Pet Sounds is the eleventh studio album by the American rock band the Beach Boys, released on May 16, 1966, by Capitol Records. It was produced, arranged, and primarily composed by Brian Wilson with guest lyricist Tony Asher. Recorded largely between January and April 1966, it furthered the orchestral sound introduced in The Beach Boys Today! (1965). Seeking to expand Phil Spector's Wall of Sound technique and surpass the Beatles' Rubber Soul (1965), Wilson's orchestrations blended pop, jazz, exotica, classical, and avant-garde elements, combining rock instrumentation with layered vocal harmonies, found sounds, and instruments not normally associated with rock. It was their first album in which studio musicians, such as the Wrecking Crew, largely replaced the band on their instruments, and the first in which any rock group abandoned the small-ensemble format for an entire album. Its unprecedented total production cost exceeded $70,000 (equivalent to $ in ).
An early rock concept album, the lyrics explored introspective themes through songs like "You Still Believe in Me", about self-awareness of flaws; "I Know There's an Answer", a critique of LSD culture; and "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times", addressing social alienation. Lead single "Caroline, No" was issued as Wilson's official solo debut, followed by the group's "Sloop John B" and "Wouldn't It Be Nice". The album received a lukewarm critical response in the U.S., devastating Wilson, but peaked at number 10 on the Billboard Top LPs chart. Bolstered by band publicist Derek Taylor's promotional efforts, it was lauded by UK critics and musicians, reaching number 2 on the Record Retailer chart and remaining in the top ten for six months. A planned follow-up album, Smile, was abandoned and substituted with Smiley Smile in 1967.
Pet Sounds is recognized for its ambitious production and sophisticated harmonic structures, and it is widely regarded as among the greatest and most influential albums in music history. It is credited with introducing novel orchestration techniques, chord voicings, and structural harmonies, while also revolutionizing music production through its detail and use of the studio as a compositional tool. It elevated recognition of popular music as an art form and albums as cohesive works, while contributing to synthesizer adoption and the evolution of orchestral pop, psychedelia, soft rock/sunshine pop, and progressive rock/pop. Long overshadowed by the Beatles' works, Pet Sounds initially gained limited mainstream recognition until reissues revived its prominence, leading to top placements on all-time greatest album lists by various publications. The 1997 expanded reissue, The Pet Sounds Sessions, debuted its first true stereo mix. Wilson toured performing the album in the early 2000s and late 2010s.
The Beach Boys' sixth album, All Summer Long (1964), concluded their beach-themed period, and they began to alter their stylistic and lyrical direction. In January 1965, Brian Wilson, leader of the band, declared his withdrawal from touring to concentrate on songwriting and studio production. The rest of the groupâÂÂBrian's brothers Carl and Dennis, cousin Mike Love, and friend Al JardineâÂÂcontinued touring without him. Session musician Glen Campbell initially filled his role, followed by Bruce Johnston.
Through 1965, Wilson showcased great advances in his musical development with The Beach Boys Today! and Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!). Today! departed from the group's earlier sound through orchestral arrangements and a move away from surfing, car, and simplistic love motifs. Its lyrics adopted an autobiographical and emotional tone and contained five songs with a unified theme. Summer Days, issued three months later, bridged Wilson's progressive style with the band's pre-1965 approach. Wilson began recording "Sloop John B" but shelved the track to focus on Beach Boys' Party!, an informal album created to meet Capitol Records' demand for a Christmas release. Later in the year, he refined "Sloop John B" and recorded six new compositions. Without consultation, Capitol issued "Barbara Ann" from Party! as a single; Wilson dismissed it as unrepresentative of their upcoming work in an early 1966 interview.
In 1965, Wilson met Tony Asher, a lyricist and jingle writer, at a Los Angeles recording studio. After exchanging song ideas, Wilson learned of Asher's abilities and proposed a creative partnership to write songs unlike his prior work. Asher accepted, and their writing sessions began within ten days, starting with "You Still Believe in Me".
Wilson and Asher collaborated over a roughly three-week period in early 1966, likely January through February, writing at Wilson's home. Sessions often started with Wilson introducing musical fragmentsâÂÂsuch as chord patterns or melodic ideas he had developed over timeâÂÂdiscussing records for their distinctive feel, or proposing a lyrical theme. Their preliminary sketches, referred to as "feels", were developed with occasional marijuana use. Lyrics were typically completed prior to recording sessions, often commencing immediately after composition, though booking times were never planned in advance.
Asher saw his role as to provide feedback on Wilson's developing melodies and chord progressions, though they exchanged ideas throughout. Regarding their lyrical collaboration, he explained, "The general tenor of the lyrics was always his [...] and the actual choice of words was usually mine. I was really just his ." Asher later cited significant musical contributions to "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times", "Caroline, No", and "That's Not Me" and claimed conceptual input on three songs. He agreed to receive 25% of publishing royalties, a share he considered disproportionate to his contributions.
In his wife Marilyn's recollection, Brian worked on Pet Sounds virtually nonstop, and that when he was home, "he was either at the piano, arranging, or eating." After their songs were completed, Asher observed a few recording sessions, mostly involving string overdubs.
Wilson collaborated on two additional tracks. "I Know There's an Answer", co-written previously with Beach Boys road manager Terry Sachen. In 1994, Love received retroactive co-writing credits for "Wouldn't It Be Nice" and "I Know There's an Answer", though his contributions beyond "I'm Waiting for the Day" are generally regarded as minimal. The remaining two instrumental tracks, "Let's Go Away for Awhile" and "Pet Sounds", were composed by Wilson alone. Originally recorded as backing tracks for existing songs, he decided that the tracks were more effective without vocals.
Commentators frequently cite Pet Sounds as a concept album, with some considering it the first such work in rock music. Wilson identified Pet Sounds as an "interpretation" of Phil Spector's Wall of Sound technique that aimed to emulate aspects of Spector's productions, particularly the combination of color tones to create new textures. In a 1988 interview, he framed the Beach Boys as "messengers" of Spector's work and innovations via Pet Sounds. On another occasion, he stated:
Wilson also sought to create "a complete statement" with Pet Sounds after hearing the Beatles' album Rubber Soul (December 1965). The American edition of Rubber Soul, reconfigured by Capitol to appear more folk rock, struck Wilson as unified and free of filler tracksâÂÂuncommon at a time when albums primarily served to promote singles. He had usually included superficial subject matter on Beach Boys albums and viewed Rubber Soul as a challenge to elevate his approach, declaring to his wife that he would create "the greatest rock album ever made".
Musicologist Michael Zager wrote that Pet Sounds aligns closer with Spector's Wall of Sound than Rubber Soul through its incorporation of the technique's hallmarks. Carl stated Brian held greater admiration for Spector over the Beatles, with Brian frequently crediting Spector's methods as foundational to his own production style. Wilson credited Rubber Soul as his "main motivator" and with inspiring him to create music "on the same level" without seeking to replicate the Beatles' sound. In 2009, he said that although "Rubber Soul didn't clarify my ideas for Pet Sounds", the Beatles' use of sitar had inspired his choice of instrumentation for the album.
Asher disputed the notion that he and Wilson had followed templates set by the Beatles or rock in general, recalling Wilson aimed to craft "classical American love songs" akin to Cole Porter or Rodgers and Hammerstein. Asher introduced jazz recordings to Wilson, who was "blown away" by records such as Duke Ellington's "Sophisticated Lady" (1932) and Hampton Hawes' "All the Things You Are" (1955). Asher remembered that Wilson "didn't know much about jazz or jazz standards, but he knew the Four Freshmen". Drawing from his own studio experience, Asher advocated for incorporating classical instruments like violins, cellos, and bass flutes into the arrangements.
