Carol Kaye (born March 24, 1935) is an American musician, best known as one… Read Full Bio ↴Carol Kaye (born March 24, 1935) is an American musician, best known as one of the most prolific and widely heard bass guitarists in history, playing on an estimated 10,000 recording sessions in a 55-year career.
As a session musician, Kaye was the bassist on many Phil Spector and Brian Wilson productions in the 1960s and 1970s. She played guitar on Ritchie Valens' La Bamba and is credited with the bass tracks on several Simon & Garfunkel hits and many film scores by Quincy Jones and Lalo Schifrin. One of the most popular albums Carol contributed to was the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds.
Kaye was born in Everett, Washington to professional musicians Clyde and Dot Smith. She grew up in poverty near the Port of Los Angeles and in 1949, at the age of fourteen began teaching guitar professionally. Throughout the 1950s, Kaye played bebop jazz guitar in dozens of nightclubs around Los Angeles with many noted bands including Bob Neal's jazz group, Jack Sheldon backing Lenny Bruce, Teddy Edwards and Billy Higgins. By her own account, Kaye got into lucrative studio work "accidentally" in late 1957 with Sam Cooke.[citation needed] A few years later, when a bass player failed to show for a session at Capitol Records in Hollywood, she was asked to fill in on what was then often called the Fender bass. She was a member of the famed "Wrecking Crew" studio musicians, who played on almost all hit records recorded in Los Angeles in the 1960s.
Throughout the 1960s, she played bass on a significant percentage of records that appeared on the Billboard Hot 100, though almost wholly unknown to the general public at the time. Kaye played bass on many of the Beach Boys hit recordings, including Good Vibrations, Help Me, Rhonda, Sloop John B, and California Girls. She worked on Brian Wilson's ill-fated but legendary Smile project (and was present at the Fire session in late November 1966 when Wilson reportedly asked the studio musicians to wear toy fire hats). Kaye's work also appears extensively on well-known television and film soundtracks from the 1960s and early 1970s.
She worked under most of the leading producers and musical directors in Los Angeles during that era, including Brian Wilson, Michel Legrand, Phil Spector, Elmer Bernstein, Lalo Schifrin, David Rose, Dave Grusin, Ernie Freeman, Hugo Montenegro, Leonard Rosenman, John Williams, Alfred Newman, David Axelrod and Lionel Newman. Kaye played the bass tracks on several of the Monkees hits, did soundtrack work (including sound effects on bass guitar) for a young Steven Spielberg and tracks for Quincy Jones whose 2001 autobiography Q noted, "... women like... Fender bass player Carol Kaye... could do anything and leave men in the dust."
Kaye performed on several American television themes including the Quinn Martin produced Cannon, The Streets of San Francisco, Mission: Impossible, M*A*S*H, Kojak, Get Smart, Hogan's Heroes, The Love Boat, McCloud, Mannix, It Takes a Thief, Peyton Place and the Cosby Show. She is credited with performing on the soundtracks of Hawaii Five-O, The Addams Family and The Brady Bunch along with Ironside, Room 222, Bonanza, Wonder Woman, Alias Smith & Jones, Run for Your Life and Barnaby Jones.
Beginning in 1969, she wrote How To Play The Electric Bass, the first of many bass tutoring books and DVD courses. She gave lessons to thousands of students, including John Clayton, Mike Porcaro, Alf Clausen, David Hughes, Tony Sales, Karl E. H. Seigfried, Roy Vogt and David Hungate. Kaye retired from studio work during the 1970s because of arthritis. She later became active again as a session musician, live jazz performer, and teacher of bass and guitar, giving seminars and interviews.
Kaye played 12-string guitar on Frank Zappa's album Freak Out!. She also played on a few songs for his next album but declined to continue, saying she found some of the lyrics offensive. Kaye later said Zappa was good-natured and understanding about her qualms and they remained on friendly terms.
Kaye played on hundreds of commercially released recordings and soundtracks. These lists represent only a small fraction of her recorded performances.
