Precursors (1958–1961) {{quote box|align=|width=25%|quote= We were working on the transparency of music; that was the Teddy Bears sound: you had a lot of air moving around, notes being played in the air but not directly into the mikes. Then, when we sent it all into the chamber, this air effect is what was heard—all the notes jumbled and fuzzy. This is what we recorded—not the notes. The chamber. In May 1958, Phil Spector, with schoolmates Marshall Leib, Harvey Goldstein, and Annette Kleinbard (later Carol Connors), recorded his songs "
Don't You Worry My Little Pet" and "
To Know Him Is to Love Him" at Gold Star. The group, subsequently named
the Teddy Bears, released "To Know Him Is to Love Him" as a single, which topped the U.S. charts by the end of 1958. Due to Gold Star's unavailability, sessions for their first album, recorded in March 1959, occurred at Master Sound Recorders, where Spector and Leib continued experimenting with room microphone capture and, for the first time, were joined by session musicians: drummer
Earl Palmer and bassist
Red Callender. While recording the Teddy Bears album, Spector encountered
Lester Sill, a prominent industry figure who managed
the Coasters and co-owned multiple record labels. Sill maintained publishing partnerships with the independent producers Jerry Lieber and Mike Stoller, who had achieved success through their series of Latin-influenced R&B hits with the Coasters and
the Drifters, and for their songs for Elvis Presley films. After signing Spector to a three-year contract, Sill arranged for him to observe his collaborator
Lee Hazlewood’s sessions with
Duane Eddy at Ramco Audio Recorders in Phoenix. Sill, who later recalled that Spector had "absorbed everything we did like a sponge", subsequently granted him autonomy to produce his own recordings. At Sill's recommendation, he secured an apprenticeship with Leiber and Stoller, relocating to New York City in mid-1960 to contribute as a session guitarist and associate songwriter. In October, Leiber delegated production duties for
Ray Peterson's single "
Corrina, Corrina" to Spector, whose recording session at
Bell Sound Studios involved his first use of violins. Concurrently, Spector pursued songwriting collaborations with Leiber before producing tracks for additional artists and concluding his apprenticeship. In 1961, he sought material from
Don Kirshner's
Aldon Music, a major publishing company whose early signings included the husband-wife teams of Gerry Goffin and Carole King alongside
Barry Mann and
Cynthia Weil. He acquired Goffin and King's "
Every Breath I Take", which he produced for
Gene Pitney at Bell Sound in June or July. Another Aldon-sourced song, "
I Love How You Love Me", written by Mann and Larry Kolberg, was produced by Spector for
the Paris Sisters at Gold Star in July or August with the goal of surpassing his previous recordings. Released in late 1961, it reached number 5 on the
Billboard charts.
Nitzsche, Levine, and the Wrecking Crew (1962–1966) Following the dissolution of Hazlewood's partnership with Sill, Sill proposed a joint venture with Spector to establish Philles Records, enabling him with full artistic control and financial backing. By June 1962, he had recruited Jack Nitzsche, then an arranger for Hazlewood who had worked on the Paris Sisters' album, to serve as an arranger for Philles. Author David Howard writes that "Spector's penchant for grandiose sounds and excessive personnel" began in earnest with "
He's a Rebel", written by Pitney and arranged by Nitzsche. The song was recorded at Gold Star on July 13 and was Larry Levine's first session under Spector. Spector enlisted
the Blossoms alongside
Bobby Sheen to record the song as
the Crystals and recruited a rhythm section comprising eight players, double the number typically used on a rock 'n' roll session. {{listen Impressed with the results at Gold Star, Spector returned on August 24 with an arrangement of "
Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah", a song from the 1946
Disney film
Song of the South. Levine again engineered, while the Blossoms and Sheen reteamed on vocals. This time, the personnel comprised twelve players, including three guitarists—two on acoustic, and
Billy Strange on electric—three bassists, two saxophonists, a drummer, and a percussionist. In November, "He's a Rebel" topped the
Billboard Hot 100, while "Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah"—the group now credited as "
Bob B. Soxx and the Blue Jeans"—reached the number eight position in early 1963. From then, his working approach remained largely unchanged, and Levine was cemented as his principal engineer until 1966. Following the Crystals' December 1962 single "
He's Sure the Boy I Love", written by Mann and Weil, Spector ceased drawing material from the Brill Building until 1964. By 1963, he had become the most successful rock producer in the United States, attaining an unprecedented streak of consecutive hits with five top 10 records and five more reaching the top 40. Additional players became regular participants at sessions while he evolved the Wall of Sound over a six-month period leading to "(Today I Met) The Boy I'm Going to Marry" in March 1963. Seeking additional songwriting talent, he collaborated with Trio Music associates Ellie Greenwich and Jeff Barry, yielding their first joint effort in early 1963 with "
