Caroline, No

"Caroline, No" is a song by American musician Brian Wilson that was released as his debut solo record on March 7, 1966. Written with Tony Asher, the lyrics describe a disillusioned man who reflects on his aged, former love interest and the loss of her innocence. Musically, it is distinguished for its jazz chords and unusual combination of instruments, including bass flutes, 12-string electric guitar, and muted harpsichord. It was issued as a single, with the B-side "Summer Means New Love", and later appeared as the closing track on the Beach Boys' album Pet Sounds.

"Caroline, No"
Sheet music cover
Single by Brian Wilson
B-side"Summer Means New Love"
ReleasedMarch 7, 1966 (1966-03-07)
RecordedJanuary 31  c.February 9, 1966
StudioWestern, Hollywood
GenreJazz[1]
Length2:15
LabelCapitol
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Brian Wilson
Brian Wilson singles chronology
"Caroline, No"
(1966)
"Gettin' Hungry"
(1967)
Music video
"Caroline, No" on YouTube
Audio sample
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The words were inspired by a past girlfriend of Asher's named Carol Amen; he initially conceived the title phrase as "Carol, I Know", misheard by Wilson as "Caroline, No". Other reports, which Wilson disputed, suggest that the song was written about Carol Mountain, a former classmate of Wilson's, or his then-wife Marilyn. Asher credited the idea for the song to Wilson, who "was saddened to see how sweet little girls turned out to be kind of bitchy hardened adults."[2]

Wilson produced the track in January 1966 at Western Studio with 12 session musicians who variously played harpsichord, flutes, guitars, basses, and vibraphone. Some of the percussion involved an empty water cooler jug struck from the bottom with a mallet. Wilson later sped up the recording by one semi-tone to make his voice sound younger. The album version was edited to include a non-musical tag consisting of the sounds of Wilson's dogs barking and a passing train.

"Caroline, No" peaked at number 32 in the US and failed to chart in the UK. To mitigate the poor sales, Capitol quickly issued "Sloop John B" as the Beach Boys' next single. Wilson later cited "Caroline, No" as his favorite track on Pet Sounds and among the finest songs he ever wrote. In 2004, it was ranked number 214 in Rolling Stone's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". Timothy B. Schmit, Elliot Easton, Eric Carmen, They Might Be Giants, and Glenn Frey are among the artists who have covered the song.

Background

"Caroline, No" was written by Brian Wilson and Tony Asher, possibly within a few days of writing "Wouldn't It Be Nice".[3] Although Wilson claimed that Asher only provided the words to his music, Asher credited himself with contributing musical ideas to at least three songs on Pet Sounds, including "Caroline, No".[4][nb 1] He credited Wilson with the subject matter, however, as "he'd always wanted to write a song about lost innocence, a young girl who changes as she matures and somehow, something's lost."[5] Wilson's 2016 memoir describes "Caroline, No" both as "a new song [Tony had been] working on" and a song on which Wilson "wrote the music".[6] His (since-discredited) 1991 memoir says that after discussing the proposed lyric theme, Asher "took a tape home, embellished on my concept, and completed the words."[7]

Lyrics

Content

["Caroline No"] is a story about how, once you've fucked up or once you've run your gamut with a chick, there's no way to get it back. It takes a lot of courage to do that sometimes in your life. ... I just felt sad, so I wrote a sad song.

