" Eight Miles High" (Gene Clark, Roger McGuinn, David Crosby) - 3:35." It Won't Be Wrong" ( Roger McGuinn, Harvey Gerst) - 1:58." Set You Free This Time" (Gene Clark) - 2:50." She Don't Care About Time" (Gene Clark) - 2:30." Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season)" ( Ecclesiastes/ Pete Seeger) - 3:37." I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better" (Gene Clark) - 2:32." All I Really Want to Do" (Bob Dylan) - 2:03."I Knew I'd Want You" ( Gene Clark) - 2:14.Tambourine Man, Turn! Turn! Turn!, Fifth Dimension or Younger Than Yesterday. They were all previously released on 45 RPM singles and most of them were also released on the mono versions of the Byrds' LPs Mr. Compiler and Byrds biographer Johnny Rogan (whose liner notes appeared on all issued) was not involved in the CD version which clearly did not include the original version of 'Why' (the B-side of 'Eight Miles High') but instead featured the version from 1967's "Younger Than Yesterday".Īll tracks are in mono. While the first UK version used single mono mixes sent from Columbia's studios, this was not the case with the CD version later issued in the USA. Although the 1980 album was acclaimed upon release, there were many complaints about the CD version. Some fans consider the sound quality of the recording, most notably on CD to be substandard. ![]() The next single was "All I Really Want to Do" with "I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better" on the B-side, and so forth. Tambourine Man" with "I Knew I'd Want You" on the B-side. For example, the Byrds' first single was "Mr. The tracks on the album are laid out chronologically by release date of the single, and features the A-side first, then the B-side. Originally released in 1980, it offered, for the first time, all of the mono single versions of the Byrds' singles released between 1965 and early 1967. The Original Singles: 1965–1967, Volume 1 is a compilation album by American rock 'n' roll band the Byrds. The Original Singles: 1967-1969, Volume 2 Accompanied by a running commentary of their memories of the group, the era, one another, and their late compatriots Gene Clark and Michael Clarke, this carefully crafted volume is a truly unique collector’s item for Byrds fans.The Original Singles: 1965-1967, Volume 1 ![]() Featuring more than 500 images from legendary photographers such as Henry Diltz, Barry Feinstein, Curt Gunther, Jim Marshall, Linda McCartney, Tom Gundelfinger O’Neal, and Guy Webster, the book also includes restored images from the Columbia Records archives and the personal archives of the band’s original manager. Now the band’s three surviving founding members – Roger McGuinn, Chris Hillman, and David Crosby – have come together to present The Byrds: 1964-1967, a large format tabletop book that offers a unique visual history of the group. “Those original Byrds really changed the world in that short time they were together.” -Tom Petty They had those great clothes and hairdos.” “And not to be too shallow,” Tom Petty once wrote, “but they also were just the best-dressed band around. ![]() ![]() They incorporated folk, country, and jazz influences into a fresh blend that helped define an era. With their unmistakable harmonies and Roger McGuinn’s innovative 12-string Rickenbacker guitar, the Byrds never stopped experimenting. Tambourine Man” in 1965, they introduced Bob Dylan’s songs to a new audience and launched a career that would make them among the most influential rock bands of all time.
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