

Impeccably mastered by Joe Reagoso at Friday Music Studios, the masterwork will be pressed for a very limited time on striking 180 Gram Coral Audiophile Vinyl.

In an effort to continually offer consummate music lovers with the greatest rock recordings of all time, Friday Music proudly presents for the first time ever on 180 Gram Audiophile Vinyl, the Anniversary Edition of The Byrds 1973 classic "Byrds."

More choice material abounds thanks to Gram Parsons with his signature works Hickory Wind and One Hundred Years From Now. The 11 song masterwork kicks off with their hit single of Bob Dylan’s You Ain’t Going Nowhere, and follows up with the brilliant gospel track I Am A Pilgrim, featuring the stunning vocals of Chris Hillman and guitar work of the late John Hartford. Produced by David Crosby, the stellar new work simply titled "Byrds" became one of the years most anticipated album releases. The band underwent multiple lineup changes throughout its. In 1973, The Byrds changed the course of rock music history once again, as the original 1965 superstar line-up of Roger McGuinn, David Crosby, Chris Hillman, Gene Clarke and Michael Clark ventured back into the studio to cut their final studio album. The Byrds (/brdz/) were an American rock band formed in Los Angeles, California, in 1964. The combination of Roger McGuinns ringing 12-string Rickenbacker guitar, Gene Clarks poetry, David Crosbys.
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But the producers haven't stopped with obvious stuff like that. The Byrds Format: Audio CD 348 ratings Amazon's Choice for 'original album series cd sets' 2198 Get Fast, Free Shipping with Amazon Prime FREE Returns See all 2 formats and editions Audio CD 21.98 3 Used from 19.99 12 New from 19.98 Vinyl from 130.00 1 Used from 130. album the Hillmen's bluegrass version of Dylan's "When the Ship Comes In" and the Byrds/ Beefeaters' "It Won't Be Wrong" from Elektra. Released on the Asylum label in March 1973, Byrds saw the classic line-up of Gene. So Raven Records has done the job instead, gathering together the major pre-Byrds and early Byrds-related tracks in one place: David Crosby's bluesy "Willie Gene" and "Come Back Baby" the pre-Byrds Jet Set trio's Beatles-esque "The Only Girl I Adore" (complete with "yeah-yeah"'s) from the Early L.A. Re-mastered edition of the legendary 1973 reunion album by The Byrds.

Some of those involved with Columbia's Byrds box urged the producers to use tracks by the Jet Set, the Beefeaters, the pre-Byrds David Crosby, and the Hillmen instead, they chose to weigh it down with a lot of later, Skip Battin-era tracks.
