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The Byrds

The Byrds (/bɜːrdz/) were an American rock band formed in Los Angeles, California, in 1964.[1] The band underwent multiple lineup changes throughout its existence, with frontman Roger McGuinn (known as Jim McGuinn until mid-1967) remaining the sole consistent member.[2] Although their time as one of the most popular groups in the world only lasted for a short period in the mid-1960s, the Byrds are today considered by critics to be among the most influential rock acts of their era.[1][3][4] Their signature blend of clear harmony singing and McGuinn's jangly 12-string Rickenbacker guitar was "absorbed into the vocabulary of rock" and has continued to be influential.[1][5]

The Byrds
The Byrds in 1965
From left to right: David Crosby, Gene Clark, Michael Clarke, Chris Hillman, and Jim McGuinn[nb 1]
Background information
OriginLos Angeles, California, U.S.
Genres
Years active
  • 1964–1973
  • 1989–1991
  • 2000
Labels
Spinoffs
Spinoff of
  • The Jet Set
  • the Beefeaters
Past membersRoger McGuinn
Gene Clark
David Crosby
Michael Clarke
Chris Hillman
Kevin Kelley
Gram Parsons
Clarence White
Gene Parsons
John York
Skip Battin
Websitethebyrds.com

Initially, the Byrds pioneered the musical genre of folk rock as a popular format in 1965, by melding the influence of the Beatles and other British Invasion bands with contemporary and traditional folk music on their first and second albums and the hit singles "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "Turn! Turn! Turn!".[6][7][8][9] As the 1960s progressed, the band was influential in originating psychedelic rock and raga rock, with their song "Eight Miles High" and the albums Fifth Dimension (1966), Younger Than Yesterday (1967), and The Notorious Byrd Brothers (1968).[1][10][11] The band also played a pioneering role in the development of country rock,[1] with the 1968 album Sweetheart of the Rodeo representing their fullest immersion into the genre.[12]

The original five-piece lineup of the band consisted of McGuinn (lead guitar, vocals), Gene Clark (tambourine, vocals), David Crosby (rhythm guitar, vocals), Chris Hillman (bass guitar, vocals), and Michael Clarke (drums).[13] This version of the band was relatively short-lived and by early 1966 Clark had left due to problems associated with anxiety and his increasing isolation within the group.[14] The Byrds continued as a quartet until late 1967, when Crosby and Clarke also departed.[15] McGuinn and Hillman decided to recruit new members, including country rock pioneer Gram Parsons, but by late 1968, Hillman and Parsons had also exited the band.[1] McGuinn elected to rebuild the band's membership; between 1968 and 1973, he helmed a new incarnation of the Byrds that featured guitarist Clarence White, among others.[1] McGuinn disbanded the then-current version of the band in early 1973 to make way for a reunion of the original quintet.[16] The Byrds' final album was released in March 1973, with the reunited group disbanding later that year.[17]

Several former members of the Byrds went on to successful careers of their own, either as solo artists or as members of such groups as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, the Flying Burrito Brothers, McGuinn, Clark & Hillman, and the Desert Rose Band.[1] In 1991, the Byrds were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, an occasion that saw the five original members performing together for the last time.[18][19] Gene Clark died of a heart attack later that year, while Michael Clarke died of liver failure in 1993.[20][21] Crosby died in 2023.[22] McGuinn and Hillman remain active.

History

Formation (1964)

McGuinn and I started picking together in The Troubadour bar which was called "The Folk Den" at the time ... We went into the lobby and started picking on the stairway where the echo was good and David came walking up and just started singing away with us doing the harmony part ... We hadn't even approached him.

—Gene Clark recalling the encounter at the Troubadour folk club in Los Angeles that marked the genesis of the Byrds[23]

The nucleus of the Byrds formed in early 1964, when Jim McGuinn, Gene Clark, and David Crosby came together as a trio.[24] All three musicians had a background rooted in folk music, with each one having worked as a folk singer on the acoustic coffeehouse circuit during the early 1960s.[1] In addition, they had all served time, independently of each other, as sidemen in various "collegiate folk" groups: McGuinn with the Limeliters and the Chad Mitchell Trio, Clark with the New Christy Minstrels, and Crosby with Les Baxter's Balladeers.[25][26][27] McGuinn had also spent time as a professional songwriter at the Brill Building in New York City, under the tutelage of Bobby Darin.[28] By early 1964, McGuinn had become enamored with the music of the Beatles, and had begun to intersperse his solo folk repertoire with acoustic versions of Beatles' songs.[24] While performing at the Troubadour folk club in Los Angeles, McGuinn was approached by fellow Beatles fan Gene Clark, and the pair soon formed a Peter and Gordon-style duo, playing Beatles' covers, Beatlesque renditions of traditional folk songs, and some self-penned material.[1][24][29] Soon after, David Crosby introduced himself to the duo at The Troubadour and began harmonizing with them on some of their songs.[23] Impressed by the blend of their voices, the three musicians formed a trio and named themselves the Jet Set, a moniker inspired by McGuinn's love of aeronautics.[23]

Crosby introduced McGuinn and Clark to his associate Jim Dickson, who had access to World Pacific Studios, where he had been recording demos of Crosby.[23] Sensing the trio's potential, Dickson quickly took on management duties for the group, while his business partner, Eddie Tickner, became the group's accountant and financial manager.[23][30] Dickson began utilizing World Pacific Studios to record the trio as they honed their craft and perfected their blend of Beatles pop and Bob Dylan-style folk.[31][32] It was during the rehearsals at World Pacific that the band's folk rock sound—an amalgam of their own Beatles-influenced material, their folk music roots and their Beatlesque covers of contemporary folk songs—began to coalesce.[32] Initially, this blend arose organically, but as rehearsals continued, the band began to actively attempt to bridge the gap between folk music and rock.[23][33] Demo recordings made by the Jet Set at World Pacific Studios would later be collected on the compilation albums Preflyte, In the Beginning, The Preflyte Sessions, and Preflyte Plus.

Drummer Michael Clarke was added to the Jet Set in mid-1964.[34] Clarke was recruited largely due to his good looks and Brian Jones-esque hairstyle, rather than for his musical experience, which was limited to having played congas in a semi-professional capacity in and around San Francisco and L.A.[35] Clarke did not even own his own drum kit and initially had to play on a makeshift setup consisting of cardboard boxes and a tambourine.[35] As the band continued to rehearse, Dickson arranged a one-off single deal for the group with Elektra Records' founder Jac Holzman.[14] The single, which coupled the band originals "Please Let Me Love You" and "Don't Be Long", featured McGuinn, Clark, and Crosby, augmented by session musicians Ray Pohlman on bass and Earl Palmer on drums.[14] In an attempt to cash in on the British Invasion craze that was dominating the American charts at the time, the band's name was changed for the single release to the suitably British-sounding the Beefeaters.[14] "Please Let Me Love You" was issued by Elektra Records on October 7, 1964, but it failed to chart.[36]

 
A Rickenbacker 360 12-string guitar similar to the one used by Jim McGuinn in 1964 and 1965. By 1966, McGuinn had transitioned to playing the three pickup 370/12 model.

In August 1964, Dickson managed to acquire an acetate disc of the then-unreleased Bob Dylan song "Mr. Tambourine Man", which he felt would make an effective cover for the Jet Set.[34][37] Although the band was initially unimpressed with the song, they began rehearsing it with a rock band arrangement, changing the time signature from 2
4
to a rockier 4
4
configuration in the process.[37][38] In an attempt to bolster the group's confidence in the song, Dickson invited Dylan himself to World Pacific to hear the band perform "Mr. Tambourine Man".[37] Impressed by the group's rendition, Dylan enthusiastically commented, "Wow, man! You can dance to that!"[37] His ringing endorsement erased any lingering doubts that the band had over the song's suitability.[37]

Soon after, inspired by the Beatles' film A Hard Day's Night, the band decided to equip themselves with similar instruments to the Fab Four: a Rickenbacker twelve-string guitar for McGuinn, a Ludwig drum kit for Clarke, and a Gretsch Tennessean guitar for Clark (although Crosby commandeered it soon after, resulting in Clark switching to tambourine).[34][39] In October 1964, Dickson recruited mandolin player Chris Hillman as the Jet Set's bassist.[40] Hillman's background was more oriented towards country music than folk or rock, having been a member of the bluegrass groups the Scottsville Squirrel Barkers, the Hillmen (also known as the Golden State Boys), and, concurrently with his recruitment into the Jet Set, the Green Grass Group.[41][42]

Through connections that Dickson had with impresario Benny Shapiro, and with a helpful recommendation from jazz trumpeter Miles Davis, the group signed a recording contract with Columbia Records on November 10, 1964.[43] Two weeks later, during a Thanksgiving dinner at Tickner's house, the Jet Set decided to rename themselves as "The Byrds", a moniker that retained the theme of flight and also echoed the deliberate misspelling of the Beatles.[43][44]

Folk rock (1965)

 
Producer Terry Melcher (left) in the recording studio with Gene Clark (center) and David Crosby (right). Melcher brought in session musicians to play on the "Mr. Tambourine Man" single because he felt that the Byrds hadn't yet gelled musically.

On January 20, 1965, the Byrds entered Columbia Studios in Hollywood to record "Mr. Tambourine Man" for release as their debut single on Columbia.[36][45] Since the band had not yet completely gelled musically, McGuinn was the only Byrd to play on "Mr. Tambourine Man" and its Clark-penned B-side, "I Knew I'd Want You".[43] Rather than using band members, producer Terry Melcher hired a collection of top session musicians, retroactively known as the Wrecking Crew, including Hal Blaine (drums), Larry Knechtel (bass), Jerry Cole (guitar), and Leon Russell (electric piano), who (along with McGuinn on guitar) provided the instrumental backing track over which McGuinn, Crosby and Clark sang.[43][46] By the time the sessions for their debut album began in March 1965, Melcher was satisfied that the band was competent enough to record its own musical backing.[46] However, the use of outside musicians on the Byrds' debut single has given rise to the persistent misconception that all of the playing on their debut album was done by session musicians.[1]

While the band waited for "Mr. Tambourine Man" to be released, they began a residency at Ciro's Le Disc nightclub on the Sunset Strip in Hollywood.[47] The band's regular appearances at Ciro's during March and April 1965 allowed them to hone their ensemble playing, perfect their aloof stage persona, and expand their repertoire.[47][48] In addition, it was during their residency at the nightclub that the band first began to accrue a dedicated following among L.A.'s youth culture and hip Hollywood fraternity, with scenesters like Kim Fowley, Peter Fonda, Jack Nicholson, Arthur Lee, and Sonny & Cher regularly attending the band's performances.[49][50][51] On March 26, 1965, the author of the band's forthcoming debut single, Bob Dylan, made an impromptu visit to the club and joined the Byrds on stage for a rendition of Jimmy Reed's "Baby What You Want Me to Do".[47] The excitement generated by the Byrds at Ciro's quickly made them a must-see fixture on L.A.'s nightclub scene and resulted in hordes of teenagers filling the sidewalks outside the club, desperate to see the band perform.[47] A number of noted music historians and authors, including Richie Unterberger, Ric Menck, and Peter Buckley, have suggested that the crowds of young Bohemians and hipsters that gathered at Ciro's to see the Byrds perform represented the first stirrings of the West Coast hippie counterculture.[13][48][52]

Columbia Records eventually released the "Mr. Tambourine Man" single on April 12, 1965.[36] The full, electric rock band treatment that the Byrds and producer Terry Melcher had given the song effectively created the template for the musical subgenre of folk rock.[53][54] McGuinn's melodic, jangling 12-string Rickenbacker guitar playing—which was heavily compressed to produce an extremely bright and sustained tone—was immediately influential and has remained so to the present day.[45][55] The single also featured another major characteristic of the band's sound: their clear harmony singing, which usually featured McGuinn and Clark in unison, with Crosby providing the high harmony.[50][56] Additionally, Richie Unterberger has stated that the song's abstract lyrics took rock and pop songwriting to new heights; never before had such intellectual and literary wordplay been combined with rock instrumentation by a popular music group.[57]

Within three months "Mr. Tambourine Man" had become the first folk rock smash hit,[58] reaching number one on both the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart and the UK Singles Chart.[59][60] The single's success initiated the folk rock boom of 1965 and 1966, during which a number of Byrds-influenced acts had hits on the American and British charts.[57][6] The term "folk rock" was itself coined by the American music press to describe the band's sound in June 1965, at roughly the same time as "Mr. Tambourine Man" peaked at number 1 in the U.S.[61][62]

 
Promotional photo of the Byrds in early 1965

The Mr. Tambourine Man album followed on June 21, 1965,[36] peaking at number six on the Billboard Top LPs chart and number seven on the UK Albums Chart.[60][63] The album mixed reworkings of folk songs, including Pete Seeger's musical adaptation of the Idris Davies' poem "The Bells of Rhymney", with a number of other Dylan covers and the band's own compositions, the majority of which were written by Clark.[62][8] In particular, Clark's "I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better" has gone on to become a rock music standard, with many critics considering it one of the band's and Clark's best songs.[64][65][66] Upon release, the Mr. Tambourine Man album, like the single of the same name, was influential in popularizing folk rock[8] and served to establish the band as an internationally successful rock act, representing the first effective American challenge to the dominance of the Beatles and the British Invasion.[1][46]

The Byrds' next single was "All I Really Want to Do", another interpretation of a Dylan song.[67] Despite the success of "Mr. Tambourine Man", the Byrds were reluctant to release another Dylan-penned single, feeling that it was too formulaic, but Columbia Records were insistent, believing that another Dylan cover would result in an instant hit for the group.[67] The Byrds' rendition of "All I Really Want to Do" is noticeably different in structure to Dylan's original: it features an ascending melody progression in the chorus and utilizes a completely new melody for one of the song's verses, to turn it into a Beatlesque, minor-key bridge.[68] Issued on June 14, 1965, while "Mr. Tambourine Man" was still climbing the U.S. charts, the single was rush-released by Columbia in an attempt to bury a rival cover version that Cher had released simultaneously on Imperial Records.[67][69] A chart battle ensued, but the Byrds' rendition stalled at number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, while Cher's version reached number 15.[69] The reverse was true in the UK, however, where the Byrds' version reached number four, while Cher's peaked at number nine.[70]

Author John Einarson has written that during this period of their career, the Byrds enjoyed tremendous popularity among teenage pop fans, with their music receiving widespread airplay on Top 40 radio and their faces adorning countless teen magazines.[3] Much was made at the time of the Byrds' unconventional dress sense, with their casual attire strikingly at odds with the prevailing trend for uniformity among contemporary beat groups.[71] With all five members sporting Beatlesque moptop haircuts, Crosby dressed in a striking green suede cape, and McGuinn wearing a pair of distinctive rectangular "granny glasses", the band exuded California cool, while also looking suitably non-conformist.[71][72][73] In particular, McGuinn's distinctive rectangular spectacles would go on to become popular among members of the burgeoning hippie counterculture in the United States.[74]

Although McGuinn was widely regarded as the Byrds' bandleader by this point, the band actually had multiple frontmen, with McGuinn, Clark, and later Crosby and Hillman all taking turns to sing lead vocals in roughly equal measures across the group's repertoire. Despite the dizzying array of personnel changes that the group underwent in later years, this lack of a dedicated lead singer would remain a stylistic trait of the Byrds' music throughout the majority of the band's existence. A further distinctive aspect of the Byrds' image was their unsmiling air of detachment, both on stage and in front of the camera.[71][73] This natural aloofness was compounded by the large amounts of marijuana that the band smoked and often resulted in moody and erratic live performances.[71][75] Indeed, the contemporary music press was extremely critical of the Byrds' abilities as a live act during the mid-1960s, with the reaction from the British media during the band's August 1965 tour of England being particularly scathing.[3][76]

This 1965 English tour was largely orchestrated by the group's publicist Derek Taylor, in an attempt to capitalize on the number 1 chart success of the "Mr. Tambourine Man" single.[3] The tour was overhyped from the start, with the band being touted as "America's answer to the Beatles", a label that proved impossible for the Byrds to live up to.[3] During concert performances, a combination of poor sound, group illness, ragged musicianship, and the band's notoriously lackluster stage presence, all combined to alienate audiences and served to provoke a merciless castigating of the band in the British press.[3]

 
The Byrds performing in July 1965

The tour enabled the band to meet and socialize with a number of top English groups, including the Rolling Stones and the Beatles.[3] In particular, the band's relationship with the Beatles would prove important for both acts, with the two groups again meeting in Los Angeles some weeks later, upon the Byrds' return to America.[3] During this period of fraternization, the Beatles were vocal in their support of the Byrds, publicly acknowledging them as creative competitors and naming them as their favorite American group.[77][78] A number of authors, including Ian MacDonald, Richie Unterberger, and Bud Scoppa, have commented on the Byrds influence on the Beatles' late 1965 album Rubber Soul,[79] most notably on the songs "Nowhere Man"[80] and "If I Needed Someone", the latter of which utilizes a guitar riff similar to that in the Byrds' cover of "The Bells of Rhymney".[81]

For their third Columbia single, the Byrds initially intended to release a cover of Dylan's "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" (it was even premiered on the California radio station KRLA),[82] but instead they decided to record "Turn! Turn! Turn! (to Everything There Is a Season)", a Pete Seeger composition with lyrics adapted almost entirely from the biblical Book of Ecclesiastes.[83][7] The song was brought to the group by McGuinn, who had previously arranged it in a chamber-folk style while working on folksinger Judy Collins' 1963 album, Judy Collins 3.[7] The Byrds' cover of "Turn! Turn! Turn! (to Everything There Is a Season)" was issued on October 1, 1965[36] and became the band's second U.S. number 1 single, as well as the title track for their second album.[7] The single represented the high-water mark of folk rock as a chart trend and has been described by music historian Richie Unterberger as "folk rock's highest possible grace note".[84] In addition, music critic William Ruhlmann has written that the song's lyrical message of peace and tolerance struck a nerve with the American record buying public as the Vietnam War continued to escalate.[7]

The Byrds' second album, Turn! Turn! Turn!, was released in December 1965[85] and while it received a mostly positive reception, critical consensus deemed it to be inferior to the band's debut.[86] Nonetheless, it was a commercial success, peaking at number 17 on the U.S. charts and number 11 in the UK.[86] Author Scott Schinder has stated that Turn! Turn! Turn!, along with Mr. Tambourine Man, served to establish the Byrds as one of rock music's most important creative forces, on a par with the Beatles, the Beach Boys and the Rolling Stones.[87] Like their debut, the album comprised a mixture of group originals, folk songs, and Bob Dylan covers, all characterized by the group's clear harmonies and McGuinn's distinctive guitar sound.[88] However, the album featured more of the band's own compositions than its predecessor, with Clark in particular coming to the fore as a songwriter.[89] His songs from this period, including "She Don't Care About Time", "The World Turns All Around Her", and "Set You Free This Time", are widely regarded by critics as among the best of the folk rock genre.[90][91] The latter song was even chosen for release as a single in January 1966, but its densely worded lyrics, melancholy melody, and ballad-like tempo contributed to it stalling at number 63 on the Billboard chart and failing to reach the UK chart altogether.[92][93]

While the Byrds outwardly seemed to be riding the crest of a wave during the latter half of 1965, the recording sessions for their second album had not been without tension. One source of conflict was the power struggle that had begun to develop between producer Melcher and the band's manager, Jim Dickson, with the latter harboring aspirations to produce the band himself, causing him to be overly critical of the former's work.[94] Within a month of Turn! Turn! Turn! being released, Dickson and the Byrds approached Columbia Records and requested that Melcher be replaced, despite the fact that he had successfully steered the band through the recording of two number 1 singles and two hit albums.[94] Any hopes that Dickson had of being allowed to produce the band himself, however, were dashed when Columbia assigned their West Coast head of A&R, Allen Stanton, to the band.[87][94]