In 1966, Wilson likened his work to that of the Burt Bacharach and Hal David songwriting team. Nelson Riddle's orchestral arrangements also influenced Wilson's approach; biographer Jon Stebbins felt Riddle's impact was more pronounced than Spector's on the album. Wilson characterized his collaboration with Asher as more focused on artistic integrity than competition with contemporaries like Spector or Motown.
During his first LSD trip in April 1965, Wilson had what he considered to be "a very religious experience" and claimed to have perceived God. Spirituality subsequently formed a core inspiration for the album. He frequently referenced the album's spiritual qualities in interviews and recalled that he and his brother Carl conducted prayer sessions for global healing that transformed the atmosphere into "a religious ceremony"; Carl proposed "a special album" following their spiritual practices. Brian explained in 1994, "We prayed for an album that would be a rival to Rubber Soul. It was like a prayer, but there was some ego there."
Pet Sounds contrasted with the group's earlier celebrations of adolescence, exemplified through lyrics wishing to be older rather than younger ("Wouldn't It Be Nice"). Asher stated that Wilson sought to create songs relatable to adolescents. Carl reflected that the album recurrently explores themes of disillusionment with adulthood and lost innocence. Critics Richard Goldstein and Nik Cohn found that the album's melancholic lyrics sometimes jarred with its music, with Cohn describing it as "sad songs about loneliness and heartache; sad songs even about happiness."
Much of the album's pessimistic and dejected lyric content stemmed from Wilson's marital struggles, exacerbated by his drug use. According to Asher, he and Wilson drew from extensive discussions about women and relationship dynamics to inspire their songs. Asher later clarified that their songwriting conversations focused on hypothetical scenarios rather than explicit autobiography.
Pet Sounds is sometimes suggested to be a song cycle portraying the unraveling of a romantic relationship. While Pet Sounds exhibits unified emotional themes, no deliberate narrative was planned. Asher and Wilson never discussed a specific concept, though Asher acknowledged Wilson's potential to unconsciously shape one. Author Scott Schinder argued that Wilson and Asher had crafted a song cycle about "the emotional challenges accompanying the transition from youth to adulthood", paired with "a series of intimate, hymn-like love songs". Music historian Larry Star traced a thematic progression from "youthful optimism [...] to philosophical and emotional disillusionment" across its track sequencing. Lambert argued that Wilson likely intended a narrative, influenced by "theme albums" by Frank Sinatra and the Four Freshmen.
Wilson refined the themes and complex arranging style he had introduced with The Beach Boys Today!, such that writers often refer to the second side of Today! as a precursor to Pet Sounds. Musicologist Daniel Harrison contends that his development as a composer and arranger on Pet Sounds was incremental relative to his earlier work, while its unconventional harmonic progressions and hypermetric disruptions extended techniques already demonstrated in their 1964 songs "The Warmth of the Sun" and "Don't Back Down". Musicologist Charles Granata describes the album as a culmination of Wilson's songwriting artistry, although he had transitioned "from writing car and surf songs to writing studious ones" by 1965, and John Covach identifies the "California Girls" single as anticipating "the more intensely experimental" approach of Pet Sounds, while Carl, Dennis, and Jardine later traced its B-side "Let Him Run Wild" as marking their recognition of Wilson's evolving production style leading into Pet Sounds. Wilson had seldom used string ensembles prior to Pet Sounds.
Pet Sounds blends elements of pop, jazz, classical, exotica, and avant-garde music. Stebbins argues that the album defies singular categorization: "Pet Sounds is at times futuristic, progressive, and experimental. [...] and the only blues are in the themes and in Brian's voice." Johnston heard persistent doo-wop and R&B influences. Music journalist Noah Berlatsky attributed various "white-coded" elements to the pop R&B tradition. Wilson drew from older popular music styles, as did Spector, and some of his innovations had precedents in 1950s incidental music and Muzak arrangements. Wilson's orchestrations drew stylistic parallels to exotica producers such as Les Baxter, Martin Denny, and Esquivel, particularly through the incorporation of culturally diverse timbres.
Commentators have variously categorized the album as progressive pop, the descriptor used in its initial marketing, as well as chamber pop, psychedelic pop, and art rock. It is typically categorized among other pioneering psychedelic rock albums, although many commentators have been reluctant to include the Beach Boys within psychedelic music. Wilson himself felt that while some songs contain psychedelic elements, the album overall was not. Academics Paul Hegarty and Martin Halliwell attribute the psychedelic sound to Wilson's production approachâÂÂeclectic instrumentation, echo, reverb, and Spector-inspired techniquesâÂÂwhich created layered and interwoven soundscapes. Historian Dale Carter cites dense sonic textures, structural complexity, novel instrument combinations, shifting tonal centers, and hypnotic rhythms as psychedelic qualities present in the Beach Boys' mid-1960s output.
The term "baroque pop" was absent from early critical discussions about Pet Sounds, which instead favored "progressive", and emerged later in 1990s critiques of artists it influenced. Academic John Howland argued in 2021 that the album's baroque pop traits were almost exclusive to "God Only Knows". Other genres attributed to the album have included pop rock, experimental rock, avant-pop, experimental pop, symphonic rock, and folk rock.
On Pet Sounds, Wilson combined standard rock instrumentation with intricate layers of vocal harmonies and many instruments which had rarely, if ever been used in rock. This included ukulele, sleigh bells, accordion, French and English horns, timpani, vibraphone, and tack pianoâÂÂall of which had appeared on Today!âÂÂin addition to bass harmonica, güiro, bass clarinet, bongos, glockenspiel, banjo, bicycle horn, Coca-Cola cans, and Electro-Theremin. His approach to orchestration adapted classical instrumentation to rock sensibilities rather than superimposing classical elements onto rock. Tracks on Pet Sounds averaged around a dozen unique instruments, ranging from six on "That's Not Me" to over 15 on "God Only Knows". Wilson frequently employed doubling, where two instruments play the same melody. Though it had been long used in orchestral and classical arrangements, its use in rock was predominantly restricted to electric bass. He expanded it to many instruments, including violins and accordions. Electric and acoustic basses were also frequently doubled and played with a hard plectrum. Drums were employed less for steady rhythm than for textural and tonal effects.
Pet Sounds contains fewer but more complex vocal harmonies than previous Beach Boys albums. The band shifted toward intricate vocal counterpoint and used doo-wop-style nonsense syllables more frequently than on previous releases. Wilson's signature falsetto appears seven times; his vocals dominate the album, with lead roles on five tracks, shared leads on two, and chorus contributions on two others, occupying 16 minutes of the 36-minute runtime (three more than the combined total of other members).
The album predominantly features chords that are slashed, diminished, major seventh, sixths, or suspended, with augmented and ninth chords appearing less commonly. Every track is in a major key, some unusual; "You Still Believe in Me" uses B, a key with numerous sharps and flats that keyboardists typically avoid, while "That's Not Me" is in F, the key farthest from C. Wilson employed a vertical compositional approach using block chords, rather than horizontal classical structures, and often juxtaposed contrasting chords across bass and treble clefs, resulting in polytonality. Four tracks maintain a strongly established key: "You Still Believe in Me" (B), "I'm Waiting for the Day" (E), "Sloop John B" (A), and "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times" (B). Song structures largely follow convention: three tracks follow the AABA quatrain format, while eight use verse-chorus frameworks.
Comparing the group's earlier output, musicologist Marshall Heiser identified a heightened spatial and textural dimensionality; "more inventive" chord progressions and voicings; an avoidance of conventional backbeats; and orchestrations drawing from Baxter's exotica "quirkiness" and Bacharach's "cool" pop sensibilities rather than Spector's "teen fanfares". The album incorporated tempo changes, metrical ambiguity, and uncommon tone colors that, according to musicologist James Perone, distinguish it from virtually "anything else [...] in 1966 pop music".
