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Jeff Lynne on Writing With Brian Wilson in Malibu: ‘It Was Horrible’

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Lynne recalled the Beach Boys legend struggling under the influence of his controversial therapist Dr. Landy during their Malibu songwriting sessions.

Jeff Lynne, one of rock's most celebrated producers, has spoken candidly about the discomfort he felt writing with Brian Wilson at Wilson's Malibu home during the period when Wilson was under the control of his controversial therapist Dr. Eugene Landy. Lynne described the experience as distressing, saying he could see Wilson's talent and decency despite the difficult circumstances surrounding him at the time.

A Difficult Session in Malibu

Lynne recalled the collaboration in stark terms. “We wrote ‘Let It Shine' at his house in Malibu,” he said. “He was really struggling in his life. It was horrible, and he was being treated badly. But you could see what a nice guy he was despite everything happening in the background.”

The song emerged from a period when Wilson was still under the influence of Landy, the therapist whose methods were widely condemned as abusive. Lynne noted that Landy's presence made the sessions unsettling. “It was all very distressing,” he said. “I only saw Dr Landy a couple of times, walking around with his cape and walking stick. I don't really want to talk about that.”

Lynne's Complicated Admiration for Wilson

Despite the difficult circumstances, Lynne's respect for Wilson's musical gifts was evident. He compared Wilson to Mozart in the world of rock and roll, acknowledging that Wilson's sense of harmony was something he could not hope to match or second-guess, even with the best resources at his disposal.

Lynne admitted that working with Wilson presented a unique challenge: it was hard to know what Wilson was going for when Landy's influence was so pervasive. Still, Lynne found value in the musical connection they shared, and ‘Let It Shine' stands as one of the stronger recordings Wilson released during that troubled period.

The experience also left a mark on Lynne's own work. His subsequent productions drew on some of the same wall-of-sound harmonic approach that Wilson had long made his signature, even as Lynne retained his own distinct touch.

Context: Lynne as Producer and Collaborator

By the time Lynne sat down with Wilson in Malibu, he had already established himself as one of rock's most versatile producers through his work with ELO. He would go on to work with The Beatles on their Anthology project, navigating the challenge of suggesting changes to Paul McCartney and George Harrison's harmonies. That kind of diplomatic confidence was harder to summon, he acknowledged, when working with someone of Wilson's stature under such fraught personal conditions.

Lynne has spoken about the difficulty of giving creative direction to his heroes, noting that the instinct to defer to legends can conflict with the responsibility to serve the record. With Wilson, that tension was compounded by the unpredictability that Landy's control introduced into the sessions.

What we know

  • Jeff Lynne and Brian Wilson wrote ‘Let It Shine' at Wilson's house in Malibu.
  • Lynne described the experience as distressing and said Wilson was being treated badly during that period.
  • Lynne said he only saw Dr. Landy a couple of times during the sessions, describing him as walking around with a cape and walking stick.
  • Lynne compared Wilson's sense of harmony to Mozart's in the world of rock and roll.
  • Lynne worked with McCartney and George Harrison on The Beatles' Anthology project.

The take

The period Lynne is describing is one of the darker chapters in rock history. Dr. Eugene Landy's control over Wilson stretched through much of the 1980s and into the early 1990s, and the accounts from musicians and associates who witnessed it firsthand paint a consistent picture of a genius operating under severe constraint. Landy was eventually stripped of his California psychology license in 1991 and ordered to have no contact with Wilson. The recordings Wilson made during those years are a complicated legacy: some show genuine creative sparks, as Lynne suggests ‘Let It Shine' does, while others reflect the disorientation that came with Landy's interference. For producers working with Wilson in that window, the challenge was not just musical. It required navigating a controlled environment where the artist's autonomy was severely limited. Lynne's willingness to engage at all, and to find musical common ground despite the circumstances, says something about his commitment to the craft. His observation that Wilson's harmonic instincts influenced his own subsequent work is also worth noting. ELO's lush, layered sound already had Beach Boys DNA in its lineage, and direct collaboration with Wilson, however fraught, would only have deepened that connection. Lynne has rarely spoken at length about this period, which makes his candid recollections particularly valuable for understanding both men's careers.

Why it matters

For Classic Rock fans, Lynne's account adds important texture to the story of Brian Wilson's lost years. Wilson is rightly celebrated as one of the most gifted musical minds of the 20th century, and understanding the conditions under which he worked during the Landy era helps explain why his output from that period is so uneven. Lynne's perspective, as both an admirer and a collaborator, offers a rare insider view that is sympathetic without being sanitized. It also underscores how much great music was made, and nearly lost, during one of rock's most troubling episodes of exploitation.

What's next

No specific upcoming releases or events tied to this account have been announced. Wilson has spoken publicly about the Landy period in his own memoir and in various interviews over the years, and those accounts remain the primary record of that chapter alongside recollections from collaborators like Lynne.

Frequently asked questions

Where did Jeff Lynne and Brian Wilson write ‘Let It Shine'?

Lynne said they wrote the song at Wilson's house in Malibu.

Who was Dr. Landy and why was he controversial?

Dr. Landy was Brian Wilson's therapist during a period when Wilson was described as being treated badly and struggling in his life. Lynne described Landy as distressing to be around, recalling him walking around with a cape and walking stick.

What did Jeff Lynne say about working with Brian Wilson?

Lynne said the experience was horrible and distressing, but that he could see Wilson was a nice guy despite everything happening around him.

How did Lynne describe Wilson's musical talent?

Lynne compared Wilson to Mozart in the world of rock and roll, saying Wilson's sense of harmony was beyond what Lynne could hope to improve upon.

Did the collaboration with Wilson influence Lynne's later work?

According to the account, Lynne took cues from Wilson after their collaboration, with some of his biggest records reflecting the same wall-of-sound harmonic approach Wilson was known for.

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