Psychedelia (1965–1967)

On December 22, 1965, the Byrds recorded a new, self-penned composition titled "Eight Miles High" at RCA Studios in Hollywood.[95] However, Columbia Records refused to release this version because it had been recorded at another record company's facility.[96] As a result, the band was forced to re-record the song at Columbia Studios in Los Angeles on January 24 and 25, 1966, and it was this re-recorded version that would be released as a single and included on the group's third album.[97][98] The song represented a creative leap forward for the band[99] and is often considered the first full-blown psychedelic rock recording by critics, although other contemporaneous acts, such as Donovan and the Yardbirds, were also exploring similar musical territory.[100][101][102] It was also pivotal in transmuting folk rock into the new musical forms of psychedelia and raga rock.[103][104]

"Eight Miles High" is marked by McGuinn's groundbreaking lead guitar playing, which saw the guitarist attempting to emulate the free form jazz saxophone playing of John Coltrane, and in particular, Coltrane's playing on the song "India" from his Impressions album.[103] It also exhibits the influence of the Indian classical music of Ravi Shankar in the droning quality of the song's vocal melody and in McGuinn's guitar playing.[105][106] The song's subtle use of Indian influences resulted in it being labeled as "raga rock" by the music press, but in fact, it was the single's B-side, "Why", that drew more directly on Indian ragas.[103][105]

Upon release, "Eight Miles High" was banned by many U.S. radio stations, following allegations made by the broadcasting trade journal the Gavin Report, that its lyrics advocated recreational drug use.[107] The band and their management strenuously denied these allegations, stating that the song's lyrics actually described an airplane flight to London and the band's subsequent concert tour of England.[107] The relatively modest chart success of "Eight Miles High" (number 14 in the U.S. and number 24 in the UK) has been largely attributed to the broadcasting ban, although the challenging and slightly uncommercial nature of the track is another possible reason for its failure to reach the Top 10.[103][107][108]

In February 1966, just prior to the release of "Eight Miles High", Gene Clark left the band.[109] His departure was partly due to his fear of flying, which made it impossible for him to keep up with the Byrds' itinerary, and partly due to his increasing isolation within the band.[110] Clark, who had witnessed a fatal airplane crash as a youth, had a panic attack on a plane bound for New York and as a result, he disembarked and refused to take the flight.[111] In effect, Clark's exit from the plane represented his exit from the Byrds, with McGuinn telling him, "If you can't fly, you can't be a Byrd."[110] However, it has become known in the years since the incident that there were other stress and anxiety-related factors at work, as well as resentment within the band that Gene's songwriting income had made him the wealthiest member of the group.[110][111] Clark was subsequently signed by Columbia Records as a solo artist and went on to produce a critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful body of work.[112] He died on May 24, 1991, at the age of 46, from heart failure brought on by a bleeding stomach ulcer, although years of alcohol abuse and a heavy cigarette habit were also contributing factors.[112][113]

The Byrds' third album, Fifth Dimension, was released in July 1966.[114] Much of the album's material continued to build on the band's new psychedelic sound, with McGuinn extending his exploration of jazz and raga styles on tracks such as "I See You" and the Crosby-penned "What's Happening?!?!".[98] The album also saw Hillman coming forward as the band's third vocalist, in order to fill the hole in the group's harmonies that Clark's departure had left.[98] The title track, "5D (Fifth Dimension)", was released as a single ahead of the album and was, like "Eight Miles High" before it, banned by a number of U.S. radio stations for supposedly featuring lyrics that advocated drug use.[115][116] The album's front cover artwork featured the first appearance of the Byrds' colorful, psychedelic mosaic logo, variations of which would subsequently appear on a number of the band's compilation albums, as well as on their 1967 release, Younger Than Yesterday.[117]

The Fifth Dimension album received a mixed critical reception upon release[116] and was less commercially successful than its predecessors, peaking at number 24 in the U.S. and number 27 in the UK.[60][63] Band biographer Bud Scoppa has remarked that with the album's lackluster chart performance, its lukewarm critical reception, and the high-profile loss of Clark from the group, the Byrds' popularity began to wane at this point and by late 1966, the group had been all but forgotten by the mainstream pop audience.[118] Nonetheless, the band were considered forefathers of the emerging rock underground, with many of the new L.A. and San Francisco groups of the day, including Love, Jefferson Airplane, and the Buffalo Springfield, publicly naming the Byrds as a primary influence.[119]

 
The Byrds' psychedelic mosaic logo

The band returned to the studio between November 28 and December 8, 1966, to record their fourth album, Younger Than Yesterday.[120] With Allen Stanton having recently departed Columbia Records to work for A&M, the band chose to bring in producer Gary Usher to help guide them through the album sessions. Usher, who had a wealth of production experience and a love of innovative studio experimentation, would prove invaluable to the Byrds as they entered their most creatively adventurous phase.[121] The first song to be recorded for the album was the McGuinn and Hillman-penned "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star", a satirical and heavily sarcastic jibe at the manufactured nature of groups like the Monkees.[122][123] The song features the trumpet playing of South African musician Hugh Masekela and as such, marks the first appearance of brass on a Byrds' recording.[124] "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star" was issued as a single in January 1967 and peaked at number 29 in America but failed to chart in the UK.[125] Despite this relatively poor chart showing, "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star" has become one of the Byrds' best-known songs in the years since its initial release, inspiring cover versions by the likes of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and the Patti Smith Group amongst others.[126][127]

Released on February 6, 1967, the Byrds' fourth album, Younger Than Yesterday, was more varied than its predecessor and saw the band successfully mixing psychedelia with folk rock and country and western influences.[128] Although it received generally positive reviews upon its release, the album was, to a degree, overlooked by the record-buying public and consequently peaked at number 24 on the Billboard chart and number 37 on the UK Albums Chart.[125][128] However, music expert Peter Buckley has pointed out that although the album may have passed the Byrds' rapidly shrinking teen audience by, it found favor with "a new underground following who disdained hit singles, but were coming to regard albums as major artistic statements".[13]

In addition to "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star", Younger Than Yesterday also includes the evocative Crosby and McGuinn penned song "Renaissance Fair", a cover of Dylan's "My Back Pages" (which was later released as a single), and a quartet of Chris Hillman songs, which found the bassist emerging fully formed as an accomplished songwriter.[124][128] Two of Hillman's country-oriented compositions on the album, "Time Between" and "The Girl with No Name", can be seen as early indicators of the country rock direction that the band would pursue on later albums.[124] Younger Than Yesterday also features the jazz-tinged Crosby ballad "Everybody's Been Burned", which critic Thomas Ward has described as "one of the most haunting songs in the Byrds' catalogue, and one of David Crosby's finest compositions".[129]

By mid-1967, McGuinn had changed his first name from Jim to Roger as a result of his interest in the Indonesian religion Subud, into which he had been initiated in January 1965.[130] The adoption of a new name was common among followers of the religion[131] and served to signify a spiritual rebirth for the participant. Shortly after McGuinn's name change, the band entered the studio to record the Crosby-penned, non-album single "Lady Friend", which was released on July 13, 1967.[132] The Byrds' biographer Johnny Rogan has described "Lady Friend" as "a work of great maturity" and "the loudest, fastest and rockiest Byrds' single to date".[130] Regardless of its artistic merits, however, the single stalled at a disappointing number 82 on the Billboard chart, despite the band making a number of high-profile television appearances to promote the record.[132] Crosby, who had closely overseen the recording of the song,[133][134] was bitterly disappointed by the single's lack of success and blamed Gary Usher's mixing of the song as a factor in its commercial failure.[130]

The poor sales suffered by "Lady Friend" were in stark contrast to the chart success of the band's first compilation album, The Byrds' Greatest Hits, which was released on August 7, 1967.[130][135] Sanctioned by Columbia Records in the wake of the Top 10 success of Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits, the album was a critical and commercial triumph, peaking at number six on the Billboard Top LPs chart and giving the band their highest-charting album in America since their 1965 debut, Mr. Tambourine Man.[130] Within a year, the compilation would be certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America,[130] eventually going platinum on November 21, 1986, and is today the biggest-selling album in the Byrds' discography.[135][136]

Prior to the release of The Byrds' Greatest Hits, the band decided to dispense with the services of their co-managers Jim Dickson and Eddie Tickner.[132] The relationship between Dickson and the band had soured over recent months, and he and Tickner's business arrangement with the Byrds was officially dissolved on June 30, 1967.[132] At Crosby's recommendation, Larry Spector was brought in to handle the Byrds' business affairs,[132] with the group electing to manage themselves to a large extent.

Between June and December 1967, the Byrds worked on completing their fifth album, The Notorious Byrd Brothers.[120] The lead single from the album was a cover of the Gerry Goffin and Carole King song "Goin' Back", which was released in October 1967 and peaked at number 89 on the Billboard chart.[137] Despite this lack of commercial success, the Byrds' rendition of "Goin' Back" featured a band performance that author Ric Menck has described as "a beautiful recording", while music critic Richie Unterberger has called it "a magnificent and melodic cover ... that should have been a big hit".[138][139] The song found the Byrds successfully blending their signature harmonies and chiming 12-string guitar playing with the sound of the pedal steel guitar for the first time, foreshadowing their extensive use of the instrument on their next album, Sweetheart of the Rodeo.[139][140]

Released in January 1968, The Notorious Byrd Brothers album saw the band taking their psychedelic experimentation to its furthest extremes by mixing folk rock, country music, jazz, and psychedelia (often within a single song), while utilizing innovative studio production techniques such as phasing and flanging.[141][142][143] The album featured contributions from a number of noted session musicians, including bluegrass guitarist and future Byrd, Clarence White.[144] White, who had also played on Younger Than Yesterday,[141] contributed country-influenced guitar to the tracks "Natural Harmony", "Wasn't Born to Follow", and "Change Is Now".[120] Upon release, the album was almost universally praised by music critics but it was only moderately successful commercially, particularly in the United States where it peaked at number 47.[145] However, the album's reputation has grown over the years and today it is widely regarded by critics and fans as one of the Byrds' best album releases.[142][146]

Lineup changes (1967–1968)

While the band worked on The Notorious Byrd Brothers album throughout late 1967, there was increasing tension and acrimony among the members of the group, which eventually resulted in the dismissals of Crosby and Clarke.[141][142] McGuinn and Hillman became increasingly irritated by what they saw as Crosby's overbearing egotism and his attempts to dictate the band's musical direction.[130][147] In addition, during the Byrds' performance at the Monterey Pop Festival on June 17, 1967, Crosby gave lengthy in-between-song speeches on controversial subjects, including the JFK assassination and the benefits of giving LSD to "all the statesmen and politicians in the world", to the intense annoyance of the other band members.[148] He further irritated his bandmates by performing with rival group Buffalo Springfield at Monterey, filling in for ex-member Neil Young.[149] His reputation within the band deteriorated even more following the commercial failure of "Lady Friend", the first Byrds' single to feature a song penned solely by Crosby on its A-side.[130][132]

They came over and said that they wanted to throw me out. They came zooming up in their Porsches and said that I was impossible to work with and I wasn't very good anyway and they'd do better without me. And frankly, I've been laughing ever since. Fuck 'em. But it hurt like hell. I didn't try to reason with them. I just said, "it's a shameful waste ... goodbye".

—David Crosby talking in 1980 about the day Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman fired him from the Byrds[147]

Tensions within the band finally erupted in August 1967, during recording sessions for The Notorious Byrd Brothers album, when Michael Clarke quit the sessions over disputes with his bandmates and his dissatisfaction with the material that the songwriting members of the band were providing.[21][150][151] Session drummers Jim Gordon and Hal Blaine were brought in to replace Clarke temporarily in the studio, although he continued to honor his live concert commitments with the group.[21][150] Then, in September, Crosby refused to participate in the recording of the GoffinKing song "Goin' Back",[150] considering it to be inferior to his own "Triad", a controversial song about a ménage à trois that was in direct competition with "Goin' Back" for a place on the album.[142] Crosby felt that the band should rely on self-penned material for their albums, rather than cover songs by other artists and writers.[152] He would eventually give "Triad" to the San Francisco band Jefferson Airplane, who included a recording of it on their 1968 album, Crown of Creation.[150][153]

When tensions reached a breaking point during October 1967, McGuinn and Hillman drove to Crosby's home and fired him, stating that they would be better off without him.[147] Crosby subsequently received a cash settlement, with which he bought a sailboat[147] and soon after, he began working with Stephen Stills and Graham Nash in the successful supergroup Crosby, Stills & Nash.[154] In the years after his exit from the Byrds, Crosby enjoyed an influential and commercially successful career as a part of Crosby, Stills & Nash (sometimes augmented by Neil Young), Crosby & Nash, CPR, and as a solo artist.[154] During the 1980s, he fought against crippling drug addiction and eventually served a year in prison on drug-related charges.[154] He emerged from jail free of his drug habit and remained musically active up to his death in 2023.[27]

Following Crosby's departure, Gene Clark briefly rejoined the band, but left just three weeks later, after again refusing to board an aircraft while on tour.[155] There is some disagreement among biographers and band historians as to whether Clark actually participated in the recording sessions for The Notorious Byrd Brothers, but there is evidence to suggest that he sang backing vocals on the songs "Goin' Back" and "Space Odyssey".[152][155] Michael Clarke also returned to the recording studio briefly, towards the end of the album sessions, before being informed by McGuinn and Hillman that they were dismissing him from the band.[144]

Now reduced to a duo, McGuinn and Hillman elected to hire new band members. Hillman's cousin Kevin Kelley was quickly recruited as the band's new drummer[12] and the trio embarked on an early 1968 college tour in support of The Notorious Byrd Brothers.[156] It soon became apparent, however, that recreating the band's studio recordings with a three-piece line-up wasn't going to be possible and so, McGuinn and Hillman, in a fateful decision for their future career direction, hired Gram Parsons as a keyboard player, although he quickly moved to guitar.[156][157] Although Parsons and Kelley were both considered full members of the Byrds, they actually received a salary from McGuinn and Hillman, and did not sign with Columbia Records when the Byrds' recording contract was renewed on February 29, 1968.[158]

Country rock (1968–1973)

Gram Parsons era

Following his induction into the band, Gram Parsons began to assert his own musical agenda in which he intended to marry his love of country and western music with youth culture's passion for rock and, in doing so, make country music fashionable for a young audience.[157][159] He found a kindred spirit in Hillman, who had played mandolin in a number of notable bluegrass bands before joining the Byrds.[157] In addition, Hillman had also persuaded the Byrds to incorporate subtle country influences into their music in the past, beginning with the song "Satisfied Mind" on the Turn! Turn! Turn! album.[157] Although McGuinn had some reservations about the band's proposed new direction, Parsons convinced him that a move towards country music could theoretically expand the group's declining audience.[160] Thus, McGuinn was persuaded to change direction and abandon his original concept for the group's next album, which had been to record a history of 20th century American popular music, and instead explore country rock.[156][160]

On March 9, 1968, the band decamped to Columbia's recording studios in Nashville, Tennessee, with Clarence White in tow, to begin the recording sessions for the Sweetheart of the Rodeo album.[160] While in Nashville, the Byrds also appeared at the Grand Ole Opry on March 15, 1968, where they performed the Merle Haggard song "Sing Me Back Home" and Parsons' own "Hickory Wind" (although they were actually scheduled to play a second Haggard song, "Life in Prison").[161] Being the first group of hippie "longhairs" ever to play at the venerable country music institution, the band was met with heckling, booing, and mocking calls of "tweet, tweet" from the conservative Opry audience.[160]

The band also incurred the wrath of renowned country music DJ Ralph Emery, when they appeared on his Nashville-based WSM radio program.[161] Emery mocked the band throughout their interview and made no secret of his dislike for their newly recorded country rock single, "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere".[162] Parsons and McGuinn would later write the pointedly sarcastic song "Drug Store Truck Drivin' Man" about Emery and their appearance on his show.[161][162] Journalist David Fricke has described the reactions of Emery and the Grand Ole Opry audience as indicative of the resistance and hostility that the Byrds' venture into country music provoked from the Nashville old guard.[12]

There was a genuine concern that we would get sued if we kept Gram's vocals on it. So we put mine on and then the contract dispute went away ... Basically it was a misunderstanding. I wouldn't have had any involvement at all if it had been up to Gram. He was taking over the band, so we couldn't really let that happen.

—Roger McGuinn on replacing some of Gram Parsons' vocals on the Sweetheart of the Rodeo album[163]

Following their stay in Nashville, the band returned to Los Angeles and throughout April and May 1968, they worked on completing their new country-oriented album.[160] During this period, Parsons attempted to exert a controlling influence over the group by pressuring McGuinn to recruit either JayDee Maness or Sneaky Pete Kleinow as the band's permanent pedal steel guitar player.[164] When McGuinn refused, Parsons next began to push for a higher salary, while also demanding that the group be billed as "Gram Parsons and the Byrds" on their forthcoming album.[163] Even Hillman, who had previously been Parsons' biggest supporter in the band, began to grow weary of his forceful demands.[163] Ultimately, Parsons' behavior led to a power struggle for control of the group, with McGuinn finding his position as band leader challenged.[164] However, biographer Johnny Rogan has pointed out that the April 1968 release of "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere" served to strengthen McGuinn's position as head Byrd, with the guitarist's familiar drawl occupying the lead vocal spot and negligible input from Parsons, despite the single's obvious country leanings.[164]

Parsons' dominance over the band waned still further during post-production for Sweetheart of the Rodeo, when his appearance on the album was contested by music business impresario Lee Hazlewood, who alleged that the singer was still under contract to his LHI record label, creating legal complications for Columbia Records.[12] As a result of this, McGuinn and Hillman replaced Parsons' lead vocals on the songs "You Don't Miss Your Water", "The Christian Life", and "One Hundred Years from Now" before the legal problems could be resolved.[165] However, album producer Gary Usher would later put a different slant on the events surrounding the removal of Parsons' vocals by telling his biographer Stephen J. McParland that the alterations to the album arose out of creative concerns, not legal ones; Usher and the band were both worried that Parsons' contributions were dominating the record so his vocals were excised in an attempt to increase McGuinn and Hillman's presence on the album.[165] In the album's final running order, Parsons is still featured as lead vocalist on the songs "You're Still on My Mind", "Life in Prison", and "Hickory Wind".[166]

With their new album now completed, the Byrds flew to England for an appearance at a charity concert at the Royal Albert Hall on July 7, 1968.[167] Following the concert, just prior to a tour of South Africa, Parsons quit the Byrds on the grounds that he did not want to perform in a racially segregated country (apartheid did not end in South Africa until 1994).[160] Hillman doubted the sincerity of Parsons' gesture, believing that the singer had in fact left the band in order to remain in England with Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones, whom he had recently befriended.[168] Parsons stayed at Richards' house in West Sussex immediately after leaving the Byrds, and the pair developed a close friendship over the next few years.[167] After leaving the Byrds, Parsons would go on to produce an influential but commercially unsuccessful body of work, both as a solo artist and with the band the Flying Burrito Brothers (which also featured Hillman).[169] He died on September 19, 1973, at the age of 26, following an accidental overdose of morphine and alcohol in his room at the Joshua Tree Inn.[170]

