Brian Wilson, music icon and creative force behind The Beach Boys, has died at 82
By
Christina Maxouris
, CNN
Brian Wilson, leader and co-founder of the Beach Boys, performs at ACL Live on May 13, 2017 in Austin, Texas.
Photo:
AFP / Suzanne Cordeiro
Brian Wilson, cofounder of the Beach Boys and the creative force behind the group's surf sound, orchestral arrangements and perfect harmonies, has died, his family announced on Wednesday (US time).
He was 82.
"We are heartbroken to announce that our beloved father Brian Wilson has passed away," his family wrote in the statement shared on Instagram and his official website. "We are at a loss for words right now. Please respect our privacy at this time as our family is grieving. We realize that we are sharing our grief with the world."
CNN has reached out to representatives for Wilson for comment.
Wilson's life was marked just as much by struggles of substance abuse and mental illness as it was by repeated comebacks, remarkable talent and timeless songs that still echo across the country, decades after their release.
His story, by all accounts, is one of resilience. Despite a childhood scarred by his father's abuse, becoming partially deaf, and the years of haunting voices in his head from schizoaffective disorder, the two-time Grammy Award winner went on to become the "reigning king of pop melody", as the
Denver Post
once put it, often bringing to life songs that told a much different tale than his own reality.
"That is probably why I wrote those happy songs. I try to get as close to paradise as I can," Wilson told
The New York Times Magazine
in 2004.
Over the decades, many have revered his genius. "I don't think you'd be out of line comparing him to Beethoven," Tom Petty once said. In 2001, CNN credited Wilson as the creator of "some of history's most intricately woven pop songs".
"He managed to both distill a simplicity of human emotion out of his songs and yet, do something that's so artistically complex and beautiful," musician Don Was once marvelled about Wilson during an interview.
Rolling Stone
magazine in 2023 named Wilson one of the 200 greatest singers of all time.
In the Beach Boys, Wilson found a family that accepted his perfectionism and eccentricity - he did, after all, install a giant beach sand box under his piano for inspiration. And later, as a solo artist, he revisited and released the one project he couldn't fulfill while in the group: the SMiLE album that Wilson called a "teenage symphony to God" and looked back on as his greatest accomplishment.
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The oldest of three brothers, Wilson was born on June 20, 1942, in Inglewood, California. His love for music began early, but so did the abuse from his father, who, during bouts of rage and depression, would beat Wilson with a belt or take out his artificial eyeball (he'd lost an eye in an industrial accident) and make Wilson look at the empty space.
Musician Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys performs onstage at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards held at Staples Centre on February 12, 2012 in Los Angeles, California.
Photo:
AFP / Getty Images / Kevin Winter
Wilson used music to escape, and his life was always shaped by the melodies around him - with some of his greatest influences including the Four Freshmen, Phil Spector, George Gershwin and, at one time, the Beatles.
In 1961, Wilson wrote his first original melody in 'Surfer Girl', according to the biography on his official website. The same year, Wilson and cousin Mike Love wrote 'Surfin', recording the song with Wilson's brothers, Dennis, and Carl, and friend Al Jardine - and soon after becoming known as the Beach Boys. The song was included in the group's 1962 debut album,
Surfin Safari.
The Beach Boys during a concert at the Gaumont Palace, in Paris on December 8, 1970.
Photo:
Roger-Viollet via AFP / Christian Rose
But the high demands of a relentless industry proved too much and in late December 1964, Wilson suffered a nervous breakdown and stopped touring, becoming a full-time studio artist for the better part of more than a decade after that.
"I probably had a little too much too soon," he speculated to CNN's Larry King in 2004. It would mark the beginning of his experience with depression, which Wilson said never really went away. (Even in 2019, Wilson postponed a tour and said that he had been feeling "mentally insecure" at the time and was grappling "with stuff in my head.")
Wilson went on to compose, arrange and produce the legendary
Pet Sounds
album alongside songwriter Tony Asher, with a single goal in mind: to create the "greatest rock album ever made." It was released May 16, 1966. The 13-track album, which now holds the No 2 spot on Rolling Stone's 2021 list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time," has become the group's landmark record.
Paul McCartney - who Wilson has referred to as one of his heroes - once called the record "unbeatable in many ways."
