The evolution of a band. Not the folk rock pioneers anymore. but a superb rock ensemble with one of the most influential guitarists of the era. I'm glad McGuinn kept it going.
@@user-yq8sx2dh4k Around 1969 when McGuinn was the only original member and Gram Parsons and Chris Hillman went on to form the "Flying Burrito Brothers". He had Clarence White on telecaster, one of the greatest guitar players ever. They totally moved from harmony to jamming.
@@roblabelle7874 Skip Battin (playing bass here) brought immense talent as well. Among the oldest with 'Rock' on his resume , born in 1934, he had some success as a solo artist (vids on RUclips), but his 1973 solo album titled 'Skip Battin' is a true classic! I like every track. Especially *St Louis Browns*. The Byrds' Clarence White smokes on guitar on this album, and McGuinn solos on one track.
@@daviddorchester2784 Old Ed Sullivan....I watched him all the time. I'm 63 years old...Came close to dying with a bad illness this past year...Finally got over it and now I'm totally grateful for my health.
Gram Parsons was a banjo/mandolin player. He learned drums on the job; self taught. He showed up for a gig and was told you're on the drums in this band and over the course of the gigs he figured it out. see the Fretboard Journal interview. He really drives this band.
Anyone who dislikes this does not understand the context of what was happening in rock at this time. You had Jimi Hendrix influencing Miles Davis and avant-garde jazz influencing rock in turn. You may still dislike this discordant sound that resulted in both jazz and rock but there is no disputing the magnificence of the playing. McGuinn and White on guitars, Battin on bass, and the great Gene Parsons on drums produced an incredible magnus opus with their syncopated version of the previous Byrds' number one hit EIGHT MILES HIGH. This is classic!
axiomist hahaha Your one-word response is moronic. You have no argument as to why you think it's trash, just your own subjective opinion. No wonder you call yourself "axiomist" since an axiom is a statement generally held to be true that MAY NOT NECESSARILY BE SO! Run away and play with the other dopes, axiomist, come back when you can support a rational opinion. A dumb unsupported outburst doesn't cut it. Your reply shows exactly what is wrong with social media and why the world has become so much dumber since its inception hahaha (made me laugh so much)
@@moniquedouglas2448 You speak for me, Monique. BUT ... The issue is not social media. Bygone era music comes alive to an expanding audience of first time listeners via my APPLE X port of call RUclips access. Thank God that sci-fi is a dream come true with modern gadgetry; but modern pop music makes me yearn for another musical genre from another historical era.Computer manufactured music is sterile and synthetic.;real musicians plucking,banging,strumming with their hands strikes a matchstick that sets passion afire in the hearts and souls of people to sing and dance their woeful lonely lives away into an explosive frenzy that shouts joy all over the spacious universe with the voice of Man singing the praises of being alive on the tiny blue speck of earthan stardust we make our home. LIFE alone in my headzone without sound spaces me out of my mind!!!Although the early original version of 8 Miles High is MY favorite(what does syncopated mean?) the Clarence White, Gene Parsons sound is an enhanced(better?) more tonal textured sound.Thank God for D-I-V-E-R-S-I-T-Y.
@@moniquedouglas2448 The spectrum of public opinion is a dynamic range;comprised of varying levels of appreciation.The social media web is also a social support group of interchangeable thoughts .Sharing means helping all of us to advance, together.Hopefully,it will live up to its billing as a group S.O.S. call for HELP that elicits a collective response for the betterment of all!!!
@@moniquedouglas2448 This is a question for the Razor sharp insightful intellect that YOU,alone,are:Axiom's ONE word exclamatory comment triggered a nearly 100 word overreactive retort by YOU aimed at his empty head ; meant to underscore his dim wit...But...do you think that he'll get it in light of the FACT that he is BRAIN DEAD?!?
I don’t know about the ‘best’ that’s debatable . But I think they easily the most cooking lineup they ever had . Clarence with that rhythm section? Damn !!
Maybe the best band in terms of instrumental ability, but it couldn't have been the best in terms of vocals, especially without Crosby. These guys here were adequate vocally, but if they had sang on the studio versions, I seriously doubt if they'd have sounded as perfect vocally as the original Byrds. Crosby's high harmonies were special and generally flawless. The lead vocals were likely double tracked for extra fulness. Don't know about Crosby's, but his vocals probably were too. Double tracking (singing the same part twice) was a thing then, perhaps because the Beatles did it. Often one could hear on Beatles tracks two parts when the phrasing slightly differed. The second track was often just under the original track in term of volume.
Here we go again with the "tight" description. Yeah, tight maybe but not The Byrds and not what I would call creative or distinguished. Drumming doesn't make a band.
@@timj9418 But it can ruin a band. Bad drummers can absolutely bring an entire band down. It's why when I was growing up in the 60's if someone discovered a good drummer, every band wanted him and was willing to replace the guy they had. The original drummer with the Byrds wasn't very good. McGuinn went out and got top notch musicians for this incarnation. Clarence White's reputation preceded him of course, he was a bluegrass legend even at that young age, but the drummer and bass player were also top notch musicians. I saw this line up and they were terrific. And yes in 1970 their playing was both creative and distinguished. Maybe 49 years later you don't recognize it for what it was back then.
@@losttango - that’s the way things were back then. Who needed a 20 minute drum solo? I endured “Moby Dick” when I saw Led Zeppelin in Aug ‘71. It may be sacrilege to say that about Bonham (and I was a drummer back then!). Also, during that was an extended violin-bow solo by Page. I’m afraid it did nothing for me at the time. It’s what bands did “back in the day.”
I'm somewhere in that crowd. Could never forget that rendition of 8 Miles High - seriously, like ten minutes of jamming, with no lyrics, and the whole band coked up the wazoo. Oh well, maybe I was just too young to appreciate it.
