Byrdmaniax
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Byrdmaniax | |||||
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Studio album by The Byrds | |||||
Released | June 23, 1971 | ||||
Recorded | June 2 & October 6, 1970 and January 9–January 24, 1971 | ||||
Genre | Rock | ||||
Length | 34:04 | ||||
Label | Columbia/Legacy | ||||
Producer | Terry Melcher | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
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The Byrds chronology | |||||
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Byrdmaniax is an album by American band The Byrds, released in 1971. It remains one of their most poorly received, largely due to the heavy strings, horns, and gospel chorus overdubbed onto the songs by producer Terry Melcher and arranger Paul Polina, reportedly while The Byrds were on the road and without their approval.
Upon release, Byrdmaniax did much to undo the critical standing The Byrds had earned thanks to Ballad of Easy Rider and (Untitled), and it faded quickly from the public's consciousness, only reaching forty-six in the United States in a short chart stay, and failing to reach the United Kingdom charts at all.
Two of Roger McGuinn's songwriting contributions are collaborations with lyricist Jacques Levy from the aborted country-rock musical Gene Tryp, an adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's Peer Gynt. "Kathleen's Song", one of the best-loved of the Tryp tunes, was in fact a leftover from the Untitled sessions - promo copies for that record actually included the song (under the abbreviated title "Kathleen") on the sleeve track listing, though it was absent from the disc itself. The other two McGuinn compositions are a subtle, modal acoustic ballad ("Pale Blue") and a flop quasi-gospel single, "I Trust".
The Fats Domino pastiche "Tunnel of Love" (by Skip Battin and Kim Fowley) is an adaptation of a poem called The Garden of Love by William Blake.
Contents |
[edit] Personnel
- Roger McGuinn - guitar, vocals
- Clarence White - guitar, vocals
- Skip Battin - bass, vocals
- Gene Parsons - drums, vocals
[edit] Track listing
- "Glory, Glory" (Art Reynolds) – 4:03
- "Pale Blue" (Roger McGuinn/Gene Parsons) – 2:22
- "I Trust" (McGuinn) – 3:19
- "Tunnel of Love" (Skip Battin/Kim Fowley) – 4:59
- "Citizen Kane" (Battin/Fowley) – 2:36
- "I Wanna Grow up to Be a Politician" (McGuinn/Jacques Levy) – 2:03
- "Absolute Happiness" (Battin/Fowley) – 2:38
- "Green Apple Quick Step" (Gene Parsons/Clarence White) – 1:49
- "My Destiny" (Helen Carter) – 3:38
- "Kathleen's Song" (McGuinn/Levy) – 2:40
- "Jamaica Say You Will" (Jackson Browne) – 3:27
[edit] 2000 release bonus tracks
Byrdmaniax was remastered and re-issued in 2000 with four bonus tracks. Only two were actually from the album sessions - a version of Gene Clark's "Think I'm Gonna Feel Better", sung by Clarence White. (White had played guitar on Clark's original 1967 solo recording of the tune.) And featured as a hidden track was an alternate (first-take) version of "Green Apple Quick Step", with White producing - humming to get Parsons's banjo in tune, and directing his father on harmonica. This tune is also referred to as "Byrdgrass".
The other two bonus tracks are actually from the sessions for their previous album, Untitled. One of them is a langorous version of Dylan's "Just Like a Woman"; the other is a stripped-down, two-guitar version of "Pale Blue".
[edit] Singles
- "Glory, Glory" b/w "Citizen Kane" (Columbia 45440) 20 August 1971
[edit] Sources
- Byrdmaniax CD booklet essay, David Fricke, c.2000.
- AllMusicGuide.com
- "Top Pop Albums 1955-2001", Joel Whitburn, c.2002.
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