Santa Fe New Mexican

Famous as music producer, notorious as convicted killer

- By Christophe­r Weber and Linda Deutsch

LOS ANGELES — Phil Spector, the eccentric and revolution­ary music producer who transforme­d rock music with his “Wall of Sound” method and who later was convicted of murder, has died. He was 81.

California state prison officials said he died Saturday of natural causes at a hospital.

Spector was convicted of murdering actress Lana Clarkson in 2003 at his castle-like mansion on the edge of Los Angeles. After a trial in 2009, he was sentenced to 19 years to life.

While most sources give Spector’s birth date as 1940, it was listed as 1939 in court documents following his arrest. His lawyer subsequent­ly confirmed that date to the Associated Press.

Clarkson, star of Barbarian

Queen and other B-movies, was found shot to death in the foyer of Spector’s mansion in the hills overlookin­g Alhambra, a modest suburban town on the edge of Los Angeles.

Until the actress’ death, which Spector maintained was an “accidental suicide,” few residents even knew the mansion belonged to the reclusive producer, who spent his remaining years in a prison hospital east of Stockton.

Decades before, Spector had been hailed as a visionary for channeling Wagnerian ambition into the three-minute song, creating the “Wall of Sound” that merged spirited vocal harmonies with lavish orchestral arrangemen­ts to produce such pop monuments as “Da Doo Ron Ron,” “Be My Baby” and “He’s a Rebel.”

He was the rare self-conscious artist in rock’s early years and cultivated an image of mystery and power with his dark shades and impassive expression.

Tom Wolfe declared him the “first tycoon of teen.” Bruce Springstee­n and Brian Wilson openly replicated his grandiose recording techniques and wideeyed romanticis­m, and John Lennon called him “the greatest record producer ever.”

The secret to his sound: an overdubbed onslaught of instrument­s, vocals and sound effects that changed the way pop records were recorded. He called the result, “Little symphonies for the kids.”

By his mid-20s his “little symphonies” had resulted in nearly two dozen hit singles and made him a millionair­e. “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling,” the operatic Righteous Brothers ballad which topped the charts in 1965, has been tabulated as the song most played on radio and television — counting the many cover versions — in the 20th century.

But thanks in part to the arrival of the Beatles, his chart success would soon fade. When “River Deep-Mountain High,” an aptly-named 1966 release that featured Tina Turner, failed to catch on, Spector shut down his record label and withdrew from the business for three years. He would go on to produce the Beatles and Lennon among others, but he was now serving the artists, instead of the other way around.

In 1969, Spector was called in to salvage the Beatles’ Let

It Be album, a troubled “back to basics” production marked by dissension within the band. Although Lennon praised Spector’s work, bandmate Paul McCartney was enraged, especially when Spector added strings and a choir to McCartney’s “The Long and Winding Road.” Years later, McCartney would oversee a remixed Let it Be, removing Spector’s contributi­ons.

A documentar­y of the making of Lennon’s 1971 Imagine album showed the ex-Beatle clearly in charge, prodding Spector over a backing vocal, a line none of Spector’s early artists would have dared cross.

Spector worked on George Harrison’s acclaimed post-Beatles triple album, All Things Must Pass and co-produced Lennon’s Imagine.

The volume, and violence, of Spector’s music reflected a dark side he could barely contain even at his peak. He was imperious, temperamen­tal and dangerous, remembered bitterly by Darlene Love, Ronnie Spector and others who worked with him.

Years of stories of his waving guns at recording artists in the studio and threatenin­g women would come back to haunt him after Clarkson’s death.

He would later tell friends Clarkson had shot herself. The case was fraught with mystery, and it took authoritie­s a year to file charges. In the meantime, Spector remained free on $1 million bail.

When he was finally indicted for murder, he lashed out at authoritie­s, angrily telling reporters: “The actions of the Hitler-like DA and his storm trooper henchmen are reprehensi­ble, unconscion­able and despicable.”

His first trial ended in a 10-2 deadlock leaning toward conviction. His defense had argued that the actress, despondent about her fading career, shot herself through the mouth. A retrial got underway in October 2008 and he was convicted and sentenced in 2009.

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP FILE PHOTO ?? Music producer Phil Spector sits in a Los Angeles courtroom for his sentencing for murder on March 29, 2009.
JAE C. HONG/AP FILE PHOTO Music producer Phil Spector sits in a Los Angeles courtroom for his sentencing for murder on March 29, 2009.

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