What is your favorite song from the 1960s-1970s? If it was recorded in Los Angeles, and most songs were, it is very likely the music was played by "studio" musicians known as The Wrecking Crew. But "wait!" you say, "why would Simon & Garfunkel hire someone to play the grand piano in Bridge Over Troubled Water, when I'm pretty sure they both played instruments?" Well, there are generally two reasons: 1) the record labels often REQUIRED bands to record using these session players because getting the songs laid down without mistakes early on reduced the cost of producing, and 2) the Wrecking Crew turned good songs into HITS. Thing is, you just didn't know the band members of The Byrds or The Mamas & Papas weren't playing the instruments (well, I guess we all knew the Monkees didn't do any playing!), because the record labels didn't want you to know. They kept this all hush-hush cause they thought it would diminish the popularity of the bands. But in fact, having musicians work on the music while, for example, the Beach Boys (except Brian Wilson) were on concert tour, just helped the band meet its production quota of hits while the "talent" was out on the road.
Hal Blaine, the drummer from The Wrecking Crew, was on speed dial for the likes of Brian Wilson, Phil Spector and Jan Berry (Jan & Dean), and played in no less than forty #1 hits and was the drummer for six consecutive Grammy songs. Carol Kaye, maybe the most prolific bass player of the time (she played bass on 10,000+ tracks, many of which are songs you'd recognize), embellished the backbeat of countless hits, as well as theme songs of TV shows such as The Brady Bunch, Hawaii 5-0, Mission Impossible, MASH, Hogan's Heroes and Adams Family. Glen Campbell is probably the best known member of The Wrecking Crew, because he left to start his own career, with such hits as Rhinestone Cowboy, Wichita Lineman, and By The Time I Get To Phoenix. But aside from his career as a singer, Campbell was an amazing guitar player, and even was a member of the Beach Boys for a short stint.
The twenty or so musicians who informally called themselves the Wrecking Crew, often playing at Gold Star Recording Studios, were originally assembled by Phil Spector for his "wall of sound". Producing such hits as You've Lost That Loving Feeling by The Righteous Brothers, and Be My Baby by The Ronettes, Spector and The Wrecking Crew caught the eye of other record labels who tried to imitate the sound. Before long, bands as diverse as Sonny & Cher, Tina Turner, Frank Sinatra, Rickey Nelson, Captain & Tennille, John Lennon, The Carpenters, Paul Revere & The Raiders, Herb Albert & Tijuana Brass, etc. were booking sessions with these talented musicians. Unfortunately, the Wrecking Crew, though being exceptionally popular and in demand, were only paid scale and were not credited on the hits they helped produce. But next time you listen to the scaling down bass after Nancy Sinatra sings "one of these days these boots are gonna walk all over you...", know that the song was probably not going to be hit material if Carol Kaye hadn't offered to throw in one of her signature bass riffs.
This book will appeal to anyone with a recollection of songs from this great era in music.