Da Doo Ron Ron", which peaked at number three for the Crystals. All subsequent Philles label releases carried Greenwich–Barry co-writing credits until 1964. The follow-up to "Da Doo Ron Ron", "
Then He Kissed Me", was recorded in July and employed echo effects greater than on any prior Spector production. Levine recalled the particular echo effect used on the record was discovered from a technical mishap that was exploited purposely for subsequent recordings, "although I don't think we ever used more echo than on that record." Following his work with the Crystals, Spector produced
the Ronettes and selected "Be My Baby", recorded that same month, for their debut with Philles. The session was his first at Gold Star that employed a full string section; upon release, the song peaked at number two. Spector continued recording the Ronettes through 1964. Although his output had received greater industry attention, his commercial performance weakened amid shifting trends in popular music. "Baby I Love You", released in January 1964, was the last Philles single co-written by Greenwich and Barry until 1966, following a dispute from Spector over their song "
Chapel of Love". He subsequently partnered with the
Hill & Range writing duo
Vini Poncia and
Peter Andreoli, whose "
(The Best Part of) Breakin' Up" and "
Do I Love You?" he recorded as the Ronettes' next singles. "Do I Love You?" incorporated Motown-inspired horns, which Poncia described as Spector "trying to move out, not stay confined. [...] The man was growing up." After Spector reteamed with Mann and Weil for the Ronettes' "
Walking in the Rain", they composed "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" for the Righteous Brothers’ Philles debut. Recorded between August and November 1964, it exceeded Spector's prior work in length and musical ambition.
Gene Page arranged due to Nitzsche's unavailability. Writer
Tom Wolfe, in an article published by the
New York Herald Tribune in January 1965, described Spector as "an
electronic maestro [...] coming out with what is known throughout the industry as "'the Spector sound.'" By February, the single had become the longest song to top the
Billboard charts. Spector later regarded the record as his finest work with Philles. Levine likewise called it "the greatest record" that he contributed to and the point when Spector first became preoccupied with “the sound” itself, rather than "what the song said, what the song needed". {{quote box|align=right|width=25%|quote= Phil kept reaching to go beyond where he had been previously. I think he got to that point before the technology was able to keep up with him on "River Deep" [...] Throughout 1965, Spector dissolved many of his professional associations while most other Philles acts sustained a decline in popularity. He regarded "
River Deep, Mountain High" as a final attempt, following a sequence from “He's a Rebel” to “Be My Baby” to “You've Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” in which each release leaped in scale and ambition. He conceived the single for the
Ike and Tina Turner Revue as a summative statement of the Wall of Sound and returned to Barry and Greenwich to fulfill these aims. Recorded in February and March 1966 over five sessions, the production cost more than $22,000. The single charted briefly in the U.S., peaking at number 88, leading to his temporary withdrawal from the industry. Levine commented, "Phil was always looking to move on to the next plateau, until there just wasn't a plateau there to move on to." The Ike & Tine Turner sessions marked Spector's last in collaboration with Nitzsche.
Final Gold Star recordings (1969–1979) Having left Gold Star in 1967 to become chief engineer at
A&M Studios, Levine was instrumental to Spector resuming sessions there. In February 1969, Spector recorded the Ronettes' single "You Came, You Saw, You Conquered", received with poor sales; according to Brown, he struggled to recreate the earlier Gold Star Wall of Sound. Levine believed the "Wall of Sound was indigenous to Gold Star [...] Once he left Gold Star it was over." In late 1973, Spector reassembled the Wrecking Crew for the recording of
John Lennon’s album
Rock ’n’ Roll, recorded at A&M, and formulated what drummer
Hal Blaine termed "a new Wall of Sound". He returned to Gold Star for sessions with Cher in early 1974 and assembled more players than he typically had in the 1960s while reorienting his style toward a more plaintive musical aesthetic. Continuing in this style, he produced
Dion's
Born to Be with You at Gold Star in mid-1975, with Stan Ross engineering and, after a year's hiatus,
Leonard Cohen's ''
Death of a Ladies' Man, partly recorded at Gold Star with Levine engineering. His further work there with Levine and the Wrecking Crew included recordings with the Paley Brothers, left unreleased, and the Ramones, whose End of the Century'' (1980) incurred production costs of about $200,000 and became the band's highest-charting album. Gold Star closed in 1983 and was destroyed by fire in 1984. In the 1990s, Spector initiated a reunion session with the Wrecking Crew at
Studio 56, the former site of Gold Star competitor
Radio Recorders. Dissatisfied with the results produced by the modern setup and the facility's unsuitability for large ensemble live recording, he halted the project. In Wrecking Crew biographer
Kent Hartman's description: "If this studio was set up this way, then they probably all were. Good old Gold Star had been the last of its kind." ==Early usages by other producers (1960s)==