In discerning its classification as a "concept album", musicologist Philip Lambert posits that its "overall unity" consists of common elements evolved from Today!. While subtle, Wilson deliberately used these to ensure the album "felt like it all belonged together". Techniques in Today!, such as recurring scale motifs were realized in Pet Sounds tracks like "Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)", where ascending stepwise vocal phrases (G to C) receive mirrored instrumental responses. According to Lambert, this arch-shaped motif serves as a unifying thread throughout the album, appearing in the concluding organ phrase in "I Know There's an Answer" and the vibraphone progression during the second half of "Let's Go Away for Awhile", among other tracks.
Tertian modulations (by thirds) were frequently used. The use of major and minor submediants, which establish tonicâÂÂsubmediant (IâÂÂvi/VI) relationships in all key-shifting tracks except "God Only Knows", is cited by Lambert as another "important source of overall unity". Author Jim Fusilli observes that Wilson frequently departs from and returns to the composition's "logic" to cement "emotional intent", but never "unbridled joy", as he had with "The Little Girl I Once Knew". Lambert locates this technique in Wilson's use of half-diminished seventh chords to impart dramatic tension in songs such as "Don't Talk" (on the word "eyes" in "I can see so much in your eyes") and "God Only Knows" (on the words "sure about it" and "livin' do me").
The bass lines were chromatic and often melodic while avoiding emphasis on the root note. Descending 1âÂÂ5 patterns were a recurring device, one that Wilson had applied before, but not in work leading to Pet Sounds. Recorded early in the sessions, the album's title track features a prominent bass descent from B to F (through A, G, and G), which served as a motivic element and inspiration for subsequent tracks.
Recording for Pet Sounds primarily occurred between January 18 and April 13, 1966, across 27 sessions. "You Still Believe in Me" and "Pet Sounds" began earlier, while "Sloop John B" was partially recorded in July and December 1965. Most instrumental tracks were recorded at the United Western Recorders, while Gold Star Studios hosted sessions for "Good Vibrations" and the backing tracks of "Wouldn't It Be Nice" and "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times". Sunset Sound Recorders was used for the instrumental of "Here Today". Wilson produced the album largely with his usual engineer, Western staff member Chuck Britz.
Since the 1963 Surfer Girl sessions, Wilson integrated Spector's studio musician group, later known as "the Wrecking Crew", into his records. Regular participants included Hal Blaine (drums), Glen Campbell and Billy Strange (guitar), Al De Lory (piano), Steve Douglas (saxophone), Carol Kaye (Fender bass), Larry Knechtel (Hammond organ), Don Randi (piano), Lyle Ritz (upright bass), Ray Pohlman (bass and guitar), and Julius Wechter (percussion). He relied on these musicians to execute increasingly complex arrangements, especially as the band members were touring. Pet Sounds marked the first Beach Boys project in which he almost exclusively used these musicians for the backing tracks. Carl, who sporadically contributed guitar parts during sessions, reflected that the technical demands of the recordings had exceeded the group's collective abilities.
Backing track sessions typically lasted at least three hours. Britz recalled that most time was spent refining sounds, as Wilson knew which instruments he wanted and insisted on assembling all musicians simultaneously, despite financial impracticality. By layering instruments (such as multiple types of keyboards) playing in unison, slight tuning discrepancies between them produced a chorusing effect, unattainable through electronic means.
Wilson characterized himself as "sort of a square" around these musicians, starting with each instrument's sound individually, typically beginning with keyboards and drums, followed by violins if not overdubbed. Sessions lacked pre-rehearsals, and he usually arrived with only rudimentary musical drafts. He typically composed full arrangements mentally but conveyed them through shorthand notation prepared by session musicians, with separate charts for different instrumental groups. His approach relied on their improvisational skills; instead of written scores, he hummed or vocalized parts during recording. Blaine recalled using handwritten chord charts, which Wilson photocopied for the group; they would adjust parts based on his feedback during takes. While maintaining creative control, he welcomed additional input and occasionally retained mistakes if he felt they enhanced the recording.
Compared to Spector's Wall of Sound, Wilson's productions achieved greater complexity through his use of four-track and eight-track recording. While Spector recorded live ensemble takes in mono on three-track machines, Wilson employed a Scully four-track 288 tape recorder for initial backing tracks, then transferred them to eight-track. Instruments were grouped across three tracks: drums, percussion, and keyboards; horns; and bass with additional percussion and guitar. A fourth track held temporary reference mixes, later replaced by overdubs like strings. Once Wilson was satisfied, Britz provided a tape copy for him to take and evaluate.
Principal recording commenced on January 18 with the basic track for "Let's Go Away for Awhile". Sessions for "Wouldn't It Be Nice" began on January 22, while "Caroline, No" was tracked on January 31. February saw "I Know There's an Answer", "Don't Talk", "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times", and "That's Not Me". March sessions included "I'm Waiting for the Day" and "God Only Knows", alongside "Here Today".
Pet Sounds is sometimes considered a Brian Wilson solo album, including by Wilson himself, who later called it "a chance to step outside the group and shine". Except for Love, who received phone previews of tracks, other band members were not consulted during production, though Brian had played excerpts to Dennis and Carl. Upon returning to the studio on February 9, the bandmates were presented with recordings that jarred with their expectations.
Critiques among the band members focused on lyrics rather than music, with concerns about replicating the complex arrangements live. In his 2016 memoir, Brian claimed Carl embraced the album while Love and Dennis initially did not. Dennis late dismissed rumors of dissent, insisting no member matched Brian's talent or opposed his vision. Carl rejected such reports as "bullshit", declaring universal affection for the project. Love stated his sole objection targeted the original lyrics of "I Know There's an Answer".
Brian later remembered arguments about the project being "too arty", while Marilyn later said that his bandmates had struggled "to understand what he was going through emotionally". Asher stated the bandmatesâÂÂespecially Al, Dennis, and MikeâÂÂvoiced objections such as "This isn't our kind of shit!" during tense sessions. Beyond this, he added that the bandmates never challenged Brian on his direction for the group, feeling they lacked the talent to make such judgments. Love's objections centered on the album's suitability for the band's brandâÂÂreservations which Jardine sharedâÂÂrather than artistic quality. Jardine was hesitant about the stylistic shift, but grew to appreciate it
According to Brian, his bandmates were concerned that he might depart for a solo career. He acknowledged their resistance to his vocal prominence, calling it "more of a Brian Wilson album than a Beach Boys album." Love later wrote that he desired greater contributions and his "lead voice" in some songs. Brian conceded that tensions eased as the band accepted the project: "They let me have my little stint."
Vocal overdubs occurred at Western and CBS Columbia Square from February to April. The bandmates often arrived unprepared, with minimal rehearsal before singing. Brian coached each member on their vocal parts at a piano. Following nightly playback sessions, they occasionally opted to re-record sections.
The vocal sessions demanded unprecedented precision, with Love recalling Brian's meticulous scrutiny of harmonies, often requiring multiple retakes for minor pitch deviations. Love affectionately nicknamed Brian "dog ears" for his auditory sensitivity and insistence on tonal and rhythmic accuracy, sometimes discarding completed tracks the next day to re-record them.
Neumann U-47 (for Dennis, Carl, and Jardine) and Shure 545 microphones (for Brian's leads) were used, with Love requiring an additional microphone for his lower register. Brian allocated six tracks for individual vocals to refine balance during mixing. Mono overdubs utilized eight-track recorders, reserving one channel for supplementary layers. Columbia Studios hosted five songs, being the sole Los Angeles facility equipped with eight-track technology during the sessions.
