Gold Star Oldies USA, Pop and Country News (On This Day)
Happy Birthday Capitol Records Tower 70 years
1970 - Phil Spector
50 musicians recorded the orchestral scores for The Beatles tracks 'The Long And Winding Road' and 'Across The Universe' for the Phil Spector produced sessions. The bill for the 50 musicians was £1,126 and 5 shillings, ($1.914). When released 'The Long and Winding Road' became a US No.1 hit.
Gold Star Oldies USA pays tribute to Phillies Records in April the Wall of Sound Phil Spector
🎙️ What Was the Wall of Sound?
The Wall of Sound was a groundbreaking music‑production technique created by Phil Spector in the early 1960s at Gold Star Studios in Hollywood. It used large ensembles, dense layering, natural echo, and mono mixing to create a massive, emotional, orchestral pop sound that jumped out of AM radios.
🎼 How Phil Spector Developed the Wall of Sound
(This is the real origin story, not the simplified textbook version.)
🎧 1. He was chasing the emotional punch of early rock & roll
Spector grew up idolizing:
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Leiber & Stoller
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Jerry Wexler
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The Drifters / Coasters productions
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Ray Charles’ big-band R&B
Those records had weight—horns, percussion, backing vocals—but they were still relatively sparse. Spector wanted something denser, something that felt like a tidal wave.
He once said he wanted records that sounded like “a Wagner opera for teenagers.”
2. Gold Star Studios gave him the missing ingredient
When Spector first walked into Gold Star, he heard the echo chambers and realized he’d found the “instrument” he’d been missing.
Gold Star’s chambers weren’t just reverb—they were:
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thick
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swirling
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harmonically rich
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slightly distorted in a musical way
They turned a simple handclap into a cathedral. This is where the Wall of Sound truly begins.
3. The Wrecking Crew could play anything in unison
Spector discovered that if you put:
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3 pianos
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3 guitars
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2 basses
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multiple percussionists
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strings
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horns
…all playing the same part, the sound didn’t get messy—it got massive.
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Legends Remembered & Celebrated — Gold Star Oldies Tributes
" April 15, 1939 — The Ink Spots, a pop vocal group who would harmonically branch into R&B, prefigure doo wop, and greatly influence the Platters, debut on the pop chart with the first of 46 hits, "If I Didn't Care," which reaches #2. (Group guitarist Charlie Fuqua's nine-year-old nephew at the time, Harvey, grows up to become co-founder of the 1950s doo wop group Moonglows, discoverer of Marvin Gaye, and a Motown producer.)
1894 — Bessie Smith, called "The Empress of the Blues," is born in Chattanooga, Tennessee. She inspires countless blues, R&B, and rock singers for generations after her 1923 recording debut and is inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989 as an Early Influence.
Sources:
Eight Days a Week (Ron Smith)
On This Day in Black Music History (Jay Warner)
Chronology of American Popular Music, 1900-2000 (Frank Hoffman)
Birthdays Singers and Song Writers
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