Time: 39:05
Size: 89.5 MB
Styles: Folk rock, AM pop
Year: 1967/1999
Art: Front
[2:29] 1. Mr. Tambourine Man
[2:30] 2. I'll Feel A Whole Lot Better
[3:29] 3. The Bells Of Rhymney
[3:49] 4. Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is A Season)
[2:03] 5. All I Really Want To Do
[3:51] 6. Chimes Of Freedom
[3:33] 7. Eight Miles High
[2:08] 8. Mr. Spaceman
[2:32] 9. 5d (Fifth Dimension)
[2:04] 10. So You Want To Be A Rock & Roll Star
[3:07] 11. My Back Pages
[1:56] 12. It Won't Be Wrong
[2:48] 13. Set You Free This Time
[2:39] 14. Have You Seen Her Face
Though they'd been together for just three years, the Byrds already had enough hits and classics to put out this collection in 1967-a #6 album in its own right! The 11 original songs- Turn, Turn, Turn; Mr. Tambourine Man; Eight Miles High , and the rest-are joined by three bonus tracks: It Won't Be Wrong; Set You Free This Time , and Have You Seen Her Face . A landmark in American music, expanded and upgraded!
The 12-string electric guitar may never recover. As long as there are baby boomers roaming the earth, its airy jangle will signify psychedelic innocence and optimism refracted through the peculiar light of mid-'60s Los Angeles. With Roger McGuinn leading, the Byrds kicked off American rock history with a merger of Bob Dylan's words and the Beatles' melodic energy. The results are here: "Mr. Tambourine Man," "The Bells of Rhymney," and "Eight Miles High" still jump off the airwaves. The midpoint between Dylan and the Beatles is a one-of-a-kind place, where optimism and innocence still sound smart. ~Steve Tignor
The 12-string electric guitar may never recover. As long as there are baby boomers roaming the earth, its airy jangle will signify psychedelic innocence and optimism refracted through the peculiar light of mid-'60s Los Angeles. With Roger McGuinn leading, the Byrds kicked off American rock history with a merger of Bob Dylan's words and the Beatles' melodic energy. The results are here: "Mr. Tambourine Man," "The Bells of Rhymney," and "Eight Miles High" still jump off the airwaves. The midpoint between Dylan and the Beatles is a one-of-a-kind place, where optimism and innocence still sound smart. ~Steve Tignor
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