The "Cocaine/Hamburger Sessions" (partially lost Brian Wilson recordings; 1981)

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BrianWilsonCocaineSessions.png

Bootleg album cover

Status: Partially found

Comment: 22½ minutes found out of "many hours" of audio

Tags: the beach boys brian wilson dennis wilson 1981 1980s


The so-called Cocaine Sessions are a series of recordings made by Brian and Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys along with UCLA music professor Garby Leon made in 1981.[1]

Background

Brian Wilson founded a band known as the Pendletones with his brothers Carl and Dennis Wilson, their cousin Mike Love, and their friend Al Jardine in Hawthorne, California in 1961. Dennis' hobby of surfing inspired the band to write and perform songs centered around the California myth. The Pendletones became the Beach Boys after their first single, "Surfin'", was issued under that name. As Brian led the band to produce more sophisticated sounds, his mental health deteriorated with him beginning to experience auditory hallucinations in the early 1960s and suffering incessant abuse from Murry Wilson, the Wilson brothers' father and the band's manager until 1964. Later in 1964, Brian experienced a panic attack on a plane after a television appearance and subsequently remained in California to write and record his masterwork, tentatively titled Our Freaky Friends or Remember the Zoo, while the rest of the band continued touring with Bruce Johnston taking Brian's place (and later becoming a full-fledged member of the band). The album was met with disappointing sales and lukewarm reception at its 1966 release as Pet Sounds despite its later reputation as a masterpiece and Brian, now dubbed "a genius" in a publicity campaign by the Beach Boys' publicist Derek Taylor, began work on his "teenage symphony to God" entitled SMiLE. This album would be cancelled in 1967 after over 50 hours of recording costing tens of thousands of dollars, with a hastily-produced, stripped-down version entitled Smiley Smile being released in its stead, and remained mostly unreleased for decades as Brian's worsening mental illness led him to largely retreat from the public eye. He wouldn't have major involvement in the production of a studio album until 1976's 15 Big Ones, which was promoted with a controversial "Brian's Back!" media campaign. Despite the optimistic message, however, Brian was in no mental state to be thrust back into the spotlight and he was becoming increasingly dependent on cigarettes, alcohol, and a variety of drugs while also regularly overeating.[2]

The sessions

Most of the known tracks from the sessions were recorded at a Venice, California beach house belonging to Garby Leon, a friend of Dennis, with later recordings being made at a studio in Santa Monica as Dennis' final productions. The title used on bootlegs is based on a rumor that Dennis convinced Brian to record the sessions by enticing him with cocaine and McDonald's hamburgers, Leon proposing the more tame title of The Hamburger Sessions as he claims there was no cocaine use during the sessions proper. A variety of dates ranging from 1980 to 1982 are given for the sessions, but Leon has confirmed they took place in 1981 with January being most commonly cited as the month. Author Jon Stebbins reports that several hours of music were recorded, however only 22½ minutes of this has ever surfaced with all but one of these tracks coming from the Venice Beach house session.[1][3][4]

Further developments

On January 25th, 1981, Brian's former caretakers Stan Love, brother of the Beach Boys member Mike Love, and Rocky Pamplin caught wind that Dennis had been giving drugs to Brian and busted into his house posing as police officers to subject him to a savage beating which they were later fined a total of $1,000 for. Brian's condition continued to worsen with his weight ballooning to 311 pounds and him suffering a drug overdose in late 1982 which prompted his bandmates to fire him and push him to place himself under the care of Dr. Eugene Landy, who previously treated Brian from 1975 to 1976 before being fired for nearly doubling his fee, where he would remain until the state intervened due to Landy's abusive practices in 1992. Dennis drowned off the coast of Marina del Rey at the age of 39 on December 28th, 1983 and was given a U.S. Coast Guard burial at sea personally authorized by President Ronald Reagan. According to Stebbins, the sessions featured arrangements which would later be used for the track "Rio Grande" on Brian Wilson's self-titled debut solo album released in 1988. A track titled "I Made a Prayer" on bootlegs was rewritten by Brian as "This Isn't Love" and recorded by actor Alan Cumming for the 2000 movie The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas. Also in 2000, the television movie The Beach Boys: An American Family featured a scene dramatizing the anecdote of Dennis coaxing Brian into recording music with cocaine and fast food. Brian rewrote "City Blues" with Scott Bennett and released it on his fourth studio album Gettin' In over My Head with a feature by Eric Clapton in 2004. "Stevie", an ode to Fleetwood Mac's Stevie Nicks and the sole track recorded at the Santa Monica studio session to be released (albeit unofficially), was considered for inclusion on the Beach Boys' 2013 Made in California box set but ultimately failed to materialize. Leon passed away from cancer at age 66 in 2014. The whereabouts of the original tapes since the 1980s and how the recordings ended up on bootlegs is unknown.[1][5][6][7][8]

List

Song Status
"Yeah" Found
"Oh Lord" Found
"City Blues" Found
"I Made a Prayer" Found
"Why Don't You Tell Me Why" (Parts 1 and 2) Found
"I Feel So Fine" Found
"Be My Baby" (snippet) Partially Found
"Heroes and Villains" Found
"Stevie" Found
"Bobby, Dale and Holly" Lost
Early "Rio Grande" sequences Lost
The Cocaine Sessions bootleg

References