Tape effects were limited to slapback echo and reverb. Reverb was added live, uncommon in modern music production. Wilson often isolated reverb on the timpani. Late overdubs, such as strings for "Don't Talk" and a final adjustment for "I Know There's an Answer" around April 17, completed the album's principal recording. Mixing occurred within days in a single nine-hour session, initially planned for vocal overdubs on "Let's Go Away for Awhile" before Capitol redirected it. Most time was spent blending vocals with the pre-mixed mono instrumentals.
The original mono mix contained numerous technical flaws contrasting with the refined arrangements and performances, alongside countertextural aspects gesturing toward the work's recorded nature. Among the most prominent examples, an audible tape splice occurs in "Wouldn't It Be Nice" between the chorus and Love's bridge vocal entrance, while a distant conversation was accidentally captured during the instrumental break of "Here Today" amid a vocal overdub. Wilson's mixing process faced technical constraints, such as simultaneously recording overdubs while mixing existing tracks and combining multiple recordings into a single mono channel in real time, which risked unintended artifacts and oversights due to limited monitoring.
A true stereo mix of Pet Sounds was not initially pursued due to logistical constraints. Like Spector, Wilson deliberately mixed in mono, believing it offered greater control over sound reproduction, unaffected by variables in speaker placement or playback systems. At the time, most consumer equipment and broadcasts were monophonic. Another factor was Wilson's near-total deafness in his right ear. The unprecedented production costs totaled $70,000 (equivalent to $ in ).
"Wouldn't It Be Nice" portrays a young couple longing for adult independence. Asher cited it as the sole track for which he wrote lyrics to match Wilson's fully composed melody. Recording the band's vocals required more studio time than any other song, as they struggled with Wilson's performance standards.
"You Still Believe in Me" introduces recurring introspective themes, exploring self-awareness of personal shortcomings amid a partner's devotion. Wilson characterized the song as depicting a man's emotional vulnerability from an effeminate perspective. He and Asher crafted its introduction by plucking piano strings with a bobby pin.
"That's Not Me", the track that most closely resembles a conventional rock song, features key modulations and mood shifts. It is the only track with most instrumental parts performed by the band members themselves. Its lyrics depict a young man's journey toward self-realization, concluding that companionship outweighs solitary ambition.
"Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)" is among the most harmonically complex of Wilson's songs, centering on non-verbal communication between lovers. It uses word painting, such as a bassline mimicking a heartbeat on the lyric "Listen to my heart beat", reinforced by timpani accents. Departing from his earlier work, Wilson incorporated a string sextet (violins, viola, and cello) to achieve an expressive tone.
"I'm Waiting for the Day" follows a protagonist attempting to comfort a guarded, emotionally wounded love interest. It blends jazz chords with doo-wop progressions and orchestral instrumentation. Originally registered as Brian's solo composition in 1964, it was later co-credited to Love, who made a minor adjustment to Brian's lyrics.
"Let's Go Away for Awhile" is the first instrumental, featuring 12 violins, four saxophones, piano, oboe, vibraphones, and a Coca-Cola bottle used as a guitar slide. Wilson considered the track to be "the finest piece of art" he had made up to that point, and one that may have been subconsciously influenced by Burt Bacharach's music. Musicologist Larry Starr references the piece's unusual AABCC structure as an example of the album's occasional formal experimentation.
Jardine proposed adapting the traditional Caribbean folk song "Sloop John B", which he knew from the Kingston Trio. Wilson's arrangement blended rock with marching band instrumentation, incorporating flutes, glockenspiel, bass saxophone, bass, guitar, and drums. Jardine likened the result to John Philip Sousa's marches. Wilson modified the original lyric from "this is the worst trip since I've been born" to "I've ever been on", possibly alluding to psychedelic experiences. He included "Sloop John B" at Capitol's insistence, anticipating commercial success from a single release.
"God Only Knows" depicts a narrator contemplating the end of a romantic relationship, asserting that life without their partner could only be fathomed by God. It challenged pop music conventions of the mid-1960s by explicitly referencing "God" in its title and lyrics, then considered tabooâÂÂ<nowiki/>at least one prior radio ban targeted a song containing words such as "hell" and "damn". Wilson and Asher debated the risks of limited airplay and the deceptive opening line "I may not always love you". Wilson credited Asher with ultimately broadening his songwriting approach through discussions of standards like "Stella by Starlight".
"I Know There's an Answer", initially titled "Let Go Your Ego" and "Hang On to Your Ego", portrays an individual reluctant to advise others on their lifestyle. Its lyrics sparked internal controversy over perceived allusions to drug culture. Wilson stated that the chorus contained "an inappropriate lyric" which he dedicated much thought to revising, resulting in a song he later described as rejecting escapist LSD culture. The track feature a bass harmonica solo performed by session musician Tommy Morgan.
"Here Today" is narrated from an ex-boyfriend's perspective, warning of inevitable heartbreak in new relationships. Wilson described the track as an experiment in basslines, featuring a bass guitar played an octave higher as the lead instrument. It was the last song written for the album. The high-register bass may echoes elements of "God Only Knows".
"I Just Wasn't Made for These Times" addresses social alienation. Wilson described the song as depicting someone like himself "crying because he thought he was too advanced" and might "leave people behind". The instrumentation incorporates harpsichord, tack piano, flutes, temple blocks, timpani, and an Electro-Theremin performed by its inventor Paul Tanner. Lambert called the chorus vocals, constructed through repeat overdubbing, emblematic of his "progressive vision for the album".
The second instrumental track "Pet Sounds" was initially named "Run, James, Run" for its intended use in a James Bond film. Its percussion involved Coca-Cola cans and a güiro. Commentator James Perone observes that although it centers lead guitar, consistent with the Beach Boys' surf music background, its elaborate of layered auxiliary percussion, abruptly changing textures, and minimal use of traditional rock drumming distinguishes it from surf. Lambert interprets the track as a "musical synopsis" of the album's key themes and a reflective pause for the narrator following the emotional climax of "Here Today".
"Caroline, No" grapples with lost innocence. Asher conceived the title as "Carol, I Know", which Wilson misheard as "Caroline, No"âÂÂwhich Asher deemed more impactful. Wilson named the song as likely his best, framing it as a melancholic reflection on irretrievable love. The track opens with the sound of a struck water cooler jug and concludes with a fade-out featuring Wilson's dogs barking alongside sounds of passing trains from a sound effects album.
"The Little Girl I Once Knew", which may be considered part of the Pet Sounds sessions, was not included on the album. Writer Neal Umphred speculated that the song might have been considered for the LP and would have probably been included had the single been more commercially successful.
In October 1965, Wilson recorded an instrumental titled "Three Blind Mice" with a 43-piece orchestra; unrelated to the nursery rhyme of the same name, it later debuted on the Beach Boys' 2011 compilation The Smile Sessions. The same day, he also recorded instrumental renditions of "How Deep Is the Ocean?" and "Stella by Starlight". Biographer Mark Dillon surmised these recordings were experimental exercises in capturing orchestral sounds, possibly preparing for the string ensemble used in "Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)", and likely never intended for release. Another instrumental, "Trombone Dixie", was recorded on November 1. Wilson dismissed it a quick arrangement made while "fuckin' around with the musicians". It was released as a bonus track on the 1990 reissue.
During late 1965, portions of the Pet Sounds sessions were dedicated to experimental endeavors, including an extended a cappella rendition of "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" that highlighted its round structure. As part of his experiments, Wilson recorded humorous skits and sound effects for a proposed psychedelic comedy album. At least two of these sketchesâÂÂ"Dick" and "Fuzz"âÂÂsurvive, featuring Wilson, a woman named Carol, and the Honeys. These remain officially unreleased.