With Parsons gone from the band and their tour of South Africa due to begin in two days time, the Byrds were forced to draft in their roadie Carlos Bernal as a substitute rhythm guitar player.[167] The ensuing South African tour was a disaster, with the band finding themselves having to play to segregated audiences—something that they had been assured by promoters they would not have to do.[167][171] The under-rehearsed band gave ramshackle performances to audiences that were largely unimpressed with their lack of professionalism and their antagonistic, anti-apartheid stance.[171] The Byrds left South Africa amid a storm of bad publicity and death threats,[171] while the liberal press in the U.S. and the UK attacked the band for undertaking the tour and questioned their political integrity.[171][172] McGuinn attempted to counter this criticism by asserting that the tour of South Africa had, in some small way, been an attempt to challenge the country's political status quo and protest against apartheid.[172]

After returning to California, the Byrds' released the Sweetheart of the Rodeo album on August 30, 1968,[36] almost eight weeks after Parsons had left the band. It comprised a mixture of country music standards and contemporary country material, along with a country reworking of William Bell's soul hit "You Don't Miss Your Water".[157] The album also included the Parsons originals "Hickory Wind" and "One Hundred Years from Now", along with the Bob Dylan-penned songs "Nothing Was Delivered" and "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere",[157] the latter of which had been a moderately successful single.[173] Although it was not the first country rock album,[174] Sweetheart of the Rodeo was the first album widely labeled as country rock to be released by an internationally successful rock act,[1][175] pre-dating Dylan's Nashville Skyline by over six months.[176]

However, the stylistic shift away from psychedelia towards country rock that Sweetheart of the Rodeo represented served to alienate much of the Byrds' counterculture following,[177] while at the same time, eliciting hostility from the ultra-conservative Nashville country music establishment.[160] As a result, the album peaked at number 77 on the U.S. charts and was the least commercially successful Byrds' album to date upon its initial release.[178][179] Today, however, it is considered a seminal and highly influential album, serving as a blueprint for the entire 1970s country rock movement, the outlaw country scene, and the alternative country genre of the 1990s and early 21st century.[12][157]

Clarence White era

After Gram Parsons' departure, McGuinn and Hillman decided to recruit noted session guitarist Clarence White as a full-time member of the band in late July 1968.[180] White, who had contributed countrified guitar playing to every Byrds' album since 1967's Younger Than Yesterday, was brought in at Hillman's suggestion as someone who could handle the band's older rock repertoire and their newer country-oriented material.[12][180] Shortly after his induction into the band, White began to express dissatisfaction with drummer Kevin Kelley and soon persuaded McGuinn and Hillman to replace him with Gene Parsons (no relation to Gram), who White had previously played with in the country rock band Nashville West.[181][182]

The McGuinn–Hillman–White–Parsons line-up was together for less than a month before Hillman quit to join Gram Parsons in forming the Flying Burrito Brothers.[182] Hillman had become increasingly disenchanted with the Byrds since the South African débâcle,[183] and was also frustrated by business manager Larry Spector's mishandling of the group's finances.[182] Things came to a head on September 15, 1968, following a band performance at the Rose Bowl stadium in Pasadena, when Hillman and Spector came to blows backstage.[182] In a fit of rage, Hillman threw down his bass in disgust and walked out of the group.[182] Following his exit, Hillman would have a successful career both as a solo artist and with bands such as the Flying Burrito Brothers, Manassas, the Souther–Hillman–Furay Band, and the Desert Rose Band.[42] He remains active, releasing albums and touring, often with ex-Desert Rose Band member Herb Pedersen.[42]

As the only original band member left, McGuinn elected to hire bassist John York as Hillman's replacement.[184] York had previously been a member of the Sir Douglas Quintet and had also worked as a session musician with Johnny Rivers and the Mamas & the Papas.[184][185] In October 1968, the new line-up entered Columbia Studios in Hollywood to begin recording the Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde album with producer Bob Johnston.[186] The sessions saw the band juxtaposing their new country rock sound with more psychedelic-oriented material, giving the resulting album a stylistic split personality that was alluded to in its title.[187][188] In the wake of the recent changes in band personnel, McGuinn decided that it would be too confusing for fans of the group to hear the unfamiliar voices of White, Parsons and York coming forward at this stage, and so they were relegated to backing vocals on the album. As a result, Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde is unique in the Byrds' back catalogue as McGuinn sings lead on every track.[189]

The album was released on March 5, 1969[188] to generally positive reviews, but in America became the lowest-charting album of the Byrds' career, peaking at number 153 on the Billboard album charts.[184] However, the album fared much better in the UK, where it attracted glowing reviews and reached number 15.[190] A number of tracks on Dr Byrds & Mr. Hyde, including the instrumental "Nashville West" and the traditional song "Old Blue",[191] featured the sound of the Parsons and White designed StringBender (also known as the B-Bender), an invention that allowed White to duplicate the sound of a pedal steel guitar on his Fender Telecaster.[189][192] The distinctive sound of the StringBender became characteristic of the Byrds' music during White's tenure.[193]

Following the release of Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde the band issued a version of Dylan's "Lay Lady Lay" as a single in May 1969, which failed to reverse the group's commercial fortunes in the U.S., reaching number 132.[190] The Byrds' producer Bob Johnston took it upon himself to overdub a female choir onto the record,[190] something the group only became aware of after the single was issued, leaving them incensed by what they saw as an embarrassing and incongruous addition.[162][190] As a result, the band dispensed with Johnston and re-enlisted Terry Melcher, who had produced the band's first two albums, to produce their next LP.[162][194] Although he was happy to accept the band's invitation, Melcher insisted that he also manage the group to avoid a repeat of the conflict he had experienced in 1965 with Jim Dickson.[195]

Prior to the release of the Byrds' next studio album, however, the band's former producer Gary Usher managed to acquire a number of demo recordings from Dickson, dating from the group's 1964 rehearsal sessions at World Pacific Studios.[196] These recordings were subsequently issued as the Preflyte album on Usher's own Together Records imprint in July 1969.[36] Although the material on Preflyte was five years old at the time of its release, the album actually managed to outperform Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde in America, garnering moderately enthusiastic reviews and peaking at number 84 on the Billboard album chart.[197]

Between June and August 1969, the Byrds worked with Melcher to complete the Ballad of Easy Rider album.[198] Musically, the album represented a consolidation and streamlining the band's country rock sound, and mostly consisted of cover versions and traditional material, along with three self-penned originals.[199] The first single to be released from the album was the title track, issued in October 1969 in America and reaching number 65 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.[200] Composed primarily by McGuinn, with some input from Bob Dylan (although not credited), "Ballad of Easy Rider" was written as the theme tune for the 1969 counterculture film Easy Rider.[201] However, the Byrds' recording of the song does not appear in the film and an acoustic version credited to McGuinn alone was used instead.[195][202] The Byrds' song "Wasn't Born to Follow" from The Notorious Byrd Brothers album was featured in the film and also included on the Easy Rider soundtrack album in August 1969.[202] The Byrds' association with the film heightened their public profile and when the Ballad of Easy Rider album was released in November 1969, it peaked at number 36 in the U.S. and number 41 in the UK, becoming the band's highest-charting album for two years in America.[195][203] A second single taken from the album, "Jesus Is Just Alright", was released in December 1969, but it only managed to reach number 97.[204] Despite this lack of commercial success, the Doobie Brothers' later hit version of "Jesus Is Just Alright" features an arrangement that was heavily influenced by the Byrds' recording.[205]

 
Left to right: Roger McGuinn, Skip Battin, Clarence White, Gene Parsons; the most stable and longest-lived of any Byrds line-up.

Just prior to the release of Ballad of Easy Rider, the Byrds underwent yet another change in personnel when bassist John York was asked to leave the band in September 1969.[206] York had become disenchanted with his role in the Byrds and had voiced his reluctance to perform material that had been written and recorded by the group before he had joined.[207] The rest of the band had begun to doubt his commitment and so, a consensus was reached among the other three members that York should be fired.[207] He was replaced, at the suggestion of Parsons and White, by Skip Battin, a freelance session musician and one-time member of the duo Skip & Flip.[208] Battin's recruitment marked the last personnel change to the group for almost three years and as a result, the McGuinn-White-Parsons-Battin line-up became the most stable and longest-lived of any configuration of the Byrds.[208][209]

The latter-day, post-Sweetheart of the Rodeo version of the band, featuring McGuinn and White's dual lead guitar work, toured relentlessly between 1969 and 1972 and was regarded by critics and audiences as much more accomplished in concert than any previous configuration of the Byrds had been.[210][211][212] As a result of this, it was decided in early 1970 that the time was right for the group to issue a live album.[213] However, it was also felt that the band had a sufficient backlog of new compositions to warrant the recording of a new studio album.[213] It was therefore suggested by Melcher that the band should release a double album, featuring one LP of concert recordings and another LP of new studio material.[213] To help with the editing of the live recordings, the band's ex-manager Jim Dickson, who had been fired by the group in June 1967, was invited back into the Byrds' camp.[214] At around this same time, former business manager Eddie Tickner also returned to the group's employ as a replacement for Larry Spector, who had quit the management business and relocated to Big Sur.[181][215]

The two-record (Untitled) album was released by the Byrds on September 14, 1970, to positive reviews and strong sales, with many critics and fans regarding the album as a return to form for the band.[215][216] Peaking at number 40 on the Billboard Top LPs chart and number 11 in the UK,[216] the album's success continued the upward trend in the band's commercial fortunes and popularity that had begun with the release of the Ballad of Easy Rider album.[217] The live half of (Untitled) included both new material and new renditions of previous hit singles, including "Mr. Tambourine Man", "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star" and a 16-minute version of "Eight Miles High", which comprised the whole of one side of the original LP release.[218] Band biographer Johnny Rogan has suggested that the inclusion of these newly recorded live versions of older songs served to forge a spiritual and musical link between the Byrds' current line-up and the original mid-1960s incarnation of the band.[218]

The studio recordings featured on (Untitled) mostly consisted of newly written, self-penned material, including a number of songs that had been composed by McGuinn and Broadway theatre impresario Jacques Levy for a planned country rock musical titled Gene Tryp that the pair were developing.[208] Plans for the musical had fallen through and as a result, McGuinn decided to record some of the material originally intended for the production with the Byrds.[208][219] Among the Gene Tryp songs included on (Untitled) was "Chestnut Mare", which had originally been written for a scene in which the musical's eponymous hero attempts to catch and tame a wild horse.[218] The song was issued as a single in the U.S. on October 23, 1970, but it only managed to climb to number 121 on the Billboard chart.[220] Nonetheless, the song went on to become a staple of FM radio programming in America during the 1970s.[221] "Chestnut Mare" did much better in the UK, however, when it was released as a single on January 1, 1971, reaching number 19 on the UK Singles Chart and giving the Byrds their first UK Top 20 hit since their cover of Bob Dylan's "All I Really Want to Do" had peaked at number 4 in September 1965.[218][220]

The Byrds returned to the recording studio with Melcher sporadically between October 1970 and early March 1971, in order to complete the follow-up to (Untitled), which would be released in June 1971 as Byrdmaniax.[198][222][223] Unfortunately, the grueling pace of the band's touring schedule at the time meant that they were not fully prepared for the sessions and much of the material they recorded was under-developed.[224] Following completion of the album recording sessions, the Byrds once again headed out on tour, leaving Melcher and engineer Chris Hinshaw to finish mixing the album in their absence.[223][225] Controversially, Melcher and Hinshaw elected to bring in arranger Paul Polena to assist in the overdubbing of strings, horns, and a gospel choir onto many of the songs, allegedly without the band's consent.[223][225][226] Drummer Gene Parsons recalled in a 1997 interview that when the band heard Melcher's additions they campaigned to have the album remixed and the orchestration removed, but Columbia Records refused, citing budget restrictions, and so the record was duly pressed up and released.[227]

In May 1971, just prior to the release of the Byrdmaniax album, the Byrds undertook a sell-out tour of England and Europe, which included a performance at the Royal Albert Hall in London that was released for the first time in 2008 as Live at Royal Albert Hall 1971.[210][227][228] The British and European press were unanimous in their praise of the Byrds' live performances during the tour,[228] reinforcing their reputation as a formidable live act during this period. Over the course of the tour, the band chose to expand their ranks, with roadie Jimmi Seiter joining the group on stage to provide additional percussion as an unofficial member.[227] Seiter would continue to sit in with the Byrds during their live performances until August 1971, when he decided to leave the group's employ.[229]

Terry Melcher put the strings on while we were on the road, we came back and we didn't even recognize it as our own album. It was like somebody else's work. Our instruments were buried.

—Clarence White speaking in 1973 about the production on Byrdmaniax[227]

When the Byrdmaniax album was released on June 23, 1971[225] it was received poorly by most critics and did much to undermine the new-found popularity that the Byrds had enjoyed since the release of Ballad of Easy Rider.[224] The response to the album from the American music press was particularly scathing, with a review in the August 1971 edition of Rolling Stone magazine describing the Byrds as "a boring dead group" and memorably dismissing the entire album as "increments of pus".[230] The consensus among most reviewers was that Byrdmaniax was hampered by Melcher's inappropriate orchestration and by being an album almost totally bereft of the Byrds' signature sound.[224] The band themselves were publicly critical of the album upon its release, with Gene Parsons referring to it as "Melcher's folly".[227] For his part, Melcher later stated that he felt that the band's performances in the studio during the making of Byrdmaniax were lackluster and he therefore employed the orchestration in order to cover up the album's musical shortcomings.[226] Regardless, by the time of the album's release, Melcher had resigned as the Byrds' manager and producer.[227] Despite the band's dissatisfaction with the finished product and its poor critical reception, Byrdmaniax made a respectable showing on the U.S. charts, peaking at number 46.[230] However, the album failed to sell in sufficient quantities to reach the UK charts.[229] Author Christopher Hjort has remarked that in the years since its release, Byrdmaniax has become arguably "the least-liked album in the Byrds catalogue" among the group's fanbase.[229]

The Byrds moved quickly to record a self-produced follow-up to Byrdmaniax, in an attempt to stem the criticism that the album was receiving in the music press and as a reaction to their own dislike of Melcher's overproduction.[226][231] Rogan has speculated that the Byrds' decision to produce their next album themselves was an attempt on the band's part to prove that they could do a better job than Melcher had done on their previous record.[232] While in England for an appearance at the Lincoln Folk Festival, the Byrds decamped to CBS Studios in London with engineer Mike Ross and between July 22 and 28, 1971, they recorded an album's worth of new material.[16][229]

In October 1971, CBS Records in the UK issued The Byrds' Greatest Hits Volume II to capitalize on the group's recent appearance at the Lincoln Folk Festival and perhaps as a reaction to the chart failure suffered by Byrdmaniax.[232][233] Unfortunately, the compilation album also failed to reach the UK charts, while contemporary reviews made note of its misleading and inaccurate title, since among its twelve tracks, only "Chestnut Mare" had been a genuine hit in the United Kingdom.[233] An equivalent compilation wasn't released in the U.S. until November 1972, when The Best of The Byrds: Greatest Hits, Volume II was issued.[234]

On November 17, 1971, less than five months after the release of Byrdmaniax, the Byrds issued their eleventh studio album, Farther Along.[235] The album was met with slightly more enthusiastic reviews than its predecessor but nevertheless, only managed to climb to number 152 on the Billboard Top LPs chart, while failing to reach the charts in the United Kingdom altogether.[235] Musically, the album found the Byrds beginning to move away from their country rock sound—although at least half the album still bore a strong country influence—and instead, embrace a style indebted to 1950s rock 'n' roll music.[236][237] The Skip Battin and Kim Fowley penned song "America's Great National Pastime" was taken from the album and released as a single in late November, but it failed to chart on either side of the Atlantic.[235] Rogan has concluded that, ultimately, the rapidity with which the Byrds planned and recorded Farther Along resulted in an album that was just as flawed as Byrdmaniax and as a result, it failed to rehabilitate the band's ailing commercial fortunes or increase their declining audience.[238] The album's title track, sung by White with the rest of the group harmonizing, would later become a poignant and prophetic epitaph for the guitarist when it was sung by ex-Byrd Gram Parsons and the Eagles' Bernie Leadon at White's funeral in July 1973.[236]

Breakup

 
Clarence White and Roger McGuinn on stage during the Byrds' September 9, 1972 appearance at Washington University in St. Louis.

Following the release of Farther Along, the Byrds continued to tour throughout 1972, but no new album or single release was forthcoming.[16][239] Gene Parsons was fired from the group in July 1972 for a number of reasons, including McGuinn's growing dissatisfaction with his drumming, disagreements that he and McGuinn were having over band members' pay, and his own discontent over the band's lack of morale during this period.[240]

Parsons was quickly replaced with L.A. session drummer John Guerin, who remained with the Byrds until January 1973, when he decided to return to studio work.[241][242] Although Guerin participated in recording sessions with the band[243] and appeared on stage with them from September 1972,[239] he was never an official member of the Byrds and instead received a standard session musician's wage, while continuing to undertake work for other artists as an in-demand studio player.[244] Three officially released Byrds recordings exist of the McGuinn-White-Battin-Guerin lineup: live versions of "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "Roll Over Beethoven" that were recorded for the soundtrack of the Earl Scruggs' film Banjoman, and a studio recording of "Bag Full of Money" that was included as a bonus track on the remastered reissue of Farther Along in 2000.[236][241]

Following Guerin's departure, he was temporarily replaced for live performances by session drummers Dennis Dragon and Jim Moon.[241] The band underwent a further personnel change following a show on February 10, 1973, in Ithaca, New York, when Skip Battin was dismissed by McGuinn, who had capriciously decided that the bassist's playing abilities were no longer of a sufficient standard.[241][242] McGuinn turned to ex-Byrd Chris Hillman – who at that time was a member of the band Manassas – and asked him to step in as Battin's replacement for two upcoming shows on February 23 and 24.[241] Hillman agreed to play both concerts for the sum of $2,000 and also brought in Manassas percussionist Joe Lala to fill the vacant spot behind the drum kit.[241] Following a shambolic, underrehearsed performance at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, New Jersey, on February 24, 1973, McGuinn cancelled the band's remaining concert commitments and disbanded the touring version of the Byrds, in order to make way for a reunion of the original five-piece line-up of the band.[16][245]

Five months later, guitarist Clarence White was killed by a drunk driver in the early hours of July 15, 1973,[246] while he loaded guitar equipment into the back of a van after a concert appearance in Palmdale, California.[247]

Reunions

1972–1973 reunion

The five original members of the Byrds reunited briefly during late 1972, while McGuinn was still undertaking selected concerts with the touring version of the group.[239] Discussions regarding a reunion between Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark, David Crosby, Chris Hillman, and Michael Clarke had taken place as early as July 1971, around the same time as the then current line-up of the band were recording the Farther Along album.[238] Plans for a reunion accelerated in mid-1972, however, when the founder of Asylum Records, David Geffen, offered each of the original band members a sizable amount of money to reform and record an album for his label.[248] The reunion actually took place in early October 1972, beginning with a rehearsal at McGuinn's house, where the group began selecting suitable material for a new album.[249] The five original Byrds booked into Wally Heider's Studio 3 in Hollywood from October 16 until November 15, 1972, recording their first album together in seven years.[234]

 
Following his dismissal from the band in 1967, David Crosby (pictured in 1976) was critical of Roger McGuinn's decision to recruit new band members, while continuing to use the Byrds name.