—Brian Wilson, 1989[8]

The lyrics describe a man who reflects on his aged, former love interest and the loss of her innocence, asking, "Where did your long hair go? Where is the girl I used to know? How could you lose that happy glow?"[9] Music historian Charles Granata writes that the line "Caroline, why?" suggests that the protagonist is unsure "why the relationship has ended. ... He doesn't blame her, but he muses and frets over a flood of unanswered questions".[9] Author James Perone differs in his interpretation, "the blame for the end of the relationship [is placed] on his partner; she is the one who changed, not him.[10] At the end of the song, the singer asks if they could ever work together to bring back "the things that made me love you so much then", before pleading, "Oh, Caroline, no".[11]

Wilson later commented that the lyrics were "a real tear jerker, very like 'Hey Girl' [a 1963 record] by Freddie Scott."[12] Musicologist Philip Lambert identified the song as a continuation of the themes established by Wilson's previous compositions "You Still Believe in Me" and "The Little Girl I Once Knew".[3] In his description, the protagonist is "thoroughly heartbroken and disillusioned" and "longs for a return to the youthful innocence, not the complexity of childhood – 'Wouldn't It Be Nice' in reverse."[13] Granata offered that the "ruminating tune" represented "the antithesis" of most Beach Boys hits.[14]

Inspiration

According to Asher, their discussions that led to the song revolved around "how wonderful it is when you first meet a girl and she looks great, and how terrible it is when you know you'll be breaking up at any moment."[15] He said that it was originally a happier song, but Wilson moved it into a sadder direction because he "was saddened to see how sweet little girls turned out to be kind of bitchy hardened adults."[16][2] Elsewhere, he attributed the impetus for the song to "Brian's wish that he could go back to simpler days, his wish that the group could return to the days when the whole thing was a lot of fun and very little pressure."[17][18] Wilson's 1991 memoir states that the song derived from his past infatuation with a high school classmate named Carol Mountain. It writes,

I'd reminisced to Tony about my high school crush on Carol Mountain and sighed, "If I saw her today, I'd probably think, God, she's lost something, because growing up does that to people." But the song was most influenced by the changes [my first wife] Marilyn and I had gone through. We were young, Marilyn nearing twenty [sic] and me closing in on twenty-four, yet I thought we'd lost the innocence of our youth in the heavy seriousness of our lives.[7]

Asher recalled that he was never told about Mountain and stated that his lyrics were inspired by a former high school girlfriend—named Carol Amen[19]—who had moved to New York to become a Broadway dancer.[17] "When I went east to visit her a scant year after the move, she had changed radically. Yes, she had cut her hair. But she was a far more worldly person, not all for the worse."[17] He initially conceived the title phrase as "Carol, I Know". When spoken, however, Wilson heard this as "Caroline, No". After the confusion was resolved, the pair decided to keep the new title, feeling that it brought an especially poignant quality to the song.[20][18]

Asked about the song in a 1996 interview, Marilyn said that she had not heard "too much of it" until the track was recorded and Wilson brought an acetate home. She acknowledged that the song was difficult to listen to, as she was aware that Wilson's "first crush was for a girl named Carol."[21][nb 2] Marilyn said of her reaction to the lyrics, "I wasn't ready for how intense it was. ... from a romantic standpoint, which is the way I was thinking in those days. And then, I thought it was about me, because I had cut my hair. ... He always used to talk about how long hair keeps a girl feminine."[21] However, Wilson credited that particular line to Asher, who "must have known a girl who cut her hair off".[22]

In a 2005 interview, Wilson said that the song "wasn't written about anyone. I just used the name Caroline."[12] Bruce Johnston similarly denied that "Caroline" was a real person and said that the song was actually "directly about Brian himself and the death of a quality within him that was so vital. His innocence. He knows it too."[23] Brian's brother Dennis claimed otherwise, saying in 1976 that the song was "about a girl that Brian was really in love with in high school. He saw her again years later, and it all came back to him, and he wrote the song."[8] Asher told biographer David Leaf that Wilson had in mind "sweet little girls ... and his wife's sister".[24]

Composition

Wilson compared "Caroline, No" to the music of Glenn Miller (pictured)