Not a Byrd's concert but September 23, 1970 - The Byrds take part in the filming of “Welcome To The Fillmore, ” a Bill Graham’s project at The Fillmore East on Second Avenue near East 6th in New-York City
@@albiefraser4057 yes when I went there live they did more songs Lay Lady Lay was new and some older ones it was THE BYRDS and PROCOL HARUM THE KINKS didn't perform because they had a fight the night before
l am now a young 75 and as a teen through the1960s I enjoyed the London club scene big time and all my pals thought The Byrds outstripped the likes of The Beatles and The Stones by miles! Hanging on the wall in my studio, in a place of honour since 1965 after I obtained it during my first visit to Arlington Virginia is an album cover containing a vinyl LP of Mr Tambourine Man signed by the entire group which I treasure to this day. When I met Mick Jagger in Mustique in 1988, as we both shared the same Italian architect Mario Spinella, when we built our villas on Mustique and St Vincent I showed him the signed LP which he would have bought at any price, but was not for sale and remains priceless to this day. At least then I got Mick to sing at my Norwegian wife's 40th Birthday party celebration's in January 1989 on Basils Bar in Mustique and Ringo Star and Barbara Bach turned up so a great party that finished at 8 am the following morning! I still listen to the Byrds at least 2 or 3 times a week. They were then and to this day remain the best Folk Rock group EVER!!!
Full of your own self promotional bull xxx. The first sentence gave it away. Everyone knows that the Byrds were really crap live on their first tour of England.
I have been listening to the byrds since they hit the St. Louis airways. Very special to me. But they know they weren’t even on the same page as The Beatles. Nobody was.
Michael, a correction if you don't mind...the color version of the "Playboy After Dark" series shot in a soundstage at CBS Television City, if I remember correctly. There is no "packed house." The people you see dancing in front of the band were either friends of Hefner's or paid extras or both. It was a very small group of people, shot in such a way as to make it appear to be a larger crowd.
The 8 Miles High jam sounds a little bit like the breakdown part in Rare Earth's Get Ready! Anyway, I'm a huge Clarence White and was disappointed that he received very little camera time. What a great guitarist. The Byrds have always been a great band. I saw McGuinn about a year ago with Marty Stuart. Fantastic. He defies the aging process!
I had the privilege & the honor to see this version of the Birds at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, N.Y around about the same time. Clarence White was one fabulously fine guitarist! He, too, was taken long before his tiime! 😢💔🙏😎🎶🎸🐺
I love it. Skip of 'Skip & Flip' fame. The late great Clarence White, B-bender guitarist extrordinaire. Gene Parsons, great drummer. Mcguinn stuck it out, master of the 12 string, great writer, vocalist, leader.
It looks like video to me. My clue is how the light bouncing off of the chrome mic stand looks like a comets tail when the camera moves quickly. And those are some crazy cameras I see once in a while.
Irrelevant when the essence of The Byrds is pummeled by this crew of "superior" talent. And not to forget that Gene Clark was a songwriting genius while collectively this group of "superiors" couldn't write a single song that anyone would remember beyond exiting the Fillmore.
@@rogermurray8553 Roger! You completely nailed it! I've always regretted that the original Byrds material was not performed live by a crack band. I saw the original group twice - once, standing beside a swimming pool right in front of them - and they clearly hadn't rehearsed or had enough experience yet to do their material justice. I also saw this edition of the band (from this video) at Fillmore East, and though I love Clarence White, this was not the Byrds I wanted to see. Maybe someday when I'm even older I'll do a Byrds tribute band. ;-)
The Byrds were ultimately a "studio" band at their most excellent and what they accomplished on Fifth Dimension, Younger Than Yesterday and The Notorious Byrd Bros is unmatched by any group, American or foreign. I can forgive Crosby his egoistic excesses but not McGuinn for trucking out this blurred aural din that has absolutely nothing to do with the superior, highly distinctive and articulate work of The Byrds. Dreadful. Good luck with that cover band, Dennis.
Too bad the director didn't know Clarence White was onstage, at least judging from this footage. He plays a cool run beginning at 9:00. Very idiosyncratic electric player--his straight country/acoustic style dodges here and there, but to my ear is more structured than on the Tele. His tone and attack here are fascinating; I just wish more of the gig was available. White was a major, major talent. He probably would have broken out with more exposure in the pop market. (If he wanted to.) Master stroke by McGuinn bringing him aboard Byrds Mark II.
Clarence White is buried a 1/2 mile down the street, here at Joshua Memorial Cemetery in Lancaster, CA. Never forget the night he was hit by a drunk driver pulling into the parking lot of BJ's Honky Tonk Palmdale. A "tragedy" is an understatement!
I must respectfully disagree. I saw the final iteration of the Byrds (Whose music I continue to love) at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic N.J. Opening act was called Tranquility and they were twice the band the Byrds were, at least on that night. I had expected more from the Byrds. Excrement occurs.
What Byrds are you talking about? This video features only one of the original band--Roger (nee Jim) McGuinn. The first iteration of the band was known for sloppy live performances, so calling them "tight" is nonsense. I love the band for what it produced on record until roughly the time of "Sweetheart of the Rodeo" when the band's composition started changing more radically. But this version of the band with Clarence White was probably much "tighter" than the original group, for what that's worth. I just don't think it's right to call it The Byrds.
Tim Jahns Latter day Byrds were great. Gene Parsons a big improvement over Michael Clarke on drums and I give the nod to Skip Battin over Chris Hillman on bass.
Virginia Addis: I have absolutely no idea what you’re trying to say lol. Are you calling me a wanna-be? A wanna-be what? Is today’s music children’s music? What does that even mean? Are you belittling the next 3 generations music? Mighty close minded if so. The phantom lol? Wtf? Are you ok?
A drummer friend of mine used to usher at the Fillmore East and still loves to tell the stories of what went on. It was quite a time. I was too young to hang out there, but I really wanted to.
I was at this concert! Delaney and Bonnie opened for the Byrd's, and I thought it should have been the other way around! I was a fan of the Byrd's, but Delaney and Bonnie BLEW ME AWAY! David Crosby was my favorite Byrd, and he had already flown the coop!
I was married on this day in 1972... this reminds me of how great we had in music back then. I was in radio for nearly 30 years, nothing compares to this today...the Hollies, Byrds, Doobies, Beatles, Association, Sly and The Family Stone, Billy Preston...and On and on...