Between February and March 1966, Wilson recorded "Good Vibrations", initially a co-authorship with Asher, who recalled the song originated from Capitol's demand for a new single. Wilson ultimately delivered "Sloop John B" and excluded "Good Vibrations" from the album, despite objections from the band.
The front cover depicts the band membersâÂÂCarl, Brian, and Dennis, Love, and Jardine (left to right)âÂÂfeeding apples to goats at the San Diego Zoo while wearing coats and sweaters. A green band header displays the artist name, album title, and track list, partially using the Cooper Black typeface. Johnston, who had joined the band unofficially, is absent due to contractual restraints with Columbia Records. The back cover includes a monochrome montage of the touring band performing onstage, posing in samurai attire during their Japan tour, and two images of Brian.
In his memoir, Love wrote that Capitol had organized the cover shoot after proposing the album title Our Freaky Friends, with the animals representing the "freaky friends". Wilson later could not remember who suggested the zoo. Jardine recalled that Pet Sounds had already been selected as the title prior to the shoot, initially misunderstanding "pet" as slang for romantic encounters, attributing the final concept to Capitol's art department. Though some sources cite Remember the Zoo as a working title, this originated as a 1990s fan-created hoax.
The cover photo was taken on February 10, 1966, by photographer George Jerman. KFMB-TV reporters footage of this was lost until 2021. A San Diego Union report stated the group visited the zoo for their album Our Freaky Friends, with zoo staff initially objecting to the title but relenting when told animals were popular with teenagers. The Beach Boys had aimed to capitalize on this trend before the rock band the Animals, who had released an album titled Animal Tracks months earlier. The zoo banned the group, accusing them of mishandling animals, though this was later lifted.
Brian later told biographer Byron Preiss the album was named for the barking dogs. Love recalled suggesting the title in a studio hallway, inspired by the zoo photos and animal sounds on the record. Carl recalled in 1996 that the title originated from Brian's concept of compiling his favorite "pet" sounds: "It was hard to think of a name for the album, because you sure couldn't call it Shut Down Vol. 3. Brian also suggested the name paid homage to Phil Spector through shared initials (PS). Wilson's 1991 memoir claims the title was inspired by Love dismissively asking, "Who's gonna hear this shit? The ears of a dog?"; Love denied this. Asher recalled disapproving the title when consulted by Wilson, feeling that it had "trivialized what we had accomplished".
On March 7, Wilson's first solo record, the "Caroline No" single (B-side "Summer Means New Love" from Summer Days) was released, charting at number 32 during a seven-week stay. It ignited speculation about his departure from the Beach Boys. The Beach Boys' "Sloop John B" (B-side "You're So Good to Me" from Summer Days), issued March 21, reached number 3.
After completing Pet Sounds, Wilson played it his wife, who later described the experience as profoundly moving and spiritual, recalling they both cried. Wilson worried its complexity might alienate listeners. Capitol staff reacted with confusion to its unconventional style. Producer Nik Venet believed Wilson was "screwing up", claiming he sought to gain industry attention and antagonize his father. Capitol A&R director Karl Engemann supported Wilson, recognizing the album's departure from the Beach Boys' earlier hits but swayed by Wilson's enthusiasm. Marketing personnel reportedly expressed disappointment. The executives debated rejecting the album but approved it after several meetings, including one where Wilson used a tape recorder with pre-recorded answers to address concerns.
Pet Sounds was released on May 16, debuting at number 106 on the Billboard charts and initially selling 200,000 copies. In the U.S., it peaked at number 10 on July 2 and remained on the chart for ten months, a moderate performance compared to the band's earlier albums. Total sales were estimated at 500,000 units, but the RIAA did not grant it immediate gold certificationâÂÂthe first Beach Boys album since 1963 to lack it upon release.
Capitol's ad campaign included Billboard ads and radio spots that maintained the group's image without acknowledging the album's new direction. The radio spots featured comedy skits by the band that omitted musical excerpts, depending solely on name recognition. Johnston and Carl later criticized Capitol for insufficient promotion compared to past releases. Carl suggested the label relied on existing airplay. Capitol may have viewed the album as commercially risky, targeting older general audiences over their core demographic of younger women. Journalist Peter Doggett disputed claims of deliberate sabotage, which he called "a pop myth", and stated that Pet Sounds had been promoted as heavily as the Beach Boys' prior releases.
Two months after the album's release, Capitol issued the compilation Best of the Beach Boys, which earned rapid RIAA gold certification and further hindered Pet Sounds commercial performance According to Engemann, the label's marketing team doubted Pet Sounds commercial potential and sought to bolster quarterly sales. Contemporary reports state some stores received the compilation instead of Pet Sounds when ordered. On July 18, the single "Wouldn't It Be Nice" (B-side "God Only Knows") was released, peaking at number 8. Billboard later ranked the album at number 43 on its "Top Pop Albums of 1966" chart.
In 2000, Pet Sounds was certified gold and platinum by the RIAA based on verifiable sales data, though Capitol estimated total sales exceeding two million copies. Certification required documented shipment records, which Capitol struggled to provide due to lost or scattered paperwork from 1966 to 1985.
Carl stated that while the Beach Boys recognized shifting industry trends, Capitol maintained a fixed perception of the group that conflicted with their desired presentation. In March, the band hired Nick Grillo as their manager after switching management firms and recruited Derek Taylor, the Beatles' former press officer, as their publicist. Taylor's reputation helped provide a credible external perspective on the band's evolving image and activities. Following Brian's complaints regarding public perception of his talents, Taylor championed him as "a genius" to rebrand and legitimize the group.
In the UK, the band experienced limited commercial success until March 1966, when "Barbara Ann" and Beach Boys Party! both reached number 2 on the Record Retailer charts. Two singles were issued in April: "Sloop John B" peaked at number 2, while "Caroline, No" did not chart. Capitalizing on their rising British popularity, the group filmed two music videos for Top of the PopsâÂÂone for "Sloop John B" and another for "God Only Knows"âÂÂwith Taylor as director. Though intended to incorporate excerpts from "Wouldn't It Be Nice" and "Here Today", the BBC slightly edited the "God Only Knows" video to reduce runtime. The "Sloop John B" video debuted on April 28.
The band's British distributor EMI initially had no plans to release Pet Sounds in the UK but later scheduled a November release to coincide with the band's British tour. From May 16 to 21, Johnston and Taylor stayed at London's Waldorf Hotel to promote the album. Through London-based producer Kim Fowley's connections, guests including Beatles John Lennon and Paul McCartney and Who drummer Keith Moon attended repeated album playbacks in their suite. Fowley likened the event to the Beatles' 1964 arrival at LaGuardia Airport, describing Johnston as "Jesus Christ in tennis shoes" and the album as "the Ten Commandments". Moon facilitated Johnston's exposure on British television and introduced him to Lennon and McCartney.
EMI rush-released Pet Sounds in the UK on June 27 due to popular demand, where it peaked at number 2, behind the soundtrack album for The Sound of Music, remaining in the top ten for six months. Taylor is recognized as instrumental in this success due to his connections with the Beatles and other British industry figures. The UK music press carried advertisements calling Pet Sounds "The Most Progressive Pop Album Ever!" while Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog OldhamâÂÂthe Beach Boys' UK publisherâÂÂpurchased a full-page Melody Maker advertisement declaring it "the greatest album ever made". The third UK single, "God Only Knows" (B-side "Wouldn't It Be Nice"), was released on July 22 and reached number 2.
Pet Sounds became one of the five bestselling UK albums of 1966. Capitalizing on the success of Beach Boys singles, EMI issued multiple existing Beach Boys albums in the UK market, including Party!, Today!, and Summer Days. Best of the Beach Boys spent five weeks at number 2 through year's end. By the final quarter of 1966, the Beach Boys surpassed British acts like the Beatles as the UK's top-selling album artists.