"Caroline, No" contains an AABA form and an ambiguous tonal center.[25] Most of the song is closest to the key of D major, while other portions suggest G major or B minor.[13] None of the chords are simple (major or minor) triads.[26] The verses alternate between AMadd6 (or Fm6
5
) and Em4
2
until the end of the section, with the appearance of a G major chord (first as GM96
4
and then as GM9) that gives the piece a brief sense of tonal stability, but which pivots to the newly-tonicized D bridge.[13] Lambert concluded his anaylsis of the song by writing:

Overall, the song features tonal evasions of the sort heard in "God Only Knows", involving competing tonal alliances, less like those of "Don't Talk", in which a single key is consistently implied but never strongly affirmed. Meanwhile, the "Caroline No" melody is filled with semitonal middle-ground upper neighbourings, like an arch motive stripped of its vitality. The verse phrases are alternately anchored on the notes F and G (most notably at phrase beginnings and endings), and in the bridge these same notes fulfil structural functions in the upper voice-leading (G on "heart", F on "cry" and "sad", F on "why"). At the end of the song these musical elements simply recur as a flute–bass flute duet (in octaves) restating the melody of the verse, offering no sense of closure or resolution.[13]

It is one of only two tracks on Pet Sounds with just one vocal part (the other being "Don't Talk").[27] The instrumentation features harpsichord and bass flutes combined with more typical pop/rock instrumentation, creating a sound that, in Lambert's estimation, reflects a jazz influence.[3] Jim Fusilli concurred, "In many ways it's a jazz tune. Some of those chords are jazz chords."[1] Wilson said of the bridge, "The melody and the chords were like Glenn Miller ... a Glenn Miller-type bridge." [28] Perone observed that while the melody engages in "wide tessitura changes and wide melodic intervals, it is the largely the instrumentation that makes 'Caroline, No' sound completely unlike recordings by other major pop artists in 1966."[10]

Granata referred to the arrangement as Wilson's "instrumental pinnacle". He cited the percussion as playing "a key role in extending the breezy feel of the performance", although "it's the flutes and [saxophone] that really make the difference, infusing the melody with an enchanting glow."[29] Asher said that he implored Wilson to incorporate the bass flute.[1] Wilson commented, "The fade-out was like a 1944 kind of record ... Listen for the flutes in the fadeout."[28]

Production

Single recording

Something must have happened to Brian. I can remember he looked so sad. When he'd catch me checking out his face, he'd look back at me with a kind of deep, unexplainable sad look. I had never seen him like that before. He was happy with the music, though. It seemed to be his expression of some feeling he couldn't put into words. Not much of a tune, just a mood.

—Studio musician Carol Kaye, recalling the "Caroline, No" session date[30]

"Caroline, No" was recorded on January 31, 1966 at Western Studio in Hollywood.[22] The basic track was recorded with 12 musicians who variously played guitars, bass, flutes, and percussion.[31] Earlier takes featured an instrumental introduction before Wilson opted for the final arrangement: an empty Sparkletts water cooler jug struck from the bottom with a hard percussion mallet.[32][22] 17 takes were required, after which Wilson recorded a lead vocal and further instrumentation.[22] Like "You Still Believe in Me", his vocal was doubletracked "live-to-tape" as engineer Chuck Britz mixed the mono master[33] on or before February 9.[31]

It is often reported that "Caroline, No" does not feature additional vocals from Wilson's bandmates because they were away on a tour and he was in a hurry to complete the record. According to biographer Mark Dillon, the relevant documentation suggests that the members were available for recording and could have contributed to the song if Wilson had wished.[27] Asher remembered that he never had the impression of it being a Beach Boys song. Unlike the pair's other collaborations, Wilson never demonstrated on piano the vocal parts that his bandmates would sing.[34]

During the mastering process, Wilson sped up the track by a semi-tone, following the advice of his father Murry, who thought that the vocal would benefit from sounding younger. In doing so, the song's tempo increased by 6% while the key was raised from C to C.[35]

Album tag

The Owl, otherwise known as the train heard after "Caroline, No"

