Eight Miles High

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"Eight Miles High"
No cover available
Single by The Byrds
B-side(s) "Why" (Jim McGuinn, David Crosby)
Released March 14, 1966
Format 7"
Recorded 1966
Genre Rock
Length 3 min 33 s
Label Columbia
Writer(s) Gene Clark, Jim McGuinn, David Crosby
Chart positions
The Byrds singles chronology
"Set You Free This Time"
(1966)
"Eight Miles High"
(1966)
"5D (Fifth Dimension)"
(1966)
Eight Miles High
Eight Miles High cover
Single from the Zen Arcade sessions by Hüsker Dü
Released March 1986
Recorded October 1983
Genre Punk Rock

Alternative Rock

Length 3:56
Label SST
Producer(s) Spot (producer)
Professional reviews
Hüsker Dü chronology
In a Free Land (1982) Eight Miles High (1984) Celebrated Summer (1985)



"Eight Miles High" is a song by Gene Clark, Jim McGuinn, and David Crosby, first appearing as a single from 1966 by the rock band The Byrds. The single peaked at #14 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was included as well on their album Fifth Dimension, released on July 18, 1966. In tandem with its b-side, "Why," written by McGuinn and Crosby, the song was instrumental in fomenting a new strain of rock and roll in the mid-1960s, that of psychedelic rock.

The obscure lyrics, penned by Clark, are about the group's plane trip to and tour in England in 1965. "Eight miles high, and when you touch down, you'll find that it's stranger than known." Airliners fly at an altitude of six to seven miles high; but it was felt that "eight miles high" sounded better.

According to Clark, the lyrics were primarily of his doing, with the only contribution coming from David Crosby's line "Rain grey town, known for its sound". Since Clark's death, however, McGuinn has contended that it was he who conceived the idea for the song being about a plane ride, and that he and Crosby both contributed lyrics to Clark's unfinished draft. John Einarson's book, Mr. Tambourine Man, questions this claim and wonders if McGuinn's story would be the same had Clark lived.

McGuinn's twelve string guitar playing — especially the famed introductory solo — was heavily inspired by Coltrane's saxophone on "India" from his Live at the Village Vanguard album of 1961 McGuinn is very guarded of the effort that went into his approximation of Coltrane's technique to guitar. Chris Hillman's bass line drives the song, while the rhythm guitar work by Crosby and fast drumming of Michael Clarke add dramatic turbulence. On a 1966 taped interview added to the 1996 re-issue of the album, Crosby said that the catastrophic ending made him "feel like a plane landing."

The B-side, "Why", equally pushed the envelope, its incorporation of raga aspects from Indian classical music even more pronounced than on the A-side. The lyric, unusual for the developing rock and roll groupie haven of Los Angeles, argues a very feminist viewpoint considering that it was written by two men, or one man, Crosby often claiming sole authorship of the song.[1] This version differs from the one later released on Younger Than Yesterday, by the more pronounced bass lines and vocal punch of the radio mix given a single side in the mid-sixties.

Almost immediately after "Eight Miles High," the Byrds suffered the loss of Clark, their main songwriter. His fear of flying was the official reason for his departure, although other pressures were at work. After Clark's departure, the Byrds would never visit the top 20 with a single again.

An earlier version of the song, along with "Why," had been recorded in RCA Studios in Los Angeles in December of 1965; those tracks saw release on the 1996 expanded reissue of Fifth Dimension on Legacy Recordings.

Other Versions - The song has been covered many times, notably by Golden Earring in 1970, who put an 19 minute version of the song on their Eight Miles High (album) , while the +40 minutes live version of the song heralded Golden Earring's breaktrough in the USA in 1969. Other artists who covered it include Leo Kottke on his Mudlark album of 1971, and Hüsker Dü as a bonus single released with their Zen Arcade LP of 1984. More recently Robyn Hitchcock covered the song as did Chris Hillman on his The Other Side album of 2005.

In March 2005, Q magazine placed "Eight Miles High" at number 50 in its list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Tracks. The Door's 1968 song "Spanish caravan", 27 seconds in, has a part which is extremely similar to the opening chord progression of Eight Miles High.

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[edit] References

    [edit] Notes

    1. ^ Zimmer and Diltz, p. 37
    Hüsker Dü

    Grant Hart | Bob Mould | Greg Norton

    Discography
    Albums: Land Speed Record | Everything Falls Apart | Zen Arcade | New Day Rising | Flip Your Wig | Candy Apple Grey | Warehouse: Songs and Stories | The Living End
    EPs and Singles: Statues | In A Free Land | Metal Circus | Eight Miles High | Celebrated Summer |
    Makes No Sense At All | Sorry Somehow | Don't Want To Know If You Are Lonely | Could You Be The One? |
    She's A Woman (And Now He Is A Man) | Ice Cold Ice | Eight Miles High/Makes No Sense At All
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    In other languages