The Byrds - Byrds (1973) Original US Presswell Pressing - LP/FLAC In 24bit/96kHz

Posted By: Fran Solo

The Byrds ‎- Byrds
Vinyl | LP Cover (1:1) | FLAC + cue | 24bit/96kHz & 16bit/44kHz | 800mb & 200mb
Mastered At The Lacquer Channel, Sausalito
Label: Asylum Records/SD 5058 | Released: 1973 | Genre: Country-Rock


A1 Full Circle 2:41
A2 Sweet Mary 2:52
A3 Changing Heart 2:40
A4 For Free 3:48
A5 Born To Rock ‘N’ Roll 3:12

B1 Things Will Be Better 2:13
B2 Cowgirl In The Sand 3:23
B3 Long Live The King 2:14
B4 Borrowing Time 1:59
B5 Laughing 5:36
B6 (See The Sky) About To Rain 3:48


Companies, etc.
Manufactured By – Atlantic Recording Corporation
Phonographic Copyright (p) – Asylum Records
Copyright © – Asylum Records
Pressed By – Presswell
Published By – Irving Music, Inc.
Published By – Blackwood Music
Published By – Siquomb Publishing Corp.
Published By – Bar None Music
Published By – Broken Arrow Music
Published By – Staysail Music
Published By – Guerrilla Music, Inc.
Recorded At – Wally Heider Recording Studio, Los Angeles
Mastered At – The Lacquer Channel, Sausalito
Credits
Acoustic Guitar – Chris Hillman, David Crosby, Gene Clark, Roger McGuinn
Acoustic Guitar [12 String] – Chris Hillman, David Crosby, Roger McGuinn
Art Direction, Design – Gary Burden
Banjo – Roger McGuinn
Bass – Chris Hillman
Congas – Michael Clarke
Design [Associate] – Alexa Smith
Drums – Michael Clarke
Electric Guitar – Chris Hillman, David Crosby, Roger McGuinn
Electric Guitar [12 String] – Chris Hillman, David Crosby, Roger McGuinn
Engineer – Doc Storch, Raghu*
Harmonica – Gene Clark
Mandolin – Chris Hillman
Percussion – Michael Clarke
Photography By – Henry Diltz
Producer – David Crosby
Synthesizer [Moog] – Roger McGuinn
Tambourine – Gene Clark
Vocals – Chris Hillman, David Crosby, Gene Clark, Roger McGuinn
Written-By – Chris Hillman (tracks: B1, B4), David Crosby (tracks: B3, B5), Gene Clark (tracks: A1, A3), Neil Young (tracks: B2, B6), Roger McGuinn (tracks: A2, A5)
Notes
Black inner sleeve

Recorded at Wally Heider Recording Studio #4

The rear cover denotes Artisan Sound Recorders. The runout stampings denotes The Lacquer Channel, Sausalito.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
Matrix / Runout (Label Side A): ST-AS-732779-PR
Matrix / Runout (Label Side B): ST-AS-732780-PR
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side A): ST-AS-732779-B
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side B): ST-AS-732780B
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side A Etched [Variant 1]): ST-AST1-732779A PR [Palm Tree]
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side B Etched [Variant 1]): ST-AS-732780A [Palm Tree] PR
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side A & B Stamped [Variant 1]): TLC [In a box]
Rights Society: BMI






This Rip: 2018
Cleaning: RCM Moth MkII Pro Vinyl
Direct Drive Turntable: Technics SL-1200MK2 Quartz
Cartridge: SHURE M97xE With JICO SAS Stylus
Amplifier: Marantz 2252
ADC: E-MU 0404
DeClick with iZotope RX5: Only Manual (Click per click)
Vinyl Condition: NM-
This LP: From my personal collection
LP Rip & Full Scan LP Cover: Fran Solo
Password: WITHOUT PASSWORD

THE BYRDS “BYRDS” (’73 REUNION)
The announcement of the reunion album featuring all five original Byrds raised expectations to the point where whatever emerged was almost bound to be an anticlimax. (Imagine the effect of the Beatles reforming around the same time, if you will.) Despite a general thumbs-down from the critics, fan loyalty and eager anticipation made the new long-player highly successful at the record store: in the States, the biggest-selling new-material Byrds album since Turn, Turn, Turn. Subsequent reviews expressed varying degrees of disappointment, but recent re-evaluation with almost forty years of hindsight portrays the project as fascinating historically and not without merit artistically. Interest in it has never waned and it’s been re-released on CD no fewer than four times. The Wikipedia article on it is almost a book.

The theory behind the reunion varies. According to one version, the famously unreticent David Crosby visited Roger McGuinn in mid-1972 and panned the well-loved White/Battin/Parsons Byrds lineup, saying, “you’ve done some OK stuff but you’ve also done stuff that is pretty bad. Please stop doing it under the Byrds name”. Crosby then suggested reforming the original band to record an album showing where the founder members “are at today”. Another version has the ever-opportunistic David Geffen seeing the lucrative potential of a reunion and planting the suggestion in McGuinn’s mind, noting that McGuinn himself had become dissatisfied with the long-standing lineup and replaced Gene Parsons with salaried sessioneer John Guerin. Either way, McGuinn acquiesced and the other members, all having found themselves between longterm engagements, followed.

The nature of the final work supports the first theory: the album is The Crosby Show in almost every respect. Although on the surface democracy seems to be served by each of the four principals furnishing two original compositions, two of the three accompanying covers are Neil Young songs and the third is by Joni Mitchell, both being longtime Crosby cronies (though Clark takes lead vocal on the Young ditties). It’s been suggested that the other three writers were saving their best material for their own solo projects, but though none of their offerings is a blockbuster they’re all engaging enough, especially Gene Clark’s delicate “Full Circle” and Dylanesque “Changing Heart” and McGuinn’s ersatz-traditional “Sweet Mary”. By contrast, Crosby’s “Long Live The King” is characteristically ebullient, while his “Laughing” is itself actually a cover of the original that appeared on his sublime 1971 collection If Only I Could Remember My Name. Crosby also has the sole production credit; the only tracks that show real spirit in the lead vocals are his; and in the cover photographs he’s the only one who really looks like he wants to be there. (Chris Hillman looks like he’d rather be anywhere else at all.)

The sound of the album is also heavily redolent with Crosby’s aural fingerprint. Acoustic guitars predominate, with the electrics and bass mostly mixed way back and only Hillman’s vibrant mandolin and Clark’s plaintive harmonica forefronted strongly as solo instruments. Apart from “Laughing”, all the songs have short, terse arrangements, never really catching fire. While Crosby’s lead vocals soar, Clark’s and Hillman’s are more subdued and McGuinn’s particularly sombre. The block harmonies are immaculate but display the sweetness of CS&N rather than the engaging rough edge of latterday Byrds. One is led to conclude that with this album Crosby finally achieved, albeit temporarily, belatedly and with questionable success, the domination of the Byrds that he’d craved during the classic years.
Written by Len, therisingstorm.net
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