1961–1963: Formation of the Beach Boys and early production work The three Wilson brothers, Love, and Jardine debuted their first music group together, called "the Pendletones", in the autumn of 1961. At Dennis's suggestion, Brian and Love co-wrote the group's first song, "
Surfin". Murry became their manager. Produced by Hite and Dorinda Morgan on
Candix Records, "Surfin became a hit in Los Angeles and reached 75 on the national
Billboard sales charts while the group's name was changed by Candix Records to
the Beach Boys. Their major live debut was at the
Ritchie Valens Memorial Dance on New Year's Eve, 1961. Days earlier, Wilson had received an electric bass from his father and quickly learned to play, prompting Jardine to switch to rhythm guitar. When Candix Records faced financial difficulties and sold the Beach Boys' master recordings to another label, Murry ended their contract. As "Surfin faded from the charts, Wilson collaborated with local musician
Gary Usher to produce demo recordings for new tracks, including "
409" and "
Surfin' Safari". Capitol Records were persuaded to release the demos as a single, achieving a double-sided national hit. In 1962, Wilson and the Beach Boys signed a seven-year contract with Capitol Records under producer
Nick Venet. During sessions for their debut album, ''
Surfin' Safari'', Wilson negotiated with Capitol to record the band outside the label's
basement studios, which he deemed ill-suited for his group. At Wilson's insistence, Capitol permitted the Beach Boys to fund their own external sessions while retaining all rights to the recordings. He also secured production control over the album, though he was not credited for this role in the
liner notes. Wilson had sought to emulate producer
Phil Spector's career path, later reflecting, "I've always felt I was a behind-the-scenes man, rather than an entertainer." Collaborating with songwriter
Gary Usher, he composed numerous songs patterned after the Teddy Bears' style and produced records for local talent, though without commercial breakthrough. His first uncredited production outside the Beach Boys was Rachel and the Revolvers' "The Revo-Lution", co-written with Usher and released by
Dot Records in September. Interference from Wilson's father eventually led to the dissolution of his partnership with Usher. By mid-1962, Wilson was writing with disc jockey
Roger Christian, whom he met via Murry or Usher, and with guitarist
Bob Norberg, who later became his roommate. In October 1962, Safari Records—a short-lived label founded by Murry—released the single "
The Surfer Moon" by
Bob & Sheri, the first record to credit Brian as producer. The label's only other release was Bob & Sheri's "Humpty Dumpty", with both songs written by Wilson. (middle) and
Dennis (bottom) at a Beach Boys photoshoot, early 1963 From January to March 1963, Wilson produced the Beach Boys' second album, ''
Surfin' U.S.A.'', limiting his public appearances with the group to television gigs and local shows to prioritize studio work.
David Marks substituted for him on vocals during other performances. In March, Capitol released "
Surfin' U.S.A.", the Beach Boys' first top-ten single. The accompanying album peaked at number two on the
Billboard charts by July, cementing the Beach Boys as a major commercial act. Against Venet's wishes, Wilson collaborated with artists outside Capitol, including the
Liberty Records duo
Jan and Dean. Wilson co-wrote "
Surf City" with
Jan Berry, which topped U.S. charts in July 1963, his first composition to do so. The song's success revitalized Jan and Dean's faltering career. Capitol and Wilson's father disapproved of the collaboration; Murry demanded his son cease working with the duo, though they continued to appear on each other's recordings. Around this time, Wilson began producing
the Rovell Sisters, a
girl group consisting of sisters
Marilyn Rovell and Diane Rovell and their cousin Ginger Blake, whom he met at a Beach Boys concert the previous August. Wilson pitched the group to Capitol as "the Honeys", a female counterpart to the Beach Boys. The company released several Honeys records as singles, though they sold poorly. He grew close to the Rovell family and resided primarily at their home through 1963 and 1964. The group's fourth single "
He's a Doll", released in April 1964, exemplified his attempts to become an entrepreneurial producer like Spector. Wilson was first officially credited as the Beach Boys' producer on their album
Surfer Girl, recorded in June and July 1963 and released that September. This LP reached number seven on the national charts, with similarly successful singles. He also produced the car-themed album
Little Deuce Coupe, released just three weeks after
Surfer Girl. Still resistant to touring, Jardine was his live substitute. By late 1963, Marks' departure necessitated Wilson's return to the touring lineup. By the end of the year, Wilson had written, arranged, or produced 42 songs for other acts.
