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  1. Nov 6, 2019 · In 1968 he teamed up with Doug Dillard, a banjo player, for two albums as Dillard & Clark, anticipating the country-rock sound with which the duo’s guitarist, Bernie Leadon, would triumph as a ...

  2. Gene Clark discography. Terry Melcher (left), Gene Clark (center), and David Crosby (right) in the recording studio. Gene Clark was an American singer-songwriter and founding member of the Byrds. His discography consists of 7 studio albums, 3 live albums, 11 compilations, 2 EPs, and 10 singles.

    • “I’ll Feel a Whole Lot Better” Mr. Tambourine Man, 1965. The Byrds' epochal debut featured four chiming Bob Dylan covers that defined the folk-rock sound, as well as five originals penned by Clark, including this one about the ambivalence of a breakup.
    • “The World Turns All Around Her” Turn! , 1965. While the title track/hit single "Turn! Turn!" found the Byrds interpolating Pete Seeger and the Book of Ecclesiastes, Clark's "The World Turns All Around Her," from that same album, pivoted on the same verb, using it to convey the tumultuous emotions brought on by being on the wrong side of a breakup.
    • “Eight Miles High” Fifth Dimension, 1966. The last Byrds song Clark had a hand in writing, and also the band's last Top 20 hit, this Clark/Crosby/McGuinn co-write was the group's most ambitious single, with the latter's Rickenbacker 12-string guitar tuned to a higher plane of Ravi Shankar-inspired raga drones and Coltrane-esque modal fire.
    • “Echoes” Gene Clark with the Gosdin Brothers, 1967. With help from what might scan as the incoherent assemblage of bluegrass musician Doug Dillard (a future collaborator), country singing duo the Gosdin Brothers, ex-Byrd bandmates and members of the famed Wrecking Crew studio outfit, Gene Clark's debut album somehow managed to finesse a sound that veered from baroque pop to garage rock, country to psychedelia.
  3. So Rebellious a Lover is a 1987 studio album by American singer-songwriters Gene Clark and Carla Olson. Released in April 1987, the album revived Clark's flagging career. It was well-received and became a modest commercial success, at the time the biggest-selling album of Clark's solo career. [1]

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gene_ClarkGene Clark - Wikipedia

    Clark wrote or co-wrote many of the Byrds' best-known originals from their first three albums, including "I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better", "Set You Free This Time", "Here Without You", "You Won't Have to Cry", "If You're Gone", "The World Turns All Around Her", "She Don't Care About Time" and "Eight Miles High".

  5. Mar 21, 2022 · This is the story of a duo composed of the icons Doug Dillard and Gene Clark. The first is without question one of the legends of the Banjo, a pioneer of the Bluegrass movement. The latter was known as one of the original members of the Byrds, before consolidating his solo legacy in the 70s.

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  7. In early 1968 Gene Clark did some sessions with a young songwriter Laramy Smith to which it is likely Doug Dillard again contributed some banjo. Tracks from these sessions remained in the vaults until some were released many years later in 1998 on Gene's retrospective 2 CD set "Flying High".