-Electric bass credits:
Credits for recorded singles on bass
Soul Reggae (Charles Kynard)
Andmoreagain (Love)
Homeward Bound (Simon and Garfunkel)
California Girls, Sloop John B, Help Me, Rhonda, Heroes and Villains (The Beach Boys)
Natural Man (Lou Rawls)
Come Together (Count Basie)
Feelin' Alright (Joe Cocker)
I Think He's Hiding (Randy Newman)
Games People Play (Mel Tormé)
Cantaro (Gene Ammons)
Wait 'Til My Bobby Gets Home (Darlene Love)
Goin' Out Of My Head/Can't Take My Eyes Off You (The Lettermen)
Go Little Honda (The Hondels)
Hikky Burr (Quincy Jones & Bill Cosby & TV theme)
I'm a Believer (The Monkees)
Indian Reservation (Paul Revere & the Raiders)
In the Heat of the Night, I Don't Need No Doctor, America The Beautiful, Understanding (Ray Charles)
It Must Be Him (Vikki Carr)
Little Green Apples (O.C. Smith)
Midnight Confessions (The Grass Roots)
Mission: Impossible Theme (Lalo Schifrin)
Mannix Theme (Lalo Schifrin)
Out of This World (Nancy Wilson)
Wichita Lineman ... Don Bagley played bass on Wichita Lineman. Carol Kaye played percussion. See link to contract for session work - http://www.wreckingcrewfilm.com/afmcontracts/Campbell,Glen_WichitaLineman.pdf and Rhinestone Cowboy (Glen Campbell)
River Deep - Mountain High (Ike & Tina Turner)
Scarborough Fair/Canticle (Simon and Garfunkel)
Sixteen Tons (Tennessee Ernie Ford)
Somethin' Stupid (Frank and Nancy Sinatra)
These Boots Are Made for Walkin' (Nancy Sinatra)
This Diamond Ring (Gary Lewis & the Playboys)
The Twelfth of Never (Johnny Mathis)
The Way We Were (Barbra Streisand)
Soul & Inspiration bass, You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' guitar (The Righteous Brothers)
Carry On (JJ Cale) - JJ Cale Styles Book
Album credits on bass
Selected highlights include:
Pet Sounds (The Beach Boys)
Light My Fire (Gábor Szabó and Bob Thiele)
Music from Mission: Impossible (Lalo Schifrin, 1967)
Song of Innocence (David Axelrod, 1968)
Songs of Experience (David Axelrod, 1969)
Release of an Oath (The Electric Prunes, 1968)
There's a Whole Lalo Schifrin Goin' On (Lalo Schifrin, 1968)
More Mission: Impossible (Lalo Schifrin, 1968)
Mannix (Lalo Schifrin, 1968)
Bullitt (soundtrack) (Lalo Schifrin, 1968)
Dirty Harry (score by Lalo Schifrin, 1971)
Northern Windows (Hampton Hawes)
Big Man (Cannonball Adderley)
Reelin' with the Feelin' (Charles Kynard)
Cameo (Dusty Springfield, 1972)
Hugo In Wonder-land (Hugo Montenegro)
Your Good Thing (Lou Rawls)
You've Made Me So Very Happy (Lou Rawls)
The Funky Organ-ization of Henry Cain (Henry Cain)
The Zodiac : Cosmic Sounds
Pride (Pride) (1970)
Thumbs up (Ray Pizzi, Carol Kaye, Mitch Holder)(1999)
Picking Up On The E-String (Carol Kaye) (1995)
Freak Out! (Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention)1965
Absolutely Free (Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention) 1966
Cosmic Brotherhood (Bill Plummer, 1968)
-Recorded credits on guitar:
Then He Kissed Me (The Crystals)
Danke Schoen (Wayne Newton)
Johnny Angel (Shelley Fabares)
La Bamba (Ritchie Valens)
Let's Dance (Chris Montez)
Needles and Pins (Jackie DeShannon)
The Beat Goes On (Sonny & Cher)
You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling (The Righteous Brothers)
The Birds and the Bees (Jewel Akens), with a Leslie speaker effect
Mannix Theme (Lalo Schifrin)
The Daily Planet (Love)
As a session musician, Kaye was the bassist on many Phil Spector and Brian Wilson productions in the 1960s and 1970s. She played guitar on Ritchie Valens' La Bamba and is credited with the bass tracks on several Simon & Garfunkel hits and many film scores by Quincy Jones and Lalo Schifrin. One of the most popular albums Carol contributed to was the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds.
Kaye was born in Everett, Washington to professional musicians Clyde and Dot Smith. She grew up in poverty near the Port of Los Angeles and in 1949, at the age of fourteen began teaching guitar professionally. Throughout the 1950s, Kaye played bebop jazz guitar in dozens of nightclubs around Los Angeles with many noted bands including Bob Neal's jazz group, Jack Sheldon backing Lenny Bruce, Teddy Edwards and Billy Higgins. By her own account, Kaye got into lucrative studio work "accidentally" in late 1957 with Sam Cooke.[citation needed] A few years later, when a bass player failed to show for a session at Capitol Records in Hollywood, she was asked to fill in on what was then often called the Fender bass. She was a member of the famed "Wrecking Crew" studio musicians, who played on almost all hit records recorded in Los Angeles in the 1960s.
