Byrds, The

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The Byrds are mostly remembered for being the definitive folk rock band of the folk rock craze of 1965-66, and that's pretty much true. But they less remembered for being one of the pioneering psychedelic and jazz rock bands. Though they spent not even two years making psychedelic music, their contributions were essential to the development of psychedelia in particular and art rock in general, even those contributions are basically forgotten by everyone except Byrds fans.


The Byrds

  • Lead Vocals:
    • Gene Clark (1964-66, 1967, 1972-73),
    • David Crosby (1964-67, 1972-73),
    • Roger McGuinn, Chris Hillman (1965-68, 1972-73),
    • Gram Parsons (1968),
    • Clarence White (1968-73, rarely),
    • Gene Parsons (1968-72),
    • John York (1968-69, rarely),
    • Skip Battin (1969-73, rarely)
  • Guitars:
    • Gene Clark (1964, 1967),
    • David Crosby (1964-67, 1972-73),
    • Roger McGuinn,
    • Chris Hillman (1966-68, studio only),
    • Gram Parsons (1968),
    • Clarence White (1968-73, and earlier as a session musician),
    • Gene Parsons (1968-72, studio only)
  • Keyboards:
    • Gram Parsons (1968),
    • Skip Battin (1969-73, studio only)
  • Bass Guitar:
    • Chris Hillman (1965-68, 1972-73),
    • John York (1968-69),
    • Skip Battin (1969-73)
  • Drums:
    • Michael Clarke (1964-67, 1972-73),
    • Kevin Kelley (1968),
    • Gene Parsons (1968-72)
  • Percussion: Gene Clark (1964-66, 1972-73)
  • Mandolin/Banjo:
    • Chris Hillman (1965-68, 1972-73, studio only),
    • Clarence White (1968-73),
    • Gene Parsons (1968-72, studio only)
  • Synthesizer: Roger McGuinn (1966-73, studio only)

Folk Rock Origins

The Byrds began as a folk trio called The Jet Set, made up of Gene Clark, David Crosby and Roger McGuinn. According the Crosby, the seminal moment in their evolution from a folk group to a rock band came when the group saw ''A Hart Day's Night'', which showed that a rock band could play folk music. The band soon expanded to a five piece and adopted the Beatles' instruments from the film, guitar, 12-string guitar, bass and drums. (Crosby infamously appropriated Clark's guitar after a time.) Released on April 12, 1965, the Byrds' cover of Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man" effectively launched the folk rock craze. Though most of the Byrds didn't actually perform on this record - the Wrecking Crew played all instruments aside from McGuinn's guitar part - the song became the sound of folk rock; jangly guitars and folk harmonies. This sound became the dominant sound in the rock world for the next 2-3 years, even finding its way into pop arrangements.

Psychedelic/Jazz Rock Innovators

Psychedelic/Jazz Rock Recordings

Popularization of Country Rock

Reunion

Influenced by

Influenced