Following completion of the album, Crosby persuaded McGuinn to dissolve the Columbia version of the Byrds, who were still touring at that time.[242] Crosby had long been vocal regarding his displeasure over McGuinn's decision to recruit new band members following his dismissal from the group in 1967, and had stated in a number of interviews that in his opinion "there were only ever five Byrds".[248] In keeping with the new spirit of reconciliation that the reunion fostered, McGuinn permanently disbanded the Columbia lineup of the group in February 1973.[16]

The reunion album, titled simply Byrds, was released on March 7, 1973, to mixed reviews.[245] As a result, a planned tour in support of the album failed to materialize.[17] Among the album's shortcomings, critics made note of a lack of sonic unity and the absence of the Byrds' signature jangly guitar sound.[245] Nonetheless, the album managed to climb to number 20 on the Billboard Top LPs & Tapes chart and number 31 in the UK.[245] In the United States, the album became the band's highest charting LP of new material since 1965's Turn! Turn! Turn!, which had also been the last Byrds' album to feature Gene Clark as a full member.[17] Among the tracks included on the album were McGuinn's folk-flavored "Sweet Mary", the Joni Mitchell cover "For Free", a re-recording of Crosby's song "Laughing" (which had originally appeared on his 1971 solo album, If I Could Only Remember My Name), and a pair of Neil Young songs.[17] The album also featured the Gene Clark compositions "Changing Heart" and "Full Circle", the latter of which had provided the reunion album with its working title and was subsequently released as a single, although it failed to chart.[245][250]

The negative critical reception that Byrds received in the music press resulted in the band losing faith in the idea of an ongoing series of reunions.[17] In the years following its release, all five band members were openly critical of the album, with the general consensus being that the material included on it was weak and that the recording sessions had been rushed and ill-thought out.[17] In addition, McGuinn and Hillman have both suggested that with the exception of Gene Clark, the songwriting members of the band were reluctant to bring their strongest compositions to the recording sessions, preferring instead to hold those songs back for their own solo projects.[17][248] In the wake of the reunion, the five original Byrds quietly returned to their own careers,[17] with the June 1973 release of McGuinn's eponymously titled solo album serving to effectively mark the end of the Byrds.

Following the reunion of 1972/1973, the Byrds remained disbanded throughout the rest of the decade.[1] Roger McGuinn turned his attention to establishing his own career, releasing a series of solo albums between 1973 and 1977, and making a high-profile appearance with Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue.[2] Chris Hillman worked as part of the Souther–Hillman–Furay Band following the Byrds reunion and released a pair of solo albums entitled Slippin' Away and Clear Sailin' in 1976 and 1977 respectively.[42] David Crosby returned to the supergroup Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young for their 1974 tour and subsequently continued to produce albums with Graham Nash.[27] He also took part in a 1977 reunion of Crosby, Stills & Nash, which saw the group release their multi-platinum selling CSN album.[27] Michael Clarke also found success following the Byrds reunion as the drummer for soft rock group Firefall,[21] while Gene Clark returned to his solo career, producing the critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful albums No Other (1974) and Two Sides to Every Story (1977).[112]

McGuinn, Clark & Hillman (1977–1981)

Between 1977 and 1980, McGuinn, Clark and Hillman worked on and off together as a trio, modeled after Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and, to a lesser extent, the Eagles.[251][252] This supergroup made up of former Byrds was reasonably successful commercially and managed to score a Top 40 hit with the single "Don't You Write Her Off" in March 1979.[253][254] The trio toured internationally and recorded the albums McGuinn, Clark & Hillman and City.[253] Clark departed the group in late 1979, resulting in a third and final album being billed as McGuinn-Hillman.[253] The two former Byrds continued to play low-key gigs after the release of the McGuinn/Hillman album, but they split up in early 1981.[255]

Ersatz Byrds and further reunions (1989–1991; 2000)

In 1984, Gene Clark approached McGuinn, Crosby, and Hillman in an attempt to reform the Byrds in time for the 20th anniversary of the release of the "Mr. Tambourine Man" single in 1985.[256] None of these three original members were interested in the venture and so Clark instead assembled a group of musicians and friends, including Rick Roberts, Blondie Chaplin, Rick Danko, Richard Manuel, and the ex-Byrds Michael Clarke and John York, under the banner of "The 20th Anniversary Tribute to the Byrds".[257] This tribute act began performing on the lucrative nostalgia circuit in early 1985, but a number of concert promoters began to shorten the band's name to the Byrds in advertisements and promotional material.[256] As the band continued to tour throughout 1985, they eventually decided to shorten their name to the Byrds themselves, prompting McGuinn, Crosby and Hillman to berate the tribute group in interviews, with McGuinn deriding the act as "a cheap show".[256]

After the tour wound down in late 1985, Clark returned to his solo career, leaving Michael Clarke to soldier on with a band that was now billed as "A Tribute to the Byrds" (although again, it was often shortened to the Byrds by promoters).[258] Gene Clark returned to the group following the release of his and Carla Olson's So Rebellious a Lover album, and the tribute band continued to work on and off in 1987 and 1988.[259] Author Johnny Rogan has stated that most die-hard fans of the Byrds were mortified by the existence of this ersatz version of the group, while Byrds expert Tim Connors has commented that "no chapter in the history of the Byrds caused as much consternation and controversy among fans".[256][258]

In June 1988, McGuinn, Crosby and Hillman appeared at a concert celebrating the reopening of the Ash Grove folk club in Los Angeles.[258] Although they were billed as solo artists, the three musicians came together for an on-stage reunion during the show, performing a string of Byrds hits including "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "Eight Miles High".[258] Although Clark and Clarke's Byrds tribute group was inactive at the time of this high-profile get-together of McGuinn, Crosby, and Hillman, Michael Clarke did mount another tribute tour shortly afterwards, this time featuring former Byrd Skip Battin and newcomers Terry Jones Rogers and Jerry Sorn, under the banner of "The Byrds featuring Michael Clarke".[258][260] In addition, the drummer also sought to trademark the name "The Byrds" for his own use.[256]

First Gene went around with a very, very bad band, calling it the Byrds. Well, okay. Gene was one of the original writer/singer guys. But when it gets to be Michael Clarke the drummer -- who never wrote anything or sang anything – going out there with an even worse band, and claiming to be the Byrds ... and they can't play the stuff. It was dragging the name in the dirt.

—David Crosby on the motivation behind the lawsuit against Michael Clarke[261]

In retaliation against Clarke's trademark application, McGuinn, Crosby and Hillman submitted their own counter-claim to gain ownership of the band's name.[260] McGuinn had actually attempted to trademark the Byrds name himself during the 1970s, in order to prevent its misuse, but his application had been turned down.[258] To strengthen their case, the three musicians announced in December 1988 that they would be performing a series of concerts in January 1989 as the Byrds.[258][260] Although he was no longer connected with Clarke's tribute act, Gene Clark was not invited to participate in these official Byrds reunion concerts due to residual ill-feeling stemming from his earlier "20th Anniversary Tribute to the Byrds".[260]

The reunion concerts were a resounding success, but with Michael Clarke continuing to tour with his Byrds tribute, McGuinn, Crosby and Hillman filed a lawsuit against the drummer in the spring of 1989, suing him for allegedly false advertising, unfair competition and deceptive trade practices, as well as seeking a preliminary injunction against Clarke's use of the name.[258][260] At the court hearing in May 1989, the judge denied the injunction, ruling that McGuinn, Crosby and Hillman had failed to show that they would be irreparably damaged by Clarke's actions.[260] As a result, Clarke gained full legal ownership of the name the Byrds.[262] In the wake of this ruling, McGuinn, Crosby and Hillman dropped their lawsuit, but to demonstrate that they had not wholly surrendered the Byrds name to Clarke, the three musicians appeared under the banner of "The Original Byrds" at a Roy Orbison tribute concert on February 24, 1990, where they were joined on-stage by Bob Dylan for a rendition of "Mr. Tambourine Man".[260][263] Later that year, McGuinn, Crosby and Hillman entered Treasure Isle Recorders in Nashville to record four new Byrds tracks for inclusion on the forthcoming The Byrds box set.[243]

On January 16, 1991, the five original members of the Byrds put aside their differences to appear together at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City for their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.[18] The ceremony honored the original line-up of Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark, David Crosby, Chris Hillman, and Michael Clarke, while later configurations of the group featuring such key personnel as Gram Parsons and Clarence White were quietly passed over.[18] The occasion, which saw the band come together on stage to perform the songs "Turn! Turn! Turn! (to Everything There Is a Season)", "Mr. Tambourine Man", and "I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better", represented the first time that all five original Byrds had stood together since 1973.[18] Unfortunately, it would also represent the last time that the five original members were gathered together.[19] Clark died later that year of heart failure, and on December 19, 1993, Clarke succumbed to liver disease brought on by alcoholism.[262]

Following Clarke's death, Terry Jones Rogers resurrected the Byrds tribute act, with guitarist Scott Nienhaus and former Byrds Skip Battin and Gene Parsons on bass and drums respectively.[264] Performing under the banner of The Byrds Celebration, the tribute group toured extensively throughout the remainder of the 1990s, although Parsons was replaced by session drummer Vince Barranco in 1995 and Battin was forced to retire due to ill-health in 1997.[264] Since 2002, Rogers and Nienhaus have continued to tour as part of the band Younger Than Yesterday: A Tribute to the Byrds, along with bassist Michael Curtis and drummer Tim Politte.[264]

 
McGuinn performing in 2009. Despite Hillman and Crosby's interest in future Byrds reunions, McGuinn remains reluctant to reform the band.

McGuinn, Crosby and Hillman all returned to their individual solo careers following the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony.[262] However, the Byrds did reunite for a third time on August 8, 2000, to give an impromptu, one-off performance at a tribute concert for Fred Walecki, the owner of a Los Angeles music equipment store who was suffering from throat cancer.[265] Crosby and Hillman were booked to appear at the event separately, but McGuinn, who was not listed on the bill, made a surprise appearance and joined his two former partners on stage.[265] McGuinn introduced the hastily reformed trio with the words, "And now, ladies and gentlemen, the Byrds", as the group launched into renditions of "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "Turn! Turn! Turn! (to Everything There Is a Season)".[265] According to contemporary press reports, the reunion was an unmitigated success, with the audience giving the band multiple standing ovations and shouting for more as they left the stage.[265]

During the 2000s, two more ex-members of the Byrds died when drummer Kevin Kelley succumbed of natural causes in 2002[266] and bassist Skip Battin, who was suffering from Alzheimer's disease, died at his home in 2003.[262] Former members Gene Parsons and John York both remain active and continue to perform and record various musical projects.[262]

Perhaps the most surprising development in the Byrds' story during the 2000s, however, was the acquisition by David Crosby of the rights to the band's name in 2002.[267][268] Ownership of the Byrds' name had reverted to Clarke's estate upon his death in 1993 and Crosby's purchase served to effectively bring the convoluted battle for control of the group's name to an end.

To date, the Fred Walecki tribute concert appearance in 2000 was the last performance by the Byrds. However, Hillman and Crosby have both expressed an interest in working with McGuinn again on future Byrds projects, but the lead guitarist and head Byrd remains adamant that he is not interested in another full reunion.[262] During an interview with music journalist John Nork, McGuinn replied "absolutely not", when asked if he had any plans to revive the Byrds, explaining, "No, I don't want to do that. I just want to be a solo artist. The Byrds are well documented. I don't think we need anymore from the Byrds."[262]

In spite of McGuinn's comments, he and Hillman undertook a series of concerts together in 2018 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo album.[269] Though not billed as the Byrds, the duo, together with backing band Marty Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives, played some earlier Byrds' material before performing all of the songs from the album and telling stories about its creation.[270]

Legacy

Since the band's 1960s heyday, the influence of the Byrds on successive generations of rock and pop musicians has grown steadily, with acts such as the Eagles, Big Star, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, R.E.M., the Bangles, the Smiths, and innumerable alternative rock bands of the post-punk era all exhibiting signs of their influence.[1][5][262][271][272] Musician and author Peter Lavezzoli described the Byrds in 2007 as "one of the few bands to exert a decisive influence on the Beatles", while also noting that they helped to persuade Bob Dylan to begin recording with electric instrumentation.[273] Lavezzoli concluded that "like it or not, terms like 'folk rock', 'raga rock' and 'country rock' were coined for a reason: the Byrds did it first, and then kept moving, never staying in the 'raga' or 'country' mode for very long. This is precisely what made the Byrds such a rewarding band to follow from one record to the next".[273]

In his book The Great Rock Discography, music researcher Martin C. Strong describes the Byrds' cover of "Mr. Tambourine Man" as "a timeless slice of hypnotic, bittersweet pop" and a record that "did nothing less than change the course of pop/rock history".[274] Author and musician Bob Stanley, writing in his 2013 book Yeah Yeah Yeah: The Story of Modern Pop, has called the Byrds' music "a phenomenon, a drone, genuinely hair-raising and totally American".[275]

In his book Riot on Sunset Strip: Rock 'n' Roll's Last Stand in 60s Hollywood, music historian Domenic Priore attempts to sum up the band's influence by stating: "Few of The Byrds' contemporaries can claim to have made such a subversive impact on popular culture. The band had a much larger, more positive impact on the world at large than any Billboard chart position or album sales or concert attendance figure could possibly measure."[276]

In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked the Byrds at number 45 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.[277] In 2006, they were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame.[278]

Members

Original members

Subsequent members

Membership timeline (1964–1973)

Discography

Notes

  1. ^ Jim McGuinn changed his name to Roger McGuinn in 1967.

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Further reading

  • Rogan, Johnny, Byrds: Requiem for the Timeless, Volume 1, Rogan House, 2011, ISBN 0-9529540-8-7.
  • Hjort, Christopher, So You Want To Be A Rock 'n' Roll Star: The Byrds Day-By-Day (1965–1973), Jawbone Press, 2008, ISBN 1-906002-15-0.
  • Menck, Ric, The Notorious Byrd Brothers (33⅓ series), Continuum Books, 2007, ISBN 0-8264-1717-5.
  • Einarson, John, Mr. Tambourine Man: The Life and Legacy of the Byrds' Gene Clark, Backbeat Books, 2005, ISBN 0-87930-793-5.
  • Unterberger, Richie, Turn! Turn! Turn!: The '60s Folk-Rock Revolution, Backbeat Books, 2002, ISBN 0-87930-703-X.
  • Unterberger, Richie, Eight Miles High: Folk-Rock's Flight from Haight-Ashbury to Woodstock, Backbeat Books, 2003, ISBN 0-87930-743-9.
  • Rogan, Johnny, The Byrds: Timeless Flight Revisited, Rogan House, 1998, ISBN 0-9529540-1-X.
  • Scoppa, Bud, The Byrds, Scholastic Book Services, 1971.

