
Beach Boy Brian Wilson, surf rock poet, dies at 82
Wilson was placed under a legal conservatorship last year due to a 'major neurocognitive disorder'. — AFP photo
NEW YORK (June 12): Brian Wilson, the Beach Boys co-founder who masterminded the group's wild popularity and soundtracked the California dream, has died, his family announced Wednesday. He was 82.
The statement on Instagram did not give a cause. Wilson was placed under a legal conservatorship last year due to a 'major neurocognitive disorder.'
'We are at a loss for words right now,' said his family. 'We realize that we are sharing our grief with the world.'
The pop visionary crafted hits whose success rivaled The Beatles throughout the 1960s, a seemingly inexhaustible string of feel-good tracks including 'Surfin' USA,' 'I Get Around,' 'Fun, Fun, Fun' and 'Surfer Girl' that made the Beach Boys into America's biggest selling band.
Wilson didn't surf, but his prodigious pen and genius ear allowed him to fashion the boundary-pushing soundscape of beachside paradise.
His lush productions were revered among his peers, with even Bob Dylan once telling Newsweek: 'That ear — I mean, Jesus, he's got to will that to the Smithsonian!'
Dylan also paid tribute to Wilson on Wednesday, posting on X 'about all the years I've been listening to him and admiring his genius. Rest in peace dear Brian.'
After five years of extraordinary songwriting, in which he produced 200 odes to sun, surfing and suntanned girls, Wilson sank into a deep, drug-fueled depression for decades.
He would emerge 35 years later to complete the Beach Boys' unfinished album, 'Smile' — widely regarded as his masterpiece.
– 'Surfin' USA' –
John Lennon said he considered 'Pet Sounds' (1966) to be one of the best albums of all time, while Paul McCartney said Wilson was a 'genius' — who reduced him to tears with one song from the album, 'God Only Knows,' which Wilson wrote in 45 minutes.
Its melancholic depths hinted at Wilson's own painful secret.
Born on June 20, 1942 in a Los Angeles suburb, Wilson found music as a haven of safety and joy after an upbringing in which he suffered abuse from his domineering father, who would go on to manage the group.
Music was his protection, and The Beach Boys was a family affair: he formed the band with his two brothers Dennis and Carl, his cousin Mike Love and neighbor Al Jardine.
Wilson did all the songwriting, arranging and sang and played bass guitar; his bandmates just had to sing in harmony.
Their first song 'Surfin,' in 1961, was a loose prototype for the unique sound that would become their signature, a fusion of the rock styles of Chuck Berry and Little Richard with the preppy vocal harmonies of 'The Four Freshmen.'
By late 1962, there was hardly a teen who did not know them thanks to the eternal ode to youthful nonchalance, 'Surfin' USA.'
– Lost youth –
But Wilson was ill at ease on stage and did not like recording studios. In 1964 he had a panic attack on a plane to France, after which he stopped touring.
He was deaf in his right ear and his mouth sagged when he sang — the result of the many beatings he received from his father.
'It was tough. My dad was quite the slave driver,' Wilson told Rolling Stone magazine in 2018.
'He made us mow the lawn and when we were done, he'd say, 'Mow it again.'
The Beach Boys' early songs spoke of simple joys and innocence.
But Wilson's writing became darker as he began to eulogize lost youth. He channeled the group towards the more psychedelic rock central to the hippie culture taking hold in California.
In 1966 he brought out 'Good Vibrations,' a song recorded in four different studios that consumed over 90 hours of tape and included multiple keys, textures, moods and instrumentations.
The single topped the charts and sold one million copies in the United States, but Wilson was at the brink.
In 1967, his mental health deteriorated, worn down by his enormous workload and his wild consumption of drugs.
He abandoned 'Smile,' planted his grand piano in a sandbox, and took vast quantities of LSD and acid.
Eventually diagnosed as schizophrenic, Wilson began hearing voices and thought the famed 'Wall of Sound' producer Phil Spector was spying on him and stealing his work.
The group eventually parted ways.
– 'Gentlest revolutionary' –
The troubled artiste had long stints of rehab and relapses as well as legal issues including a lengthy, eyebrow-raising relationship with a controlling psychotherapist who was eventually blocked by a court order from contact with Wilson.
The artist credits his marriage to former model Melinda Ledbetter as helping him to rebuild his life. He revived and finished 'Smile,' releasing it in 2004.
His brother Dennis drowned in 1983, while Carl died of cancer in 1998.
Last year Wilson's family successfully pursued a legal conservatorship following the death of Melinda, with his longtime manager and publicist being put in charge of his affairs.
Wilson's seven children were consulted by the conservators regarding major health decisions as a stipulation of the agreement.
The musician's many accolades included a Kennedy Center Honor in 2007, when that committee dubbed him 'rock and roll's gentlest revolutionary.'