Vinnie Bozzuto Yes! This is who I became. G This. I listen to it now with mature ears and know the sounds and lyrics of the 60's, 70's formed the person I was to become. To have lived during the greatest musical revolution.
Yes yes yes! I’ve been making playlists in 192khz for some new speakers, starting with what’s the most important music of my lifetime-and it always turns out to be 60s and 70s bands. I rarely attend concerts anymore, because back then I could be part of an audience of 200-2000 max and the musicians could have been in my living room with me. Byrd’s, Jefferson Airplane, Pink Floyd (right after Saucer Full of Secrets-first surround concert I’d ever heard), Moby Grape, Procol Harum, onand on and on.... thank you Electric Factory, Main Point, Bill Graham!
This lineup visited us in Lenox MA for an outdoor concert at the Music Inn (called Lenox Art Center at the time) in the summer of 1971, I was just 15, but still a fond memory of an amazing show on a warm New England summer night; I still remember the elaborate Eight Miles High - high indeed.
man he used to do some great bookings. not just that; you could afford to go even though you didn't have much money. always double and ..were there triple feature shows? pretty much l remember two (really great) bands per show.
I think I was there that night. One problem with going to the Fillmore is that no matter what you did there was going to be a bowtie sunglass guy dancing in the seat right in front of you. The alternative to that was the tambourine shaking girl joining in as if she were a band member. I think this still goes on, but I haven’t been to a concert in years - because of them.
I want his high hats and ride. Keep the rest. His drums sound like shit. He has zero hand and wrist movement. All elbow and shoulder. Inefficient and you lose speed and power.
I saw the Byrds in this era in Rochester. I took my catholic girl friend to her first rock concert. Her parents were dubious as well they should be. No drugs were injured. Gene Parsons stole the show.
@@Jbones72 The original lineup was fine live. They played the songs as they were on the records. If you like hearing a bunch of stuff you don't recognize I can understand liking this version of the Byrds.
@@michaelharrington75 Clarence White is the best musician to ever play in the band, look at the comments Mike, most agree with me. The original band was a studio band that relied HEAVILY on session players on all their records. 2 guys played on the original lineups best record. 😂
@@Jbones72 You have no clue what you're talking about. Session musicians played on 2 songs in the studio throughout the 1st 3 albums. Mr Tambourine Man, and the B-side. The Byrds played their own instruments on their albums. They only brought in other musicians to play instruments they couldn't play. They were a good band regardless of what you've been lead to believe. It was until later that they started bringing in studio musicians, and Clarence White was one of them. Clarence White was a good guitar player, I understand that. But wouldn't want to see the Byrds play a bunch of jam songs I've never heard.
The film crew must have been fans/friends of Skip Batten. Meanwhile, the real creative energy here is Clarence White's and a little Mcguinn. But the cameraman can't seem to find them. Pity.
The Byrds have so many good songs, sounds like a band that was evolving. 1970, so many great groups touring, how could they not get lost in the shuffle?
I used to think The Doobie Bros. did something a LITTLE different from the Byrds hit of two years earlier until i heard the LIVE Byrds version. McGuinn got totally ripped off except for the fact that no one in The Doobies could play like Clarence.
I saw this edition of the Byrds at a PA local College sometime in the early 70s, could be even 1970. I remember them as being really good, probably the strongest instrumental version of the Byrds. You can get a taste here.
This presentation was just on my 9th birthday. Everything was still revolutionary, despite the tragedies with deaths and the Vietnam war still going on. ☮️✌🏻😧✌🏻🕊️ 🇧🇷
Good gracious Lord, who knew the Byrds Bass player could rock. I like that didn't even sing the song 8 miles high and the crowd went ka Ray zee! Too cool.
Richard, it's not the camera operator's doing; it's the direct fault of the director and the fact that there wasn't a raised stage so the musicians could be adequately covered.
Apparently the cameraman thinks the bass player is the star attraction... It seems the bass player agrees judging by how much he overplays on Eight Miles High...
unbelievably clean and clear footage of lower east side as I remember it as a kid working that area w/ my father on a soda truck. The marquis was there until at least '78. IGA Lion right next door and Hells Angels down the side street.
Well it is the 1970s. Yes Digital was yet to come for all you Twitter Facebook generation but good ol film gave a real rich look that video & digital cant. Film is best for me
+Bruce Berman Same here! Among the concerts I saw there was Zep in '69. I got into the sold out show for free (a friend had connections) and I bought some good acid from a guy at the front door! I know, never by drugs from a stranger in the East Village, unless you want to get ripped off but I took a chance since he told me that he was also going to the show, promised it was good and even came up to me during it to ask how it was. A rare evening!
Grooooovy mannnnn. Great jamming espec the jittering drummer. It was all hair, beards & beads led by the Beatles who the Byrd's formed on the basis of "..I can do that". Nicely filmed with all band members given a fair screen time.
I don't know anything about rock or music history, but I'm surprised they are playing for such a small audience. I thought by 1970 they were so famous they'd be playing in a stadium, right? Also I wonder how they made it if such a small venue. I thought like other rock stars they became millionaires. Is that true? Really though some portion of the band was touring in about 2002 and played for a festival on the Iron Range in Minnesota. I met the bass player. He said he was playing with The Byrds since 1969 and looks kind of like the guy in the film. He said he owns a hobby farm in Oregon and whenever called to play he reemerges. A guy, not Roger McGuinn, said he also played with The Byrds at their peak. So two original players then. I went to the hotel bar/restaurant where they were staying. They were all easy going down to earth people. The drummer, not the original, was so good at piano, he played the lounge's grand piano. We all sang not Byrds stuff but Beatles, Crosby - Stills... Another new Byrd member grabbed his acoustic guitar. All four sang by then and did a really great version of "Don't Let Me Down", well, great versions of everything ha! It was the greatest time until 1 or 2AM when the security guard nicely told everyone they had to quit. It was well beyond closing time. I couldn't believe it when they invited me to a special gathering at a small rural bar I think called, "Popeye's", or something like that, where nearby they all stayed at a friend's cabin on a lake near Detroit Lakes MN. People came with original Byrds albums from the Sixties and two of the original guys autographed them. I could hardly believe I was there kind of a feeling. One of the originals... forgot his name, even gave the bar/restaurant owner my name to let me in. It was a packed crowd and they played the old classics and new music they'd written. Thanks to whomever created this video!