External links

byrds, confused, with, birds, band, ɜːr, were, american, rock, band, formed, angeles, california, 1964, band, underwent, multiple, lineup, changes, throughout, existence, with, frontman, roger, mcguinn, known, mcguinn, until, 1967, remaining, sole, consistent,. Not to be confused with The Birds band The Byrds b ɜːr d z were an American rock band formed in Los Angeles California in 1964 1 The band underwent multiple lineup changes throughout its existence with frontman Roger McGuinn known as Jim McGuinn until mid 1967 remaining the sole consistent member 2 Although their time as one of the most popular groups in the world only lasted for a short period in the mid 1960s the Byrds are today considered by critics to be among the most influential rock acts of their era 1 3 4 Their signature blend of clear harmony singing and McGuinn s jangly 12 string Rickenbacker guitar was absorbed into the vocabulary of rock and has continued to be influential 1 5 The ByrdsThe Byrds in 1965From left to right David Crosby Gene Clark Michael Clarke Chris Hillman and Jim McGuinn nb 1 Background informationOriginLos Angeles California U S GenresRock pop folk rock psychedelia raga rock country rock jangle popYears active1964 19731989 19912000LabelsColumbiaAsylumElektraSpinoffsThe Flying Burrito Brothers Crosby Stills Nash amp Young Firefall McGuinn Clark amp Hillman the Desert Rose BandSpinoff ofThe Jet Set the BeefeatersPast membersRoger McGuinnGene ClarkDavid CrosbyMichael ClarkeChris HillmanKevin KelleyGram ParsonsClarence WhiteGene ParsonsJohn YorkSkip BattinWebsitethebyrds wbr comInitially the Byrds pioneered the musical genre of folk rock as a popular format in 1965 by melding the influence of the Beatles and other British Invasion bands with contemporary and traditional folk music on their first and second albums and the hit singles Mr Tambourine Man and Turn Turn Turn 6 7 8 9 As the 1960s progressed the band was influential in originating psychedelic rock and raga rock with their song Eight Miles High and the albums Fifth Dimension 1966 Younger Than Yesterday 1967 and The Notorious Byrd Brothers 1968 1 10 11 The band also played a pioneering role in the development of country rock 1 with the 1968 album Sweetheart of the Rodeo representing their fullest immersion into the genre 12 The original five piece lineup of the band consisted of McGuinn lead guitar vocals Gene Clark tambourine vocals David Crosby rhythm guitar vocals Chris Hillman bass guitar vocals and Michael Clarke drums 13 This version of the band was relatively short lived and by early 1966 Clark had left due to problems associated with anxiety and his increasing isolation within the group 14 The Byrds continued as a quartet until late 1967 when Crosby and Clarke also departed 15 McGuinn and Hillman decided to recruit new members including country rock pioneer Gram Parsons but by late 1968 Hillman and Parsons had also exited the band 1 McGuinn elected to rebuild the band s membership between 1968 and 1973 he helmed a new incarnation of the Byrds that featured guitarist Clarence White among others 1 McGuinn disbanded the then current version of the band in early 1973 to make way for a reunion of the original quintet 16 The Byrds final album was released in March 1973 with the reunited group disbanding later that year 17 Several former members of the Byrds went on to successful careers of their own either as solo artists or as members of such groups as Crosby Stills Nash amp Young the Flying Burrito Brothers McGuinn Clark amp Hillman and the Desert Rose Band 1 In 1991 the Byrds were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame an occasion that saw the five original members performing together for the last time 18 19 Gene Clark died of a heart attack later that year while Michael Clarke died of liver failure in 1993 20 21 Crosby died in 2023 22 McGuinn and Hillman remain active Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1964 1 2 Folk rock 1965 1 3 Psychedelia 1965 1967 1 4 Lineup changes 1967 1968 1 5 Country rock 1968 1973 1 5 1 Gram Parsons era 1 5 2 Clarence White era 1 5 3 Breakup 1 6 Reunions 1 6 1 1972 1973 reunion 1 6 2 McGuinn Clark amp Hillman 1977 1981 1 6 3 Ersatz Byrds and further reunions 1989 1991 2000 1 7 Legacy 2 Members 3 Discography 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditFormation 1964 Edit McGuinn and I started picking together in The Troubadour bar which was called The Folk Den at the time We went into the lobby and started picking on the stairway where the echo was good and David came walking up and just started singing away with us doing the harmony part We hadn t even approached him Gene Clark recalling the encounter at the Troubadour folk club in Los Angeles that marked the genesis of the Byrds 23 The nucleus of the Byrds formed in early 1964 when Jim McGuinn Gene Clark and David Crosby came together as a trio 24 All three musicians had a background rooted in folk music with each one having worked as a folk singer on the acoustic coffeehouse circuit during the early 1960s 1 In addition they had all served time independently of each other as sidemen in various collegiate folk groups McGuinn with the Limeliters and the Chad Mitchell Trio Clark with the New Christy Minstrels and Crosby with Les Baxter s Balladeers 25 26 27 McGuinn had also spent time as a professional songwriter at the Brill Building in New York City under the tutelage of Bobby Darin 28 By early 1964 McGuinn had become enamored with the music of the Beatles and had begun to intersperse his solo folk repertoire with acoustic versions of Beatles songs 24 While performing at the Troubadour folk club in Los Angeles McGuinn was approached by fellow Beatles fan Gene Clark and the pair soon formed a Peter and Gordon style duo playing Beatles covers Beatlesque renditions of traditional folk songs and some self penned material 1 24 29 Soon after David Crosby introduced himself to the duo at The Troubadour and began harmonizing with them on some of their songs 23 Impressed by the blend of their voices the three musicians formed a trio and named themselves the Jet Set a moniker inspired by McGuinn s love of aeronautics 23 Crosby introduced McGuinn and Clark to his associate Jim Dickson who had access to World Pacific Studios where he had been recording demos of Crosby 23 Sensing the trio s potential Dickson quickly took on management duties for the group while his business partner Eddie Tickner became the group s accountant and financial manager 23 30 Dickson began utilizing World Pacific Studios to record the trio as they honed their craft and perfected their blend of Beatles pop and Bob Dylan style folk 31 32 It was during the rehearsals at World Pacific that the band s folk rock sound an amalgam of their own Beatles influenced material their folk music roots and their Beatlesque covers of contemporary folk songs began to coalesce 32 Initially this blend arose organically but as rehearsals continued the band began to actively attempt to bridge the gap between folk music and rock 23 33 Demo recordings made by the Jet Set at World Pacific Studios would later be collected on the compilation albums Preflyte In the Beginning The Preflyte Sessions and Preflyte Plus Drummer Michael Clarke was added to the Jet Set in mid 1964 34 Clarke was recruited largely due to his good looks and Brian Jones esque hairstyle rather than for his musical experience which was limited to having played congas in a semi professional capacity in and around San Francisco and L A 35 Clarke did not even own his own drum kit and initially had to play on a makeshift setup consisting of cardboard boxes and a tambourine 35 As the band continued to rehearse Dickson arranged a one off single deal for the group with Elektra Records founder Jac Holzman 14 The single which coupled the band originals Please Let Me Love You and Don t Be Long featured McGuinn Clark and Crosby augmented by session musicians Ray Pohlman on bass and Earl Palmer on drums 14 In an attempt to cash in on the British Invasion craze that was dominating the American charts at the time the band s name was changed for the single release to the suitably British sounding the Beefeaters 14 Please Let Me Love You was issued by Elektra Records on October 7 1964 but it failed to chart 36 A Rickenbacker 360 12 string guitar similar to the one used by Jim McGuinn in 1964 and 1965 By 1966 McGuinn had transitioned to playing the three pickup 370 12 model In August 1964 Dickson managed to acquire an acetate disc of the then unreleased Bob Dylan song Mr Tambourine Man which he felt would make an effective cover for the Jet Set 34 37 Although the band was initially unimpressed with the song they began rehearsing it with a rock band arrangement changing the time signature from 24 to a rockier 44 configuration in the process 37 38 In an attempt to bolster the group s confidence in the song Dickson invited Dylan himself to World Pacific to hear the band perform Mr Tambourine Man 37 Impressed by the group s rendition Dylan enthusiastically commented Wow man You can dance to that 37 His ringing endorsement erased any lingering doubts that the band had over the song s suitability 37 Soon after inspired by the Beatles film A Hard Day s Night the band decided to equip themselves with similar instruments to the Fab Four a Rickenbacker twelve string guitar for McGuinn a Ludwig drum kit for Clarke and a Gretsch Tennessean guitar for Clark although Crosby commandeered it soon after resulting in Clark switching to tambourine 34 39 In October 1964 Dickson recruited mandolin player Chris Hillman as the Jet Set s bassist 40 Hillman s background was more oriented towards country music than folk or rock having been a member of the bluegrass groups the Scottsville Squirrel Barkers the Hillmen also known as the Golden State Boys and concurrently with his recruitment into the Jet Set the Green Grass Group 41 42 Through connections that Dickson had with impresario Benny Shapiro and with a helpful recommendation from jazz trumpeter Miles Davis the group signed a recording contract with Columbia Records on November 10 1964 43 Two weeks later during a Thanksgiving dinner at Tickner s house the Jet Set decided to rename themselves as The Byrds a moniker that retained the theme of flight and also echoed the deliberate misspelling of the Beatles 43 44 Folk rock 1965 Edit Producer Terry Melcher left in the recording studio with Gene Clark center and David Crosby right Melcher brought in session musicians to play on the Mr Tambourine Man single because he felt that the Byrds hadn t yet gelled musically Mr Tambourine Man source source An excerpt from the Byrds cover of Mr Tambourine Man highlighting the band s clear harmony singing and Roger McGuinn s jangly twelve string Rickenbacker guitar playing Problems playing this file See media help On January 20 1965 the Byrds entered Columbia Studios in Hollywood to record Mr Tambourine Man for release as their debut single on Columbia 36 45 Since the band had not yet completely gelled musically McGuinn was the only Byrd to play on Mr Tambourine Man and its Clark penned B side I Knew I d Want You 43 Rather than using band members producer Terry Melcher hired a collection of top session musicians retroactively known as the Wrecking Crew including Hal Blaine drums Larry Knechtel bass Jerry Cole guitar and Leon Russell electric piano who along with McGuinn on guitar provided the instrumental backing track over which McGuinn Crosby and Clark sang 43 46 By the time the sessions for their debut album began in March 1965 Melcher was satisfied that the band was competent enough to record its own musical backing 46 However the use of outside musicians on the Byrds debut single has given rise to the persistent misconception that all of the playing on their debut album was done by session musicians 1 While the band waited for Mr Tambourine Man to be released they began a residency at Ciro s Le Disc nightclub on the Sunset Strip in Hollywood 47 The band s regular appearances at Ciro s during March and April 1965 allowed them to hone their ensemble playing perfect their aloof stage persona and expand their repertoire 47 48 In addition it was during their residency at the nightclub that the band first began to accrue a dedicated following among L A s youth culture and hip Hollywood fraternity with scenesters like Kim Fowley Peter Fonda Jack Nicholson Arthur Lee and Sonny amp Cher regularly attending the band s performances 49 50 51 On March 26 1965 the author of the band s forthcoming debut single Bob Dylan made an impromptu visit to the club and joined the Byrds on stage for a rendition of Jimmy Reed s Baby What You Want Me to Do 47 The excitement generated by the Byrds at Ciro s quickly made them a must see fixture on L A s nightclub scene and resulted in hordes of teenagers filling the sidewalks outside the club desperate to see the band perform 47 A number of noted music historians and authors including Richie Unterberger Ric Menck and Peter Buckley have suggested that the crowds of young Bohemians and hipsters that gathered at Ciro s to see the Byrds perform represented the first stirrings of the West Coast hippie counterculture 13 48 52 Columbia Records eventually released the Mr Tambourine Man single on April 12 1965 36 The full electric rock band treatment that the Byrds and producer Terry Melcher had given the song effectively created the template for the musical subgenre of folk rock 53 54 McGuinn s melodic jangling 12 string Rickenbacker guitar playing which was heavily compressed to produce an extremely bright and sustained tone was immediately influential and has remained so to the present day 45 55 The single also featured another major characteristic of the band s sound their clear harmony singing which usually featured McGuinn and Clark in unison with Crosby providing the high harmony 50 56 Additionally Richie Unterberger has stated that the song s abstract lyrics took rock and pop songwriting to new heights never before had such intellectual and literary wordplay been combined with rock instrumentation by a popular music group 57 Within three months Mr Tambourine Man had become the first folk rock smash hit 58 reaching number one on both the U S Billboard Hot 100 chart and the UK Singles Chart 59 60 The single s success initiated the folk rock boom of 1965 and 1966 during which a number of Byrds influenced acts had hits on the American and British charts 57 6 The term folk rock was itself coined by the American music press to describe the band s sound in June 1965 at roughly the same time as Mr Tambourine Man peaked at number 1 in the U S 61 62 Promotional photo of the Byrds in early 1965 The Mr Tambourine Man album followed on June 21 1965 36 peaking at number six on the Billboard Top LPs chart and number seven on the UK Albums Chart 60 63 The album mixed reworkings of folk songs including Pete Seeger s musical adaptation of the Idris Davies poem The Bells of Rhymney with a number of other Dylan covers and the band s own compositions the majority of which were written by Clark 62 8 In particular Clark s I ll Feel a Whole Lot Better has gone on to become a rock music standard with many critics considering it one of the band s and Clark s best songs 64 65 66 Upon release the Mr Tambourine Man album like the single of the same name was influential in popularizing folk rock 8 and served to establish the band as an internationally successful rock act representing the first effective American challenge to the dominance of the Beatles and the British Invasion 1 46 All I Really Want to Do source source A sample of the Byrds recording of All I Really Want to Do illustrating the ascending melody progression in the song s refrain and the Beatlesque melody used in its third verse Problems playing this file See media help The Byrds next single was All I Really Want to Do another interpretation of a Dylan song 67 Despite the success of Mr Tambourine Man the Byrds were reluctant to release another Dylan penned single feeling that it was too formulaic but Columbia Records were insistent believing that another Dylan cover would result in an instant hit for the group 67 The Byrds rendition of All I Really Want to Do is noticeably different in structure to Dylan s original it features an ascending melody progression in the chorus and utilizes a completely new melody for one of the song s verses to turn it into a Beatlesque minor key bridge 68 Issued on June 14 1965 while Mr Tambourine Man was still climbing the U S charts the single was rush released by Columbia in an attempt to bury a rival cover version that Cher had released simultaneously on Imperial Records 67 69 A chart battle ensued but the Byrds rendition stalled at number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100 while Cher s version reached number 15 69 The reverse was true in the UK however where the Byrds version reached number four while Cher s peaked at number nine 70 Author John Einarson has written that during this period of their career the Byrds enjoyed tremendous popularity among teenage pop fans with their music receiving widespread airplay on Top 40 radio and their faces adorning countless teen magazines 3 Much was made at the time of the Byrds unconventional dress sense with their casual attire strikingly at odds with the prevailing trend for uniformity among contemporary beat groups 71 With all five members sporting Beatlesque moptop haircuts Crosby dressed in a striking green suede cape and McGuinn wearing a pair of distinctive rectangular granny glasses the band exuded California cool while also looking suitably non conformist 71 72 73 In particular McGuinn s distinctive rectangular spectacles would go on to become popular among members of the burgeoning hippie counterculture in the United States 74 Although McGuinn was widely regarded as the Byrds bandleader by this point the band actually had multiple frontmen with McGuinn Clark and later Crosby and Hillman all taking turns to sing lead vocals in roughly equal measures across the group s repertoire Despite the dizzying array of personnel changes that the group underwent in later years this lack of a dedicated lead singer would remain a stylistic trait of the Byrds music throughout the majority of the band s existence A further distinctive aspect of the Byrds image was their unsmiling air of detachment both on stage and in front of the camera 71 73 This natural aloofness was compounded by the large amounts of marijuana that the band smoked and often resulted in moody and erratic live performances 71 75 Indeed the contemporary music press was extremely critical of the Byrds abilities as a live act during the mid 1960s with the reaction from the British media during the band s August 1965 tour of England being particularly scathing 3 76 This 1965 English tour was largely orchestrated by the group s publicist Derek Taylor in an attempt to capitalize on the number 1 chart success of the Mr Tambourine Man single 3 The tour was overhyped from the start with the band being touted as America s answer to the Beatles a label that proved impossible for the Byrds to live up to 3 During concert performances a combination of poor sound group illness ragged musicianship and the band s notoriously lackluster stage presence all combined to alienate audiences and served to provoke a merciless castigating of the band in the British press 3 The Byrds performing in July 1965 The tour enabled the band to meet and socialize with a number of top English groups including the Rolling Stones and the Beatles 3 In particular the band s relationship with the Beatles would prove important for both acts with the two groups again meeting in Los Angeles some weeks later upon the Byrds return to America 3 During this period of fraternization the Beatles were vocal in their support of the Byrds publicly acknowledging them as creative competitors and naming them as their favorite American group 77 78 A number of authors including Ian MacDonald Richie Unterberger and Bud Scoppa have commented on the Byrds influence on the Beatles late 1965 album Rubber Soul 79 most notably on the songs Nowhere Man 80 and If I Needed Someone the latter of which utilizes a guitar riff similar to that in the Byrds cover of The Bells of Rhymney 81 Turn Turn Turn to Everything There Is a Season source source An excerpt from the Byrds recording of Turn Turn Turn to Everything There Is a Season which provided the band with their second U S number 1 single and served to cement folk rock as a chart trend Problems playing this file See media help For their third Columbia single the Byrds initially intended to release a cover of Dylan s It s All Over Now Baby Blue it was even premiered on the California radio station KRLA 82 but instead they decided to record Turn Turn Turn to Everything There Is a Season a Pete Seeger composition with lyrics adapted almost entirely from the biblical Book of Ecclesiastes 83 7 The song was brought to the group by McGuinn who had previously arranged it in a chamber folk style while working on folksinger Judy Collins 1963 album Judy Collins 3 7 The Byrds cover of Turn Turn Turn to Everything There Is a Season was issued on October 1 1965 36 and became the band s second U S number 1 single as well as the title track for their second album 7 The single represented the high water mark of folk rock as a chart trend and has been described by music historian Richie Unterberger as folk rock s highest possible grace note 84 In addition music critic William Ruhlmann has written that the song s lyrical message of peace and tolerance struck a nerve with the American record buying public as the Vietnam War continued to escalate 7 The Byrds second album Turn Turn Turn was released in December 1965 85 and while it received a mostly positive reception critical consensus deemed it to be inferior to the band s debut 86 Nonetheless it was a commercial success peaking at number 17 on the U S charts and number 11 in the UK 86 Author Scott Schinder has stated that Turn Turn Turn along with Mr Tambourine Man served to establish the Byrds as one of rock music s most important creative forces on a par with the Beatles the Beach Boys and the Rolling Stones 87 Like their debut the album comprised a mixture of group originals folk songs and Bob Dylan covers all characterized by the group s clear harmonies and McGuinn s distinctive guitar sound 88 However the album featured more of the band s own compositions than its predecessor with Clark in particular coming to the fore as a songwriter 89 His songs from this period including She Don t Care About Time The World Turns All Around Her and Set You Free This Time are widely regarded by critics as among the best of the folk rock genre 90 91 The latter song was even chosen for release as a single in January 1966 but its densely worded lyrics melancholy melody and ballad like tempo contributed to it stalling at number 63 on the Billboard chart and failing to reach the UK chart altogether 92 93 While the Byrds outwardly seemed to be riding the crest of a wave during the latter half of 1965 the recording sessions for their second album had not been without tension One source of conflict was the power struggle that had begun to develop between producer Melcher and the band s manager Jim Dickson with the latter harboring aspirations to produce the band himself causing him to be overly critical of the former s work 94 Within a month of Turn Turn Turn being released Dickson and the Byrds approached Columbia Records and requested that Melcher be replaced despite the fact that he had successfully steered the band through the recording of two number 1 singles and two hit albums 94 Any hopes that Dickson had of being allowed to produce the band himself however were dashed when Columbia assigned their West Coast head of A amp R Allen Stanton to the band 87 94 Psychedelia 1965 1967 Edit On December 22 1965 the Byrds recorded a new self penned composition titled Eight Miles High at RCA Studios in Hollywood 95 However Columbia Records refused to release this version because it had been recorded at another record company s facility 96 As a result the band was forced to re record the song at Columbia Studios in Los Angeles on January 24 and 25 1966 and it was this re recorded version that would be released as a single and included on the group s third album 97 98 The song represented a creative leap forward for the band 99 and is often considered the first full blown psychedelic rock recording by critics although other contemporaneous acts such as Donovan and the Yardbirds were also exploring similar musical territory 100 101 102 It was also pivotal in transmuting folk rock into the new musical forms of psychedelia and raga rock 103 104 Eight Miles High is marked by McGuinn s groundbreaking lead guitar playing which saw the guitarist attempting to emulate the free form jazz saxophone playing of John Coltrane and in particular Coltrane s playing on the song India from his Impressions album 103 It also exhibits the influence of the Indian classical music of Ravi Shankar in the droning quality of the song s vocal melody and in McGuinn s guitar playing 105 106 The song s subtle use of Indian influences resulted in it being labeled as raga rock by the music press but in fact it was the single s B side Why that drew more directly on Indian ragas 103 105 Upon release Eight Miles High was banned by many U S radio stations following allegations