'There is real humanity in his body of work,' they said, 'vulnerable and sincere, authentic and unmistakably American.' — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
19 hours ago
- The Sun
Japan's 400,000-follower ‘Insta-gran' dies aged 97
Kimiko Nishimoto, who died this week at the age of 97, told AFP in a 2018 interview that 'you can take photos no matter how old you get'. TOKYO: A Japanese great-grandmother with 400,000 Instagram followers who shot to fame for her goofy self-portraits after taking up photography aged 72 has died, her son said on Thursday. Kimiko Nishimoto, who died this week at the age of 97, told AFP in a 2018 interview that 'you can take photos no matter how old you get'. 'Wherever it is, in your house, outside, or in your bed, you can do it. That is the nice thing about a camera,' she said. Dubbed the 'selfie queen' by Japanese media, Nishimoto's posts showed her in various candid poses -- from riding a broom like Harry Potter to imitating an off-duty sumo wrestler on their fifth beer of the night. 'Our mother always created her work with a smile,' a post from her son Kazutami Nishimoto said on her Instagram account. 'We are deeply grateful to everyone who visited her photography exhibitions held across the country, to those who shared warm words of encouragement through Instagram... and to all who supported her warmly throughout her journey.' Nishimoto's son teaches photography classes, which his mother started taking in retirement. 'Though she began photography at the age of 72, she was blessed with countless encounters, which enriched this third chapter of her life tremendously,' he said. Nishimoto appeared on national television as her online following grew and was interviewed by major news outlets. But her more out-there visual scenarios were also the cause of some confusion over the years. One snap -- showing her wrapped in a garbage bag, as if she had been discarded -- drew criticism from people who didn't know she was involved in its set-up. 'It's not like ideas just suddenly pop into my head but wherever I go I think about what it would be fun to dress up as in that place,' she said in 2018.


Rakyat Post
21 hours ago
- Rakyat Post
Char Kuey Teow Gets Snubbed While Muar's Mee Bandung Storms Global Top 5
Subscribe to our FREE The international food scene just got a reality check courtesy of TasteAtlas's 2024/2025 global noodle rankings, and Malaysia is having the last laugh with eight entries in the top 100. Leading the charge is Mee Bandung from Muar, Johor, which bulldozed its way to fifth place worldwide with a stellar 4.6 rating—leaving food snobs everywhere scrambling to Google 'what the hell is Mee Bandung?' But here's the kicker that's got Malaysian food lovers doing double-takes: Char Kuey Teow, the smoky wok-kissed legend that's supposedly conquered 'many taste buds,' didn't even crack the list. That's right—the dish that food tourists pilgrimage to Penang for was ghosted entirely. The Muar Marvel That Nobody Saw Coming While everyone was busy hyping up Penang's street food scene, this unassuming bowl from Muar was quietly perfecting its game. Mee Bandung isn't just noodles—it's a masterclass in flavour engineering. Yellow noodles swimming in a thick, spicy sauce made from chillies, onions, shrimp paste, and dried shrimp, loaded with halved hard-boiled eggs, prawns, fish cakes, and vegetables. Sometimes beef joins the party, and a squeeze of lime juice provides the perfect acidic punctuation. The name itself tells the story: 'Bandung' means 'mixed' or 'paired'—nothing to do with the Indonesian city, despite what your geography teacher might have told you. It's all about the art of combination, taking disparate ingredients and creating something greater than the sum of its parts. Malaysia's Noodle Domination The full Malaysian invasion of the Mee Bandung (5th, 4.6) – The Muar champion East Coast Laksam (27th, 4.4) – Kelantan and Terengganu's thick, coconut-rich contribution Curry Mee (49th, 4.2) – Because coconut milk makes everything better Maggi Goreng (58th, 4.2) – Instant noodles elevated to an art form Penang Hokkien Mee (62nd, 4.2) – The dark, prawn-stock beauty Penang Assam Laksa (67th, 4.1) – Sour, fishy, and absolutely addictive Mee Rebus (73rd, 4.1) – Sweet potato starch never tasted so good Tai Lok Mee (92nd, 4.0) – Central and Southern Malaysia's sleeper hit This is what noodle domination looks like when Malaysia claims eight spots in the world's top 100, proving that the best bowls aren't always the most famous ones. (Pix: Fernando Fong) The Char Kuey Teow Mystery The absence of Char Kuey Teow from this list is the culinary equivalent of leaving The Beatles off a greatest bands ranking. This is the dish that food bloggers write love letters about, that the late American chef and author Anthony Bourdain practically genuflected before, that has spawned countless 'best of' lists across Southeast Asia. So what happened? Did the people who left their ratings on various dishes miss the memo about Did they not get the smoky, slightly charred noodles with Chinese sausage, prawns, and bean sprouts? Or is Char Kuey Teow simply too cool for international validation? Nothing captures the authentic local kopitiam dining experience than a steaming plate of Char Kuey Teow. (Pix: Fernando Fong) What This Really Says This ranking isn't just about noodles—it's about Malaysia's food culture finally getting its due on the global stage. For too long, Malaysian cuisine has been overshadowed by its more famous neighbours, but this list proves what locals have always known: some of the world's best eating happens at plastic tables under zinc roofs. A comforting bowl of traditional 'lai fun' rice noodle soup in Gopeng, Perak, in clear, aromatic broth with tender pieces of pork lard and fresh green onions. (Pix: Fernando Fong) The fact that Mee Bandung—a dish many international food lovers have never heard of—outranked countless 'famous' noodle dishes from around the world speaks to the depth and sophistication of Malaysian hawker culture. These aren't just cheap eats; they're generations of culinary refinement. The Char Kuey Teow snub, meanwhile, might be the best thing that ever happened to it as nothing says 'authentic local secret' like being ignored by international food rankings. While tourists chase Instagram-worthy bowls, locals know where the real magic happens. READ MORE : READ MORE : READ MORE : Share your thoughts with us via TRP's . Get more stories like this to your inbox by signing up for our newsletter.


