychedelic drug culture that characterized the mid to late 1960s and Brian’s novel, if limited, involvement (see Love, p. 185). A dismissed Murry stayed in Hawthorne, California at home (3701 W. 119th Street; torn down in the mid1980s) where youngest brother, Carl Wilson, was still living and where he listened many times to Introducing… The Beatles and Meet the Beatles! in his room.

In April 1964 and May 1964 members of the Beach Boys appeared personally in two films and Brian Wilson’s songs were used in other films. In April 1964 Brian Wilson spent two days on the set of “Girls on the Beach,” a 1965 release, singing his song “Lonely Sea” to a group of teenagers from the Surfin’ USA album. The movie, about a sorority house trying to book the Beatles for a benefit concert, have to settle for the Beach Boys instead. Everything changed away from these corny stilted low budget beach and surfer flicks when, in August 1964, A Hard Day’s Night was released. The Beatles got to play themselves in a witty script that featured their songs and natural appeal. It was as far as could be from California surfer girls and boys whose music the Beach Boys showcased.

In May 1964 the Beach Boys were still just starting out when they played back up to Annette Funicello (1942-2013) during the opening credits of the Disney comedy film, Monkey’s Uncle, released in summer 1965. They are lip-synching a Sherman brothers’ song. Former Mouseketeer Funicello was making her last movie for Disney and had high praise for the Beach Boys. “As silly as the [opening credits] song is in places,” she remarked, “it really does rock and with the Beach Boys’ amazing four-part harmonies, I could sing it without echo.” (see – Funicello, Annette; Bashe, Patricia Romanowski (1994). A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes: My Story. Hyperion. p. 134). She continued: “They were wonderful guys and I feel fortunate that I was kind of in on the ground floor. We even worked together performing at Disneyland. Little did any of us know how successful they would become.” (see-  Santoli, Lorraine (Spring 1993). “Annette – As Ears Go By”. Disney News Magazine. p. 18.)

In June 1964 they recorded The Beach Boys’ Christmas Album (released in November 1964) and since July had been in Hawaii and Arizona to begin their 33-day, 42-concert Surfin’ Safari tour. After Murry was fired the Beach Boys became more involved in their concert date strategy, such as playing nearby secondary and tertiary cities as well as playing in big ones (see Love, p. 98). In early August 1964, “When I Grow Up (To Be A Man)” was the first song recorded for The Beach Boys Today! and released as a single on August 24, 1964. It is a philosophical song whose music is an artistic progression for Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys with its rich and profound instrumental arrangement and 4-part vocal harmonies that are fluid and ethereal (See – https://www.songfacts.com/lyrics/the-beach-boys/the-warmth-of-the-sun – retrieved April 16, 2024). Wilson’s use of the harpsichord in the song could stem from “easy listening” sources such as Henry Mancini’s Playboy’s Theme  (1960) from the late-night TV show or other of his film scores. Rock critic Richard Meltzer later observed that it was When I Grow Up (To be a Man) that marked the moment when the Beach Boys “abruptly ceased to be boys” (quoted in O’Regan, Jody (2014). When I Grow Up: The Development of the Beach Boys’ Sound (1962-1966) (PDF) (Thesis). Queensland Conservatorium, p. 253). In his 2016 memoir, Love wrote that the song was “probably influenced” by Murry Wilson who constantly challenged Brian’s manhood.

LYRICS
When I grow up to be a man
Will I dig the same things that turn me on as a kid?
Will I look back and say that I wish I hadn’t done what I did?
Will I joke around and still dig those sounds
When I grow up to be a man?
Will I look for the same things in a woman that I dig in a girl?
(Fourteen fifteen)
Will I settle down fast or will I first wanna travel the world?
(Sixteen seventeen)
Now I’m young and free, but how will it be
When I grow up to be a man?
Ooh ooh ooh
Ooh ooh ooh
Will my kids be proud or think their old man is really a square?
(Eighteen nineteen)
When they’re out having fun yeah, will I still wanna have my share?
(Twenty twenty-one)
Will I love my wife for the rest of my life, rest of my life
When I grow up to be a man?
What will I be when I grow up to be a man?
(Twenty-two twenty-three)
Won’t last forever
(Twenty-four twenty-five)
It’s kind of sad
(Twenty-six twenty-seven)
Won’t last forever
(Twenty-eight twenty-nine)
It’s kind of sad
(Thirty thirty-one)
Won’t last forever
(Thirty-two)

In September 1964 the Beach Boys picked up the Surfin Safari tour that they broke off in August 1964 to return to the studio to record and release When I Grow Up (To Be a Man). After touring up and down the East Coast from Florida to New York, they made an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show on September 27, 1964. In front of screaming fans they performed “I Get Around,” their no.1 hit that year and what would become a top-5 Billboard song of the year.

Released October 19, 1964, the live album Beach Boys Concert was the first Beach Boys album to be no. 1 on the Billboard 200. The only other album to achieve the top spot is Endless Summer in 1974. Recorded in Sacramento, California, Beach Boys Concert was the first live album to top the pop music record charts (see – Moskowitz, David V., ed. (2015). The 100 Greatest Bands of All Time: A Guide to the Legends Who Rocked the World, p.42). It was on the charts for nearly a year and in the no. 1 spot for 4 consecutive weeks. Because Brian Wilson was not going to perform live with the group in the future, it is a relatively rare recording of the original line-up.