made by the broadcasting trade journal the Gavin Report that its lyrics advocated recreational drug use 107 The band and their management strenuously denied these allegations stating that the song s lyrics actually described an airplane flight to London and the band s subsequent concert tour of England 107 The relatively modest chart success of Eight Miles High number 14 in the U S and number 24 in the UK has been largely attributed to the broadcasting ban although the challenging and slightly uncommercial nature of the track is another possible reason for its failure to reach the Top 10 103 107 108 Eight Miles High source source An excerpt from the intro of Eight Miles High demonstrating the John Coltrane influenced free form guitar playing of Roger McGuinn Problems playing this file See media help In February 1966 just prior to the release of Eight Miles High Gene Clark left the band 109 His departure was partly due to his fear of flying which made it impossible for him to keep up with the Byrds itinerary and partly due to his increasing isolation within the band 110 Clark who had witnessed a fatal airplane crash as a youth had a panic attack on a plane bound for New York and as a result he disembarked and refused to take the flight 111 In effect Clark s exit from the plane represented his exit from the Byrds with McGuinn telling him If you can t fly you can t be a Byrd 110 However it has become known in the years since the incident that there were other stress and anxiety related factors at work as well as resentment within the band that Gene s songwriting income had made him the wealthiest member of the group 110 111 Clark was subsequently signed by Columbia Records as a solo artist and went on to produce a critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful body of work 112 He died on May 24 1991 at the age of 46 from heart failure brought on by a bleeding stomach ulcer although years of alcohol abuse and a heavy cigarette habit were also contributing factors 112 113 The Byrds third album Fifth Dimension was released in July 1966 114 Much of the album s material continued to build on the band s new psychedelic sound with McGuinn extending his exploration of jazz and raga styles on tracks such as I See You and the Crosby penned What s Happening 98 The album also saw Hillman coming forward as the band s third vocalist in order to fill the hole in the group s harmonies that Clark s departure had left 98 The title track 5D Fifth Dimension was released as a single ahead of the album and was like Eight Miles High before it banned by a number of U S radio stations for supposedly featuring lyrics that advocated drug use 115 116 The album s front cover artwork featured the first appearance of the Byrds colorful psychedelic mosaic logo variations of which would subsequently appear on a number of the band s compilation albums as well as on their 1967 release Younger Than Yesterday 117 The Fifth Dimension album received a mixed critical reception upon release 116 and was less commercially successful than its predecessors peaking at number 24 in the U S and number 27 in the UK 60 63 Band biographer Bud Scoppa has remarked that with the album s lackluster chart performance its lukewarm critical reception and the high profile loss of Clark from the group the Byrds popularity began to wane at this point and by late 1966 the group had been all but forgotten by the mainstream pop audience 118 Nonetheless the band were considered forefathers of the emerging rock underground with many of the new L A and San Francisco groups of the day including Love Jefferson Airplane and the Buffalo Springfield publicly naming the Byrds as a primary influence 119 The Byrds psychedelic mosaic logo The band returned to the studio between November 28 and December 8 1966 to record their fourth album Younger Than Yesterday 120 With Allen Stanton having recently departed Columbia Records to work for A amp M the band chose to bring in producer Gary Usher to help guide them through the album sessions Usher who had a wealth of production experience and a love of innovative studio experimentation would prove invaluable to the Byrds as they entered their most creatively adventurous phase 121 The first song to be recorded for the album was the McGuinn and Hillman penned So You Want to Be a Rock n Roll Star a satirical and heavily sarcastic jibe at the manufactured nature of groups like the Monkees 122 123 The song features the trumpet playing of South African musician Hugh Masekela and as such marks the first appearance of brass on a Byrds recording 124 So You Want to Be a Rock n Roll Star was issued as a single in January 1967 and peaked at number 29 in America but failed to chart in the UK 125 Despite this relatively poor chart showing So You Want to Be a Rock n Roll Star has become one of the Byrds best known songs in the years since its initial release inspiring cover versions by the likes of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and the Patti Smith Group amongst others 126 127 Time Between source source A sample of the country influenced Chris Hillman composition Time Between which foreshadowed the Byrds later exploration of the country rock genre Problems playing this file See media help Released on February 6 1967 the Byrds fourth album Younger Than Yesterday was more varied than its predecessor and saw the band successfully mixing psychedelia with folk rock and country and western influences 128 Although it received generally positive reviews upon its release the album was to a degree overlooked by the record buying public and consequently peaked at number 24 on the Billboard chart and number 37 on the UK Albums Chart 125 128 However music expert Peter Buckley has pointed out that although the album may have passed the Byrds rapidly shrinking teen audience by it found favor with a new underground following who disdained hit singles but were coming to regard albums as major artistic statements 13 In addition to So You Want to Be a Rock n Roll Star Younger Than Yesterday also includes the evocative Crosby and McGuinn penned song Renaissance Fair a cover of Dylan s My Back Pages which was later released as a single and a quartet of Chris Hillman songs which found the bassist emerging fully formed as an accomplished songwriter 124 128 Two of Hillman s country oriented compositions on the album Time Between and The Girl with No Name can be seen as early indicators of the country rock direction that the band would pursue on later albums 124 Younger Than Yesterday also features the jazz tinged Crosby ballad Everybody s Been Burned which critic Thomas Ward has described as one of the most haunting songs in the Byrds catalogue and one of David Crosby s finest compositions 129 By mid 1967 McGuinn had changed his first name from Jim to Roger as a result of his interest in the Indonesian religion Subud into which he had been initiated in January 1965 130 The adoption of a new name was common among followers of the religion 131 and served to signify a spiritual rebirth for the participant Shortly after McGuinn s name change the band entered the studio to record the Crosby penned non album single Lady Friend which was released on July 13 1967 132 The Byrds biographer Johnny Rogan has described Lady Friend as a work of great maturity and the loudest fastest and rockiest Byrds single to date 130 Regardless of its artistic merits however the single stalled at a disappointing number 82 on the Billboard chart despite the band making a number of high profile television appearances to promote the record 132 Crosby who had closely overseen the recording of the song 133 134 was bitterly disappointed by the single s lack of success and blamed Gary Usher s mixing of the song as a factor in its commercial failure 130 The poor sales suffered by Lady Friend were in stark contrast to the chart success of the band s first compilation album The Byrds Greatest Hits which was released on August 7 1967 130 135 Sanctioned by Columbia Records in the wake of the Top 10 success of Bob Dylan s Greatest Hits the album was a critical and commercial triumph peaking at number six on the Billboard Top LPs chart and giving the band their highest charting album in America since their 1965 debut Mr Tambourine Man 130 Within a year the compilation would be certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America 130 eventually going platinum on November 21 1986 and is today the biggest selling album in the Byrds discography 135 136 Prior to the release of The Byrds Greatest Hits the band decided to dispense with the services of their co managers Jim Dickson and Eddie Tickner 132 The relationship between Dickson and the band had soured over recent months and he and Tickner s business arrangement with the Byrds was officially dissolved on June 30 1967 132 At Crosby s recommendation Larry Spector was brought in to handle the Byrds business affairs 132 with the group electing to manage themselves to a large extent Old John Robertson source source An excerpt from the song Old John Robertson highlighting the Byrds extensive use of phasing and flanging effects on The Notorious Byrd Brothers album Problems playing this file See media help Between June and December 1967 the Byrds worked on completing their fifth album The Notorious Byrd Brothers 120 The lead single from the album was a cover of the Gerry Goffin and Carole King song Goin Back which was released in October 1967 and peaked at number 89 on the Billboard chart 137 Despite this lack of commercial success the Byrds rendition of Goin Back featured a band performance that author Ric Menck has described as a beautiful recording while music critic Richie Unterberger has called it a magnificent and melodic cover that should have been a big hit 138 139 The song found the Byrds successfully blending their signature harmonies and chiming 12 string guitar playing with the sound of the pedal steel guitar for the first time foreshadowing their extensive use of the instrument on their next album Sweetheart of the Rodeo 139 140 Released in January 1968 The Notorious Byrd Brothers album saw the band taking their psychedelic experimentation to its furthest extremes by mixing folk rock country music jazz and psychedelia often within a single song while utilizing innovative studio production techniques such as phasing and flanging 141 142 143 The album featured contributions from a number of noted session musicians including bluegrass guitarist and future Byrd Clarence White 144 White who had also played on Younger Than Yesterday 141 contributed country influenced guitar to the tracks Natural Harmony Wasn t Born to Follow and Change Is Now 120 Upon release the album was almost universally praised by music critics but it was only moderately successful commercially particularly in the United States where it peaked at number 47 145 However the album s reputation has grown over the years and today it is widely regarded by critics and fans as one of the Byrds best album releases 142 146 Lineup changes 1967 1968 Edit While the band worked on The Notorious Byrd Brothers album throughout late 1967 there was increasing tension and acrimony among the members of the group which eventually resulted in the dismissals of Crosby and Clarke 141 142 McGuinn and Hillman became increasingly irritated by what they saw as Crosby s overbearing egotism and his attempts to dictate the band s musical direction 130 147 In addition during the Byrds performance at the Monterey Pop Festival on June 17 1967 Crosby gave lengthy in between song speeches on controversial subjects including the JFK assassination and the benefits of giving LSD to all the statesmen and politicians in the world to the intense annoyance of the other band members 148 He further irritated his bandmates by performing with rival group Buffalo Springfield at Monterey filling in for ex member Neil Young 149 His reputation within the band deteriorated even more following the commercial failure of Lady Friend the first Byrds single to feature a song penned solely by Crosby on its A side 130 132 They came over and said that they wanted to throw me out They came zooming up in their Porsches and said that I was impossible to work with and I wasn t very good anyway and they d do better without me And frankly I ve been laughing ever since Fuck em But it hurt like hell I didn t try to reason with them I just said it s a shameful waste goodbye David Crosby talking in 1980 about the day Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman fired him from the Byrds 147 Tensions within the band finally erupted in August 1967 during recording sessions for The Notorious Byrd Brothers album when Michael Clarke quit the sessions over disputes with his bandmates and his dissatisfaction with the material that the songwriting members of the band were providing 21 150 151 Session drummers Jim Gordon and Hal Blaine were brought in to replace Clarke temporarily in the studio although he continued to honor his live concert commitments with the group 21 150 Then in September Crosby refused to participate in the recording of the Goffin King song Goin Back 150 considering it to be inferior to his own Triad a controversial song about a menage a trois that was in direct competition with Goin Back for a place on the album 142 Crosby felt that the band should rely on self penned material for their albums rather than cover songs by other artists and writers 152 He would eventually give Triad to the San Francisco band Jefferson Airplane who included a recording of it on their 1968 album Crown of Creation 150 153 When tensions reached a breaking point during October 1967 McGuinn and Hillman drove to Crosby s home and fired him stating that they would be better off without him 147 Crosby subsequently received a cash settlement with which he bought a sailboat 147 and soon after he began working with Stephen Stills and Graham Nash in the successful supergroup Crosby Stills amp Nash 154 In the years after his exit from the Byrds Crosby enjoyed an influential and commercially successful career as a part of Crosby Stills amp Nash sometimes augmented by Neil Young Crosby amp Nash CPR and as a solo artist 154 During the 1980s he fought against crippling drug addiction and eventually served a year in prison on drug related charges 154 He emerged from jail free of his drug habit and remained musically active up to his death in 2023 27 Following Crosby s departure Gene Clark briefly rejoined the band but left just three weeks later after again refusing to board an aircraft while on tour 155 There is some disagreement among biographers and band historians as to whether Clark actually participated in the recording sessions for The Notorious Byrd Brothers but there is evidence to suggest that he sang backing vocals on the songs Goin Back and Space Odyssey 152 155 Michael Clarke also returned to the recording studio briefly towards the end of the album sessions before being informed by McGuinn and Hillman that they were dismissing him from the band 144 Now reduced to a duo McGuinn and Hillman elected to hire new band members Hillman s cousin Kevin Kelley was quickly recruited as the band s new drummer 12 and the trio embarked on an early 1968 college tour in support of The Notorious Byrd Brothers 156 It soon became apparent however that recreating the band s studio recordings with a three piece line up wasn t going to be possible and so McGuinn and Hillman in a fateful decision for their future career direction hired Gram Parsons as a keyboard player although he quickly moved to guitar 156 157 Although Parsons and Kelley were both considered full members of the Byrds they actually received a salary from McGuinn and Hillman and did not sign with Columbia Records when the Byrds recording contract was renewed on February 29 1968 158 Country rock 1968 1973 Edit Gram Parsons era Edit Following his induction into the band Gram Parsons began to assert his own musical agenda in which he intended to marry his love of country and western music with youth culture s passion for rock and in doing so make country music fashionable for a young audience 157 159 He found a kindred spirit in Hillman who had played mandolin in a number of notable bluegrass bands before joining the Byrds 157 In addition Hillman had also persuaded the Byrds to incorporate subtle country influences into their music in the past beginning with the song Satisfied Mind on the Turn Turn Turn album 157 Although McGuinn had some reservations about the band s proposed new direction Parsons convinced him that a move towards country music could theoretically expand the group s declining audience 160 Thus McGuinn was persuaded to change direction and abandon his original concept for the group s next album which had been to record a history of 20th century American popular music and instead explore country rock 156 160 On March 9 1968 the band decamped to Columbia s recording studios in Nashville Tennessee with Clarence White in tow to begin the recording sessions for the Sweetheart of the Rodeo album 160 While in Nashville the Byrds also appeared at the Grand Ole Opry on March 15 1968 where they performed the Merle Haggard song Sing Me Back Home and Parsons own Hickory Wind although they were actually scheduled to play a second Haggard song Life in Prison 161 Being the first group of hippie longhairs ever to play at the venerable country music institution the band was met with heckling booing and mocking calls of tweet tweet from the conservative Opry audience 160 The band also incurred the wrath of renowned country music DJ Ralph Emery when they appeared on his Nashville based WSM radio program 161 Emery mocked the band throughout their interview and made no secret of his dislike for their newly recorded country rock single You Ain t Goin Nowhere 162 Parsons and McGuinn would later write the pointedly sarcastic song Drug Store Truck Drivin Man about Emery and their appearance on his show 161 162 Journalist David Fricke has described the reactions of Emery and the Grand Ole Opry audience as indicative of the resistance and hostility that the Byrds venture into country music provoked from the Nashville old guard 12 There was a genuine concern that we would get sued if we kept Gram s vocals on it So we put mine on and then the contract dispute went away Basically it was a misunderstanding I wouldn t have had any involvement at all if it had been up to Gram He was taking over the band so we couldn t really let that happen Roger McGuinn on replacing some of Gram Parsons vocals on the Sweetheart of the Rodeo album 163 Following their stay in Nashville the band returned to Los Angeles and throughout April and May 1968 they worked on completing their new country oriented album 160 During this period Parsons attempted to exert a controlling influence over the group by pressuring McGuinn to recruit either JayDee Maness or Sneaky Pete Kleinow as the band s permanent pedal steel guitar player 164 When McGuinn refused Parsons next began to push for a higher salary while also demanding that the group be billed as Gram Parsons and the Byrds on their forthcoming album 163 Even Hillman who had previously been Parsons biggest supporter in the band began to grow weary of his forceful demands 163 Ultimately Parsons behavior led to a power struggle for control of the group with McGuinn finding his position as band leader challenged 164 However biographer Johnny Rogan has pointed out that the April 1968 release of You Ain t Goin Nowhere served to strengthen McGuinn s position as head Byrd with the guitarist s familiar drawl occupying the lead vocal spot and negligible input from Parsons despite the single s obvious country leanings 164 Parsons dominance over the band waned still further during post production for Sweetheart of the Rodeo when his appearance on the album was contested by music business impresario Lee Hazlewood who alleged that the singer was still under contract to his LHI record label creating legal complications for Columbia Records 12 As a result of this McGuinn and Hillman replaced Parsons lead vocals on the songs You Don t Miss Your Water The Christian Life and One Hundred Years from Now before the legal problems could be resolved 165 However album producer Gary Usher would later put a different slant on the events surrounding the removal of Parsons vocals by telling his biographer Stephen J McParland that the alterations to the album arose out of creative concerns not legal ones Usher and the band were both worried that Parsons contributions were dominating the record so his vocals were excised in an attempt to increase McGuinn and Hillman s presence on the album 165 In the album s final running order Parsons is still featured as lead vocalist on the songs You re Still on My Mind Life in Prison and Hickory Wind 166 With their new album now completed the Byrds flew to England for an appearance at a charity concert at the Royal Albert Hall on July 7 1968 167 Following the concert just prior to a tour of South Africa Parsons quit the Byrds on the grounds that he did not want to perform in a racially segregated country apartheid did not end in South Africa until 1994 160 Hillman doubted the sincerity of Parsons gesture believing that the singer had in fact left the band in order to remain in England with Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones whom he had recently befriended 168 Parsons stayed at Richards house in West Sussex immediately after leaving the Byrds and the pair developed a close friendship over the next few years 167 After leaving the Byrds Parsons would go on to produce an influential but commercially unsuccessful body of work both as a solo artist and with the band the Flying Burrito Brothers which also featured Hillman 169 He died on September 19 1973 at the age of 26 following an accidental overdose of morphine and alcohol in his room at the Joshua Tree Inn 170 With Parsons gone from the band and their tour of South Africa due to begin in two days time the Byrds were forced to draft in their roadie Carlos Bernal as a substitute rhythm guitar player 167 The ensuing South African tour was a disaster with the band finding themselves having to play to segregated audiences something that they had been assured by promoters they would not have to do 167 171 The under rehearsed band gave ramshackle performances to audiences that were largely unimpressed with their lack of professionalism and their antagonistic anti apartheid stance 171 The Byrds left South Africa amid a storm of bad publicity and death threats 171 while the liberal press in the U S and the UK attacked the band for undertaking the tour and questioned their political integrity 171 172 McGuinn attempted to counter this criticism by asserting that the tour of South Africa had in some small way been an attempt to challenge the country s political status quo and protest against apartheid 172 You Ain t Goin Nowhere source source As the lead single from Sweetheart of the Rodeo You Ain t Goin Nowhere became the first full blown country rock release by the Byrds As such it provided the public at large with their first opportunity to hear the band s new musical direction Problems playing this file See media help After returning to California the Byrds released the Sweetheart of the Rodeo album on August 30 1968 36 almost eight weeks after Parsons had left the band It comprised a mixture of country music standards and contemporary country material along with a country reworking of William Bell s soul hit You Don t Miss Your Water 157 The album also included the Parsons originals Hickory Wind and One Hundred Years from Now along with the Bob Dylan penned songs Nothing Was Delivered and You Ain t Goin Nowhere 157 the latter of which had been a moderately successful single 173 Although it was not the first country rock album 174 Sweetheart of the Rodeo was the first album widely labeled as country rock to be released by an internationally successful rock act 1 175 pre dating Dylan s Nashville Skyline by over six months 176 However the stylistic shift away from psychedelia towards country rock that Sweetheart of the Rodeo represented served to alienate much of the Byrds counterculture following 177 while at the same time eliciting hostility from the ultra conservative Nashville country music establishment 160 As a result the album peaked at number 77 on the U S charts and was the least commercially successful Byrds album to date upon its initial release 178 179 Today however it is considered a seminal and highly influential album serving as a blueprint for the entire 1970s country rock movement the outlaw country scene and the alternative country genre of the 1990s and early 21st century 12 157 Clarence White era Edit After Gram Parsons departure McGuinn and Hillman decided to recruit noted session guitarist Clarence White as a full time member of the band in late July 1968 180 White who had contributed countrified guitar playing to every Byrds album since 1967 s Younger Than Yesterday was brought in at Hillman s suggestion as someone who could handle the band s older rock repertoire and their newer country oriented material 12 180 Shortly after his induction into the band White began to express dissatisfaction with drummer Kevin Kelley and soon persuaded McGuinn and Hillman to replace him with Gene Parsons no relation to Gram who White had previously played with in the country rock band Nashville West 181 182 The McGuinn