1964–1965: International success and withdrawal from touring Throughout 1964, Wilson toured internationally with the Beach Boys while writing and producing their albums
Shut Down Volume 2 (March),
All Summer Long (June), and ''
The Beach Boys' Christmas Album'' (November). Following a particularly stressful Australasian tour in early 1964, the group dismissed Murry as their manager. Murry maintained occasional contact with Wilson, offering unsolicited advice on the group's business decisions. In February,
Beatlemania swept the U.S., a development that deeply concerned Wilson, who felt the Beach Boys' supremacy had been threatened by the
British Invasion. Reflecting in 1966, he said, "
The Beatles invasion shook me up a lot. [...] So we stepped on the gas a little bit." The Beach Boys' May 1964 single "
I Get Around", their first U.S. number-one hit, is identified by scholar James Perone as representing both a successful response to the British Invasion and the beginning of an unofficial rivalry between Wilson and the Beatles, principally
Paul McCartney. The B-side, "
Don't Worry Baby", was cited by Wilson in a 1970 interview as "Probably the best record we've done". By late 1964, Wilson had faced mounting psychological strain from career pressures. He began distancing himself from the Beach Boys' surf-themed material, which had ceased following the
All Summer Long track "
Don't Back Down". During the group's first major European tour, a reporter asked how he had felt about originating the surfing sound, to which he responded by saying he had aimed to "produce a sound that teens dig, and that can be applied to any theme." Exhausted by his self-described "Mr Everything" role, he later expressed feeling mentally drained and unable to rest. Adding to his concerns were the group's "business operations" and the quality of their records, which he believed suffered from this arrangement. " with the Beach Boys at
NBC TV studio, December 18, 1964 On December 18, 1964, Wilson was to accompany his bandmates for a two-week U.S. tour, but during a flight from Los Angeles to Houston, he experienced a breakdown, sobbing uncontrollably due to stress over his recent marriage to Marilyn Rovell. Jardine recalled, "None of us had ever witnessed something like that." Wilson played the show in Houston later that day, but was replaced by session musician
Glen Campbell for the rest of the tour. Wilson, speaking in 1966, described it as "the first of a series of three breakdowns". When the group resumed recording their next album in January 1965, Wilson declared that he would be withdrawing from future tours. Wilson attributed his decision partly to a "fucked up" jealousy of Spector and the Beatles. Wilson rejoined the live group for one-off occasions throughout 1965. Campbell substituted for him at some shows until February 1965, after which Wilson produced Campbell's solo single, "
Guess I'm Dumb", as a gesture of appreciation.
Columbia Records staff producer
Bruce Johnston was subsequently hired as Wilson's permanent touring replacement.
1965–1966: Artistic growth and Pet Sounds With his bandmates frequently touring, Wilson grew socially distant from the Beach Boys. By late 1964, he had relocated to an apartment at 7235
Hollywood Boulevard, where he had begun cultivating a new social circle through music industry connections. Biographer
Steven Gaines writes that this period marked Wilson's first independence from familial oversight, allowing friendships without "parental interference". Wilson befriended talent agent
Loren Schwartz, whom he met at a Hollywood studio and was introduced to literature on philosophy and world religions, sparking his interest in mystical topics. His first song composed under the influence of marijuana was "
Please Let Me Wonder" (1965). Throughout 1965, Wilson's musical ambitions progressed significantly with the albums
The Beach Boys Today! (March) and
Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!) (June). Weeks after relocating to an apartment on
West Hollywood's Gardner Street with his wife early in the year, Wilson took
LSD for the first time under Schwartz's supervision. Wilson later said of the experience, "it just tore my head off. [...] You just come to grips with what you are, what you can do [and] can't do, and learn to face it." During the experience, he composed portions of the Beach Boys' single "
California Girls". He later described the session for the song's backing track, held on April 6, as his "favorite", and the opening orchestral section as "the greatest piece of music that I've ever written". However, he attributed persistent
