One songwriter who was reached for a collaboration was XTC's Andy Partridge who explains: "I rang up a lot of people... and heard quite a few stories that would put off any sane person from getting involved in the Brian Wilson camp... They said he would call me... either he changed his mind, or the management changed his mind, or maybe he just forgot, because I've heard stories of people who've gone over to work with him, and he's not acknowledged them being in the room for days.... he's definitely in the Wilsonverse, I don't think he's in the known universe.... one of the few people you can actually call genius, I think, so hey, he can be as nutty as he wants."
Reception
At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from critics, Gettin' In Over My Head received an average score of 55 based on 14 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Writing in The Rolling Stone Album Guide, reviewer Jackie Wilson wrote, "Wilson is still frighteningly detached from the moment.... it's best to think of this one as a celebrity's children's record." Critic Robert Christgau said that the album's only improvement on Imagination was the absence of producer Joe Thomas. John Bush of AllMusic highlighted "Soul Searchin" and the title track in what was otherwise a collection of "weak songs" with "trite lyrics". He wrote, "Whether it's a solo composition or one written with a talented collaborator like Andy Paley, Wilson's songs are uniformly embarrassing". The Guardians Alexis Petridis was disappointed with the record's "musical conservatism" – which be believed came out of Wilson's self-described desperation to be considered in league with Sting, Paul Simon, and Bruce Springsteen – and wrote, "The worst thing about Gettin' In Over My Head - far worse than the mediocre songs and the MOR guest appearances - is that it doesn't sound terribly happy." Matthew Weiner of Stylus introduced his review by declaring, "It's time to face the facts: we’re never, never, ever getting another great record out of Brian Wilson again. It's over." He added that, given the involvement of the Wondermints and all the other musicians and songwriters Wilson could have potentially collaborated with, "it's impossible to conclude that the utter failure of Getting In Over My Head falls anywhere other than squarely on Wilson himself". Conversely, Uncuts reviewer said the album was "the most consistent and sympathetically constructed solo album he's made." Billboards review called it "An unexpected but dazzling return to the top form of the later Beach Boys years."
Track listing
Tracks 8–9 and 11–13 were originally recorded for the scrapped Sweet Insanity album
An iTunes bonus track of "Don't Worry Baby" was released with daughter Wendy Wilson on lead vocals.
Personnel
Brian Wilson – keyboards, piano, producer, lead vocals