Great stuff, MWJ! They sold more albums from 1965-'67 than at any other time … well-loved all along but nowhere near the commercial success that the Doobies, Eagles, CSN and other bands that came along a half-decade or more after them enjoyed (no justice).
@@McChazm Hi! Thanks for your informative response. I remember an old Bob Dylan quote where he said of any band he wished he played with it would be the Byrds. The one I talked to the most was really interested in a story I was writing in screenplay form. He said he wanted to write a script too... I think it was Sci-Fi. We talked at the bar for quite a while, and no big ego at all. That Iron Range fest was in about 1996 and really if two of them were originals, at least from 1969, then they wouldn't be playing like they were, at a small venue, if they were millionaires, plus joining the band after their peak you mention '65 - '67. The Letterman were there too, and only one of the four was original, yet they joked about how fans like to try to remember who was who and they said all through the Letterman's history there were changes in group members. They had serious fans who followed them on their tour too. Bob Dylan played in Duluth and for only $25 a ticket in 1999. He lowered the price maybe because Duluth area being so economically depressed. Some fans, a guy and his lady, dressed in expensive black leather outfits, said they followed them all over Europe on their tour. They said the tickets in Vegas were $150! I met 3 guys who weren't "rich" at all, worked for a golf course in Ireland, saved their money, and were following Dylan's tour then too!
I saw the Byrds w/ Michael Clark and Gene Clark, one was the drummer and the other guitar. They had Rick Roberts, from FireFall ('That's a Strange Way to Tell Me You Love Me') which they played. Blondie Chapman was in the band too and they played Sloop John B (from his time with the Beach Boys, at least that's how it was presented.) The Byrds songs were wonderful with all the leads and harmonies. It was an earlier tour, a super group of sorts and I enjoyed it very much.
It sounds to me like you met John York, who was a Byrd for two albums in 1969. The bassist here was suffering from Alzheimer's by 2002 and died in 2003. Stadiums were not played at very commonly in 1970. Even at their peak in 1965, the Byrds played in many small venues. Based on the description you provided, I honestly don't think you met any of the original 1964 members in that incident.
@@WelshKnight1066 Hi! Thanks for well informed response! Wasn't Roger with them still in 1969? One guy said he was original and I think his name was Terry, but forgot. We visited a long time about screenplays as he was writing one and I had written several. Maybe by "original" he meant since the late Sixties. They sounded very good and some there with original albums to autograph... but like you say they broke up in 1965. So Roger just soloed ever since 1965 or maybe returned for special anniversary like performances? They played the first concert in my area at a festival and stayed in the hotel I mentioned in Hibbing and that's where they jammed in the bar/lounge at I think the "Park Hotel" until 2AM even beyond closing. I car-camped when they played at "Popeye's" in Detroit Lakes, MN they said they had an old friend who owned a cabin on a lake near there. Wow, so none of them were original. They played at the "Iron Gate" festival in Chisolm, MN I think it was called back when I lived near there.
Saw the same lineup in Indianapolis about 6 months before this concert. The Eight Miles High jam was definitely a highlight of their live show in that era.
Never heard of any full concert being 16 minutes and 17 seconds, this must be Alvin and the chipmunks version featuring Alvin Lee guest appearance he's super fast lead guitarist 😊✌️♥️
I saw this lineup at an outdoor venue in Bloomington, Indiana, in May of 1970. It may have not been the original group, but Clarence White, OMG! Also on the bill, opening act, BB King, and the Jefferson Airplane closing the show. It is Skip Batten on bass, but not sure of the guy in the wire rim glasses (playing some kind of percussion)in the first part of 8 miles high, anyone? He did not play with them in Bloomington.
Jimmy Seiter (or something like that) on percussion. he might have been their road manager. i was at this show. if i remember right (doubtful), Delaney and Bonnie were on the bill, possibly Van Morrison, Albert King.
Sammy Scotch. Yeah, for a 13 year old kid who took his transistor radio everywhere he went, it was an incredible experience in an amazing venue on a beautiful summer night.
My name is Marty. I’m a 70-year-old attorney and I live in Louisville Kentucky. As I type this note I’m listening to “Fifth Dimension” by the Byrds.
The evolution of a band. Not the folk rock pioneers anymore. but a superb rock ensemble with one of the most influential guitarists of the era. I'm glad McGuinn kept it going.
When did this transition start to a jam band? Always thought of them as a vocal band.
@@user-yq8sx2dh4k Around 1969 when McGuinn was the only original member and Gram Parsons and Chris Hillman went on to form the "Flying Burrito Brothers". He had Clarence White on telecaster, one of the greatest guitar players ever. They totally moved from harmony to jamming.
@@roblabelle7874 Skip Battin (playing bass here) brought immense talent as well. Among the oldest with 'Rock' on his resume , born in 1934, he had some success as a solo artist (vids on RUclips), but his 1973 solo album titled 'Skip Battin' is a true classic! I like every track. Especially *St Louis Browns*. The Byrds' Clarence White smokes on guitar on this album, and McGuinn solos on one track.
Cream was very influential for a lot of late 60s bands as far as jamming things out
Saw the Byrds, Lovin Spoonful, Beach Boys, Chad and Jeremy and Love at the Hollywood Bowl Sumner of 66. My first concert. I was 13.
Groovy
What a line up that concert was!
They used to put four or five acts on for like four or five bucks !!
Peter Koulouris : onward and upward , you were very fortunate.
Percy Sledge, Captain Beefheart and Sir Douglas Quintet also on the bill. KRLA Summer Spectacular. It was very, very cool.
What a fantastic lineup- Clarence, Gene, Roger, and Skip. Absolutely the best
Who is here listening to this in January 3rd 2020?