paranoia later that year to his LSD use. After unsuccessful efforts to distance Wilson from Schwartz, Marilyn temporarily separated from him. She later reflected on the strain caused by his drug-associated social circle, stating, "He was not the same Brian... These people were very hurtful, and I tried to get that through to Brian." The couple soon reconciled, and, in late 1965, moved into a newly purchased home at 1448 Laurel Way in
Beverly Hills. Wilson recalled that after relocating to his Beverly Hills home, he experienced an unexpected surge of creativity, working for hours to develop new musical ideas. He acknowledged heavy drug use, stating, "I was taking [...] a lot of pills, and it fouled me up for a while. It got me really introspective". Over five months, he planned an album that would elevate his music to "a spiritual level". '', early 1966 In December 1965, Wilson enlisted jingle writer
Tony Asher as his lyricist for the Beach Boys' next album,
Pet Sounds (May 1966). He produced most of the album between January and April 1966 across multiple
Hollywood studios, mainly employing his bandmates for singing vocal parts and session musicians for the backing tracks. Reflecting on the album, Wilson highlighted the instrumental "
Let's Go Away for Awhile" as his "most satisfying piece of music" at the time and "
I Just Wasn't Made for These Times" as a partially autobiographical song "about a guy who was crying because he thought he was too advanced". In a 1995 interview, he called "
Caroline, No" "probably the best [song] I've ever written". The album's lead single, "Caroline, No", released in March 1966, became Wilson's first solo credit, sparking speculation about his potential departure from the Beach Boys. Wilson later said, "I explained to [the group], 'It's OK. It is only a temporary rift [...] I wanted to step out a little bit. The single peaked at number 32, while
Pet Sounds reached number 10. Wilson was "mortified" that his artistic growth had failed to translate into a number-one album. Marilyn stated, "When it wasn't received by the public the way he thought it would be received, it made him hold back. ... but he didn't stop. He couldn't stop. He needed to create more." Beginning with
Smiley Smile (September 1967), the band shifted recording operations to Wilson's studio, where they worked intermittently until 1972. The album marked the first time production was credited to the group collectively instead of Wilson alone. Producer
Terry Melcher attributed this change to Wilson's reluctance to risk individual scrutiny, saying he no longer wanted to "put his stamp on records". In August 1967, Wilson briefly rejoined the band for two live performances in Honolulu, recorded for an unfinished live album titled ''
Lei'd in Hawaii''. (pictured 1969). During sessions for
Wild Honey (December 1967), Wilson encouraged his brother Carl to contribute more to the record-making process. He later described
Friends as his second "solo album" (after
Pet Sounds) According to Mike Love, Wilson had "lost interest in the mechanical aspect" of recording, deferring technical work to Carl. Early in 1969, the Beach Boys commenced recording
Sunflower (August 1970). Wilson contributed numerous songs, though most were excluded from the final track selection. He co-wrote and produced the single "
Break Away" with his father in early 1969, after which he largely withdrew from studio work until August. The group faced difficulties securing a new record deal, attributed by Gaines to Wilson's diminished standing in the industry. In May 1969, Wilson disclosed the band's near-bankruptcy to reporters, which derailed negotiations with
Deutsche Grammophon and nearly jeopardized their upcoming European tour. That July, he opened a short-lived health food store, the
Radiant Radish, with cousin Steve Korthof and associate Arny Geller. In August, the Beach Boys' publishing company,
Sea of Tunes, sold their song catalog to Irving Almo Music for $700,000 ($ in ). Wilson signed the consent form under pressure from his father. Marilyn later stated that the sale emotionally devastated him: "It killed him.
Killed him. I don't think he talked for days. [...] Brian took it as Murry not believing in him anymore." During this period, Wilson reportedly engaged in self-destructive behavior, including an attempt to drive off a cliff and a demand to be buried in a backyard grave he had dug. He channeled his despondence into writing "
Til I Die", later calling the song a summation of "everything I had to say at the time". Later in 1969, Wilson produced poet
Stephen Kalinich's spoken-word album
A World of Peace Must Come. That November, the Beach Boys signed to
Reprise Records, a subsidiary of
Warner Bros., with contractual terms requiring Wilson's active participation in their albums. In March 1970, Wilson briefly substituted for Mike Love on tour. In April, he attempted to produce a
country and western album for co-manager Fred Vail, later known as
Cows in the Pasture.
