Album Reviews

Photo

The Byrds

There Is A Season  Hear it Now

RS: 5of 5 Stars Average User Rating: 4of 5 Stars

2006

Play View The Byrds's page on Rhapsody

The Byrds are still among the most underrated bands in rock history. One reason is that they didn't have a unique, charismatic frontman: Five California folkie boys came together one jingle-jangle morning in 1964 and then careened around musically for a decade. The Byrds also ran into more than their fair share of trouble, maybe because they weren't great friends -- when things got crazy, they'd just rotate out another member. One example: When singer Gene Clark freaked out and refused to get on an airplane in 1966, the rest of the Byrds kept flying. Clark, their best songwriter, left the band.

Another reason the Byrds were underrated, of course, is that they were overshadowed by British groups like the Beatles and the Stones. But the Byrds' appeal isn't limited to bald-eagle rock fans rooting for the home team: They came up with harmonizing folk rock that sounds like liquid sunshine ("I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better"), they brought Bob Dylan to the top of the charts for the first time (with "Mr. Tambourine Man" -- many Dylan covers would follow), they pioneered trippy psychedelic guitar rock ("Eight Miles High") and pretty much invented country rock when Gram Parsons joined them for 1968's Sweetheart of the Rodeo. Bands from the Eagles to R.E.M. are in the Byrds' debt, as is just about any musician who ever picked up a twelve-string Rickenbacker guitar.

Ten years ago, Columbia began elegantly refurbishing the Byrds' back catalog, reissuing the records with essential B sides and outtakes (and, in the case of Sweetheart of the Rodeo, releasing the Parsons vocals that got wiped from the original disc for legal reasons). Now the label has finally upgraded the band's 1990 box set with this four-CD, ninety-nine-track release. There Is a Season draws mostly on the Nineties CDs but also includes five previously unreleased live tracks. There is, in addition, a fifth disc, a twenty-six-minute DVD -- and it's dated in a way that the Byrds' music isn't. In ten vintage clips, you can groove to artifacts of the era: Roger McGuinn's granny glasses, lots of shimmying go-go dancers and, most improbably, a young, skinny David Crosby.

GAVIN EDWARDS

(Posted: Oct 17, 2006)

Advertisement

News and Reviews

Advertisement


How to Play This Album
  • Click the play button.

  • Register or enter your username and password.

  • Let the music play!

No commitment.
It's FREE.

 

Track List

Play All

Photo

 

Review 1 of 1

BarryG writes:

3of 5 Stars


Although "There Is A Season" is a HUGE improvement over the Byrds' 1990 box set in terms of song selection (more Gene Clark) and packaging (no more ugly duotone photos and tacky art), it still eliminates too many great songs by the original Byrds (e.g., "Don't Doubt Yourself, Babe," "Thoughts and Words," "Get to You") and includes WAY too much stuff post-"Notorious Byrd Bros." The booklet devotes little space to the later Byrds; too bad compilers Roger McGuinn and Bob Irwin didn't do the same. Also, using alternative, inferior versions of certain longs (e.g., "You Showed Me," "Wheels on Fire," "Old John Robertson," "100 Years from Now")doesn't help. It's a shame the DVD isn't longer and doesn't contain some LIVE performances (e.g., the still-unseen Monterey footage, the T.A.M.I. Show). Newcomers would be better off buying the first five Columbia albums ("Mr. Tambourine Man," "Turn! Turn! Turn!", "5D," "Younger Than Yesterday" and "Notorious Byrd Brothers") for now. Frankly, a much better set would have focused exclusively on these albums, complete with outtakes, with a separate, stringently cherry-picked one-disc compilation of the later Byrds released separtely.

Oct 30, 2006 08:49:43

Off Topic Report Abuse

Previous Next

Advertisement

 

Everything:The Byrds

Main | Biography | Articles | Album Reviews | Photos | Discography

 


Advertisement

Advertisement