 

Also in October of 1964, the Beach Boys, crowd pleasers mostly wherever they went, played four songs at the T.A.M. I. (Teenage Awards Music International show) in Santa Monica, California. The Beach Boys played Surfin’ USA, I Get Around, Surfer Girl, Dance, Dance, Dance. Others in that show included Chuck Berry, James Brown, the Supremes, Smokey Robinson and the Rolling Stones who played right before the Beach Boys. According to Mike Love’s “Good Vibrations,” he met and made friends with Marvin Gaye at that show. “Surfin’ U.S.A.” peaked at no. 3 in May 1963 and became Billboard’s no.1 song for the year. The concert was held at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium on October 28 and 29, 1964.

When the Beach Boys landed in London in early November 1964 there was an electricity in the air surrounding them. Since February they had a top-5 hit (Fun, Fun, Fun), no. 1 song (“I Get Around”), a no.1 album (Beach Boys Concert), TV and movie appearances, live concert tours and so on. They had two follow-up  top-10 singles – When I Grow Up (To Be Man) and Dance, Dance, Dance. The band’s leader, Brian Wilson, was getting married in December. There was a competition between the Beach Boys and the Beatles who, so far, dominated the field, despite the Beach Boys’ tremendous accomplishment. Their arrival into Britain was greeted with screaming fans and lots of media attention. As Mike Love put it, “Five singles and four albums – by any measure, an extraordinary year. It did nothing to slow down the Beatles, who had nine Top 10 singles and six albums that charted either 1 or 2, but both commercially and artistically, we were doing our best to hold our own.” (Love, p. 97)

In November 1964, after eight days in England doing TV and radio promotions and taping performances, the band flew to France, Italy, Germany, Denmark and Sweden to make more live appearances. It was their first time in Paris and the Beach Boys acted like typical camera-toting young American tourists in Montmartre. At their concert at Olympia Hall in Paris they were greeted by fans shrieking in French. Mike Love stated in his Good Vibrations that when he wrote “California Girls” in 1965 the lyrics were inspired by the band’s experiences seeing all the beautiful women during their late 1964 European tour – and thinking of home.  

They flew back home and did more concerts until, on December 7, 1964, Brian Wilson and Marilyn Rovell married. As Mike Love observed, it was Brian Wilson who was under the most “pressure” of “trying to keep pace with the Beatles, trying to satisfy the [record] label, trying to become a global band.” (Love, p. 104). On December 23, 1964, Brian Wilson was on an airplane from L.A. to Houston, Texas, to start a 25-date concert tour when he announced he had had enough of the hectic lifestyle of a pop rocker. Getting back to L.A., he returned to the vacant family homestead in Hawthorne and had a long talk with his mother who, Brian said, “sort of straightened me out” (quoted in The Beach Boys’ America’s Band, Johnny Morgan, p.81). Despite Brian’s marriage and breakdown, the Beach Boys road show carried on. Glen Campbell filled in for Brian to finish out the concert dates in Texas that ended the year 1964 for the Beach Boys. It was to be a busy January 1965.

SOURCES:

The Beach Boys: America’s Band, Johnny Morgan, Union Square & Co.; Illustrated edition, 2015, pp. 63-81.

The Beach Boys: The Definitive Diary of America’s Greatest Band on Stage and in the Studio, Keith Badman, Backbeat Books; First Edition, 2004.  

Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy, Penguin Publishing Group, Mike Love, 2016, p. 97; pp. 159-160.

Dennis Wilson: The Real Beach Boy, Jon Stebbins, ECW Press, 2000 p.39.

The Beach Boys FAQ, All That’s Left to Know about America’s Band, Jon Stebbins, Backbeat Books, 2011.

When I Grow Up: The Development of the Beach Boys’ Sound (1962-1966) (Thesis), Jody O’Regan (2014). Queensland Conservatorium.

A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes: My Story, Annette Funicello, Patricia Romanowski (1994). Hyperion. p. 13.

Santoli, Lorraine (Spring 1993). “Annette – As Ears Go By”. Disney News Magazine. p. 18.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Beach_Boys – retrieved April 10, 2024.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Beach_Boys_Today! – retrieved April 10, 2024.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_I_Grow_Up_(To_Be_a_Man) – retrieved April 10, 2024.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billboard_Year-End_Hot_100_singles_of_1963 – retrieved April 12, 2024.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Billboard_Hot_100_top-ten_singles_in_1963– retrieved April 12, 2024.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billboard_Year-End_Hot_100_singles_of_1964-– retrieved April 10, 2024.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Billboard_Hot_100_top-ten_singles_in_1964 – retrieved April 12, 2024

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Billboard_Hot_100_number_ones_of_1964 – retrieved April 12, 2024.

https://www.songfacts.com/lyrics/the-beach-boys/the-warmth-of-the-sun  – retrieved April 16, 2024.

Beach Boys in 1965. Public Domain.