advertisement for Surf's Up'' Wilson's disappointment over the poor commercial reception of
Sunflower led him to reduce his contributions to subsequent Beach Boys recordings. Bruce Johnston described his involvement in the ''
Surf's Up sessions (August 1971) as that of "a visitor". In November 1970, Wilson performed with the band at the Whisky a Go Go for one-and-a-half dates. Intense discomfort forced him to leave mid-performance during the second show. Following this experience, he told Melody Maker'' that although he was "quite happy living at home", he felt less creative and less engaged with the band. He described himself as "a kind of drop-out". In September 1971, Wilson told a reporter he had recently returned to arranging rather than writing. In December, at a
Long Beach concert, manager
Jack Rieley persuaded Wilson to perform with the Beach Boys, though his appearance lasted only minutes. From late 1971 to early 1972, Wilson and musician David Sandler collaborated on
Spring, the first album by Marilyn Wilson and Diane Rovell's new group,
American Spring. As with much of his work in this period, the extent of his contributions varied, but it was his most involved production effort since
Friends in 1968. During the recording of
Carl and the Passions (April 1972), Wilson rarely left his bedroom and his unavailability was such that his image had to be superimposed into the group portrait included in the record sleeve. During the summer of 1972, Wilson joined his bandmates when they temporarily relocated to Holland after persistent persuasion. Residing in a Dutch house known as "Flowers" and repeatedly listening to
Randy Newman's album
Sail Away, he was inspired to write a fairy tale,
Mount Vernon and Fairway, drawing on memories of listening to the radio at Mike Love's family home in his youth. The group declined to include the fairy tale on their next album,
Holland (January 1973), and instead released it as a bonus EP packaged with the album. That April, Wilson briefly joined his bandmates onstage during an encore at the
Hollywood Palladium.
Recluse period After his father's death in June 1973, Wilson secluded himself in the chauffeur's quarters of his home, where he spent his time sleeping, abusing drugs and alcohol, overeating, and exhibiting
self-destructive behavior. He rarely ventured outside wearing anything but
pajamas and later said that his father's death "had a lot to do with my retreating". Wilson's family were eventually forced to take control of his financial affairs due to his irresponsible drug expenditures. This led Wilson to occasionally wander the city, begging for rides, drugs, and alcohol. According to Wilson, from 1974 to 1975, his output was confined to minimal, fragmentary recordings, due to a diminished capacity for sustained concentration. He elaborated that he had been preoccupied with snorting cocaine, reading magazines such as
Playboy and
Penthouse, and "hanging out with Danny Hutton", whose
Laurel Canyon house had become the center of Wilson's social life. Although increasingly reclusive during the day, Wilson spent many nights at Hutton's house fraternizing with colleagues such as
Alice Cooper and
Iggy Pop. Other visitors of Hutton's home included
Harry Nilsson,
John Lennon,
Ringo Starr, and
Keith Moon. On several occasions, Marilyn Wilson sent her friends to climb Hutton's fence and retrieve her husband. In 1974, Wilson interrupted a set by jazz musician
Larry Coryell at
The Troubadour by leaping on stage and singing "
Be-Bop-a-Lula" while wearing slippers and a bathrobe. Many reported anecdotes involving Wilson in the early 1970s, though frequently of questionable veracity, attained a legendary status. Recalling Wilson's wellbeing at the time,
John Sebastian said, "It wasn't all grimness."
Jeff Foskett, then a Beach Boys fan who had visited Wilson's home unannounced, similarly commented that Wilson had responded cordially to the visit and had belied the popular myths surrounding him. Wilson also participated in some recording sessions for Nilsson's "
Salmon Falls" and Keith Moon's solo album,
Two Sides of the Moon. The Beach Boys' greatest hits compilation
Endless Summer was a surprise success, becoming the band's second number-one U.S. album in October 1974. To take advantage of their sudden resurgence in popularity, Wilson agreed to join his bandmates in Colorado for the recording of a new album at
James William Guercio's
Caribou Ranch studio. The group completed a few tracks, including "
Child of Winter (Christmas Song)", but ultimately abandoned the project. Released as a single at the end of December 1974, "Child of Winter" was their first record that displayed the credit "Produced by Brian Wilson" since 1966. Early in 1975, while still under contract with Warner Bros., Wilson signed a short-lived sideline production deal with Bruce Johnston and Terry Melcher's Equinox Records. Together, they founded the loose-knit supergroup known as
California Music, which also involved Gary Usher,
Curt Boettcher, and other Los Angeles musicians. Along with his guest appearances on
Johnny Rivers's rendition of "
Help Me, Rhonda" and
Jackie DeShannon's "
Boat to Sail", Wilson's production of California Music's single "
Why Do Fools Fall in Love" represents his only "serious" work throughout this period.