Throughout the 1960s, she played bass on a significant percentage of records that appeared on the Billboard Hot 100, though almost wholly unknown to the general public at the time. Kaye played bass on many of the Beach Boys hit recordings, including Good Vibrations, Help Me, Rhonda, Sloop John B, and California Girls. She worked on Brian Wilson's ill-fated but legendary Smile project (and was present at the Fire session in late November 1966 when Wilson reportedly asked the studio musicians to wear toy fire hats). Kaye's work also appears extensively on well-known television and film soundtracks from the 1960s and early 1970s.
She worked under most of the leading producers and musical directors in Los Angeles during that era, including Brian Wilson, Michel Legrand, Phil Spector, Elmer Bernstein, Lalo Schifrin, David Rose, Dave Grusin, Ernie Freeman, Hugo Montenegro, Leonard Rosenman, John Williams, Alfred Newman, David Axelrod and Lionel Newman. Kaye played the bass tracks on several of the Monkees hits, did soundtrack work (including sound effects on bass guitar) for a young Steven Spielberg and tracks for Quincy Jones whose 2001 autobiography Q noted, "... women like... Fender bass player Carol Kaye... could do anything and leave men in the dust."
Kaye performed on several American television themes including the Quinn Martin produced Cannon, The Streets of San Francisco, Mission: Impossible, M*A*S*H, Kojak, Get Smart, Hogan's Heroes, The Love Boat, McCloud, Mannix, It Takes a Thief, Peyton Place and the Cosby Show. She is credited with performing on the soundtracks of Hawaii Five-O, The Addams Family and The Brady Bunch along with Ironside, Room 222, Bonanza, Wonder Woman, Alias Smith & Jones, Run for Your Life and Barnaby Jones.
Beginning in 1969, she wrote How To Play The Electric Bass, the first of many bass tutoring books and DVD courses. She gave lessons to thousands of students, including John Clayton, Mike Porcaro, Alf Clausen, David Hughes, Tony Sales, Karl E. H. Seigfried, Roy Vogt and David Hungate. Kaye retired from studio work during the 1970s because of arthritis. She later became active again as a session musician, live jazz performer, and teacher of bass and guitar, giving seminars and interviews.
Kaye played 12-string guitar on Frank Zappa's album Freak Out!. She also played on a few songs for his next album but declined to continue, saying she found some of the lyrics offensive. Kaye later said Zappa was good-natured and understanding about her qualms and they remained on friendly terms.
Kaye played on hundreds of commercially released recordings and soundtracks. These lists represent only a small fraction of her recorded performances.
-Electric bass credits:
Credits for recorded singles on bass
Soul Reggae (Charles Kynard)
Andmoreagain (Love)
Homeward Bound (Simon and Garfunkel)
California Girls, Sloop John B, Help Me, Rhonda, Heroes and Villains (The Beach Boys)
Natural Man (Lou Rawls)
Come Together (Count Basie)
Feelin' Alright (Joe Cocker)
I Think He's Hiding (Randy Newman)
Games People Play (Mel Tormé)
Cantaro (Gene Ammons)
Wait 'Til My Bobby Gets Home (Darlene Love)
Goin' Out Of My Head/Can't Take My Eyes Off You (The Lettermen)
Go Little Honda (The Hondels)
Hikky Burr (Quincy Jones & Bill Cosby & TV theme)
I'm a Believer (The Monkees)
Indian Reservation (Paul Revere & the Raiders)
In the Heat of the Night, I Don't Need No Doctor, America The Beautiful, Understanding (Ray Charles)
It Must Be Him (Vikki Carr)
Little Green Apples (O.C. Smith)
Midnight Confessions (The Grass Roots)
Mission: Impossible Theme (Lalo Schifrin)
Mannix Theme (Lalo Schifrin)
Out of This World (Nancy Wilson)
Wichita Lineman ... Don Bagley played bass on Wichita Lineman. Carol Kaye played percussion. See link to contract for session work - http://www.wreckingcrewfilm.com/afmcontracts/Campbell,Glen_WichitaLineman.pdf and Rhinestone Cowboy (Glen Campbell)
River Deep - Mountain High (Ike & Tina Turner)
Scarborough Fair/Canticle (Simon and Garfunkel)
Sixteen Tons (Tennessee Ernie Ford)
Somethin' Stupid (Frank and Nancy Sinatra)
These Boots Are Made for Walkin' (Nancy Sinatra)
This Diamond Ring (Gary Lewis & the Playboys)
The Twelfth of Never (Johnny Mathis)
The Way We Were (Barbra Streisand)