Me ! I saw The Byrds debut on Ed Sullivan.
Remember him?
@@daviddorchester2784 Old Ed Sullivan....I watched him all the time. I'm 63 years old...Came close to dying with a bad illness this past year...Finally got over it and now I'm totally grateful for my health.
me
Well, it’s the Byrds so...
Me, I'm 56 years old and Rock 'n Roll is my life. This song plays on voturock.caster.fm/ (Brasil)
That drummer is fantastic
Yep. See also the drummer with Santana at woodstock.
Gene Parsons man. The best. Good singer, songwiter, guitar player and inventor (the B bender) too!
Sure is!...Gene Parsons...Skip Battin on bass is also fabulous here!!
Not a fan.
@@titostacos We don’t care
So glad Marty Stuart is keeping that guitar on the road!
Jay haskett has clarences amp
Tony Rice had his Martin acoustic. No idea where it is since Tony passed.
This is a phenomenal rhythm section, man.
I will use it to play my guitar,.
Yeah, heavy man.
Gram Parsons was a banjo/mandolin player. He learned drums on the job; self taught. He showed up for a gig and was told you're on the drums in this band and over the course of the gigs he figured it out. see the Fretboard Journal interview. He really drives this band.
@@JoshuaPolak I think you mean Gene Parsons.
Gram Parsons was a singer/ guitar player and left the band in '68 I believe.
@@joeshoe6184 of course. An easy mistake to make ..
Anyone who dislikes this does not understand the context of what was happening in rock at this time. You had Jimi Hendrix influencing Miles Davis and avant-garde jazz influencing rock in turn. You may still dislike this discordant sound that resulted in both jazz and rock but there is no disputing the magnificence of the playing. McGuinn and White on guitars, Battin on bass, and the great Gene Parsons on drums produced an incredible magnus opus with their syncopated version of the previous Byrds' number one hit EIGHT MILES HIGH. This is classic!
TRASH !!!!!!!!!
axiomist hahaha Your one-word response is moronic. You have no argument as to why you think it's trash, just your own subjective opinion. No wonder you call yourself "axiomist" since an axiom is a statement generally held to be true that MAY NOT NECESSARILY BE SO! Run away and play with the other dopes, axiomist, come back when you can support a rational opinion. A dumb unsupported outburst doesn't cut it. Your reply shows exactly what is wrong with social media and why the world has become so much dumber since its inception hahaha (made me laugh so much)
@@moniquedouglas2448 You speak for me, Monique. BUT ... The issue is not social media. Bygone era music comes alive to an expanding audience of first time listeners via my APPLE X port of call RUclips access. Thank God that sci-fi is a dream come true with modern gadgetry; but modern pop music makes me yearn for another musical genre from another historical era.Computer manufactured music is sterile and synthetic.;real musicians plucking,banging,strumming with their hands strikes a matchstick that sets passion afire in the hearts and souls of people to sing and dance their woeful lonely lives away into an explosive frenzy that shouts joy all over the spacious universe with the voice of Man singing the praises of being alive on the tiny blue speck of earthan stardust we make our home. LIFE alone in my headzone without sound spaces me out of my mind!!!Although the early original version of 8 Miles High is MY favorite(what does syncopated mean?) the Clarence White, Gene Parsons sound is an enhanced(better?) more tonal textured sound.Thank God for D-I-V-E-R-S-I-T-Y.
@@moniquedouglas2448 The spectrum of public opinion is a dynamic range;comprised of varying levels of appreciation.The social media web is also a social support group of interchangeable thoughts .Sharing means helping all of us to advance, together.Hopefully,it will live up to its billing as a group S.O.S. call for HELP that elicits a collective response for the betterment of all!!!
@@moniquedouglas2448 This is a question for the Razor sharp insightful intellect that YOU,alone,are:Axiom's ONE word exclamatory comment triggered a nearly 100 word overreactive retort by YOU aimed at his empty head ; meant to underscore his dim wit...But...do you think that he'll get it in light of the FACT that he is BRAIN DEAD?!?
Roger McGuinn said many times later on that this lineup was the "the best band I ever had."
I don’t know about the ‘best’ that’s debatable . But I think they easily the most cooking lineup they ever had . Clarence with that rhythm section? Damn !!
@@brucediamond4703 That's what he meant, i.e., best live band.
Personally, I think this was the SECOND BEST band McGuinn ever played with, the first being The Wrecking Crew who gave him all of his hits.
Maybe the best band in terms of instrumental ability, but it couldn't have been the best in terms of vocals, especially without Crosby. These guys here were adequate vocally, but if they had sang on the studio versions, I seriously doubt if they'd have sounded as perfect vocally as the original Byrds. Crosby's high harmonies were special and generally flawless.
The lead vocals were likely double tracked for extra fulness. Don't know about Crosby's, but his vocals probably were too.
Double tracking (singing the same part twice) was a thing then, perhaps because the Beatles did it. Often one could hear on Beatles tracks two parts when the phrasing slightly differed. The second track was often just under the original track in term of volume.
@@ianmclennon3602 Tell me you know nothing about the Byrds without telling me you know nothing about the Byrds. Best to stop talking
What an amazing band this line up of the Byrds. The drumming is so tight.
Here we go again with the "tight" description. Yeah, tight maybe but not The Byrds and not what I would call creative or distinguished. Drumming doesn't make a band.
@@timj9418 But it can ruin a band. Bad drummers can absolutely bring an entire band down. It's why when I was growing up in the 60's if someone discovered a good drummer, every band wanted him and was willing to replace the guy they had. The original drummer with the Byrds wasn't very good. McGuinn went out and got top notch musicians for this incarnation. Clarence White's reputation preceded him of course, he was a bluegrass legend even at that young age, but the drummer and bass player were also top notch musicians. I saw this line up and they were terrific. And yes in 1970 their playing was both creative and distinguished. Maybe 49 years later you don't recognize it for what it was back then.
It wasn't The Byrds? This is the only incarnation of the Byrds that could play live without sounding like shite.
@@tylermcauliffe1065 Maybe, but who really needs to hear an extended bass solo on "Eight Miles High"? 🤷♂️Surely not what that band was about?