1975–1982: First Landy intervention, Love You, and regression Wilson's consumption of food, cigarettes, alcohol, and other drugs, including heroin, increased during this period, and his weight reached . In 1975, to address his declining health, band manager Stephen Love appointed his brother
Stan, a professional basketball player, as Wilson's bodyguard, trainer, and caretaker. A family intervention involving the band's lawyers and accountants was arranged to remind Wilson of his contractual obligation to write and produce for the Beach Boys. According to Stan, Wilson's growing resentment had led him to frequently announce his withdrawal from the Beach Boys, but his bandmates persisted. Although Stan improved Wilson's health over several months, he soon returned to his
NBA commitments. Wilson entered psychologist
Eugene Landy's intensive 24-hour therapy program in October. '' in early 1976 Under Landy's care, Wilson stabilized and became more socially engaged, renewing his productivity. In 1976, the slogan "
Brian's Back!" was widely used to promote the Beach Boys' concert tours and the July release of
15 Big Ones, the first album since
Pet Sounds to list Wilson as the sole producer. Recording sessions were tense, as his bandmates opposed his proposal for a covers album and questioned his readiness to lead studio proceedings. The album ultimately featured a mix of covers and original material. Beginning on July 2, 1976, Wilson resumed regular performances with the band for the first time since 1964, singing and alternating between bass guitar and piano. In August, he toured outside California for the first time since 1970.
NBC premiered a
Lorne Michaels–produced television special, titled
The Beach Boys, featuring recent concert footage, interviews, and a comedy sketch with Wilson alongside ''
NBC's Saturday Night'' cast members
Dan Aykroyd and
John Belushi. Despite the promotional success of "Brian's Back!", the campaign was controversial. Wilson's remarks in interviews implied he had not fully recovered from his addictions; on one occasion, he remarked that he "felt like a prisoner". He was credited as the album's "executive producer". Around this time, Wilson attempted to produce an album for Pamplin that would have featured the Honeys as backing vocalists. After a disastrous Australian tour in 1978, Wilson regressed and began secretly acquiring cocaine and
barbiturates. In mid-1978, following an overdose, he hitchhiked in
West Hollywood, eventually arriving at a gay bar where he played piano for drinks. A bar patron then drove him to Mexico, after which he hitchhiked to San Diego. Days later, police found him in
Balboa Park without shoes, money, or a wallet, and he was taken to
Alvarado Hospital to detox from alcohol poisoning. Wilson rejoined his bandmates for the recording of
L.A. (Light Album) (March 1979), but after producing demos and early recordings, he asked that Bruce Johnston take over the project. Wilson left his mansion in Beverly Hills for a home on
Sunset Boulevard, where his alcoholism worsened. After attacking his doctor, he was institutionalized at Brotzman Memorial Hospital—initially admitted in November 1978 for three months, discharged for one month, then readmitted. In January 1979, while hospitalized, his caregivers Stan Love and Rocky Pamplin were dismissed. Wilson was released in March. He rented a house in
Santa Monica and was cared for by a psychiatric nursing team. Later, he purchased a home in
Pacific Palisades. Although his bandmates urged him to produce their next album, ''
Keepin' the Summer Alive'' (March 1980), he was unable or unwilling to do so. Wilson continued his overeating and drug habits and, to motivate him in his musical endeavors, Dennis occasionally provided him with
McDonald's hamburgers and cocaine.