Soul & Inspiration bass, You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' guitar (The Righteous Brothers)
Carry On (JJ Cale) - JJ Cale Styles Book
Album credits on bass
Selected highlights include:
Pet Sounds (The Beach Boys)
Light My Fire (Gábor Szabó and Bob Thiele)
Music from Mission: Impossible (Lalo Schifrin, 1967)
Song of Innocence (David Axelrod, 1968)
Songs of Experience (David Axelrod, 1969)
Release of an Oath (The Electric Prunes, 1968)
There's a Whole Lalo Schifrin Goin' On (Lalo Schifrin, 1968)
More Mission: Impossible (Lalo Schifrin, 1968)
Mannix (Lalo Schifrin, 1968)
Bullitt (soundtrack) (Lalo Schifrin, 1968)
Dirty Harry (score by Lalo Schifrin, 1971)
Northern Windows (Hampton Hawes)
Big Man (Cannonball Adderley)
Reelin' with the Feelin' (Charles Kynard)
Cameo (Dusty Springfield, 1972)
Hugo In Wonder-land (Hugo Montenegro)
Your Good Thing (Lou Rawls)
You've Made Me So Very Happy (Lou Rawls)
The Funky Organ-ization of Henry Cain (Henry Cain)
The Zodiac : Cosmic Sounds
Pride (Pride) (1970)
Thumbs up (Ray Pizzi, Carol Kaye, Mitch Holder)(1999)
Picking Up On The E-String (Carol Kaye) (1995)
Freak Out! (Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention)1965
Absolutely Free (Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention) 1966
Cosmic Brotherhood (Bill Plummer, 1968)
-Recorded credits on guitar:
Then He Kissed Me (The Crystals)
Danke Schoen (Wayne Newton)
Johnny Angel (Shelley Fabares)
La Bamba (Ritchie Valens)
Let's Dance (Chris Montez)
Needles and Pins (Jackie DeShannon)
The Beat Goes On (Sonny & Cher)
You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling (The Righteous Brothers)
The Birds and the Bees (Jewel Akens), with a Leslie speaker effect
Mannix Theme (Lalo Schifrin)
The Daily Planet (Love)
Boogaloo
Carol Kaye Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Boogaloo' by these artists:
A-la-carte Hoy es tu cumpleaños y quiero cantar boogaloo boogaloo Hoy e…
Jazzkantine und jetzt das face und den arsch hoch und…
KASE.O Pon atención Quédate con mi canción Fiestón de estilos en mi…
Kase.O Jazz Magnetism Pon atención Quédate con mi canción Fiestón de estilos en mi…
Les Wampas Je survole le Pakistan En écoutant Morrissey Et sous mes p…
Lotta Engberg Du som tycker din dag är grå jorden snurrar sitt…
Matt Bianco Boogaloo boogaloo ven bailar boogaloo boogaloo boogaloo ven …
Mr. Pimp-Lotion Hun minner om en Harley hennes stil den er rask Og…
Salvador y el Unicornio Hoy te miré Sin saber te estoy pensando Cuando te vi…
SosMula Beep Beep KLEAN UP KREW (Yung Germ) 2200 (Ryder, turn me up)…
SosMula feat. ZillaKami Beep Beep KLEAN UP KREW (Yung Germ) 2200 (Ryder, turn me up)…
SosMula ZillaKami Beep Beep KLEAN UP KREW (Yung Germ) 2200 (Ryder, turn me up)…
The Cat Empire There's a soul man And he's shuffling in my head He lives…
We have lyrics for these tracks by Carol Kaye:
Better Days Ooh child things are going to get easier Ooh child things…
If I Were a Bell Ask me how do I feel, Now that we're cosy and…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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Bill Karmetsky
I used to think Chuck Rainey was the grooviest electric bassist around. Listening to Kaye, now I know who wrote the book. Jaco and I took much from both. Jaco also took heavily from Jerry Jemmott who is in a whole 'nother universe. No one plays Blues like Jerry. His work with Souler Energy is a must hear. But Kaye's work here is so definitive of 60's chic. Her sound was EVERYWHERE at all the cool parties.
Marco Vitali
Pbass, flatwound strings,Sponge near the bridge and pick.....
Super grooooooooooove!!!!!!!
Carol Kaye rules!
Tony Gregory
The funk is so stank on this cut!! Props Mz. Kaye
El Rey
A Genius. Took the time to teach those who wanted to learn.
Robert Macphee
That Bass groove gets into your muscles and makes them twitch
Morrismusicpete
One of the most overlooked bass talents ever. I love that bass tone!
Paula Sanabria
Esto está increíbleeeeeeee! me encanta.
Jeff Portwood
its not just the bass here. this is complete. nothing out of place
Daniel Martine
Carol was the resident bassist for the great Wrecking Crew. Who, as studio cats must have played on literally 1000's of pop/rock and jazz tracks from the late 50's to the late 80's.
bernard_hossmoto
Sound, punch and groove. Incredible!