Brian Wilson and Beach Boys
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With his recent passing, which stars like John Cusack and Stephen King recently paid tribute to, I was reminded of one of the greatest music movies of all time, that being Love & Mercy. So, here's why Wilson's death makes me remember what a masterful and thoughtful biopic that movie was.
For the last quarter-century, no one shared more musical moments with Brian Wilson than Darian Sahanaja, who was part of the Beach Boys architect’s solo band from his return to live shows in 1999 through his final tour dates in 2022.
In a rare 1964 interview on The Ida B Show, Wilson discussed his creative process, revealing how he built songs for The Beach Boys and other artists. He also shared what drove him to write so many songs.
"The notes he heard in his head and passed to us were simple and brilliant at the same time," the Beatle writes of the Beach Boy
Wilson, who died Wednesday at 82, was one of music's true visionaries, if that's the right word for a guy who dealt in the endless possibility of sound.
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inews.co.uk on MSNBrian Wilson, the troubled genius who turned his demons into miraclesIf ever a story summed up the troubled genius of Brian Wilson, it is his 1967 appearance on Inside Pop: The Rock Revolution, a US documentary hosted by Leonard Bernstein to showcase pop’s evolution into a serious art form.
Brian Wilson was a troubled genius who made so many people happy but had far too much sadness in his life already.
Wilson, who died June 11 at age 82, gave some of the studio world's guitar greats their shining moments on the Beach Boys' hit records
“When I was around 10 or 12 years old,” Brian Wilson said, “my mom and I were walking to the market one day and a dog started barking at us. When I asked my mom, ‘Why is that dog barking at us?’ she said, ‘Son, some dogs pick up vibrations from some people, and when they pick up bad vibrations, they bark.’ And I said, ‘What about good vibrations?’”