Brian Wilson is joined on stage by the members of Wilson Phillips, his daughters Carney Wilson (2nd from L) and Wendy Wilson, right, , and Chyna Phillips, 2nd from right, at the Radio City Music Hall in New York 29 March, 2001.
Photo:
AFP / Henny Ray Abrams
While bringing to life many of the band's iconic songs, Wilson was also plunging deep into his personal hell, taking drugs including hashish, amphetamines and LSD. It was a sort of self-medication, he had said. "It's called 'nepenthe,'" he told King in 2004. "Alcohol and morphine - nepenthe means numbing the soul," he said, referring to a fictional antidote for sorrow mentioned in Ancient Greek literature.
Wilson continued to spiral, at times spending days in bed. Around age 25, he began hearing voices: awful ones he desperately tried to tune out, which at times threatened to harm him. It was a symptom of schizoaffective disorder, Wilson said.
"Every few minutes the voices say something derogatory to me," he told
Ability Magazine
in 2006. The only antidote for those proved to be singing, writing and being around his family, Wilson said.
Wilson and his first wife, singer Marilyn Rovell, were divorced in 1979 after about 15 years of marriage. He met his second wife, Melinda Ledbetter, in a car dealership in 1986, when she sold him a Cadillac. He released his first solo album -
Brian Wilson
- in 1988.
His wife, Melinda, called that time the "Landy years" - a reference to the domineering therapist hired to help Wilson but who instead, according to the musician, overmedicated him, controlled him and banned communication with his friends or family, Wilson and Melinda told King in the 2004 interview. (After a 1991 settlement, Landy was banned from having any contact with the artist.)
Wilson married Melinda in 1995. He pointed to her as a critical backbone and support system during his struggles, and the one who helped him take his life back. After her death, Wilson called her his "saviour."
In 2004, came a stunning resurrection: more than 35 years since its inception, Wilson revisited the "SMiLE" project and with the help of lyricist Van Dyke Parks and band member Darian Sahanaja, performed the entire finished album at the Royal Festival Hall in London. He released the
Brian Wilson Presents Smile
album in September 2004. Wilson has called it his "biggest accomplishment ever."
"I get the impression that Brian knew he was running out of time and if he was going to present the work he'd have to make a decision to do it and no longer be embarrassed that he had followed his own madness as a 24-year-old composer," Parks told
The New York Times
at the time.
In May 2024, after his wife Melinda died, a judge ruled to place Wilson under a conservatorship, to which the musician agreed to. Court documents said Wilson had a "major neurocognitive disorder" and was unable to care for himself, CNN reported.
In Wilson's mind, the Beach Boys - as the world knew them - broke up in 1998, after Carl Wilson died of lung cancer. Dennis Wilson died in 1983 in a swimming accident.
For all the sorrow and internal battles that haunted his life, Wilson never forgot about the things that made him happy: his wife, his children and music, above all else.
"They're the light of my life. Nothing brings joy into my life like my children," Wilson told
Ability Magazine
in 2006. "My children and my music are my two greatest loves."
In his interview with the magazine, Wilson said he had found ways to overcome the darkest days of his mental health conditions with the help of medication and regular visits with a psychiatrist.
On what gets him through the day, he said: "I walk five miles a day in the morning, I eat really good food, I get a little sleep at night-four or five hours, sometimes six if I'm lucky-and I use my love with people. I use love as a way to get along with people."
And when the going got tougher, he said he got through it with his willpower - which he, fittingly, called "Wilson Power."
CNN's Todd Leopold contributed to this report.
