Although they only attained the huge success of
the Beatles,
Rolling Stones, and
the Beach Boys for a short time in the mid-'60s, time has judged
the Byrds to be nearly as influential as those groups in the long run. They were not solely responsible for devising folk-rock, but they were certainly more responsible than any other single act (
Dylan included) for melding the innovations and energy of the British Invasion with the best lyrical and musical elements of contemporary folk music. The jangling, 12-string guitar sound of leader
Roger McGuinn's Rickenbacker was permanently absorbed into the vocabulary of rock. They also played a vital role in pioneering psychedelic rock and country-rock, the unifying element being their angelic harmonies and restless eclecticism.
Often described in their early days as a hybrid of
Dylan and
the Beatles,
the Byrds in turn influenced
Dylan and
the Beatles almost as much as
Bob and
the Fab Four had influenced
the Byrds. The Byrds' innovations have echoed nearly as strongly through subsequent generations, in the work of
Tom Petty,
R.E.M., and innumerable alternative bands of the post-punk era that feature those jangling guitars and dense harmonies.
Although
the Byrds had perfected their blend of folk and rock when their debut single, "Mr. Tambourine Man," topped the charts in mid-1965, it was something of a miracle that the group had managed to coalesce in the first place. Not a single member of the original quintet had extensive experience on electric instruments. Jim McGuinn (he'd change his first name to
Roger a few years later),
David Crosby, and
Gene Clark were all young veterans of both commercial folk-pop troupes and the acoustic coffeehouse scene. They were inspired by the success of
the Beatles to mix folk and rock;
McGuinn had already been playing
Beatles songs acoustically in Los Angeles folk clubs when
Clark approached him to form an act, according to subsequent recollections, in the
Peter & Gordon style.
David Crosby soon joined to make them a trio, and they made a primitive demo as the Jet Set that was nonetheless bursting with promise. With the help of session musicians, they released a single on Elektra as
the Beefeaters that, while a flop, showed them getting quite close to the folk-rock sound that would electrify the pop scene in a few months.
The Beefeaters, soon renamed
the Byrds, were fleshed out to a quintet with the addition of drummer
Michael Clarke and bluegrass mandolinist
Chris Hillman, who was enlisted to play electric bass, although he had never played the instrument before. The band was so lacking in equipment in their early stages that
Clarke played on cardboard boxes during their first rehearsals, but they determined to master their instruments and become a full-fledged rock band (many demos from this period would later surface for official release). They managed to procure a demo of a new
Dylan song, "Mr. Tambourine Man"; by eliminating some verses and adding instantly memorable 12-string guitar leads and
Beatlesque harmonies, they came up with the first big folk-rock smash (though
the Beau Brummels and others had begun exploring similar territory as well). For the "Mr. Tambourine Man" single, the band's vocals and
McGuinn's inimitable Rickenbacker were backed by session musicians, although the band themselves (contrary to some widely circulated rumors) performed on their subsequent recordings.
The first long-haired American group to compete with the British Invasion bands visually as well as musically,
the Byrds were soon anointed as the American counterpart to
the Beatles by the press, legions of fans, and
George Harrison himself. Their 1965 debut LP,
Mr. Tambourine Man, was a fabulous album that mixed stellar interpretations of
Dylan and
Pete Seeger tunes with strong, more romantic and pop-based originals, usually written by
Gene Clark in the band's early days. A few months later, their version of
Seeger's "Turn! Turn! Turn!" became another number-one hit and instant classic, featuring more great chiming guitar lines and ethereal, interweaving harmonies. While their second LP (
Turn! Turn! Turn!) wasn't as strong as their debut full-length, the band continued to move forward at a dizzying pace. In early 1966, the "Eight Miles High" single heralded the birth of psychedelia, with its drug-like (intentionally or otherwise) lyrical imagery, rumbling bassline, and a frenzied
McGuinn guitar solo that took its inspiration from
John Coltrane and Indian music.
The Byrds suffered a major loss right after "Eight Miles High" with the departure of
Gene Clark, their primary songwriter and, along with
McGuinn, chief lead vocalist. The reason for his resignation, ironically, was fear of flying, although other pressures were at work as well. "Eight Miles High," amazingly, would be their last Top 20 single; many radio stations banned the record for its alleged drug references, halting its progress at number 14. This ended
the Byrds' brief period as commercial challengers to
the Beatles, but they regrouped impressively in the face of the setbacks. With the band continuing as a quartet,
McGuinn,
Crosby, and
Hillman would assume a much larger (actually, the entire) chunk of the songwriting responsibilities. The third album,
Fifth Dimension, contained more groundbreaking folk-rock and psychedelia on tracks like "Fifth Dimension," "I See You," and "John Riley," although it (like several of their classic early albums) mixed sheer brilliance with tracks that were oddly half-baked or carelessly executed.