In the U.S., early reviews of Pet Sounds varied from negative to cautiously favorable. Billboard called the album an "exciting, well-produced LP" with "two superb instrumental cuts" and highlighted "Wouldn't It Be Nice" in a belated review. While American critics had offered sporadic praise for the album, some fans spread word to avoid the "weird" new Beach Boys release.
Conversely, British music journalists had an overwhelmingly favorable response, due in part to the promotional efforts. Rolling Stone founder Jann Wenner recalled that many British fans viewed the Beach Boys as surpassing the Beatles. Disc and Music Echo critic Penny Valentine praised the album as "Thirteen tracks of Brian Wilson genius", describing it as "sad little wistful songs about lost love and found love and all-around love". Norman Jopling of Record Mirror reported that the LP had been widely praised and uncriticized, writing that his only complaint with the album was "terribly complicated and cluttered" arrangements, suspecting it would primarily appeal to existing fans. A contrasting review in Disc and Music Echo argued the album would attract "thousands of new fans", declaring that it elevated the group's previously uneven output.
Melody Maker surveyed musicians on whether Pet Sounds was revolutionary or "as sickly as peanut butter" and concluded the album had a considerable impact on artists and industry figures. Spencer Davis of the Spencer Davis Group stated he became a fan of the Beach Boys after repeated listens of the album, calling Wilson a great producer. Eric Clapton, then with Cream, said his band loved the album and deemed Wilson "a pop genius". Three of nine respondentsâÂÂKeith Moon, Manfred Mann's Mike d'Abo, and Scott Walker of the Walker BrothersâÂÂdisagreed that it was revolutionary. D'Abo and Walker preferred the Beach Boys' earlier work, as did journalist and television presenter Barry Fantoni, who favored Today! and said Pet Sounds was "probably revolutionary, but I'm not sure that everything that's revolutionary is necessarily good". Moon's bandmate Pete Townshend criticized the album as tailored for "feminine" audiences, although later praised "God Only Knows".
Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones disliked the album's songwriting, despite enjoying the record and its harmonies, while John Lennon praised Wilson's work. At the end of 1966, Melody Maker declared Pet Sounds and the Beatles' Revolver joint recipients of its "Pop Album of the Year" honor; its panel had deadlocked before compromising on the dual selection.
Wilson later stated that while Pet Sounds was well received in Britain, he viewed its underperformance in the U.S. as a public rejection of his artistry. His wife recalled that the tepid response "destroyed Brian", causing him to lose faith in music. Reflecting on his brother's disappointment, Carl described the album as like "going to church" and lamented that Brian missed experiencing its British success during the band's late 1966 UK tour.
Through the remainder of 1966, Wilson collaborated with lyricist Van Dyke Parks on Smile, an unfinished album Wilson described as "a teenage symphony to God" intended to surpass Pet Sounds. During its production, he revisited earlier psychedelic comedy concepts explored during Pet Sounds session outtakes. Released in October, the single "Good Vibrations" became a global hit. Music journalist Noel Murray suggested the single's success helped clarify Wilson's artistic ambitions for listeners initially perplexed by the "un-hip orchestrations and pervasive sadness" in Pet Sounds.
As Wilson's mental health declined, his participation in the Beach Boys diminished, prompting the group to release subsequent albums that were less ambitious and received little critical attention. Wilson, in 1976, cited the band's 1968 release Friends as his second "solo album" after Pet Sounds. It was a commercial failure, leading the group's fanbase to abandon "any hope that [he] would deliver a true successor", according to a Mojo contributor.
Wilson attempted several professional comebacks in subsequent years, including the 1977 album The Beach Boys Love You, which marked his brief return as the group's primary songwriter and vocalist. He regarded it as a spiritual successor to Pet Sounds, citing its autobiographical lyrics and his feeling of creative satisfaction. In 1988, he released debut solo album Brian Wilson, aiming to revisit the sensibilities of Pet Sounds. Co-producer Russ Titelman promoted it as "Pet Sounds '88". It included "Baby Let Your Hair Grow Long", a thematic follow-up to "Caroline, No".
The Beach Boys rerecorded "Caroline, No" with Timothy B. Schmit, featuring a new multi-part vocal arrangement, for their 1996 album Stars and Stripes Vol. 1. Following the album's release, tentative plans emerged for a project biographer Mark Dillon dubbed Pet Sounds, Vol. 2, which would have involved the band collaborating with Sean O'Hagan of the High Llamas. Despite interest from record companies, the project remained unrealized. Later in the 1990s, Wilson and Asher resumed their songwriting partnership, composing at least four songs; only "This Isn't Love" and "Everything I Need" were released.
In the late 1990s, Carl Wilson vetoed an offer for the Beach Boys to perform Pet Sounds in full for ten shows, citing the complexity of replicating the album's arrangements onstage and Brian's diminishing vocal range. Brian ultimately performed the album live as a solo artist in 2000 with a different orchestra in each venue, and on three occasions without orchestra on his 2002 tour to a favorable critical reception. Recordings from Wilson's 2002 concert tour were released as Brian Wilson Presents Pet Sounds Live.
In 2013, Wilson performed Pet Sounds at two shows, unannounced, also with Jardine as well as original Beach Boys guitarist David Marks. From 2016 through 2020, Wilson toured Pet Sounds across Australia, Japan, Europe, Canada and the U.S., planned as his final performances of the album. Writing in 2016, Rolling Stones credited Wilson's Pet Sounds performances with establishing a precedent for other artists to play "classic albums" in their entirety.
Commentators often consider Pet Sounds to be one of the greatest and most influential albums, typically acknowledging its ambition, innovative studio production techniques, and high compositional standards. The album solidified Wilson's reputation for pioneering studio craftsmanship with its attention to detail at a level unprecedented in popular music; he wrote, arranged, and produced the album with control over every phase of its creation, an approach that Granata credits as redefining the role of record producers. While many artists previously served as their own producers, Wilson became the first major pop artist to oversee all aspects of an album's production. According to author Virgil Moorefield, Wilson built on the precedent of Leiber and Stoller by seeking to realize the full potential of the recording studio and effectively "composing at the mixing board"; as both songwriter and producer, he was involved in every detail of the sound production, making impromptu decisions about notes, articulation, and timbre, thereby merging the roles of composer, arranger, and producerâÂÂa model later adopted industry-wide.
Despite limited initial commercial success, its impact was immediate and far-reaching, later influencing artists across rock, pop, hip-hop, jazz, electronic, experimental, and punk. Lenny Waronker, then a staff producer at Warner Bros. Records, said that Pet Sounds elevated studio artistry among West Coast artists. In the UK it signaled a new level of creative ambition for pop while numerous groups furthered their exploration of experimental recording techniques. "God Only Knows" is frequently praised as one of the greatest songs ever written; historian John Robert Greene, in his 2010 book America in the Sixties, credited it with redefining the popular love song.
The album's production techniques remained common in modern music production through the 2010s. Composer Philip Glass compared its legacy to that of the Beatles' and Pink Floyd's recordings, and felt that the album's "structural innovation", incorporation of classical elements in arrangements, and novel "production concepts", with hindsight, clarified its status as a defining work of its era. Atlantic contributor Jason Guriel argued that it marked popular music's first extended exploration of auteurism.
Pet Sounds established a new benchmark for production and musical sophistication in the rock genre, according to musicologist John Covach. Greene positioned Pet Sounds as among the principal contributor to rock music trends after 1965. Later discussions of the greatest albums of all time frequently cite Pet Sounds alongside the Beatles' Revolver and Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde, released contemporaneously. Among critics, Geoffrey Himes argued that Wilson's innovative harmonies and timbres were as impactful as Dylan's incorporation of irony into rock lyrics. Charlie Gillett felt that the album's "naïve innocence" diverged from skeptical contemporary works by Dylan, the Beatles, and the Rolling Stones, whereas Jon Savage saw that Pet Sounds contrasted the Rolling Stones' "icy mod cool" with its personal vulnerability. Velvet Underground co-founder John Cale called Pet Sounds "adult and childlike at the same time."