Hillman White Parsons line up was together for less than a month before Hillman quit to join Gram Parsons in forming the Flying Burrito Brothers 182 Hillman had become increasingly disenchanted with the Byrds since the South African debacle 183 and was also frustrated by business manager Larry Spector s mishandling of the group s finances 182 Things came to a head on September 15 1968 following a band performance at the Rose Bowl stadium in Pasadena when Hillman and Spector came to blows backstage 182 In a fit of rage Hillman threw down his bass in disgust and walked out of the group 182 Following his exit Hillman would have a successful career both as a solo artist and with bands such as the Flying Burrito Brothers Manassas the Souther Hillman Furay Band and the Desert Rose Band 42 He remains active releasing albums and touring often with ex Desert Rose Band member Herb Pedersen 42 As the only original band member left McGuinn elected to hire bassist John York as Hillman s replacement 184 York had previously been a member of the Sir Douglas Quintet and had also worked as a session musician with Johnny Rivers and the Mamas amp the Papas 184 185 In October 1968 the new line up entered Columbia Studios in Hollywood to begin recording the Dr Byrds amp Mr Hyde album with producer Bob Johnston 186 The sessions saw the band juxtaposing their new country rock sound with more psychedelic oriented material giving the resulting album a stylistic split personality that was alluded to in its title 187 188 In the wake of the recent changes in band personnel McGuinn decided that it would be too confusing for fans of the group to hear the unfamiliar voices of White Parsons and York coming forward at this stage and so they were relegated to backing vocals on the album As a result Dr Byrds amp Mr Hyde is unique in the Byrds back catalogue as McGuinn sings lead on every track 189 Tulsa County alternate version source source An excerpt from an outtake of the song Tulsa County highlighting Clarence White s use of the StringBender device This guitar accessory was designed by drummer Gene Parsons and fitted to White s Fender Telecaster allowing him to emulate the sound of a pedal steel guitar The StringBender became a major characteristic of the Byrds sound during White s time with the band Problems playing this file See media help The album was released on March 5 1969 188 to generally positive reviews but in America became the lowest charting album of the Byrds career peaking at number 153 on the Billboard album charts 184 However the album fared much better in the UK where it attracted glowing reviews and reached number 15 190 A number of tracks on Dr Byrds amp Mr Hyde including the instrumental Nashville West and the traditional song Old Blue 191 featured the sound of the Parsons and White designed StringBender also known as the B Bender an invention that allowed White to duplicate the sound of a pedal steel guitar on his Fender Telecaster 189 192 The distinctive sound of the StringBender became characteristic of the Byrds music during White s tenure 193 Following the release of Dr Byrds amp Mr Hyde the band issued a version of Dylan s Lay Lady Lay as a single in May 1969 which failed to reverse the group s commercial fortunes in the U S reaching number 132 190 The Byrds producer Bob Johnston took it upon himself to overdub a female choir onto the record 190 something the group only became aware of after the single was issued leaving them incensed by what they saw as an embarrassing and incongruous addition 162 190 As a result the band dispensed with Johnston and re enlisted Terry Melcher who had produced the band s first two albums to produce their next LP 162 194 Although he was happy to accept the band s invitation Melcher insisted that he also manage the group to avoid a repeat of the conflict he had experienced in 1965 with Jim Dickson 195 Prior to the release of the Byrds next studio album however the band s former producer Gary Usher managed to acquire a number of demo recordings from Dickson dating from the group s 1964 rehearsal sessions at World Pacific Studios 196 These recordings were subsequently issued as the Preflyte album on Usher s own Together Records imprint in July 1969 36 Although the material on Preflyte was five years old at the time of its release the album actually managed to outperform Dr Byrds amp Mr Hyde in America garnering moderately enthusiastic reviews and peaking at number 84 on the Billboard album chart 197 Between June and August 1969 the Byrds worked with Melcher to complete the Ballad of Easy Rider album 198 Musically the album represented a consolidation and streamlining the band s country rock sound and mostly consisted of cover versions and traditional material along with three self penned originals 199 The first single to be released from the album was the title track issued in October 1969 in America and reaching number 65 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart 200 Composed primarily by McGuinn with some input from Bob Dylan although not credited Ballad of Easy Rider was written as the theme tune for the 1969 counterculture film Easy Rider 201 However the Byrds recording of the song does not appear in the film and an acoustic version credited to McGuinn alone was used instead 195 202 The Byrds song Wasn t Born to Follow from The Notorious Byrd Brothers album was featured in the film and also included on the Easy Rider soundtrack album in August 1969 202 The Byrds association with the film heightened their public profile and when the Ballad of Easy Rider album was released in November 1969 it peaked at number 36 in the U S and number 41 in the UK becoming the band s highest charting album for two years in America 195 203 A second single taken from the album Jesus Is Just Alright was released in December 1969 but it only managed to reach number 97 204 Despite this lack of commercial success the Doobie Brothers later hit version of Jesus Is Just Alright features an arrangement that was heavily influenced by the Byrds recording 205 Left to right Roger McGuinn Skip Battin Clarence White Gene Parsons the most stable and longest lived of any Byrds line up Just prior to the release of Ballad of Easy Rider the Byrds underwent yet another change in personnel when bassist John York was asked to leave the band in September 1969 206 York had become disenchanted with his role in the Byrds and had voiced his reluctance to perform material that had been written and recorded by the group before he had joined 207 The rest of the band had begun to doubt his commitment and so a consensus was reached among the other three members that York should be fired 207 He was replaced at the suggestion of Parsons and White by Skip Battin a freelance session musician and one time member of the duo Skip amp Flip 208 Battin s recruitment marked the last personnel change to the group for almost three years and as a result the McGuinn White Parsons Battin line up became the most stable and longest lived of any configuration of the Byrds 208 209 The latter day post Sweetheart of the Rodeo version of the band featuring McGuinn and White s dual lead guitar work toured relentlessly between 1969 and 1972 and was regarded by critics and audiences as much more accomplished in concert than any previous configuration of the Byrds had been 210 211 212 As a result of this it was decided in early 1970 that the time was right for the group to issue a live album 213 However it was also felt that the band had a sufficient backlog of new compositions to warrant the recording of a new studio album 213 It was therefore suggested by Melcher that the band should release a double album featuring one LP of concert recordings and another LP of new studio material 213 To help with the editing of the live recordings the band s ex manager Jim Dickson who had been fired by the group in June 1967 was invited back into the Byrds camp 214 At around this same time former business manager Eddie Tickner also returned to the group s employ as a replacement for Larry Spector who had quit the management business and relocated to Big Sur 181 215 The two record Untitled album was released by the Byrds on September 14 1970 to positive reviews and strong sales with many critics and fans regarding the album as a return to form for the band 215 216 Peaking at number 40 on the Billboard Top LPs chart and number 11 in the UK 216 the album s success continued the upward trend in the band s commercial fortunes and popularity that had begun with the release of the Ballad of Easy Rider album 217 The live half of Untitled included both new material and new renditions of previous hit singles including Mr Tambourine Man So You Want to Be a Rock n Roll Star and a 16 minute version of Eight Miles High which comprised the whole of one side of the original LP release 218 Band biographer Johnny Rogan has suggested that the inclusion of these newly recorded live versions of older songs served to forge a spiritual and musical link between the Byrds current line up and the original mid 1960s incarnation of the band 218 The studio recordings featured on Untitled mostly consisted of newly written self penned material including a number of songs that had been composed by McGuinn and Broadway theatre impresario Jacques Levy for a planned country rock musical titled Gene Tryp that the pair were developing 208 Plans for the musical had fallen through and as a result McGuinn decided to record some of the material originally intended for the production with the Byrds 208 219 Among the Gene Tryp songs included on Untitled was Chestnut Mare which had originally been written for a scene in which the musical s eponymous hero attempts to catch and tame a wild horse 218 The song was issued as a single in the U S on October 23 1970 but it only managed to climb to number 121 on the Billboard chart 220 Nonetheless the song went on to become a staple of FM radio programming in America during the 1970s 221 Chestnut Mare did much better in the UK however when it was released as a single on January 1 1971 reaching number 19 on the UK Singles Chart and giving the Byrds their first UK Top 20 hit since their cover of Bob Dylan s All I Really Want to Do had peaked at number 4 in September 1965 218 220 Kathleen s Song source source An excerpt from Kathleen s Song highlighting the prominent orchestra and horn overdubs that producer Terry Melcher controversially added to the Byrdmaniax album allegedly without the Byrds consent Problems playing this file See media help The Byrds returned to the recording studio with Melcher sporadically between October 1970 and early March 1971 in order to complete the follow up to Untitled which would be released in June 1971 as Byrdmaniax 198 222 223 Unfortunately the grueling pace of the band s touring schedule at the time meant that they were not fully prepared for the sessions and much of the material they recorded was under developed 224 Following completion of the album recording sessions the Byrds once again headed out on tour leaving Melcher and engineer Chris Hinshaw to finish mixing the album in their absence 223 225 Controversially Melcher and Hinshaw elected to bring in arranger Paul Polena to assist in the overdubbing of strings horns and a gospel choir onto many of the songs allegedly without the band s consent 223 225 226 Drummer Gene Parsons recalled in a 1997 interview that when the band heard Melcher s additions they campaigned to have the album remixed and the orchestration removed but Columbia Records refused citing budget restrictions and so the record was duly pressed up and released 227 In May 1971 just prior to the release of the Byrdmaniax album the Byrds undertook a sell out tour of England and Europe which included a performance at the Royal Albert Hall in London that was released for the first time in 2008 as Live at Royal Albert Hall 1971 210 227 228 The British and European press were unanimous in their praise of the Byrds live performances during the tour 228 reinforcing their reputation as a formidable live act during this period Over the course of the tour the band chose to expand their ranks with roadie Jimmi Seiter joining the group on stage to provide additional percussion as an unofficial member 227 Seiter would continue to sit in with the Byrds during their live performances until August 1971 when he decided to leave the group s employ 229 Terry Melcher put the strings on while we were on the road we came back and we didn t even recognize it as our own album It was like somebody else s work Our instruments were buried Clarence White speaking in 1973 about the production on Byrdmaniax 227 When the Byrdmaniax album was released on June 23 1971 225 it was received poorly by most critics and did much to undermine the new found popularity that the Byrds had enjoyed since the release of Ballad of Easy Rider 224 The response to the album from the American music press was particularly scathing with a review in the August 1971 edition of Rolling Stone magazine describing the Byrds as a boring dead group and memorably dismissing the entire album as increments of pus 230 The consensus among most reviewers was that Byrdmaniax was hampered by Melcher s inappropriate orchestration and by being an album almost totally bereft of the Byrds signature sound 224 The band themselves were publicly critical of the album upon its release with Gene Parsons referring to it as Melcher s folly 227 For his part Melcher later stated that he felt that the band s performances in the studio during the making of Byrdmaniax were lackluster and he therefore employed the orchestration in order to cover up the album s musical shortcomings 226 Regardless by the time of the album s release Melcher had resigned as the Byrds manager and producer 227 Despite the band s dissatisfaction with the finished product and its poor critical reception Byrdmaniax made a respectable showing on the U S charts peaking at number 46 230 However the album failed to sell in sufficient quantities to reach the UK charts 229 Author Christopher Hjort has remarked that in the years since its release Byrdmaniax has become arguably the least liked album in the Byrds catalogue among the group s fanbase 229 The Byrds moved quickly to record a self produced follow up to Byrdmaniax in an attempt to stem the criticism that the album was receiving in the music press and as a reaction to their own dislike of Melcher s overproduction 226 231 Rogan has speculated that the Byrds decision to produce their next album themselves was an attempt on the band s part to prove that they could do a better job than Melcher had done on their previous record 232 While in England for an appearance at the Lincoln Folk Festival the Byrds decamped to CBS Studios in London with engineer Mike Ross and between July 22 and 28 1971 they recorded an album s worth of new material 16 229 In October 1971 CBS Records in the UK issued The Byrds Greatest Hits Volume II to capitalize on the group s recent appearance at the Lincoln Folk Festival and perhaps as a reaction to the chart failure suffered by Byrdmaniax 232 233 Unfortunately the compilation album also failed to reach the UK charts while contemporary reviews made note of its misleading and inaccurate title since among its twelve tracks only Chestnut Mare had been a genuine hit in the United Kingdom 233 An equivalent compilation wasn t released in the U S until November 1972 when The Best of The Byrds Greatest Hits Volume II was issued 234 On November 17 1971 less than five months after the release of Byrdmaniax the Byrds issued their eleventh studio album Farther Along 235 The album was met with slightly more enthusiastic reviews than its predecessor but nevertheless only managed to climb to number 152 on the Billboard Top LPs chart while failing to reach the charts in the United Kingdom altogether 235 Musically the album found the Byrds beginning to move away from their country rock sound although at least half the album still bore a strong country influence and instead embrace a style indebted to 1950s rock n roll music 236 237 The Skip Battin and Kim Fowley penned song America s Great National Pastime was taken from the album and released as a single in late November but it failed to chart on either side of the Atlantic 235 Rogan has concluded that ultimately the rapidity with which the Byrds planned and recorded Farther Along resulted in an album that was just as flawed as Byrdmaniax and as a result it failed to rehabilitate the band s ailing commercial fortunes or increase their declining audience 238 The album s title track sung by White with the rest of the group harmonizing would later become a poignant and prophetic epitaph for the guitarist when it was sung by ex Byrd Gram Parsons and the Eagles Bernie Leadon at White s funeral in July 1973 236 Breakup Edit Clarence White and Roger McGuinn on stage during the Byrds September 9 1972 appearance at Washington University in St Louis Following the release of Farther Along the Byrds continued to tour throughout 1972 but no new album or single release was forthcoming 16 239 Gene Parsons was fired from the group in July 1972 for a number of reasons including McGuinn s growing dissatisfaction with his drumming disagreements that he and McGuinn were having over band members pay and his own discontent over the band s lack of morale during this period 240 Parsons was quickly replaced with L A session drummer John Guerin who remained with the Byrds until January 1973 when he decided to return to studio work 241 242 Although Guerin participated in recording sessions with the band 243 and appeared on stage with them from September 1972 239 he was never an official member of the Byrds and instead received a standard session musician s wage while continuing to undertake work for other artists as an in demand studio player 244 Three officially released Byrds recordings exist of the McGuinn White Battin Guerin lineup live versions of Mr Tambourine Man and Roll Over Beethoven that were recorded for the soundtrack of the Earl Scruggs film Banjoman and a studio recording of Bag Full of Money that was included as a bonus track on the remastered reissue of Farther Along in 2000 236 241 Following Guerin s departure he was temporarily replaced for live performances by session drummers Dennis Dragon and Jim Moon 241 The band underwent a further personnel change following a show on February 10 1973 in Ithaca New York when Skip Battin was dismissed by McGuinn who had capriciously decided that the bassist s playing abilities were no longer of a sufficient standard 241 242 McGuinn turned to ex Byrd Chris Hillman who at that time was a member of the band Manassas and asked him to step in as Battin s replacement for two upcoming shows on February 23 and 24 241 Hillman agreed to play both concerts for the sum of 2 000 and also brought in Manassas percussionist Joe Lala to fill the vacant spot behind the drum kit 241 Following a shambolic underrehearsed performance at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic New Jersey on February 24 1973 McGuinn cancelled the band s remaining concert commitments and disbanded the touring version of the Byrds in order to make way for a reunion of the original five piece line up of the band 16 245 Five months later guitarist Clarence White was killed by a drunk driver in the early hours of July 15 1973 246 while he loaded guitar equipment into the back of a van after a concert appearance in Palmdale California 247 Reunions Edit 1972 1973 reunion Edit The five original members of the Byrds reunited briefly during late 1972 while McGuinn was still undertaking selected concerts with the touring version of the group 239 Discussions regarding a reunion between Roger McGuinn Gene Clark David Crosby Chris Hillman and Michael Clarke had taken place as early as July 1971 around the same time as the then current line up of the band were recording the Farther Along album 238 Plans for a reunion accelerated in mid 1972 however when the founder of Asylum Records David Geffen offered each of the original band members a sizable amount of money to reform and record an album for his label 248 The reunion actually took place in early October 1972 beginning with a rehearsal at McGuinn s house where the group began selecting suitable material for a new album 249 The five original Byrds booked into Wally Heider s Studio 3 in Hollywood from October 16 until November 15 1972 recording their first album together in seven years 234 Following his dismissal from the band in 1967 David Crosby pictured in 1976 was critical of Roger McGuinn s decision to recruit new band members while continuing to use the Byrds name Following completion of the album Crosby persuaded McGuinn to dissolve the Columbia version of the Byrds who were still touring at that time 242 Crosby had long been vocal regarding his displeasure over McGuinn s decision to recruit new band members following his dismissal from the group in 1967 and had stated in a number of interviews that in his opinion there were only ever five Byrds 248 In keeping with the new spirit of reconciliation that the reunion fostered McGuinn permanently disbanded the Columbia lineup of the group in February 1973 16 The reunion album titled simply Byrds was released on March 7 1973 to mixed reviews 245 As a result a planned tour in support of the album failed to materialize 17 Among the album s shortcomings critics made note of a lack of sonic unity and the absence of the Byrds signature jangly guitar sound 245 Nonetheless the album managed to climb to number 20 on the Billboard Top LPs amp Tapes chart and number 31 in the UK 245 In the United States the album became the band s highest charting LP of new material since 1965 s Turn Turn Turn which had also been the last Byrds album to feature Gene Clark as a full member 17 Among the tracks included on the album were McGuinn s folk flavored Sweet Mary the Joni Mitchell cover For Free a re recording of Crosby s song Laughing which had originally appeared on his 1971 solo album If I Could Only Remember My Name and a pair of Neil Young songs 17 The album also featured the Gene Clark compositions Changing Heart and Full Circle the latter of which had provided the reunion album with its working title and was subsequently released as a single although it failed to chart 245 250 The negative critical reception that Byrds received in the music press resulted in the band losing faith in the idea of an ongoing series of reunions 17 In the years following its release all five band members were openly critical of the album with the general consensus being that the material included on it was weak and that the recording sessions had been rushed and ill thought out 17 In addition McGuinn and Hillman have both suggested that with the exception of Gene Clark the songwriting members of the band were reluctant to bring their strongest compositions to the recording sessions preferring instead to hold those songs back for their own solo projects 17 248 In the wake of the reunion the five original Byrds quietly returned to their own careers 17 with the June 1973 release of McGuinn s eponymously titled solo album serving to effectively mark the end of the Byrds Following the reunion of 1972 1973 the Byrds remained disbanded throughout the rest of the decade 1 Roger McGuinn turned his attention to establishing his own career releasing a series of solo albums between 1973 and 1977 and making a high profile appearance with Bob Dylan s Rolling Thunder Revue 2 Chris Hillman worked as part of the Souther Hillman Furay Band following the Byrds reunion and released a pair of solo albums entitled Slippin Away and Clear Sailin in 1976 and 1977 respectively 42 David Crosby returned to the supergroup Crosby Stills Nash amp Young for their 1974 tour and subsequently continued to produce albums with Graham Nash 27 He also took part in a 1977 reunion of Crosby Stills amp Nash which saw the group release their multi platinum selling CSN album 27 Michael Clarke also found success following the Byrds reunion as the drummer for soft rock group Firefall 21 while Gene Clark returned to his solo career producing the critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful albums No Other 1974 and Two Sides to Every Story 1977 112 McGuinn Clark amp Hillman 1977 1981 Edit Main article McGuinn Clark amp Hillman Between 1977 and 1980 McGuinn Clark and Hillman worked on and off together as a trio modeled after Crosby Stills Nash amp Young and to a lesser extent the Eagles 251 252 This supergroup made up of former Byrds was reasonably successful commercially and managed to score a Top 40 hit with the single Don t You Write Her Off in March 1979 253 254 The trio toured internationally and recorded the albums McGuinn Clark amp Hillman and City 253 Clark departed the group in late 1979 resulting in a third and final album being billed as McGuinn Hillman 253 The two former Byrds continued to play low key gigs after the release of the McGuinn Hillman album but they split up in early 1981 255 Ersatz Byrds and further reunions 1989 1991 2000 Edit In 1984 Gene Clark approached McGuinn Crosby and Hillman in an attempt to reform the Byrds in time for the 20th anniversary of the release of the Mr Tambourine Man single in 1985 256 None of these three original members were interested in the venture and so Clark instead assembled a group of musicians and friends including Rick Roberts Blondie Chaplin Rick Danko