Wilson wanted to end Pet Sounds with a non-musical tag to follow "Caroline, No".[36] On March 22,[31] he returned to Western to capture the barking of his dogs Banana, a beagle, and Louie, a Weimaraner.[37] A taped conversation from the session reveals that Brian considered photographing a horse belonging to Carl in Western Studio 3 for the album cover.[38] Brian asked Britz: "Hey, Chuck, is it possible we can bring a horse in here without ... if we don't screw everything up?", to which a clearly startled Britz responds, "I beg your pardon?", with Brian then pleading, "Honest to God, now, the horse is tame and everything!"[39][37] Wilson's dogs inspired the album's title.[40]

As the album version of "Caroline, No" fades out, it segues into the sounds of Wilson's barking dogs and a passing locomotive train, the latter sampled from the 1963 effects album Mister D’s Machine ("Train #58, the Owl at Edison, California").[37] The Owl (SP 6461) was a Southern Pacific Railroad train that had an overnight schedule between San Francisco and Los Angeles from 1898 and 1965.[41] It is heard sounding its horn, a B7 trichord that turns into a G7 (a consequence of a Doppler effect), as it approaches a railway crossing. Musicologist Daniel Harrison writes, "There’s no little irony that this effect was put on record by a group noted for their songs about cars."[42]

Granata, writing in his 2003 book about Pet Sounds, reported that "no one remembers" why Wilson chose to end the album this way.[36] Asked in a 1996 interview, Wilson said, "I'm not really sure [what I had in mind]. I can't answer that question. ... I took a tape recorder and I recorded their barks. And we went down and we looked through some sound effects tapes and we found a train. So we just put it all together."[43]

Release

Brian Wilson in 1966

On March 7, 1966, "Caroline, No" (backed with the Summer Days instrumental "Summer Means New Love") was issued by Capitol Records as Wilson's first solo record.[44] According to music historian Keith Badman, "everyone close to [Brian was] certain the disc [would] be a monster hit."[44] In Marilyn's recollection, "Everybody at Capitol said it should be a single because it was so good, and there were no background vocals, so they said, 'Why don't we release this as a Brian Wilson single, because it's really not a Beach Boys song."[21]

Conversely, biographer Steven Gaines wrote that Capitol "knew it was not a hit" but released the song "to encourage Brian to complete the forthcoming album."[45] Asher recalled that the criticism Wilson received from his bandmates about the song not being "Beach Boys" enough was what prompted him to issue the single under his own name.[27] Session musician Steve Douglas told an interviewer that he had been "really instigating" Wilson to issue the single as a solo record, a decision that ultimately "caused problems, man, I just can't tell you."[46][47]

To promote the single, Brian, Carl Wilson, Love, and Johnston recorded several 23-second "thank you" radio spots for different stations across the US, thanking them for playing the record and making it "a hit".[44] The single debuted on the US Top 40 Billboard at number 37, more than a month after it was released, and ultimately peaked at number 32 during a seven-week chart stay.[48] Badman states that Capitol quickly issued "Sloop John B" as a single "to cover up the unimpressive performance" of "Caroline, No".[49] In the UK, "Caroline, No" was issued in April and failed to chart.[50] In a 2000 interview, Wilson was asked if he would have issued Pet Sounds as a solo album had the single performed better, to which he responded, "Probably would've, yeah, but I didn't."[51]

Pet Sounds was released on May 16 with "Caroline, No" as its final track.[52] In his self-described "unbiased" review of the album for Record Mirror, Norman Jopling praised the song as the LP's best track, "Very sad and very romantic. In fact horribly sad." However, he decreed that the added sound effects ruined "an atmosphere which must have taken some amount of time and trouble to create. A pity because Beach Boy fans won't thank them for that kind of musical development."[53]

