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Phil Spector and the New Film About His Lovin’ Feelin’

9 minute read
RICHArd Corliss

Ask lovers of true-crime sensation who Phil Spector is, and they’ll say he’s the dotty old recluse who killed actress Lana Clarkson in his Alhambra, Cal., mansion in 2003. Vikram Jayanti’s BBC documentary The Agony and the Ecstasy of Phil Spector, now receiving a theatrical run at New York City’s Film Forum, shows some grim details from the first of Spector’s two trials — forensics of Clarkson’s wounds, testimony by two other women that he had put guns to their heads — plus the defendant’s bizarre coiffure: the wild Isro wig he wore, he says, in part as “a tribute to Albert Einstein and Beethoven,” whom Spector considered his artistic equals. About the wig, he recalls, “Jay Leno said I looked like I’d been electrocuted already.” After all the comic weirdness, and two trials, Spector was convicted in 2009 of second-degree murder and sentenced to 19 years to life.

The documentary annotates its exclusive, rambling Spector interview (blond wig this time) with hagiographic notes by Mick Brown, author of the excellent biography Tearing Down the Wall of Sound: The Rise and Fall of Phil Spector. And over the footage from the trial, Jayanti plays the music that Spector birthed: girl-group anthems like “Uptown,” “He’s a Rebel,” “Da Doo Ron Ron” and “Be My Baby.” To those who grew up in the early ’60s, Spector was the record producer, himself just out of his teens, who monitored adolescent heartbeats and transformed them into pounding rock ‘n roll dreams. He produced and cowrote the grown-up ballads “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin'” and “River Deep — Mountain High,” which still stand as two of the decade’s great singles. Then the Beatles hired Spector to make an album out of the tracks that became Let It Be; he also produced John Lennon’s Imagine album and George Harrison’s “My Sweet Lord.”

(Read TIME’s 1965 profile of the King of Teen Pan Alley.)

For Spector’s impact on the intelligentsia, you could consult Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing, the 1982 play about a playwright lost in ’60s pop nostalgia. Henry, the hero and Stoppard stand-in, proclaims that, while he was dashing off his highminded dramas, “I was spending the whole time listening to the Crystals singing ‘Da Doo Ron Ron'” and “believing that the Righteous Brothers’ recording of ‘You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin” on the London label was possibly the most haunting, the most deeply moving noise ever produced by the human spirit.” Those were both Spector singles — what the producer called his “little symphonies for the kids.”

The esteem in which Lennon and Harrison, the Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson and most of Spector’s other contemporaries held him — Lennon’s son Sean called him “the genius that the geniuses come to” — is exceeded only by Spector’s opinion of himself. Just as movie directors wanted to be known as auteurs, Spector believed in the sanctity of his calling and the grandeur of his achievement. “I was creating the sound in the same way Modigliani or DaVinci or Michelangelo was creating art,” he says in the film. “And I always considered it not rock ‘n roll; I always considered it art.”

(Read about India’s wall of sound.)

What exactly was the art? Not the song. Though most of his hit singles were composed by three gifted songwriting duos — the husband-wife teams of Gerry Goffin and Carole King, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil and Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich, all in their early 20s — Spector would revamp their work to his satisfaction (and take a writing credit), then fill the B sides of his singles with instrumental vamps named after his studio musicians (“Tedesco and Pitman,” “Nino [Tempo] and Sonny [Bono].” Nor did Spector see his brand of rock ‘n roll as a singer’s medium. He cavalierly shuffled the lineups of his girl groups and sometimes left them off their own records; on “He’s a Rebel,” credited to the Crystals, the real singers are Darlene Love and the Blossoms.

No: as Spector tells Jayanti, “The production always carried the art.” The Real Thing‘s Henry is saying as much when he insists, “I don’t like artists. I like singles.” That expresses a core truth of Spector rock ‘n roll; that the sound trumps melody or vocal virtuosity. It creates the feeling. And Spector created the sound. He could take an Oscar-winning nonsense song like “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” (for Bob B. Soxx & the Blue Jeans), a schmaltz ballad like “Unchained Melody” (the Righteous Brothers) or an entire album of Christmas pop, and invest it with bounce, grit and that you-can’t-sit-downable Spector swing. Though he also compares himself to Bach, he was really the Toscanini of pop.