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From 1963-66, they were rarely off the charts, hitting No. 1 with I Get Around and Help Me, Rhonda and narrowly missing with California Girls and Fun, Fun, Fun. For television appearances, they wore candy-striped shirts and grinned as they mimed their latest hit, with a hot rod or surfboard nearby. ADVERTISEMENT Their music echoed private differences. Wilson often contrasted his own bright falsetto with Love's nasal, deadpan tenor. The extroverted Love was out front on the fast songs, but when it was time for a slow one, Brian took over. The Warmth of the Sun was a song of despair and consolation that Wilson alleged — to some scepticism — he wrote the morning after President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Don't Worry Baby, a ballad equally intoxicating and heartbreaking, was a leading man's confession of doubt and dependence, an early sign of Brian's crippling anxieties. 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It was immediately praised as a major advance, the lyrics far more personal and the music far more subtle and sophisticated than such earlier hits as She Loves You and A Hard Day's Night. Wilson would recall getting high and listening to the record for the first time, promising himself he would not only keep up with the British band, but top them. Wilson worked for months on what became Pet Sounds, and months on the single Good Vibrations. He hired an outside lyricist, Tony Asher, and used various studios, with dozens of musicians and instruments ranging from violins to bongos to the harpsichord. The air seemed to cool on some tracks and the mood turn reflective, autumnal. From I Know There's an Answer to You Still Believe in Me, many of the songs were ballads, reveries, brushstrokes of melody, culminating in the sonic wonders of Good Vibrations, a psychedelic montage that at times sounded as if recorded in outer space.' ADVERTISEMENT The results were momentous, yet disappointing. 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Remnants, including the songs Heroes and Villains and Wind Chimes were re-recorded and issued in September 1967 on Smiley Smile, dismissed by Carl Wilson as a "bunt instead of a grand slam". The stripped down Wild Honey, released three months later, became a critical favourite but didn't restore the band's reputation. The Beach Boys soon descended into an oldies act, out of touch with the radical '60s, and Wilson withdrew into seclusion. (Source: Associated Press) Years of struggle, and late life validation ADVERTISEMENT Addicted to drugs and psychologically helpless, sometimes idling in a sandbox he had built in his living room, Wilson didn't fully produce another Beach Boys record for years. Their biggest hit of the 1970s was a greatest hits album, 'Endless Summer,' that also helped re-establish them as popular concert performers. Although well enough in the 21st century to miraculously finish Smile and tour and record again, Wilson had been diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder and baffled interviewers with brief and disjointed answers. Among the stranger episodes of Wilson's life was his relationship with Dr. Eugene Landy, a psychotherapist accused of holding a Svengali-like power over him. A 1991 lawsuit from Wilson's family blocked Landy from Wilson's personal and business affairs. His first marriage, to singer Marilyn Rovell, ended in divorce and he became estranged from daughters Carnie and Wendy, who would help form the pop trio Wilson Phillips. His life stabilized in 1995 with his marriage to Melinda Ledbetter, who gave birth to two more daughters, Daria and Delanie. He also reconciled with Carnie and Wendy and they sang together on the 1997 album The Wilsons. (Melinda Ledbetter died in 2024.) Musician Brian Wilson, left, and his wife Melinda Ledbetter Wilson arrive at the 55th annual Grammy Awards in 2013 in Los Angeles. (Source: Associated Press) In 1992, Brian Wilson eventually won a US$10 million (NZ$16.5 million) out-of-court settlement for lost songwriting royalties. But that victory and his 1991 autobiography, Wouldn't It Be Nice: My Own Story, set off other lawsuits that tore apart the musical family. Carl Wilson and other relatives believed the book was essentially Landy's version of Brian's life and questioned whether Brian had even read it. Their mother, Audree Wilson, unsuccessfully sued publisher HarperCollins because the book said she passively watched as her husband beat Brian as a child. Love successfully sued Brian Wilson, saying he was unfairly deprived of royalties after contributing lyrics to dozens of songs. He would eventually gain ownership of the band's name. The Beach Boys still released an occasional hit single: Kokomo, made without Wilson, hit No. 1 in 1988. Wilson, meanwhile, released such solo albums as Brian Wilson and Gettin' In Over My Head, with cameos by McCartney and Clapton among others. He also completed a pair of albums for the Walt Disney label — a collection of Gershwin songs and music from Disney movies. In 2012, surviving members of the Beach Boys reunited for a 50th anniversary album, which quickly hit the Top 10 before the group again bickered and separated. ADVERTISEMENT Wilson won just two competitive Grammys, for the solo instrumental Mrs. O'Leary's Cow and for The Smile Sessions box set. Otherwise, his honors ranged from a Grammy lifetime achievement prize to a tribute at the Kennedy Centre to induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. In 2018, he returned to his old high school in Hawthorne and witnessed the literal rewriting of his past: The principal erased an "F" he had been given in music and awarded him an "A".