@@losttango - that’s the way things were back then. Who needed a 20 minute drum solo? I endured “Moby Dick” when I saw Led Zeppelin in Aug ‘71. It may be sacrilege to say that about Bonham (and I was a drummer back then!). Also, during that was an extended violin-bow solo by Page. I’m afraid it did nothing for me at the time. It’s what bands did “back in the day.”
The Byrds best live lineup bar none. Fantastic.
I'm somewhere in that crowd. Could never forget that rendition of 8 Miles High - seriously, like ten minutes of jamming, with no lyrics, and the whole band coked up the wazoo. Oh well, maybe I was just too young to appreciate it.
😮
The Byrds best jamming combo, a truly great band early and later...…
*16 minutes is the shortest full concert Ive ever heard of !*
Not a Byrd's concert but September 23, 1970 - The Byrds take part in the filming of “Welcome To The Fillmore, ” a Bill Graham’s project at The Fillmore East on Second Avenue near East 6th in New-York City
@@albiefraser4057 yes when I went there live they did more songs Lay Lady Lay was new and some older ones it was THE BYRDS and PROCOL HARUM THE KINKS didn't perform because they had a fight the night before
There is another segment of 9.53 on show in the selections below the playline. Groooovy mannnnnn..
Yeah, and they sucked!!
and the first three minutes are a documentary, so it's only maybe thirteen. I've seen bands that do one song longer than that
l am now a young 75 and as a teen through the1960s I enjoyed the London club scene big time and all my pals thought The Byrds outstripped the likes of The Beatles and The Stones by miles! Hanging on the wall in my studio, in a place of honour since 1965 after I obtained it during my first visit to Arlington Virginia is an album cover containing a vinyl LP of Mr Tambourine Man signed by the entire group which I treasure to this day. When I met Mick Jagger in Mustique in 1988, as we both shared the same Italian architect Mario Spinella, when we built our villas on Mustique and St Vincent I showed him the signed LP which he would have bought at any price, but was not for sale and remains priceless to this day. At least then I got Mick to sing at my Norwegian wife's 40th Birthday party celebration's in January 1989 on Basils Bar in Mustique and Ringo Star and Barbara Bach turned up so a great party that finished at 8 am the following morning! I still listen to the Byrds at least 2 or 3 times a week. They were then and to this day remain the best Folk Rock group EVER!!!
Full of your own self promotional bull xxx. The first sentence gave it away. Everyone knows that the Byrds were really crap live on their first tour of England.
legitt !
I have been listening to the byrds since they hit the St. Louis airways. Very special to me.
But they know they weren’t even on the same page as The Beatles.
Nobody was.
my favourite american band of all time
Skip and Gene were one of my favorite rhythm sections of all time!
Wow, the Byrds made that song about ten times better than the original!!
Yeah---to the DEAF, and the D U M B !!!!!
@@georgescarlett2320 Well, Art Reynolds wrote the song. Not the Doobies.
Far out! The Byrds were cooking! Great view of the Filmore spirit. Bill Graham left an amazing legacy. Thank you for sharing this.
LOVE this footage and getting to see a packed house like that cheering on one of the best and most under appreciated bands of the late 60s/early 70s.
Michael, a correction if you don't mind...the color version of the "Playboy After Dark" series shot in a soundstage at CBS Television City, if I remember correctly. There is no "packed house." The people you see dancing in front of the band were either friends of Hefner's or paid extras or both. It was a very small group of people, shot in such a way as to make it appear to be a larger crowd.
@@writer62951 I know the Playboy stuff was on a soundstage, but I was speaking about this Fillmore clip.
Under appreciated? You must have not been alive in the sixties.
@@rjwh67220 I’m talking about the 1968-1972 lineup
Gene Parsons' drumming - just wow. Incredible.
The 8 Miles High jam sounds a little bit like the breakdown part in Rare Earth's Get Ready! Anyway, I'm a huge Clarence White and was disappointed that he received very little camera time. What a great guitarist. The Byrds have always been a great band. I saw McGuinn about a year ago with Marty Stuart. Fantastic. He defies the aging process!
I also saw him with Marty Stuart in roanoke Virginia at the Jefferson center around a year or so ago, he was a excellent entertainer
THAT was EXACTLY what I was thinking 🤔 in regards to Clarence LeBlanc ❤
Was really hoping to get a little more footage of Clarence White. Skip got much of the camera time which is ok I guess
Saw them in June of 69 at Fillmore East. On bill with Procol Harum. 2 great shows!
Great to see a vintage concert in such clarity.
I had the privilege & the honor to see this version of the Birds at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, N.Y around about the same time. Clarence White was one fabulously fine guitarist! He, too, was taken long before his tiime! 😢💔🙏😎🎶🎸🐺
I was at this show at the Fillmore East, I remember being blown away by Clarence White’s guitar playing!
Is that what you call it?
Clarence was one of those guys that invented a new genre of playing. Just fantastic.
Roger McQuinn, Skip Battin, Clarence White, Gene Parsons
Hein Fokker thankyou
I love it. Skip of 'Skip & Flip' fame. The late great Clarence White, B-bender guitarist extrordinaire. Gene Parsons, great drummer. Mcguinn stuck it out, master of the 12 string, great writer, vocalist, leader.
Remember Kralingen Pop 1970, same Byrds.
Look up Stamping ground, the movie or just Rotterdam. Enjoy.
One of the best line-up of The Byrds...
Great footage! Well preserved. Looks clean, clear. Can't beat the look of film.
It looks like video to me. My clue is how the light bouncing off of the chrome mic stand looks like a comets tail when the camera moves quickly. And those are some crazy cameras I see once in a while.
Definitely video. It’s just professionally shot video, well preserved.
Except when it's video.
I think this is the most musically talented edition of the Byrds. Their playing is awesome.
Specialy the drummer.
Irrelevant when the essence of The Byrds is pummeled by this crew of "superior" talent. And not to forget that Gene Clark was a songwriting genius while collectively this group of "superiors" couldn't write a single song that anyone would remember beyond exiting the Fillmore.