Wilson's pioneering use of doubling for virtually every instrument in Pet Sounds marked its first use in rock music. "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times" was the first piece in popular music to incorporate the Electro-Theremin, and the first rock piece to feature theremin-like sounds. The album is also cited as a precursor to synthesizer adoption; music writer Jeff Nordstedt contends that Wilson's layered instrumental combinations, achieved without electronic tools, foreshadowed and "fueled the drive toward" the synthesizer's capacity to unify organic tones into novel timbres. Pet Sounds marked the first instance of a rock group abandoning the conventional small-ensemble format for an entire album. Music journalist Tim Sommer suggests that while other artists had occasionally diverged from this format for individual songs, the Beach Boys' work was unprecedented in creating a full-length album that could not be replicated by a typical four- or five-member amplified group.
Rock historians frequently link Pet Sounds to the Beatles' 1967 Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Paul McCartney often cited Pet Sounds as his favorite album and "God Only Knows" as "the greatest song ever written". He declared in 1990 that "no one is educated musically 'til they've heard that album" and credited it as an influence on his increasingly melodic bass-playing style, Sgt. Pepper, and his composition "Here, There and Everywhere" . Producer George Martin stated that Wilson challenged the Beatles, adding that "Without Pet Sounds [...] Sgt. Pepper wouldn't have happened." The Beach Boys' rivalry with the Beatles was significant in advancing psychedelic music, as both groups pushed the boundaries of rock's stylistic and compositional range, inspiring later artists. Scholar Philip Auslander supports that, although psychedelic music is not typically associated with the Beach Boys, the album's experimental nature was instrumental in creating opportunities for psychedelic acts to gain broader recognition.
Pet Sounds influenced numerous artists and producers in Los Angeles' orchestral pop scene. According to music writer Noel Murray, while the Beach Boys' music diverged from the subsequent sunshine pop movementâÂÂa retrospective label for music originally categorized as "soft pop" or "soft rock"âÂÂthe record's orchestration techniques were widely emulated by producers. Music historian Bob Stanley identifies Pet Sounds and Sgt. Pepper as foundational to soft rock, citing their use of instrumentation, found sounds, and avoidance of traditional rock dynamics. He writes that acts like Harpers Bizarre, the Association, and the Mamas and the Papas expanded this approach; their styles informed subsequent groups such as the 5th Dimension and Free Design, whose music was later termed "sunshine pop". Jimmy Webb, who penned songs for several of these groups, cited Pet Sounds as a benchmark work, declaring, "There's no way I can overemphasize its importance to us, in terms of inspiration and our development." Collaborating with former Beach Boys lyricist Gary Usher, Association producer Curt Boettcher applied the Pet Sounds aesthetic to Sagittarius' 1968 release Present Tense.
The juxtaposition of upbeat music with underlying moods of melancholy and longing, exemplified by "Wouldn't It Be Nice", became core elements of the power pop genre. Chicago Reader Noah Berlatsky posited that the Beach Boys helped bridge a gap between the pop harmonizing and "melancholy" of the Drifters and the "psychedelic" experimentation of the Chi-Lites, influencing the development of smooth soul. The album's impact extended to the mid-1970s subgenre later dubbed "yacht rock", retroactively applied to soft rock characterized by jazz-influenced arrangements, introspective lyrics, and apolitical themes; in particular, the track "Sloop John B" is frequently cited as a precursor to the genre's occasional nautical themes.
Pet Sounds helped establish the album as a primary format for rock music. Though Rubber Soul had recently popularized the idea of cohesive albums over collections of singles, it largely maintained fidelity to the live ensemble sound. Wilson expanded its "album-centered" approach by crafting music that wholly transcended traditional rock instrumentation. The Los Angeles Times reported in 1968 that Wilson had become a leading figure in "art rock" following the album's release. It influenced producer Tony Clarke's orchestral-rock fusion on the Moody Blues' Days of Future Passed (1967), and Nick Drake's string arrangements on Bryter Layter (1971).
The album contributed to the emergence of progressive pop, a genre that preceded progressive rock; journalist Troy Smith later referred to "Wouldn't It Be Nice" as "the first taste of progressive pop" subsequently elaborated upon by bands such as Queen and Supertramp. Ryan Reed, writing for Tidal, referenced the album's incorporation of non-rock instruments, alongside intricate key changes and vocal harmonies, as integral to progressive pop. Bill Martin, an author of books about progressive rock, described the album as a turning point in rock's evolution from dance-oriented music to a more complex listening experience, marked by innovations in harmony, instrumentation, and studio technology. Covach states that Pet Sounds and subsequent Beach Boys and the Beatles recordings legitimized rock as a serious art form, prompting record labels to enable more experimental approaches among other artists.
By the early 1970s, there was a growing preference among rock record consumers for self-contained artists over collaboration, as orchestration became associated with older generations. By the mid-1970s, more melody-focused songwriters adapted the progressive rock genre for mainstream radio. Musician and journalist Andy Gill suggested that Pet Sounds ultimately inspired rock bands to "get clever" and experiment with orchestration and time signatures. Eric Woolfson of the Alan Parsons Project praised it as "phenomenally progressive stuff".
By the 1990s, Pet Sounds had become a major influence on indie pop, with Wilson described as a "godfather" to indie musicians influenced by his melodic sensibilities, studio experimentation, and chamber orchestrations. "Chamber pop" also emerged as a distinct genre from the musical template established by Pet Sounds.
During the mid-1990s, underground artists including Cardinal, the High Llamas, Yum-Yum, and members of the Elephant 6 collective drew inspiration from the album's arrangements, spurring a movement termed "ork-pop". Sean O'Hagan of the High Llamas, characterized by DeRogatis as "the most Pet Sounds-obsessed" of these musicians, channeled its orchestrated approach in works such as Gideon Gaye (1994) and Hawaii (1995). Robert Schneider of the Apples in Stereo and Jim McIntyre of Von Hemmling founded Pet Sounds Studio, which served as the venue for numerous Elephant 6 projects by Neutral Milk Hotel and the Olivia Tremor Control. Pet Sounds has been cited as a precursor to emo music, with writer Sean Cureton identifying parallels in the introspective themes of Weezer's Pinkerton (1996) and Death Cab for Cutie's Transatlanticism (2003). Music critic Ernest Simpson and Wild Nothing's Jack Tatum have called Pet Sounds "the first emo album", with Simpson referring to "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times" in particular.
Radiohead's 1997 album OK Computer was intended to evoke an initially "shocking" quality similar to that of Pet Sounds, according to Thom Yorke. Collaborating with O'Hagan and Elephant 6 members, Cornelius' Fantasma, released a few months later, was created as an explicit homage to Pet Sounds. The album experienced a resurgence in popularity by the late 1990s; Lester cited the High Llamas, Saint Etienne, Stereolab, Air, Kid Loco, and Lewis Taylor among "today's most interesting acts ... using the Brian Wilson songbook as a resource for their forays into the realms of electronic pop."
One of the earliest tribute albums dedicated to Pet Sounds is the Japanese Smiling Pets (1998), including contributions from Seagull Screaming Kiss Her Kiss Her and Melt Banana. In 2007, producer Bullion created a J Dilla mashup of the album, '. Novelist Haruki Murakami translated Jim Fusilli's book on the album. In 2014, the Brian Wilson biopic Love & Mercy included a substantial depiction of the album's making. To honor the album's 50th anniversary, 26 artists contributed to a Pitchfork retrospective on its enduring influence, including comments from members of Talking Heads, Yo La Tengo, Chairlift, and Deftones, among others. That year, PopMatters contributor Danilo Castro acknowledged the album had "restructured the landscape of modern music in its image", with its influence extending to David Bowie, the Flaming Lips, Frank Ocean, Fleet Foxes, Bruce Springsteen, and Kanye West.