The Sun
21 hours ago
- The Sun
Beach Boys founder, Brian Wilson, dies at 82
BRIAN Wilson, the Beach Boys co-founder who masterminded the group's wild popularity and soundtracked the California dream, has died, his family announced Wednesday. He was 82. The statement on Instagram did not give a cause. Wilson was placed under a legal conservatorship last year due to a 'major neurocognitive disorder.' 'We are at a loss for words right now,' said his family. 'We realise that we are sharing our grief with the world.' The pop visionary crafted hits whose success rivaled The Beatles throughout the 1960s, a seemingly inexhaustible string of feel-good tracks including Surfin' USA, I Get Around, Fun, Fun, Fun and Surfer Gir that made the Beach Boys into America's biggest selling band. Wilson did not surf but his prodigious pen and genius ear allowed him to fashion the boundary-pushing soundscape of beachside paradise. His lush productions were revered among his peers, with even Bob Dylan once telling Newsweek: 'That ear – I mean, Jesus, he's got to will that to the Smithsonian!' But after five years of extraordinary songwriting, in which he produced 200 odes to sun, surfing and suntanned girls, Wilson sank into a deep, drug-fueled depression for decades. He would emerge 35 years later to complete the Beach Boys' unfinished album, 'Smile' – widely regarded as his masterpiece. Surfin' USA John Lennon said he considered Pet Sounds (1966) to be one of the best albums of all time, while Paul McCartney said Wilson was a 'genius' – who reduced him to tears with one song from the album, God Only Knows which Wilson wrote in 45 minutes. Its melancholic depths hinted at Wilson's own painful secret. Born on June 20, 1942 in a Los Angeles suburb, Wilson found music as a haven of safety and joy after an upbringing in which he suffered abuse from his domineering father, who would go on to manage the group. Music was his protection, and The Beach Boys was a family affair: he formed the band with his two brothers Dennis and Carl, his cousin Mike Love and neighbor Al Jardine. Wilson did all the songwriting, arranging and sang and played bass guitar; his bandmates just had to sing in harmony. Their first song Surfin, in 1961, was a loose prototype for the unique sound that would become their signature, a fusion of the rock styles of Chuck Berry and Little Richard with the preppy vocal harmonies of The Four Freshmen. By late 1962, there was hardly a teen who did not know them thanks to the eternal ode to youthful nonchalance, Surfin' USA. Lost youth But Wilson was ill at ease on stage and did not like recording studios. In 1964 he had a panic attack on a plane to France, after which he stopped touring. He was deaf in his right ear and his mouth sagged when he sang – the result of the many beatings he received from his father. 'It was tough. My dad was quite the slave driver,' Wilson told Rolling Stone magazine in 2018. 'He made us mow the lawn and when we were done, he'd say, 'Mow it again.'' The Beach Boys' early songs spoke of simple joys and innocence. But Wilson's writing became darker as he began to eulogise lost youth. He channeled the group towards the more psychedelic rock central to the hippie culture taking hold in California. In 1966 he brought out Good Vibrations, a song recorded in four different studios that consumed over 90 hours of tape and included multiple keys, textures, moods and instrumentations. The single topped the charts and sold one million copies in the United States, but Wilson was at the brink. In 1967, his mental health deteriorated, worn down by his enormous workload and his wild consumption of drugs. He abandoned Smile, planted his grand piano in a sandbox, and took vast quantities of LSD and acid. Eventually diagnosed as schizophrenic, Wilson began hearing voices and thought the famed 'Wall of Sound' producer Phil Spector was spying on him and stealing his work. The group eventually parted ways. Gentlest revolutionary The troubled artist had long stints of rehab and relapses as well as legal issues including a lengthy, eyebrow-raising relationship with a controlling psychotherapist who was eventually blocked by a court order from contact with Wilson. The artist credits his marriage to former model Melinda Ledbetter as helping him to rebuild his life. He revived and finished Smile, releasing it in 2004. His brother Dennis drowned in 1983, while Carl died of cancer in 1998. Last year Wilson's family successfully pursued a legal conservatorship following the death of Melinda, with his longtime manager and publicist being put in charge of his affairs. Wilson's seven children were consulted by the conservators regarding major health decisions as a stipulation of the agreement. The musician's many accolades included a Kennedy Center Honor in 2007, when that committee dubbed him 'rock and roll's gentlest revolutionary.' 'There is real humanity in his body of work,' they said, 'vulnerable and sincere, authentic and unmistakably American.'