@@rogermurray8553 Roger! You completely nailed it! I've always regretted that the original Byrds material was not performed live by a crack band. I saw the original group twice - once, standing beside a swimming pool right in front of them - and they clearly hadn't rehearsed or had enough experience yet to do their material justice. I also saw this edition of the band (from this video) at Fillmore East, and though I love Clarence White, this was not the Byrds I wanted to see.
Maybe someday when I'm even older I'll do a Byrds tribute band. ;-)
The Byrds were ultimately a "studio" band at their most excellent and what they accomplished on Fifth Dimension, Younger Than Yesterday and The Notorious Byrd Bros is unmatched by any group, American or foreign. I can forgive Crosby his egoistic excesses but not McGuinn for trucking out this blurred aural din that has absolutely nothing to do with the superior, highly distinctive and articulate work of The Byrds. Dreadful. Good luck with that cover band, Dennis.
Longest bass solo ever recorded! This shows why bass solos are rare thank God - and I love the bass!
They were all outta' this world,ultra fantastic! 😍🎼🎵🎶✌️
Too bad the director didn't know Clarence White was onstage, at least judging from this footage. He plays a cool run beginning at 9:00. Very idiosyncratic electric player--his straight country/acoustic style dodges here and there, but to my ear is more structured than on the Tele. His tone and attack here are fascinating; I just wish more of the gig was available. White was a major, major talent. He probably would have broken out with more exposure in the pop market. (If he wanted to.) Master stroke by McGuinn bringing him aboard Byrds Mark II.
Clarence White is buried a 1/2 mile down the street, here at Joshua Memorial Cemetery in Lancaster, CA. Never forget the night he was hit by a drunk driver pulling into the parking lot of BJ's Honky Tonk Palmdale. A "tragedy" is an understatement!
The best short show ever! Just 16 minutes! They deserved a lot more time!
say what you want about the byrds. they were always a tight group despite who was in the band at the time.
Jim McGuinn's band- jerk
I must respectfully disagree. I saw the final iteration of the Byrds (Whose music I continue to love) at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic N.J. Opening act was called Tranquility and they were twice the band the Byrds were, at least on that night. I had expected more from the Byrds. Excrement occurs.
@@ilkamarquardt6704 cant stand "Roger" and his phony 700 club w pat robertson
What Byrds are you talking about? This video features only one of the original band--Roger (nee Jim) McGuinn. The first iteration of the band was known for sloppy live performances, so calling them "tight" is nonsense. I love the band for what it produced on record until roughly the time of "Sweetheart of the Rodeo" when the band's composition started changing more radically. But this version of the band with Clarence White was probably much "tighter" than the original group, for what that's worth. I just don't think it's right to call it The Byrds.
Tim Jahns
Latter day Byrds were great. Gene Parsons a big improvement over Michael Clarke on drums and I give the nod to Skip Battin over Chris Hillman on bass.
I'm from England & I have to say I've always loved this band.
Those were the great,early days of rock when the bassist and drummer could just jam away and the audience loved it.
We headed for the men's room to get further high..
Why is that a good thing lol? Get on with it. Play the f’ing song I came to hear. I don’t have all day for your stoned nonsense. Ha ha ha.
Virginia Addis: I have absolutely no idea what you’re trying to say lol. Are you calling me a wanna-be? A wanna-be what? Is today’s music children’s music? What does that even mean? Are you belittling the next 3 generations music? Mighty close minded if so. The phantom lol? Wtf? Are you ok?
no one noticed the guitar went on the fritz?
@@mrsmartypants_1 As an old drummer, I might agree..
They break strings tho' (just came to Me)
Alohas
A drummer friend of mine used to usher at the Fillmore East and still loves to tell the stories of what went on. It was quite a time. I was too young to hang out there, but I really wanted to.
I was at this concert! Delaney and Bonnie opened for the Byrd's, and I thought it should have been the other way around! I was a fan of the Byrd's, but Delaney and Bonnie BLEW ME AWAY! David Crosby was my favorite Byrd, and he had already flown the coop!
There was nothing like those Fillmore East shows.5 bucks got you 5 hours of greatness every time..Oh I miss Delaney and Bonnie !
I was married on this day in 1972... this reminds me of how great we had in music back then. I was in radio for nearly 30 years, nothing compares to this today...the Hollies, Byrds, Doobies, Beatles, Association, Sly and The Family Stone, Billy Preston...and On and on...
Vinnie Bozzuto Yes! This is who I became. G
This. I listen to it now with mature ears and know the sounds and lyrics of the 60's, 70's formed the person I was to become. To have lived during the greatest musical revolution.
And I was on my honeymoon on this day in 1972!
Yes yes yes! I’ve been making playlists in 192khz for some new speakers, starting with what’s the most important music of my lifetime-and it always turns out to be 60s and 70s bands. I rarely attend concerts anymore, because back then I could be part of an audience of 200-2000 max and the musicians could have been in my living room with me. Byrd’s, Jefferson Airplane, Pink Floyd (right after Saucer Full of Secrets-first surround concert I’d ever heard), Moby Grape, Procol Harum, onand on and on.... thank you Electric Factory, Main Point, Bill Graham!
8 miles high rocks!! What a great jam!
Yeah, good thing McGuinn introduced it by title, or no one would have known what it was, (or WASN"T)!
@@georgescarlett2320 I agree, they turned a great song into an extended (and tedious) drum/bass solo.
This lineup visited us in Lenox MA for an outdoor concert at the Music Inn (called Lenox Art Center at the time) in the summer of 1971, I was just 15, but still a fond memory of an amazing show on a warm New England summer night; I still remember the elaborate Eight Miles High - high indeed.
man he used to do some great bookings. not just that; you could afford to go even though you didn't have much money. always
double and ..were there triple feature shows? pretty much l remember two (really great) bands per show.
These songs kept me sane in Vietnam.
