Brian Wilson, Beach Boys leader and summer's poet laureate, dies at 82
		
		[June 12, 2025] 
		By HILLEL ITALIE 
		
		NEW YORK (AP) — Brian Wilson, the Beach Boys’ visionary and fragile 
		leader who helped compose and arrange “Good Vibrations,” “California 
		Girls” and dozens of other summertime anthems and became one of the 
		world’s most influential and admired musicians, has died at 82. 
		 
		Wilson’s family posted news of his death to his website Wednesday. 
		Further details weren’t immediately available. Since May 2024, Wilson 
		had been under a court conservatorship to oversee his personal and 
		medical affairs, with Wilson’s longtime representatives in charge. 
		 
		The eldest and last surviving of three musical brothers — Brian played 
		bass, Carl lead guitar and Dennis drums — he and his fellow Beach Boys 
		rose from local act to national hitmakers to international ambassadors 
		of the American dream. Wilson himself was celebrated for his beautiful 
		music and pitied for his demons. He was one of rock’s great Romantics, a 
		tortured soul who in his peak years embarked on an ever-steeper quest 
		for aural perfection. 
		 
		The Beach Boys rank among the most popular acts of the rock era, with 
		more than 30 singles in the Top 40 and worldwide sales of more than 100 
		million. 1966's “Pet Sounds” was voted No. 2 in a 2003 Rolling Stone 
		list of the best 500 albums, losing out, as Wilson did from the start, 
		to the Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.” The Beach Boys, 
		who also featured Wilson cousin Mike Love and family friend Al Jardine, 
		were voted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1988. 
		 
		Fans ranged from Elton John and Bruce Springsteen to Katy Perry and Bob 
		Dylan. The Who’s drummer, Keith Moon, fantasized about joining the Beach 
		Boys. Paul McCartney cited “Pet Sounds” as a direct inspiration on the 
		Beatles and said the ballad “God Only Knows” often moved him to tears. 
		
		
		  
		
		Their music was like an ongoing party, with Wilson as mastermind and 
		wallflower. He was a tall, shy man, partially deaf (allegedly because of 
		beatings by his father, Murry Wilson), with a sweet, crooked grin, and 
		he rarely touched a surfboard unless for publicity. But out of the 
		lifestyle that he observed and such musical influences as Chuck Berry 
		and the Four Freshmen, he devised a magical and durable soundscape — 
		easy melodies, bright harmonies, vignettes of beaches, cars and girls 
		that resonated worldwide. 
		 
		Decades after its first release, a Beach Boys song can still conjure up 
		instant summer — the wake-up guitar riff that opens “Surfin’ USA”; the 
		melting harmonies of “Don’t Worry Baby”; the chants of “fun, fun, fun” 
		or “good, good, GOOD, good vibrations”; the behind-the-wheel chorus 
		“’Round, ‘round, get around, I get around.” Beach Boys songs have 
		cheered on generations from iPods and boom boxes, radios and 8-track 
		players, and any device that could be placed on a beach towel. 
		 
		The Beach Boys’ innocent appeal survived changing trends and times and 
		the group’s increasingly troubled backstory — Brian’s many personal 
		trials; allegations of their father's mismanagement and physical abuse; 
		feuds and lawsuits; the alcoholism of Dennis Wilson, who drowned in 
		1983. Brian Wilson’s ambition took the Beach Boys into territory far 
		beyond the simple pleasures of their early hits — transcendent, 
		eccentric and destructive. They seemed to live out every fantasy, and 
		every nightmare, of the California myth. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
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            Members of The Beach Boys, from left, Bruce Johnston, David Marks, 
			rear, Brian Wilson, Mike Love and Al Jardine appear during ABC's 
			"Good Morning America" summer concert series, on June 15, 2012, in 
			New York. (Photo by Jason DeCrow/Invision/AP, File) 
            
			
			
			  Brian Wilson was born June 20, 1942, 
			two days after McCartney. His musical gifts were obvious and as a 
			boy he was playing piano and teaching his brothers to sing harmony. 
			The Beach Boys started as a neighborhood act, rehearsing in Brian’s 
			bedroom and in the garage of their house in suburban Hawthorne, 
			California. Surf music was catching on locally and Dennis, the 
			group’s only real surfer, suggested they cash in. Brian and Love 
			hastily wrote up their first single, “Surfin,’” a minor hit released 
			in 1961. 
			 
			They wanted to call themselves the Pendletones, in honor of a 
			popular shirt. But when they first saw the pressings for “Surfin,’” 
			they discovered the record label had tagged them “The Beach Boys.” 
			Other decisions were handled by their father, a musician and 
			apparent tyrant who hired himself as the manager and holy terror. By 
			mid-decade, Murry Wilson had been displaced and Brian was in charge. 
			 
			Their breakthrough came in early 1963 with “Surfin’ USA,” so closely 
			modeled on Chuck Berry’s “Sweet Little Sixteen” that Berry 
			successfully sued to get a songwriting credit. It was their first 
			Top 10 hit and a boast to the nation: “If everybody had an ocean / 
			across the USA / then everybody’d be surfin’, / like Cali-for-nye-ay.” 
			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 their many television 
			appearances, they wore candy-striped shirts and grinned as they 
			mimed their latest hit, with a hot rod or surfboard nearby. 
			 
			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 often took over. “The 
			Warmth of the Sun” was a song of despair and consolation that Wilson 
			alleged — to some skepticism — 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 peek at Brian’s 
			crippling insecurities. 
			 
			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, with whom he had 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. 
			
			
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