Jon Stebbins's biography of Dennis describes clandestine recording sessions between the brothers, which were hidden due to efforts by "certain members of the Beach Boys clan" to keep them apart. Discovering their collaboration often led to a halt in the proceedings. Bootlegged tapes of the brothers' collaborations—produced in 1980 and 1981 at the
Venice Beach home studio of musicologist and film executive Garby Leon—later became known among fans as the "
cocaine sessions" or "hamburger sessions". In early 1981, Pamplin and Stan Love were convicted of assaulting Dennis after learning he had been providing Wilson with drugs. In early 1982, Wilson signed a trust document granting Carl control of his finances and voting power in the band's corporate structure, and he was involuntarily admitted for a three-day stay at
St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica. By the end of the year, his weight exceeded .
1982–1991: Second Landy intervention and Brian Wilson In 1982, after Wilson overdosed on alcohol, cocaine, and other drugs, his family and management staged an elaborate ruse to persuade him to reenter Landy's program. On November 5, the group falsely informed Wilson that he was destitute and no longer a Beach Boy, insisting he reenlist Landy as his caretaker to continue receiving his touring income. Landy had agreed to resume treatment only if granted complete control over Wilson's affairs and promised rehabilitation within two years. Wilson acquiesced and was taken to
Hawaii, where he was isolated from friends and family and placed on a strict diet and health regimen. Combined with counseling sessions that retaught him basic social etiquette, the treatment restored his physical health. By March 1983, he had returned to Los Angeles and was moved, under Landy's direction, to a
Malibu home where he lived with several of Landy's aides and was cut off from many of his own friends and family. Between 1983 and 1986, Landy charged approximately $430,000 annually ($ in ). When he requested additional funds, Carl Wilson was obliged to allocate a quarter of Brian's publishing royalties. In January 1987, he accepted a solo contract from
Sire Records president
Seymour Stein, who mandated co-production by multi-instrumentalist
Andy Paley to keep Wilson focused. In return, Landy was allowed to serve as executive producer. Other producers, including
Russ Titelman and
Lenny Waronker, soon joined the project, and conflicts with Landy emerged. Released in July 1988,
Brian Wilson received favorable reviews and moderate sales, peaking at number 52 in the U.S. The album featured "
Rio Grande", an eight-minute
Western suite reminiscent of songs from
Smile. Its release was largely overshadowed by the controversy surrounding Landy and the success of the Beach Boys' "
Kokomo", their first number-one hit since "Good Vibrations" and the first without Wilson's involvement. In 1989, Wilson and Landy formed the company Brains and Genius. By then, Landy was no longer legally recognized as Wilson's therapist and had surrendered his California
psychology license. Together, they worked on Wilson's second solo album,
Sweet Insanity, with Landy co-writing nearly all the material. Sire rejected the album due to Landy's lyrics and the inclusion of Wilson's rap song "
Smart Girls". In May 1989, Wilson recorded "Daddy's Little Girl" for the film ''
She's Out of Control'', and in June, he was among the featured guests on the charity single "The Spirit of the Forest". By 1990, he was estranged from the Beach Boys, with his bandmates scheduling recording sessions without him and twice rejecting his offers to produce an album, according to Brother Records president Elliot Lott. After a conservatorship suit filed by his family in May 1991, Wilson and Landy's partnership was dissolved in December, followed by a
restraining order.
