Popular music and record production Sometimes ranked among the finest recordings in the history of popular music, Producer
Steve Levine compared the track's impact on sound design to that of the Beach Boys' "
Good Vibrations" (1966),
10cc's "
I'm Not in Love", and
Queen's "
Bohemian Rhapsody" (both 1975). Many subsequent popular songs have replicated or recreated the drum phrase, considered to be one of the most recognizable in popular music. Producer
Rick Nowels, who lifted the drum beat for a
Lana Del Rey song, said, "'Be My Baby,' for me, is Ground Zero for the modern pop era. it was a line in the sand that left everything that came before in the rear view mirror. It was the beginning of pop music being a serious American art form."
NME ranked it number 2 on its 2012 list of the "100 Best Songs of the 1960s" and number 9 on its 2014 list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". In 2016,
Paste ranked the song at number 11 on its list "The 100 Best Songs of the 1960s". In 2024,
Rolling Stone ranked the song at number 22 on its list "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". In 2006, the
Library of Congress inducted the Ronettes' recording into the
National Recording Registry. In 2016, Barbara Cane, vice president and general manager of writer-publisher relations for the songwriters' agency BMI, estimated that the song had been played in 3.9 million feature presentations on radio and television since 1963, "the equivalent of 17 years back to back." Copies of the record were located in his car, living room jukebox, and virtually everywhere else inside his home. Wilson conceived the Beach Boys' 1964 hit "
Don't Worry Baby" as an
answer song. It was originally submitted for the Ronettes' consideration before being rejected by Spector, who had a policy against producing records lacking his own writing credit. Spector was aware of Wilson's obsession and joked that he would have enjoyed "a nickel for every
joint" Wilson had smoked while studying "Be My Baby". Wilson's daughter
Carnie, born in 1968, stated that "every day" of her childhood began with her awaking to a playback of the record. Music historian Luis Sanchez characterizes the accumulation of stories such as these as effectively depicting "an image of wretchedness: Brian locked in the bedroom ... listening to 'Be My Baby' over and over at aggressive volumes, for hours ...". The Beach Boys' 1977 song "
Mona", written by Wilson, ends with the lines "Listen to 'Be My Baby' / I know you're going to love Phil Spector". He told
The New York Times in 2013 that he had listened to the song at least one thousand times. Beach Boy
Bruce Johnston gave a higher estimate: "Brian must have played 'Be My Baby' ten million times. He never seemed to get tired of it." ==Later versions==