Legacy

Wilson later stated that "Caroline, No" was his favorite Pet Sounds track, "the prettiest ballad I've ever sung. Awfully pretty song."[28] In a 1995 interview, he viewed it as "probably the best [song] I've ever written."[34] Dennis said that their father Murry "used to go to pieces when he heard stuff like 'Caroline, No.'"[8] Asher opined, "At first, I didn't think it was on the same level as the other songs we were doing, although I liked it well enough. It just didn't have the level of sophistication that the other songs had."[34] Journalist Nick Kent recognized it in 1975 as "arguably the most beautiful song [Brian] has ever written."[23] In 2001, "Caroline, No" was ranked number 55 in Rock's Backpages' list of "The 100 Most Heartbreaking Records of All Time".[54] In 2003, it was ranked number 214 in Rolling Stone's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[55]

In the autumn of 1966, Wilson attempted to reconnect with Carol Mountain, acting on the suggestion of friend Stanley Shapiro. According to Shapiro, Wilson phoned every Mountain listed in the Hawthorne-Inglewood area until he found her parents, who gave Wilson her address. Wilson then drove with Shapiro to Mountain's house, intending to bring her back with him to his home in Laurel Way, but was unsuccessful in the endeavor.[56][nb 3] Wilson continued to telephone Mountain, as she recalled, "He didn't sound drugged or anything, but it was very strange. He’d call at 3:00 a.m. and want to talk about music. I was such a nerd I’d say, 'What? Who?' and have him talk to my husband. But it was nothing inappropriate."[59]

Wilson revisited the themes of "Caroline, No" in his 1988 song "Baby Let Your Hair Grow Long" from his first solo album Brian Wilson.[60] Biographer Peter Ames Carlin wrote that it "updated the mournful first line of 'Caroline, No' ... only with the voice of a seasoned veteran who knows that innocence and hope can be regained."[61] Wilson rerecorded "Caroline, No" for his 1995 album I Just Wasn't Made for These Times. The Beach Boys, accompanied by Timothy B. Schmit, remade the song with a new multi-part vocal arrangement for the 1996 album Stars and Stripes Vol. 1. Jimmy Webb was commissioned to write the orchestration for the track. Dillon praised the rendition as "the highlight" of the album.[27]

  • It is sometimes suggested that the animal sound effects inspired a similar device in the Beatles' 1967 song "Good Morning, Good Morning".[40]
  • Neil Young mentions the song in the title track to the Stills-Young Band album Long May You Run (1976).
  • The British band Modesty Blaise released the sunshine-pop single "Carol Mountain" (2002).
  • A song called "Caroline, Yes" appears on the Kaiser Chiefs' album Employment (2005).[62]
  • A song called "Caroline Mountain" appears on Sugar Candy Mountain's album Mystic Hits (2013).
  • The 2014 biopic Love & Mercy includes a depiction of the recording of "Caroline, No" and its dog barking session.[63]

Cover versions

Personnel

Per band archivist Craig Slowinski.[31]

Session musicians

Guests

  • Banana and Louie – barking (album version)

Technical staff

Charts

Weekly charts
Chart (1966) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[44] 32

References

Notes

  1. The other two were "That's Not Me" and "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times".[4]
  2. Marilyn went on to say that Brian "constantly remembers his past and still relates to it and everybody in it. And that's another thing at seventeen years old that was hard for me to understand. You want this man to talk about you, and he was talking about all his old girlfriends."[21]
  3. Shapiro said, "It was the funniest thing I had ever seen in my life. We were bombed out of our minds. He's standing on the doorstep ringing her doorbell and Carol Mountain opened the door with rollers in her hair."[57] Mountain refused to leave with Wilson, and once her husband appeared, "the guy started yelling, 'I'm going to get my gun.' Brian took off running and came back to the car, and the two of us tore out of there."[58]