The initial acclaim for Pet Sounds was immediately diverted by the Beatles' successive releases. It received no 1967 Grammy Award nomination. Geoffrey Cannon wrote in his late 1967 column for Listener that the Beach Boys were "lesser than the Beatles" due to the album's "juvenile or specious" ballads and lack of cohesive artistic vision, though his critique was withheld from publication by The Listeners editor. Melody Maker journalist Richard Williams, in a 1971 reappraisal, shared this sentiment, attributing the album's muted reception, relative to the Beatles, to a perceived narrower range of influences. Gene Sculatti, writing in Jazz & Pop magazine in 1968, recognized the album's debt to Rubber Soul and called it "revolutionary only within the confines of the Beach Boys' music" despite also serving as a "final statement of an era and a prophecy that sweeping changes lay ahead."
From the late 1960s onward, Pet Sounds underwent critical reevaluation, with a 1976 NME feature, cited by author Johnny Morgan, as particularly impactful. Ben Edmonds of Circus reported in 1971 that the album's "beauty" had endured amid "the turbulence of the past few years", adding that "many consider it not only the Beach Boys' finest achievement, but a milestone in the progression of contemporary rock as well." Stephen Davis wrote in a 1972 Rolling Stone review that the album represented Wilson's pinnacle as an artist, likening the emotional resonance of its "trenchant cycle of love songs" to "a shatteringly evocative novel". He argued that the album had changed "the course of popular music" and "a few lives in the bargain". Melody Maker critic Josh Ingham wrote in 1973 that while initially "ignored by the public", Pet Sounds had inspired many critics to label Wilson a genius, "not least for being a year ahead of Sgt Pepper in thinking." Ingham concluded that, "With hindsight, of course, Pet Sounds has become the classic album."
After going out of print in 1974, Pet Sounds entered a period of obscurity with prolonged placement in discount bins. Sociomusicologist Simon Frith wrote in 1981 that the album remained widely perceived as "a 'weird' record" within music circles. Dave Marsh's 1979 review in The Rolling Stone Record Guide (1979) awarded four stars (out of a possible five), characterizing it as a "powerful, but spotty" collection where the least experimental songs proved to be the best. By 1985, he wrote that the album was now considered a "classic" while contrasting its perceived disconnect from listeners with the Beatles' contemporaneous work. Granata wrote that upon its 1990 CD reissue, the album remained a "quasi-cult classic" primarily embraced by devoted fans.
Pet Sounds has since been widely ranked among the greatest albums of all time and extensively analyzed for its musical and production innovations. By the 1990s, three British critics' polls placed it at or near the top of their rankings. Publications such as NME, The Times, and Uncut have each ranked it as the greatest album of all time. In 1994, Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums, which surveyed the public and a wide range of critics, musicians and industry figures, listed Pet Sounds at number 3; a revised 2000 edition of the book repositioned it at number 18.
In 1998, Pet Sounds was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. Historian Michael Roberts suggested that the album's canonical status solidified following the 1997 release of its expanded reissue, The Pet Sounds Sessions. Crawdaddy founder Paul Williams, writing in 1998, declared Pet Sounds a 20th-century classic comparable to James Joyce's Ulysses, Stanley Kubrick's ', and Pablo Picasso's Guernica. In Music USA: The Rough Guide (1999), Richie Unterberger and Samb Hicks deemed the album a "quantum leap" from the Beach Boys' earlier work and regarded its arrangements as among "the most gorgeous" in rock history.
In 2004, the Library of Congress preserved Pet Sounds in the National Recording Registry for its being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." By 2006, over 100 domestic and international publications had recognized the album as one of the greatest ever recorded. Larry Starr, in American Popular Music: From Minstrelsy to MP3 (2006), writes that Pet Sounds had epitomized "state-of-the-art pop music in every sense" through its "diverse and unusual instrumentation", "virtuosic vocal arrangements", "advanced harmonies", and "occasional formal experiments". Chris Smith's 2009 book 101 Albums That Changed Popular Music characterized it as "one of the most innovative recordings in rock" and a work that transformed Wilson from "talented bandleader to studio genius." Philip Lambert, a university music professor who had authored book-length analyses on Wilson and Charles Ives, described the album as "an extraordinary achievement â for any musician, but especially for the 23-year-old Wilson".
Luis Sanchez, in his 2014-published 33â  book about Smile, described Pet Sounds as "the score to a film about what rock music doesn't have to be", praising its "inward-looking sentimentalism" and Wilson's "sui generis" vision. Music critic Tim Sommer considered it the greatest album of all time, "probably by about 20 or 30 lengths", and distinguished it as the only one among frequently cited masterpieces like Jethro Tull's Thick as a Brick (1972), Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon (1973), and Radiohead's OK Computer to have been written from a teenage or adolescent perspective.
In 2000, Pitchfork founder Ryan Schreiber rated the album's latest reissue 7.5/10 and decreed that although Pet Sounds had been "groundbreaking enough to alter the course of music", its "straight-forward pop music" had become "passé and clichéd" compared to The Dark Side of the Moon, Loveless and OK Computer. For the 2006 40th Anniversary edition, Pitchfork contributor Dominique Leone awarded the album 9.4, affirming its enduring acclaim but expressing a preference for the Beach Boys' post-Pet Sounds recordings. Leone praised its "hymnal" qualities and themes as having retained their emotional potency, reporting that generations of listeners "will secretly believe you have no soul if you don't announce your allegiance to it" before concluding, "Certainly, regardless of what I write here, the impact and 'influence' of the record will have been in turn hardly influenced at all."
Discussing the album's sleeve design, Jardine expressed disappointment with the zoo photo, stating he had wanted something "more sensitive and enlightening". Johnston dubbed it the "worst cover in the history of the record business", while biographer Peter Ames Carlin deemed the back cover's design "even worse" than the front. Peter Doggett contrasted its aesthetic with mid-1960s sophisticated cover art by contemporaries like the Beatles, Bob Dylan, and the Rolling Stones, calling it "a warning of what could happen when music and image parted company: songs of high romanticism, an album cover of stark banality."
In a 2004 essay, Robert Christgau described Pet Sounds as a "good record, but a ". Jeff Nordstedt's essay in the 2004 book Kill Your Idols critiqued the album's legacy, arguing that discussions often prioritized its influence over substantive analysis of its music. Nordstedt considered the album's hit songs to be "disjointed" and the remaining tracks "downright insane", criticizing its perceived role in fostering the overproduction apparent in 1980s popular music and questioning its artistic authenticity, citing its "inoffensive aesthetics", absence of "visceral charge", and collaborative origins with a commercial jingle writer: "it offends every notion of truth that I hold dear about rock 'n' roll". Comedian Fred Armisen portrayed a character in the television series Portlandia (2011âÂÂ2018) that was based on his observations of recording engineers fixated on Pet Sounds and vintage studio equipment, whom he likened to 1950s car enthusiasts in their technical obsession. Stereogum writer Ryan Leas reported in 2016 that Pet Sounds had grown to be "arguably even more of a totemic presence than Revolver".
Pet Sounds has had many different reissues since its release in 1966, including remastered mono and remixed stereo versions.
Notes
Per archivists John Brode, Will Crerar, Joshilyn Hoisington, and Craig Slowinski.
The Beach Boys
Guests
Session musicians (also known as "the Wrecking Crew")
The Sid Sharp Strings
Technical staff