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  1. The Byrds' Greatest Hits is the first greatest hits album by the American rock band the Byrds and was released in August 1967 on Columbia Records. It is the top-selling album in the...

  2. Jan 24, 2013 · Top 10 Byrds Songs. The Byrds made their name as the best Bob Dylan cover band on the planet. But by the end of the '60s, they were spearheading their own movements into jazzy psych-rock and...

  3. Nov 30, 2023 · Sign up for Deezer for free and listen to Dan Byrd: discography, top tracks and playlists.

  4. The Byrds' Greatest Hits was the first compilation album released by the Byrds' label, Columbia Records. The album originally contained 11 songs from the Byrds' first four albums; the...

  5. Jun 19, 2015 · From “So You Want To Be A Rock’n’Roll Star” to “Mr Tambourine Man”, here are the greatest Byrds tracks, as chosen by famous fans, and introduced by Roger McGuinn himself.

    • Tom Pinnock
    • Full Circle
    • All I Really Want to Do
    • Chimes of Freedom
    • Draft Morning
    • So You Want to Be A Rock ‘N’ Roll Star
    • Turn! Turn! Turn!
    • Lady Friend
    • Mr. Tambourine Man
    • I’ll Feel A Whole Lot Better
    • Eight Miles High

    The original five-piece of Roger McGuinn, Gene Clark, David Crosby, Chris Hillman, and Michael Clarke was already over by 1966. Gene Clark left first, swiftly followed by Crosby and Clarke. In 1972, all five reunited to record the simply titled Byrds. Despite charting higher than any Byrds album since 1965’s Turn! Turn! Turn!, the critics didn’t li...

    According to ultimateclassicrock.com, the Byrds covered Bob Dylanbetter than anyone else. They certainly covered him more often. Following hot on the heels of the 1965 chart-topper Mr. Tamborine Man came the band’s second single, All I Really Want to Do. Apparently, great minds think alike – at the exact same time the Byrds were releasing their ver...

    The Byrds didn’t create folk and they didn’t create rock but they, more than any other band, helped popularize the amalgamation of the two. It was their debut album’s melding of intelligent storytelling and rock backbeats that led the music press to coin the phrase folk-rock, and which subsequently encouraged previously acoustic acts like Simon and...

    Draft Morning follows the story of a drafted soldier from his last days of freedom to the turmoil of the battlefield. Released in 1968 during the height of both the Summer of Love and the Vietnam War, it captures the sentiments and the events of the time beautifully. Drafted by David Crosby prior to his dismal from the band, the song was later rewo...

    According to All Music, So You Want to Be a Rock ‘n’ Roll Star was written as a savage dig at prefabricated bands like the Monkeys and the ever-increasing commercialization of the music business. The band’s own declining fortunes couldn’t have been an easy pill to swallow either. Beneath the lush melodies and pretty harmonizing lies a seething bitt...

    The Byrds didn’t waste any time getting stuck into the ‘difficult second album’. Released just 6 months after Mr. Tamborine Man catapulted them to international stardom, Turn! Turn! Turn! didn’t garner quite so much critical praise as their previous effort, but it still managed to perform well in the charts, peaking at No. 17 in the U.S. and No. 11...

    As Louder Sound writes, the only A-side ever to be written by David Crosby is a gorgeous piece of psych-pop with a luscious chorus and an equally inspired brass section. It flopped in the charts, prompting Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman to exclude it from their forthcoming album. But chart success isn’t everything, and Lady Friend constitutes one ...

    The Byrds didn’t just cover Bob Dylan’s Mr. Tambourine Man, they made it their own. They took his acoustic four verses, compacted them down to a single verse, added an inspired guitar riff, replaced his divisive droning with McGuinn’s soaring vocals, and turned it from a folk song into a pop sensation. Released in 1965, it hit No.1 in the charts, f...

    Originally released as the B Side to All I Really Want to Do, I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better is all about Gene Clark. He wrote it, he sang it, and he bought a ton of attention to its door thanks to his subsequent solo success. It wasn’t a major hit when it was released, but with its chewy hook and angelic vocals, it deserved to be.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J74ttSR8lEg Described by Uncutas a “daring ascent into raga-rock, fusing modal jazz, Indian music, and nascent psychedelia,” Eight Miles High is as adventurous as the Byrds ever got. After building a reputation as a kind of super-talented Bob Dylan cover band, this Clark/Crosby/McGuinn co-write proved that their ambi...

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  7. Listen to Dan Byrd MP3 songs online from the playlist available on Wynk Music or download them to play offline. Discover new favorite songs every day from the ever-growing list of Dan Byrds songs.

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