Citations

  1. Dillon 2012, p. 99.
  2. Leaf 1978, p. 80.
  3. Lambert 2007, p. 235.
  4. Gaines 1986, p. 145.
  5. "Interview with Tony Asher". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. Wilson & Greenman 2016, p. 183.
  7. Wilson & Gold 1991, p. 134.
  8. White, Timothy (October 12, 1996). "The Passion of Pet Sounds". Billboard. pp. 45–46.
  9. Granata 2003, p. 110.
  10. Perone 2012, p. 30.
  11. Granata 2003, pp. 110–111.
  12. Sharp, Ken (January 2006). "Christmas with Brian Wilson". Record Collector. United Kingdom. pp. 72–76.
  13. Lambert 2008, p. 116.
  14. Granata 2003, p. 187.
  15. Granata 2003, p. 86.
  16. Leaf, David, ed. (1990). Pet Sounds (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records.
  17. Elliott, Brad (August 31, 1999). "Pet Sounds Track Notes". beachboysfanclub.com. Retrieved March 3, 2009.
  18. Asher, Tony (April 4, 1996). "Tony Asher Interview" (Interview). Interviewed by Mike Wheeler. Cabin Essence. Retrieved October 9, 2020.
  19. Dillon 2012, p. 97.
  20. Granata 2003, p. 111.
  21. "The Observers: Marilyn Wilson". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.CS1 maint: others (link)
  22. Badman 2004, p. 111.
  23. Kent, Nick (June 21, 1975). "Brian Wilson: The Last Beach Movie part 1". NME.
  24. Leaf 1978, pp. 79–80.
  25. Lambert 2008, p. 115.
  26. O'Regan 2014, p. 197.
  27. Dillon 2012, p. 100.
  28. Mark, Linett (2001). "Track-by-Track Notes". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records.
  29. Granata 2003, p. 153.
  30. "Carol Kaye". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.CS1 maint: others (link)
  31. Slowinski, Craig. "Pet Sounds LP". beachboysarchives.com. Endless Summer Quarterly. Retrieved September 24, 2018.
  32. Granata 2003, p. 147.
  33. Granata 2003, p. 127.
  34. Granata 2003, p. 112.
  35. Granata 2003, p. 181.
  36. Granata 2003, p. 164.
  37. Runtagh, Jordan (May 16, 2016). "Beach Boys' 'Pet Sounds': 15 Things You Didn't Know". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on May 16, 2016.
  38. Granata 2003, p. 165.
  39. Sanchez 2014, p. 83.
  40. Dillon 2012, p. 101.
  41. Burns, Adam. "Owl". American Rails. Retrieved November 19, 2020.
  42. Harrison 2016, p. 57.
  43. "Interview with Brian Wilson". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.CS1 maint: others (link)
  44. Badman 2004, p. 121.
  45. Gaines 1986, p. 148.
  46. "Musician Comments: Steve Douglas". The Pet Sounds Sessions (Booklet). The Beach Boys. Capitol Records. 1997.CS1 maint: others (link)
  47. Granata 2003, p. 188.
  48. Badman 2004, pp. 121, 130.
  49. Badman 2004, p. 122.
  50. Badman 2004, p. 124.
  51. Himmelsbach, Erik (2000). "Brian Wilson: Sounds Unsilenced". Revolver.
  52. Badman 2004, p. 134.
  53. Jopling, Norman (July 2, 1966). "The Beach Boys: Pet Sounds (Capitol)". Record Mirror.
  54. "Cry Me A River! The 100 Most Heartbreaking Records of All Time…(100-51)". Rock's Backpages. December 2001.
  55. "The RS 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". Rolling Stone. December 11, 2003. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  56. Gaines 1986, p. 166.
  57. Gaines 1986, pp. 166–167.
  58. Gaines 1986, p. 167.
  59. Carlin 2006, p. 17.
  60. Dillon 2012, p. 98.
  61. Carlin 2006, p. .
  62. "Employment". AllMusic. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
  63. Caro, Mark (May 29, 2015). "Brian Wilson, John Cusack on the alchemy of 'Love and Mercy'". Chicago Tribune.

Bibliography

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