Terry Melcher (February 8,
1942 – November 19, 2004) was an American
musician and record
producer.
Early life
Melcher
was born Terry Jorden in New York City
to trombonist Al Jorden
and his wife, singer/actress Doris Day.
Day was only 19 years old
[96662] when she gave birth to Terry. Before Melcher's
birth, Day was planning to leave the abusive and violent Jorden:
outraged when he found out about her pregnancy, he had demanded Day
get an
abortion. Doris refused and in turn,
Jorden physically abused Day throughout her entire pregnancy.
Shortly
after giving birth, Day filed for divorce, left the boy with her
mother in Ohio
and went
back to touring with big band leader
Les Brown. After the
divorce, Al Jorden failed to visit his son on a regular basis and
had little presence in his life. Al Jorden would ultimately commit
suicide years later.
Day's
career led her to Hollywood
where she appeared on local radio shows.
After marrying and divorcing her second husband, saxophonist George
Weidler, Day met and married Martin Melcher. Martin Melcher would
become Day's manager and go on to produce many of her movies.
Although Terry and Martin disliked each other intensely, Martin
adopted Terry, giving the boy his
surname.
After Martin's death in 1968, it was discovered that he had
mismanaged or embezzled $20 million of Doris Day's money.
Career
In the early 1960s, Terry Melcher and
Bruce Johnston formed the vocal duet
Bruce & Terry. The duo had hits like
"Custom Machine" and "Summer Means Fun". Melcher and Johnston also
created another band together, The Rip Chords, that had a Top 10
hit "Hey, Little Cobra". Later, Bruce Johnston would join
The Beach Boys. By the mid-60s, Melcher had
joined the staff of
Columbia
Records and went on to work with
The
Byrds. He produced their song, "
Turn, Turn, Turn", and helped them to
produce their version of
Bob Dylan's,
"
Mr. Tambourine Man". Due to
conflicts with the band, Melcher was replaced. He later worked with
Paul Revere & the
Raiders,
Wayne Newton,
Frankie Laine,
Jimmy
Boyd,
Pat Boone,
Glen Campbell,
Mark
Lindsay and
The Mamas
& the Papas. He was instrumental in signing another
near-legendary L.A. band, the
Rising
Sons, led by
Taj Mahal and
Ry Cooder. Melcher also performed on the
Beach Boys' Platinum-certified album
Pet
Sounds as a background vocalist, and introduced
Brian Wilson to
Van
Dyke Parks in February 1966, beginning their partnership on the
ill-fated
SMiLE project.
He was also a board
member of the Monterey Pop Foundation and a producer of the
Monterey Pop
Festival
in 1967.
The Manson Family
In 1968, Beach Boy
Dennis Wilson
introduced Melcher to ex-con and aspiring musician
Charles Manson. Manson and his "family" had
been living in Wilson's house on Sunset Boulevard after Dennis had
picked up two girls from the "family" hitchhiking. Wilson expressed
interest in Manson's music and even recorded two of Manson's songs
with The Beach Boys. For a time, Melcher was interested in
recording Manson's music, as well as making a movie about the
"family".
During that time, Manson met Melcher at
10050 Cielo
Drive
, the home Melcher shared with his girlfriend,
Candice Bergen, on different
occasions. Manson eventually auditioned for Melcher, but
Melcher declined to sign him. There was still talk of a documentary
being made about Manson's music, but Melcher abandoned the project
after witnessing his subject becoming embroiled in a terrifying
fight with a drunken stuntman at
Spahn
Ranch. Both Wilson and Melcher severed their ties with Manson,
a move that angered Manson.
After severing ties with Manson, Melcher and Bergen moved out of
the Cielo Drive home. The house's owner, Rudi Altobelli, leased it
to film director
Roman Polanski and
his wife, actress
Sharon Tate. Manson
visited the house looking for Melcher, but was turned away as
Melcher had moved. On August 9, 1969, the house that was once
occupied by Melcher was the site of the brutal murders of Sharon
Tate (who was eight months pregnant at the time), coffee heiress
Abigail Folger (known as Gibby to her
friends), hairdresser
Jay Sebring,
writer
Wojciech Frykowski, and
Steven Parent, by members of
Manson's "family".
Some authors and law
enforcement personnel have theorized that the reason that 10050 Cielo
Drive
was selected by Manson was to target Melcher as
revenge for Melcher's earlier rejection of his music for a
recording contract, and that Manson did not believe it when told
that Melcher and Bergen had moved out.
At that time Melcher was producing
Jimmy
Boyd for
A&M Records.
Herb Alpert had previously visited a
recording studio where Melcher and Boyd were recording a session
for
Vee Jay Records.
Vee Jay Records was
the first record company to release The
Beatles records in the USA, then lost a major law suit over the
rights to the Beatles with Capitol Records
and went bankrupt. The record never got
released. Herb Alpert was impressed enough to invite Melcher to
produce Boyd for A&M Records. After the initial tracks were
recorded, the Manson murders took place, Melcher went into
seclusion and the session was never completed.
After
Manson was arrested, it was
widely reported that he had sent his followers to the house to kill
Melcher. Manson "family" member
Susan
Atkins, who admitted her part in the murders, stated to police
and before a
Grand Jury that the house
was chosen as the scene for the murders, "to instill fear into
Terry Melcher because Terry had given us his word on a few things
and never came through with them". In this aim, the
Manson Family was quite successful. Melcher
took to employing a bodyguard and he told prosecutor
Vincent Bugliosi that his fear was so
great, he had been undergoing psychiatric treatment. Melcher was
the most frightened of the witnesses at the trial, even though
Bugliosi assured him that, "Manson knew you were no longer living
there".
Later years
In the 1970s, Melcher again became a producer for the Byrds, but
the results were not well received; one critic referred to the
album
Byrdmaniax as "Melcher's
Folly". During this time, he also dabbled in real estate and served
as the executive producer on his mother's CBS series,
The Doris Day Show. He later
recorded two solo albums,
Terry Melcher and
Royal
Flush. In 1985, Terry co-produced the cable show,
Doris
Day's Best Friends, and worked as the director and vice
president of the Doris Day Animal Foundation.
He and his mother, to
whom he remained extremely close throughout his life, also co-owned
the Cypress Inn, a small hotel in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California
.
In 1988, Melcher earned a
Golden
Globe nomination for co-writing the song "
Kokomo" with
John Phillips,
Scott McKenzie and
Mike
Love, and recorded by
The Beach
Boys. The song was featured in the 1988
Tom Cruise film,
Cocktail, and hit #1 (the band's career
fourth overall) on the
Bllboard Hot
100. The 45 r.p.m. single was certified Gold for sales of more
than a million US copies. He also produced the band's last studio
record,
Summer in
Paradise, which was the first record produced digitally on
Pro Tools.
Death
On November 19, 2004, Terry Melcher died at his home after a long
battle with
melanoma. He was 62 years old.
He is survived by his wife Terese, son Ryan Melcher and his mother
Doris Day.
References
- [simplyDORIS.com] :: [biography]
- Terry Melcher - Telegraph
- westcoastmusic: Terry Melcher dies, Terry Melcher
passed away, legendary artist who worked with The Beach Boys, The
Byrds, Ry Cooder
- Charles Manson. Charlie. The Charles Manson Family.
Cielodrive.com:: The Story of The Manson Family and Their
Victims
- Blog of Death: Terry Melcher
External links