1992–2005: Career resurgence, first solo tours, and Brian Wilson Presents Smile Throughout the 1990s, Wilson was embroiled in numerous lawsuits. In August 1989, he had filed a $100 million suit against Irving Music to reclaim song publishing rights sold by his father decades earlier. He did not regain the rights, but secured a $10 million ($ in ) out-of-court settlement in April 1992. The next month, Wilson was
sued by Mike Love over long-neglected royalties and songwriting credits. In December 1994, a jury ruled in favor of Love, awarding him $5 million ($ in ) and a share of future royalties from Wilson. In September 1995, Wilson sued his former conservator, Jerome Billet, seeking $10 million for alleged failures in supervising the lawyers handling the Irving Music and Love lawsuits. According to his second wife
Melinda Ledbetter, when they married in 1995, Wilson was entangled in nine separate lawsuits, many unresolved until the early 2000s. Wilson's productivity had increased significantly after his disassociation from Landy. He and Andy Paley composed and recorded a
substantial body of material intended for a proposed Beach Boys album throughout the early to mid-1990s. Concurrently, Wilson collaborated with musician
Don Was on the documentary ''
Brian Wilson: I Just Wasn't Made for These Times (1995), whose soundtrack, comprising rerecorded Beach Boys songs, was released in August as his second solo album. In 1993, Wilson had agreed to record an album of songs by Van Dyke Parks, which was credited to the duo and released as Orange Crate Art in October 1995. In the late 1990s, Wilson and Tony Asher rekindled their writing partnership, and one of their songs, "Everything I Need", appeared on The Wilsons'' (1997), a project by his daughters Carnie and Wendy that included select contributions from Wilson. Although some recordings with the Beach Boys were completed, the Wilson–Paley project was eventually abandoned. Instead, Wilson co-produced the band's 1996 album
Stars and Stripes Vol. 1 with
Joe Thomas, owner of
River North Records. At Ledbetter's behest, He toured the U.S. again in October. Asked if he still considered himself a Beach Boy during this period, Wilson responded, "No. Maybe a little bit." Early in 2000, Wilson released his first live album,
Live at the Roxy Theatre. Later that year, he embarked on U.S. tour dates featuring the first full live performances of
Pet Sounds, with Wilson backed by a 55-piece orchestra. Van Dyke Parks was commissioned to write an
overture arrangement of Wilson's songs. Although critics praised the tour, it was poorly attended and resulted in hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses. In March 2001, Wilson attended a
tribute show held in his honor at
Radio City Music Hall in New York, where he performed "Heroes and Villains" publicly for the first time in decades. The
Pet Sounds tour was followed by one in Europe in 2002, with a sold-out four-night residency at the
Royal Festival Hall in London. Recordings from these concerts were issued as the live album
Brian Wilson Presents Pet Sounds Live (June 2002). Over the next year, Wilson continued sporadic recording sessions for his fourth solo album, ''
Gettin' In over My Head''. Released in June 2004, the record featured guest appearances from Parks, Paul McCartney,
Eric Clapton, and
Elton John. Some of the songs were leftovers from Wilson's collaborations with Paley and Thomas. '' at the
Royal Festival Hall in London on February 21, 2004 To the surprise of his associates, Wilson agreed to follow the
Pet Sounds tours with concert dates featuring songs from the unfinished
Smile album. Sahanaja assisted with sequencing and Parks contributed additional lyrics.
Brian Wilson Presents Smile (
BWPS) premiered at the Royal Festival Hall in February 2004 and its positive reception led to a subsequent studio album adaptation. Released in September,
BWPS debuted at number 13 on the
Billboard 200, the highest chart position for any album by the Beach Boys or Wilson since 1976's
15 Big Ones and the highest ever debut for a Beach Boys-related album. It was later certified platinum. In support of
BWPS, Wilson embarked on a tour covering the U.S., Europe, and Japan. Sahanaja told
Australian Musician, "In six years of touring this is the happiest we've ever seen Brian". In July 2005, Wilson performed at the
Live 8 in Berlin, an event watched by about three million viewers on television. In September, he organized a charity drive for
Hurricane Katrina victims, raising over $250,000. In November, Mike Love filed a lawsuit alleging that Wilson misappropriated his songs, likeness, the Beach Boys trademark, and the
Smile album in connection with
BWPS. The suit was dismissed.