Spector’s “Wall of Sound” was a fuzzy, congested, massive sonic assault that was perfect for monaural 45 record players and AM car radios. To his cramped, beloved Gold Star studio in L.A., Spector and super-arranger Jack Nitzsche would summon an army of musicians — backup singers, guitarists, a few horn men, percussionists with their castanets, maracas and tambourines, plus three or four pianists banging away simultaneously and maybe a string section — for long nights and 40 or 60 takes, while engineer Larry Levine would double the echo effect and Spector kept noodling and cajoling until he heard the magic that was already in his head. By the time he was done, the song exploded with a sound so dense and intense that a record needle would literally jump out of the grooves. Spector’s target audience got the same vinyl jolt. Even today, it’s impossible to listen to “Da Doo Ron Ron,” “Be My Baby,” “He’s a Rebel,” “Then He Kissed Me” or “Not Too Young to Get Married” without feeling elated, intoxicated and 15.

(See the top 10 supergroups of all time.)

The teenage Phil Spector could have used a Phil Spector single to cheer him. He was born in the Bronx, in 1949, and bred in violence. His father Benjamin, whom Phil commemorated in his first hit “To Know Him Is to Love Him,” killed himself when the boy was 9. (Spector in the film: “I mean, when your father blows his head open, it’s not funny. And it leaves a scar on you.”) Phil’s mom, after whom he named his Mother Bertha music publishing company, is depicted as wildly unstable; Brown’s biography includes a vignette from when Phil was about 20 and “Bertha chased her son around the apartment, brandishing a kitchen knife.” He and his friend Russ Titelman ran out and jumped into Phil’s Corvette. “We get in,” Titelman told Mick Brown, “and suddenly Bertha is standing at the end of the alley with a piece of four-by-two, screaming at the top of her lungs at him. Phil starts inching the car toward her — he just kept on going, and she got out of the way…. I have no idea what they were fighting about.”

By this time “To Know Him Is to Love Him” had gone to No. 1, with Spector’s trio The Teddy Bears, and he had become a protégé of top writer-producers Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. (Spector composed the plangent melody for Leiber’s “Spanish Harlem.”) But what he really wanted to do was produce. With his first hit group, the Paris Sisters, he extended the Teddy Bears’ wistful ballad style. Then he did a 180, dove into the raucous girl-group genre and started creating masterpieces. The Wall of Sound had antecedents in numbers like U.S. Bonds’ “Quarter to Three” and some of the early Motown hits; their spontaneous mood and dirty aural tracks were what Spector worked up a sweat trying to reproduce and transcend. Thus he made art, and top-10 hits.

(Read TIME’s 2003 report on Lana Clarkson’s murder.)

In 1965 Tom Wolfe proclaimed him “The First Tycoon of Teen” in the Herald Tribune’s Sunday magazine New York, and Spector considered himself the cock of rock; as he tells Jayanti, “I could strut sitting down, I was so brazen.” But his girl-group hitmaking days were over; he needed some galvanizing performer to sell his next single. As he tells Jayanti, “I just wanted an act that could become famous so I could make a hit record, that could go on to Las Vegas and The Ed Sullivan Show and destroy the Beatles.” He thought he found that act in Ike and Tina Turner, the stud bandleader and his feral wife, who were an R&B sensation but hadn’t found mainstream success. The 1966 “River Deep — Mountain High,” which blends pre-teen lyrics about rag dolls and puppies to Tina’s rampaging womanliness, and encases her screams and shouts in a propulsive symphonic arrangement, was to be their breakthrough and Spector’s return to the top of the pops. But it flopped on AM radio, and in frustration he stopped producing until the Beatles begged him to get back.

(Read TIME’s review of Let It Be.)

In his 2007 interview with Jayanti, which was taped between the trial that ended in a hung jury and the later one that resulted in his conviction, Spector — his gray eyes intent, like a slightly sedated Gilbert Gottfried, his clasped hands trembling — was still his biggest fan; the license plate on his black Mercedes reads “I ♥ PHIL.” And he still felt the world has insufficiently appreciated his achievement: “I’m concerned with the fact that I have not been made a doctorate at any college, and Bill Cosby has. Even Dylan has.” He harbored a special grudge against Tony Bennett (Tony Bennett??) and tells a long story about how Martin Scorsese didn’t pay for the rights to “Be My Baby,” used in the first scene of his 1973 breakthrough movie Mean Streets. (Scorsese told me back then that he paid $15,000 for the song.)

Spector sees the trial as “this thing that happened to me,” another traumatic episode like his father’s suicide, his mother’s threats. He sees himself as a victim of the crime he committed. The strangest scene in the movie shows Spector in court, instructed to hold his hand out like a gun in a recreation of the night of Clarkson’s death. It’s as if he’s posing for the Tussaud Museum wax figure of course — another tribute he will never get.

“I may not believe in God,” Spector tells Jayanti, “but I know there’s a Devil.” The viewer is left with the challenge of reconciling this strange, violent, broken man, now 70, with the majestic rock ‘n roll joy he produced nearly a half-century ago.

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