Richard Manuel and the ex Byrds Michael Clarke and John York under the banner of The 20th Anniversary Tribute to the Byrds 257 This tribute act began performing on the lucrative nostalgia circuit in early 1985 but a number of concert promoters began to shorten the band s name to the Byrds in advertisements and promotional material 256 As the band continued to tour throughout 1985 they eventually decided to shorten their name to the Byrds themselves prompting McGuinn Crosby and Hillman to berate the tribute group in interviews with McGuinn deriding the act as a cheap show 256 After the tour wound down in late 1985 Clark returned to his solo career leaving Michael Clarke to soldier on with a band that was now billed as A Tribute to the Byrds although again it was often shortened to the Byrds by promoters 258 Gene Clark returned to the group following the release of his and Carla Olson s So Rebellious a Lover album and the tribute band continued to work on and off in 1987 and 1988 259 Author Johnny Rogan has stated that most die hard fans of the Byrds were mortified by the existence of this ersatz version of the group while Byrds expert Tim Connors has commented that no chapter in the history of the Byrds caused as much consternation and controversy among fans 256 258 In June 1988 McGuinn Crosby and Hillman appeared at a concert celebrating the reopening of the Ash Grove folk club in Los Angeles 258 Although they were billed as solo artists the three musicians came together for an on stage reunion during the show performing a string of Byrds hits including Mr Tambourine Man and Eight Miles High 258 Although Clark and Clarke s Byrds tribute group was inactive at the time of this high profile get together of McGuinn Crosby and Hillman Michael Clarke did mount another tribute tour shortly afterwards this time featuring former Byrd Skip Battin and newcomers Terry Jones Rogers and Jerry Sorn under the banner of The Byrds featuring Michael Clarke 258 260 In addition the drummer also sought to trademark the name The Byrds for his own use 256 First Gene went around with a very very bad band calling it the Byrds Well okay Gene was one of the original writer singer guys But when it gets to be Michael Clarke the drummer who never wrote anything or sang anything going out there with an even worse band and claiming to be the Byrds and they can t play the stuff It was dragging the name in the dirt David Crosby on the motivation behind the lawsuit against Michael Clarke 261 In retaliation against Clarke s trademark application McGuinn Crosby and Hillman submitted their own counter claim to gain ownership of the band s name 260 McGuinn had actually attempted to trademark the Byrds name himself during the 1970s in order to prevent its misuse but his application had been turned down 258 To strengthen their case the three musicians announced in December 1988 that they would be performing a series of concerts in January 1989 as the Byrds 258 260 Although he was no longer connected with Clarke s tribute act Gene Clark was not invited to participate in these official Byrds reunion concerts due to residual ill feeling stemming from his earlier 20th Anniversary Tribute to the Byrds 260 The reunion concerts were a resounding success but with Michael Clarke continuing to tour with his Byrds tribute McGuinn Crosby and Hillman filed a lawsuit against the drummer in the spring of 1989 suing him for allegedly false advertising unfair competition and deceptive trade practices as well as seeking a preliminary injunction against Clarke s use of the name 258 260 At the court hearing in May 1989 the judge denied the injunction ruling that McGuinn Crosby and Hillman had failed to show that they would be irreparably damaged by Clarke s actions 260 As a result Clarke gained full legal ownership of the name the Byrds 262 In the wake of this ruling McGuinn Crosby and Hillman dropped their lawsuit but to demonstrate that they had not wholly surrendered the Byrds name to Clarke the three musicians appeared under the banner of The Original Byrds at a Roy Orbison tribute concert on February 24 1990 where they were joined on stage by Bob Dylan for a rendition of Mr Tambourine Man 260 263 Later that year McGuinn Crosby and Hillman entered Treasure Isle Recorders in Nashville to record four new Byrds tracks for inclusion on the forthcoming The Byrds box set 243 On January 16 1991 the five original members of the Byrds put aside their differences to appear together at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City for their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 18 The ceremony honored the original line up of Roger McGuinn Gene Clark David Crosby Chris Hillman and Michael Clarke while later configurations of the group featuring such key personnel as Gram Parsons and Clarence White were quietly passed over 18 The occasion which saw the band come together on stage to perform the songs Turn Turn Turn to Everything There Is a Season Mr Tambourine Man and I ll Feel a Whole Lot Better represented the first time that all five original Byrds had stood together since 1973 18 Unfortunately it would also represent the last time that the five original members were gathered together 19 Clark died later that year of heart failure and on December 19 1993 Clarke succumbed to liver disease brought on by alcoholism 262 Following Clarke s death Terry Jones Rogers resurrected the Byrds tribute act with guitarist Scott Nienhaus and former Byrds Skip Battin and Gene Parsons on bass and drums respectively 264 Performing under the banner of The Byrds Celebration the tribute group toured extensively throughout the remainder of the 1990s although Parsons was replaced by session drummer Vince Barranco in 1995 and Battin was forced to retire due to ill health in 1997 264 Since 2002 Rogers and Nienhaus have continued to tour as part of the band Younger Than Yesterday A Tribute to the Byrds along with bassist Michael Curtis and drummer Tim Politte 264 McGuinn performing in 2009 Despite Hillman and Crosby s interest in future Byrds reunions McGuinn remains reluctant to reform the band McGuinn Crosby and Hillman all returned to their individual solo careers following the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony 262 However the Byrds did reunite for a third time on August 8 2000 to give an impromptu one off performance at a tribute concert for Fred Walecki the owner of a Los Angeles music equipment store who was suffering from throat cancer 265 Crosby and Hillman were booked to appear at the event separately but McGuinn who was not listed on the bill made a surprise appearance and joined his two former partners on stage 265 McGuinn introduced the hastily reformed trio with the words And now ladies and gentlemen the Byrds as the group launched into renditions of Mr Tambourine Man and Turn Turn Turn to Everything There Is a Season 265 According to contemporary press reports the reunion was an unmitigated success with the audience giving the band multiple standing ovations and shouting for more as they left the stage 265 During the 2000s two more ex members of the Byrds died when drummer Kevin Kelley succumbed of natural causes in 2002 266 and bassist Skip Battin who was suffering from Alzheimer s disease died at his home in 2003 262 Former members Gene Parsons and John York both remain active and continue to perform and record various musical projects 262 Perhaps the most surprising development in the Byrds story during the 2000s however was the acquisition by David Crosby of the rights to the band s name in 2002 267 268 Ownership of the Byrds name had reverted to Clarke s estate upon his death in 1993 and Crosby s purchase served to effectively bring the convoluted battle for control of the group s name to an end To date the Fred Walecki tribute concert appearance in 2000 was the last performance by the Byrds However Hillman and Crosby have both expressed an interest in working with McGuinn again on future Byrds projects but the lead guitarist and head Byrd remains adamant that he is not interested in another full reunion 262 During an interview with music journalist John Nork McGuinn replied absolutely not when asked if he had any plans to revive the Byrds explaining No I don t want to do that I just want to be a solo artist The Byrds are well documented I don t think we need anymore from the Byrds 262 In spite of McGuinn s comments he and Hillman undertook a series of concerts together in 2018 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Byrds Sweetheart of the Rodeo album 269 Though not billed as the Byrds the duo together with backing band Marty Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives played some earlier Byrds material before performing all of the songs from the album and telling stories about its creation 270 Legacy Edit Since the band s 1960s heyday the influence of the Byrds on successive generations of rock and pop musicians has grown steadily with acts such as the Eagles Big Star Tom Petty amp the Heartbreakers R E M the Bangles the Smiths and innumerable alternative rock bands of the post punk era all exhibiting signs of their influence 1 5 262 271 272 Musician and author Peter Lavezzoli described the Byrds in 2007 as one of the few bands to exert a decisive influence on the Beatles while also noting that they helped to persuade Bob Dylan to begin recording with electric instrumentation 273 Lavezzoli concluded that like it or not terms like folk rock raga rock and country rock were coined for a reason the Byrds did it first and then kept moving never staying in the raga or country mode for very long This is precisely what made the Byrds such a rewarding band to follow from one record to the next 273 In his book The Great Rock Discography music researcher Martin C Strong describes the Byrds cover of Mr Tambourine Man as a timeless slice of hypnotic bittersweet pop and a record that did nothing less than change the course of pop rock history 274 Author and musician Bob Stanley writing in his 2013 book Yeah Yeah Yeah The Story of Modern Pop has called the Byrds music a phenomenon a drone genuinely hair raising and totally American 275 In his book Riot on Sunset Strip Rock n Roll s Last Stand in 60s Hollywood music historian Domenic Priore attempts to sum up the band s influence by stating Few of The Byrds contemporaries can claim to have made such a subversive impact on popular culture The band had a much larger more positive impact on the world at large than any Billboard chart position or album sales or concert attendance figure could possibly measure 276 In 2004 Rolling Stone magazine ranked the Byrds at number 45 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time 277 In 2006 they were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame 278 Members EditOriginal members Roger McGuinn lead guitar banjo Moog synthesizer vocals 1964 1973 1989 1991 2000 Gene Clark tambourine rhythm guitar harmonica vocals 1964 1966 1967 1972 1973 1991 died 1991 David Crosby rhythm guitar vocals 1964 1967 1972 1973 1989 1991 2000 died 2023 Michael Clarke drums 1964 1967 1972 1973 1991 died 1993 Chris Hillman bass guitar rhythm guitar mandolin vocals 1964 1968 1972 1973 1989 1991 2000 Subsequent members Kevin Kelley drums 1968 died 2002 Gram Parsons rhythm guitar piano organ vocals 1968 died 1973 Clarence White lead guitar mandolin vocals 1968 1973 died 1973 Gene Parsons drums banjo harmonica pedal steel guitar rhythm guitar vocals 1968 1972 John York bass guitar vocals 1968 1969 Skip Battin bass guitar piano vocals 1969 1973 died 2003 Membership timeline 1964 1973 Discography EditMain article The Byrds discography Mr Tambourine Man 1965 Turn Turn Turn 1965 Fifth Dimension 1966 Younger Than Yesterday 1967 The Notorious Byrd Brothers 1968 Sweetheart of the Rodeo 1968 Dr Byrds amp Mr Hyde 1969 Ballad of Easy Rider 1969 Untitled 1970 Byrdmaniax 1971 Farther Along 1971 Byrds 1973 Notes Edit Jim McGuinn changed his name to Roger McGuinn in 1967 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Unterberger Richie Biography of The Byrds AllMusic Archived from the original on July 12 2018 Retrieved May 25 2010 a b Ankeny Jason Biography of Roger McGuinn Allmusic Archived from the original on January 20 2023 Retrieved May 25 2010 a b c d e f g h Einarson John 2005 Mr Tambourine Man The Life and Legacy of the Byrds Gene Clark Backbeat Books pp 72 75 ISBN 0 87930 793 5 Menck Ric 2007 The Notorious Byrd Brothers 33 series Continuum Books p 44 ISBN 978 0 8264 1717 6 a b Smith Chris 2009 101 Albums That Changed Popular Music Oxford University Press pp 32 34 ISBN 978 0 19 537371 4 a b Ruhlmann William Mr Tambourine Man song review Allmusic Archived from the original on April 9 2011 Retrieved May 31 2010 a b c d e Ruhlmann William Turn Turn Turn song review Allmusic Archived from the original on December 16 2010 Retrieved May 31 2010 a b c Richie Unterberger Mr Tambourine Man album review Allmusic Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved May 31 2010 Folk Rock Overview Allmusic Archived from the original on September 3 2017 Retrieved October 26 2017 Psychedelic Rock Overview Allmusic Archived from the original on October 16 2011 Retrieved January 30 2010 Bellman Jonathan 1997 The Exotic In Western Music Northeastern Publishing p 351 ISBN 1 55553 319 1 a b c d e f Fricke David 1997 A Trip to the Country Sweetheart of the Rodeo CD booklet The Byrds Columbia Legacy a b c Buckley Peter 2003 The Rough Guide to Rock Rough Guides pp 155 156 ISBN 1 84353 105 4 a b c d Einarson John 2005 Mr Tambourine Man The Life and Legacy of the Byrds Gene Clark Backbeat Books pp 87 89 ISBN 0 87930 793 5 Archived from the original on January 20 2023 Retrieved February 20 2016 Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press p 117 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 a b c d e Fricke David 2000 Farther Along The Byrds at Twilight Farther Along CD booklet The Byrds Columbia Legacy a b c d e f g h Connors Tim Byrds ByrdWatcher A Field Guide to the Byrds of Los Angeles Archived from the original on May 25 2009 Retrieved May 25 2010 a b c d Einarson John 2005 Mr Tambourine Man The Life and Legacy of the Byrds Gene Clark Backbeat Books pp 293 294 ISBN 0 87930 793 5 a b Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 445 447 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House p 510 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X a b c d Unterberger Richie Biography of Michael Clarke Allmusic Archived from the original on January 20 2023 Retrieved May 25 2010 Willman Chris Morris Chris January 19 2023 David Crosby Byrds and Crosby Stills amp Nash Co Founder Dies at 81 Variety Penske Media Corporation Retrieved January 19 2023 a b c d e f Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 33 36 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X a b c Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press pp 16 17 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 Russel Richard E Roger McGuinn Founder of The Byrds Roger McGuinn Home Page Archived from the original on May 16 2010 Retrieved May 26 2010 Connors Tim Musicians Associated with the Byrds The New Christy Minstrels ByrdWatcher A Field Guide to the Byrds of Los Angeles Archived from the original on October 28 2010 Retrieved May 26 2010 a b c d Ankeny Jason Biography of David Crosby Allmusic Archived from the original on December 3 2010 Retrieved November 28 2010 Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press p 11 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House p 31 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Einarson John Hillman Chris 2008 Hot Burritos The True Story of the Flying Burrito Brothers Jawbone Press p 42 ISBN 978 1 906002 16 9 Fricke David 2001 The Preflyte Sessions CD booklet The Byrds Sundazed Records a b Connors Tim In The Beginning ByrdWatcher A Field Guide to the Byrds of Los Angeles Archived from the original on May 24 2009 Retrieved May 26 2010 Fricke David 1990 The Byrds booklet The Byrds Columbia Records a b c Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press pp 19 20 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 a b Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 38 40 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X a b c d e f g Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 541 548 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X a b c d e Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 52 55 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Creswell Toby 2006 1001 Songs The Great Songs of All Time and the Artists Stories and Secrets Behind Them Da Capo Press p 59 ISBN 1 56025 915 9 McGuinn Roger Byrds FAQ What instruments did they play Roger McGuinn Home Page Archived from the original on May 16 2010 Retrieved May 26 2010 McGuinn Roger Byrds FAQ How and When did they get together Roger McGuinn Home Page Archived from the original on May 16 2010 Retrieved May 26 2010 Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press p 21 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 a b c d Ankeny Jason Biography of Chris Hillman Allmusic Archived from the original on January 20 2023 Retrieved May 26 2010 a b c d Einarson John 2005 Mr Tambourine Man The Life and Legacy of the Byrds Gene Clark Backbeat Books pp 56 57 ISBN 0 87930 793 5 Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 56 57 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X a b Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press p 24 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 a b c Fricke David 1996 The Chimes of Freedom Mr Tambourine Man CD booklet The Byrds Columbia Legacy a b c d Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press pp 27 30 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 a b Unterberger Richie 2002 Turn Turn Turn The 60s Folk Rock Revolution Backbeat Books pp 113 117 ISBN 0 87930 703 X Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 67 70 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X a b Schinder Scott Schwartz Andy 2007 Icons of Rock An Encyclopedia of the Legends Who Changed Music Forever Greenwood Press p 262 ISBN 978 0 313 33845 8 Kubernik Harvey 2006 Hollywood Shack Job Rock Music in Film and on Your Screen University of New Mexico Press p 84 ISBN 0 8263 3542 X Menck Ric 2007 The Notorious Byrd Brothers 33 series Continuum Books p 43 ISBN 978 0 8264 1717 6 Hoffmann Frank 2004 Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound 2nd ed Routledge p 148 ISBN 0 415 93835 X Unterberger Richie Folk Rock An Overview Richieunterberger com Archived from the original on November 9 2013 Retrieved March 15 2010 Kitts Jeff Tolinski Brad 2002 Guitar World Presents the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time Hal Leonard p 85 ISBN 0 634 04619 5 Connors Tim Mr Tambourine Man ByrdWatcher A Field Guide to the Byrds of Los Angeles Archived from the original on January 11 2010 Retrieved May 31 2010 a b Unterberger Richie 2002 Turn Turn Turn The 60s Folk Rock Revolution Backbeat Books p 107 ISBN 0 87930 703 X Dean Maury 2003 Rock n Roll Gold Rush A Singles Un Cyclopedia Algora Publishing p 200 ISBN 0 87586 207 1 Whitburn Joel 2008 Top Pop Singles 1955 2006 Record Research Inc p 130 ISBN 978 0 89820 172 7 a b c Brown Tony 2000 The Complete Book of the British Charts 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Eric V D 2009 Die at the Right Time A Subjective Cultural History of the American Sixties Gegensatz Press p 250 ISBN 978 0 9655179 2 8 Unterberger Richie 2002 Turn Turn Turn The 60s Folk Rock Revolution Backbeat Books p 180 ISBN 0 87930 703 X Scoppa Bud 1971 The Byrds Scholastic Book Services p 29 MacDonald Ian 1995 Revolution In The Head The Beatles Records and The Sixties Pimlico p 135 ISBN 0 7126 6208 1 Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 123 124 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House p 128 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Unterberger Richie 2002 Turn Turn Turn The 60s Folk Rock Revolution Backbeat Books p 183 ISBN 0 87930 703 X Unterberger Richie Turn Turn Turn album review Allmusic Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved June 1 2010 a b Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press pp 73 74 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 a b Schinder Scott Schwartz Andy 2007 Icons of Rock An Encyclopedia of the Legends Who Changed Music Forever Greenwood Press pp 266 267 ISBN 978 0 313 33845 8 Wadhams Wayne Nathan David 2001 Inside the Hits The Seduction of a Rock and Roll Generation Berklee Press p 244 ISBN 0 634 01430 7 Rogan Johnny 1996 Turn Turn Turn CD booklet The Byrds Columbia Legacy Einarson John 2005 Mr Tambourine Man The Life and Legacy of the Byrds Gene Clark Backbeat Books p 80 ISBN 0 87930 793 5 Fricke David 1996 Turning Point Shindig Scripture amp Oh Susannah Turn Turn Turn CD booklet The Byrds Columbia Legacy Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press p 79 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 Greenwald Matthew Set You Free This Time song review Allmusic Archived from the original on January 20 2023 Retrieved June 1 2010 a b c Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 147 149 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n 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Jawbone Press p 113 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 Fricke David 1996 Fame and Misfortune The End of the First Golden Era Younger Than Yesterday CD booklet The Byrds Columbia Legacy a b c Connors Tim Younger Than Yesterday ByrdWatcher A Field Guide to the Byrds of Los Angeles Archived from the original on December 26 2014 Retrieved June 24 2010 a b Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press pp 118 120 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Pack Up the Plantation Live album review Allmusic Archived from the original on January 20 2023 Retrieved November 28 2010 Ruhlmann William Wave album review Allmusic Archived from the original on November 15 2010 Retrieved November 28 2010 a b c Unterberger Richie Younger Than Yesterday album review Allmusic Archived from the original on December 31 2010 Retrieved June 24 2010 Ward Thomas Everybody s Been Burned song review Allmusic Retrieved January 20 2011 a b c d e f g h Rogan Johnny 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pp 341 342 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X a b Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House pp 630 632 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press p 304 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 a b c d e Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press pp 316 318 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 Hjort Christopher 2008 So You Want to Be a Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day by Day 1965 1973 London Jawbone Press p 321 ISBN 978 1 906002 15 2 Schinder Scott Schwartz Andy 2007 Icons of Rock An Encyclopedia of the Legends Who Changed Music Forever Greenwood Press p 280 ISBN 978 0 313 33845 8 a b c Einarson John 2005 Mr Tambourine Man The Life and Legacy of the Byrds Gene Clark Backbeat Books pp 178 180 ISBN 0 87930 793 5 Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd ed Rogan House p 340 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Rogan Johnny 1998 The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited 2nd 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Dawn of Indian music in the West Continuum International Publishing Group p 162 ISBN 978 0 8264 2819 6 Strong Martin C 2004 The Great Rock Discography 7th ed Edinburgh Canongate Books p 226 ISBN 1841955515 Stanley Bob 2013 Yeah Yeah Yeah The Story of Modern Pop London Faber and Faber p 177 ISBN 978 0 571 28197 8 Priore Domenic 2007 Riot on Sunset Strip Rock n Roll s Last Stand in 60s Hollywood Jawbone Press p 85 ISBN 978 1 906002 04 6 Petty Tom 100 Greatest Artists of All Time No 45 The Byrds Rolling Stone Archived from the original on October 19 2012 Retrieved April 26 2011 The Byrds Music Inductees The Vocal Group Hall of Fame Archived from the original on January 14 2022 Retrieved January 14 2022 Further reading EditRogan Johnny Byrds Requiem for the Timeless Volume 1 Rogan House 2011 ISBN 0 9529540 8 7 Hjort Christopher So You Want To Be A Rock n Roll Star The Byrds Day By Day 1965 1973 Jawbone Press 2008 ISBN 1 906002 15 0 Menck Ric The Notorious Byrd Brothers 33 series Continuum Books 2007 ISBN 0 8264 1717 5 Einarson John Mr Tambourine Man The Life and Legacy of the Byrds Gene Clark Backbeat Books 2005 ISBN 0 87930 793 5 Unterberger Richie Turn Turn Turn The 60s Folk Rock Revolution Backbeat Books 2002 ISBN 0 87930 703 X Unterberger Richie Eight Miles High Folk Rock s Flight from Haight Ashbury to Woodstock Backbeat Books 2003 ISBN 0 87930 743 9 Rogan Johnny The Byrds Timeless Flight Revisited Rogan House 1998 ISBN 0 9529540 1 X Scoppa Bud The Byrds Scholastic Book Services 1971 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Byrds The Byrds Fan Site Roger McGuinn s Official Byrds Homepage Archived May 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Byrds biography at Rollingstone com The Byrds interviewed on the Pop Chronicles 1969 The Byrds Rock and Roll Hall of Fame The Byrds at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Byrds amp oldid 1152550482, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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