2005–2025: Continued activity and final years In October 2005,
Arista Records released Wilson's album
What I Really Want for Christmas, which consisted of renditions of Christmas standards plus two new originals by Wilson. To celebrate the 40th anniversary of
Pet Sounds, he toured the album briefly in November 2006 with Al Jardine. In 2007, the
Southbank Centre in London commissioned Wilson to create a new
song cycle in the style of
Smile. Collaborating with Scott Bennett, Wilson reconfigured a collection of recently written songs into
That Lucky Old Sun, a semi-autobiographical conceptual piece about California. A studio-recorded version of the work was released as his seventh solo album in September 2008 and received generally favorable reviews. In 2009, Wilson was approached by
Walt Disney Records to record a Disney songs album, agreeing only if he could also record an album of
George Gershwin songs. The Gershwin project,
Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin, was released in August 2010, reaching number 26 on the
Billboard 200 and topping its Jazz Albums chart. Wilson then toured, performing the album in its entirety. In October 2011, he released
In the Key of Disney, which peaked at number 83 in the U.S. This release was soon overshadowed by
The Smile Sessions, issued one week later. In mid-2011, Wilson reunited with Mike Love, Al Jardine, David Marks, and Bruce Johnston to re-record "
Do It Again" in secret for a potential 50th anniversary album. Rumors soon circulated in the music press about a world tour by the group. In a September report, Wilson said he was not participating in the tour with his bandmates: "I don't really like working with the guys, but it all depends on how we feel and how much money's involved. Money's not the only reason I made records, but it does hold a place in our lives." Ultimately, Wilson agreed to the tour, lasting until September 2012, and to record the album ''
That's Why God Made the Radio'', released in June 2012. By that time, Wilson had renewed his creative partnership with Joe Thomas. Although Wilson was listed as the album's producer, Thomas was credited with "recording" and Love with "executive producer". In June 2013, Wilson's website announced that he was recording and self-producing new material with Don Was, Al Jardine, David Marks,
Blondie Chaplin, and
Jeff Beck. It stated that the material might be split into three albums: one of new pop songs, another of mostly instrumental tracks with Beck, and another of interwoven tracks dubbed "the suite" which initially began form as the closing four tracks of ''That's Why God Made the Radio''. In January 2014, Wilson declared in an interview that the Beck collaborations would not be released. In September 2014, Wilson attended the premiere of
Bill Pohlad's biopic
Love & Mercy at the
Toronto International Film Festival. He had contributed "
One Kind of Love" to the film, which later received a
Golden Globe nomination for
Best Original Song. In October,
BBC released a re-recorded version of "
God Only Knows" —featuring Wilson,
Brian May,
Elton John,
Jake Bugg,
Stevie Wonder,
Lorde, and others—to commemorate the launch of
BBC Music. A week later, he was featured as a guest vocalist on
Emile Haynie's single "
Falling Apart". His cover of Paul McCartney's "
Wanderlust" was included on the tribute album
The Art of McCartney in November. , 2016 Released in April 2015,
No Pier Pressure marked another collaboration between Wilson and Joe Thomas, featuring guest appearances from Jardine, Marks, Chaplin, and others. The album reached the U.S. top 30, but critical reaction was mixed due to its adult contemporary arrangements and extensive use of
autotune. Later that year, Sahanaja was asked if Wilson was reaching the end of his career as a performing artist, responding, "I gotta be honest. Each of the past five years I thought to myself, 'Well, this is probably going to be it. In March 2016, Wilson and Al Jardine began the
Pet Sounds 50th Anniversary World Tour, billed as his final performances of the album. In a
Rolling Stone interview later that year, he responded to a retirement question by stating he would rather continue touring than sit idle. in New Jersey, 2019 In 2019, Wilson embarked on a co-headlining tour with
the Zombies, performing selections from
Friends and ''Surf's Up''. Around this time, he had had two back surgeries that left him reliant on a
walker. Later in the year, he postponed some concert dates due to worsening mental health. The next month, his social media declared that he had recovered and would resume touring. Pausing his tours due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, he again resumed touring in August 2021. In November, two releases followed:
At My Piano, consisting of new instrumental piano recordings of his songs, and the soundtrack to
Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road, which includes both new and previously unreleased recordings. At the end of 2021, he sold his publishing rights to
Universal Music Publishing Group for $50 million. He was paid almost $32 million for his songwriter share plus $19 million for his reversion rights (his ability to reclaim his song rights within a time period after signing them away under the
Copyright Act of 1976). On July 26, 2022, Wilson played his final concert, as part of a joint tour with
Chicago at the Pine Knob Music Theatre in Clarkston, Michigan, where he was reported to have "sat rigid and expressionless" throughout the performance. Days later, he cancelled his remaining tour dates for that year, with his management citing "unforeseen health reasons". During a January 2023 appearance on a Beach Boys fan
podcast, Wilson's daughter Carnie reported that her father was "probably not going to tour anymore, which is heartbreaking". In January 2024, Melinda Ledbetter died at their home. The following month, it was announced that Wilson had
dementia and was placed under another conservatorship, which began in May 2024. He had completed two tracks as part of a forthcoming solo album produced by Joe Thomas and
Jonathan Wilson (no relation) before the project was abandoned following Thomas' death that April. == Death, tributes, and posthumous releases ==