Younger Than Yesterday, (1967) which included the small hits "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star" and "My Back Pages" (another
Dylan cover), was another high point,
Hillman and
Crosby in particular taking their writing to a new level. In 1967,
Crosby would assert a much more prominent role in the band, singing and writing some of his best material. He wasn't getting along so well with
McGuinn and
Hillman, though, and was jettisoned from
the Byrds partway into the recording of
The Notorious Byrd Brothers.
Gene Clark, drafted back into the band as a replacement, left after only a few weeks, and by the end of 1967,
Michael Clarke was also gone. Remarkably, in the midst of this chaos (not to mention diminishing record sales), they continued to sound as good as ever on
Notorious. This was another effort that mixed electronic experimentation and folk-rock mastery with aplomb, with hints of a growing interest in country music.
As
McGuinn and
Hillman rebuilt the group one more time in early 1968,
McGuinn mused upon the exciting possibility of a double album that would play as nothing less than a history of contemporary music, evolving from traditional folk and country to jazz and electronic music. Toward this end, he hired
Gram Parsons, he has since said, to play keyboards. Under
Parsons' influence, however,
the Byrds were soon going full blast into country music, with
Parsons taking a large share of the guitar and vocal chores. In 1968,
McGuinn,
Hillman,
Parsons, and drummer
Kevin Kelly recorded
Sweetheart of the Rodeo, which was probably the first album to be widely labeled as country-rock.
Opinions as to the merits of
Rodeo remain sharply divided among
Byrds fans. Some see it as a natural continuation of the group's innovations; other bewail the loss of the band's trademark crystalline guitar jangle, and the short-circuited potential of
McGuinn's most ambitious experiments. However one feels, there's no doubt that it marked the end, or at least a drastic revamping, of the "classic"
Byrds sound of the 1965-1968 period (bookended by the
Tambourine Man and
Notorious albums).
Parsons, the main catalyst for the metamorphosis, left the band after about six months, partially in objection to a 1968
Byrds tour of South Africa. It couldn't have helped, though, that
McGuinn replaced several of
Parsons' lead vocals on
Rodeo with his own at the last minute, ostensibly due to contractual obstacles that prevented
Parsons from singing on Columbia releases. (Some tracks with
Parsons' lead vocals snuck on anyway, and a few others surfaced in the 1990s on
the Byrds box set).
Chris Hillman left
the Byrds by the end of 1968 to form
the Flying Burrito Brothers with
Parsons. Although
McGuinn kept
the Byrds going for about another five years with other musicians (most notably former country picker
Clarence White), essentially
the Byrds name was a front for
Roger McGuinn and backing band. Opinions, again, remain sharply divided about the merits of latter-day
Byrds albums.
McGuinn was (and is) such an idiosyncratic and pleasurable talent that fans and critics are inclined to give him some slack; no one else plays the 12-string as well, he's a fine arranger, and his
Lennon-meets-
Dylan vocals are immediately distinctive. Yet aside from some good echoes of vintage
Byrds like "Chestnut Mare," "Jesus Is Just Alright," and "Drug Store Truck Drivin' Man," nothing from the post-1968
Byrds albums resonates with nearly the same effervescent quality and authority of their classic 1965-1968 period. This is partly because
McGuinn is an erratic (though occasionally fine) songwriter; it's also because
the Byrds at their peak were very much a unit of diverse and considerable talents, not just a front for their leader's ideas.
The Byrds' diminishing importance must have stung
McGuinn doubly in light of the rising profiles of several
Byrds alumni as the '60s turned into the '70s.
David Crosby was a superstar with
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young;
Hillman,
Parsons, and (for a while)
Michael Clarke were taking country-rock further with
the Flying Burrito Brothers; even
Gene Clark, though he'd dropped out of sight commercially, was recording some respected country-rock albums on his own. The original quintet actually got back together for a one-off reunion album in 1973; though it made the Top 20, it was the first, and one of the most flagrant, examples of the futility of a great band reuniting in an attempt to recapture the lightning one last time.
The original
Byrds continued to pursue solo careers and outside projects throughout the 1970s and 1980s.
McGuinn,
Clark, and
Hillman had some success at the end of the 1970s with an adult contemporary variation on
the Byrds' sound; in the 1980s,
Crosby battled drug problems while
Hillman enjoyed mainstream country success with
the Desert Rose Band. The Byrds' legend was tarnished by squabbles over which members of the original lineup had the rights to use
the Byrds name; for quite a while, drummer
Michael Clarke even toured with a "
Byrds" that featured no other original members. The Byrds were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1991;
Gene Clark died several months later, and
Michael Clarke died in 1993, permanently scotching prospects of a reunion involving the original quintet. ~ Richie Unterberger