Thank you for your service and our freedoms sir. :-)
From one Vet to another, Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you Tom ♫
AMEN BROTHER ,
I think I was there that night. One problem with going to the Fillmore is that no matter what you did there was going to be a bowtie sunglass guy dancing in the seat right in front of you. The alternative to that was the tambourine shaking girl joining in as if she were a band member. I think this still goes on, but I haven’t been to a concert in years - because of them.
What a rocking rhythm section!!!!!
I love the Byrds.
16 dislikes?! Ok, so it's obvious not the full concert. However, it gets a thumbs up for Clarence!
I was there and The Byrds were not the only group playing. The Byrds, Elvin Bishop, Albert King, Van Morrison, The Flock, Allman Brothers all played.
Bieber Fans
@@eltrow - What a great lineup!
And for Uncle Bobo! :)
nobody ever talks about how good and cool a drummer Gene Parsons was ....wow ...he and the bass had a groove going !!
Word
I want his high hats and ride. Keep the rest. His drums sound like shit. He has zero hand and wrist movement. All elbow and shoulder. Inefficient and you lose speed and power.
enkibumbu ...entire band lacks...riding a brand name...
@@getredytagetredy This band lacks for nothing. Great guitar work, and the bassist and drummer provide a powerful, flexible, swinging pulse.
WHAT? Weirdo!
8 Miles High to me is the musical equivalent of a crazy long Adrenalin rush...amazing.
I saw the Byrds in Memphis in Oct. of 1970....the opening act was the Flying Burrito Brothers....great show....
?
All things considered, this video didn't make my day. On a normal day it would have. I just had an extraordinary day, that's all.
Roger McGuinn is one of the greatest guitar 🎸 pickers of all time! His playing style is amazing! 💥🎸😎
Five days before this I was at a Grateful Dead concert (all-nighter--left the place at dawn)
The Great Clarence White.
playing major thirds on a minor chord does not sound good, but string benders are cool
Yup. One more f the greatest unknowns
@JDTX yea but Stuart will never surpass Clarence White in skills, talent, and status.
@JDTX
I wish.
Amazing - where did this film/video come from? Long live the Byrds and Fillmore East!
Wow. Starting off with the Maker of the universe!!
falls in the category of "things I heard about but didn't experience directly". Thank you RUclips/Google (but you already knew that I felt that way).
Those were the days when the audience actually sat in their seats (well, mostly). And yet, the gigs were STILL very enjoyable.
I love the bass lines! 😍❤️🎼🎵🎶
Creative ,talented, genius…ty💎✌️
greetings from salzburg austria .......... maahoo wolfsair und tala
I saw the Byrds in this era in Rochester. I took my catholic girl friend to her first rock concert. Her parents were dubious as well they should be. No drugs were injured. Gene Parsons stole the show.
The best live Byrds lineup, not debatable.
I would much rather have seen the original lineup. This doesn't even sound like the Byrds.
@@michaelharrington75 The original lineup wasn’t great live, by their own admission. Any band with Clarence White is going to be superior.
@@Jbones72 The original lineup was fine live. They played the songs as they were on the records. If you like hearing a bunch of stuff you don't recognize I can understand liking this version of the Byrds.
@@michaelharrington75 Clarence White is the best musician to ever play in the band, look at the comments Mike, most agree with me. The original band was a studio band that relied HEAVILY on session players on all their records. 2 guys played on the original lineups best record. 😂
@@Jbones72 You have no clue what you're talking about. Session musicians played on 2 songs in the studio throughout the 1st 3 albums. Mr Tambourine Man, and the B-side. The Byrds played their own instruments on their albums. They only brought in other musicians to play instruments they couldn't play.
They were a good band regardless of what you've been lead to believe. It was until later that they started bringing in studio musicians, and Clarence White was one of them.
Clarence White was a good guitar player, I understand that. But wouldn't want to see the Byrds play a bunch of jam songs I've never heard.
The film crew must have been fans/friends of Skip Batten. Meanwhile, the real creative energy here is Clarence White's and a little Mcguinn. But the cameraman can't seem to find them. Pity.
Oh man. They're on fire. Love it!!
The Byrds have so many good songs, sounds like a band that was evolving. 1970, so many great groups touring, how could they not get lost in the shuffle?
I used to think The Doobie Bros. did something a LITTLE different from the Byrds hit of two years earlier until i heard the LIVE Byrds version. McGuinn got totally ripped off except for the fact that no one in The Doobies could play like Clarence.
Yeah, i mean as great as Skunk is, he's not Clarence.
Nobody anywhere can play like Clarence.
I saw this edition of the Byrds at a PA local College sometime in the early 70s, could be even 1970. I remember them as being really good, probably the strongest instrumental version of the Byrds. You can get a taste here.
Loved them from "Mr. Tambourine Man" till "Farther Along".
This presentation was just on my 9th birthday. Everything was still revolutionary, despite the tragedies with deaths and the Vietnam war still going on. ☮️✌🏻😧✌🏻🕊️ 🇧🇷
Good gracious Lord, who knew the Byrds Bass player could rock. I like that didn't even sing the song 8 miles high and the crowd went ka Ray zee! Too cool.
Amazing performances from every member...a fabulous, underrated lineup. (too bad the cameraman stupidly drifts away from Clarence...).
Richard, it's not the camera operator's doing; it's the direct fault of the director and the fact that there wasn't a raised stage so the musicians could be adequately covered.
@@writer62951 Thanks....
Apparently the cameraman thinks the bass player is the star attraction...
It seems the bass player agrees judging by how much he overplays on Eight Miles High...
I keep wanting to move the screen with my fingers and that doesn't work!I would like to have seen more of Clarence!
God Bless Bill Graham....r.i.p.
Geezus what a show !
unbelievably clean and clear footage of lower east side as I remember it as a kid working that area w/ my father on a soda truck. The marquis was there until at least '78. IGA Lion right next door and Hells Angels down the side street.
Yup!
The video quality is amazing.
Well it is the 1970s. Yes Digital was yet to come for all you Twitter Facebook generation but good ol film gave a real rich look that video & digital cant. Film is best for me
lucky enough to have been able to see many concert there
+Bruce Berman Me too...first one was Hendrix in late '68 or early 69. Wasn't that a time and place ?!?
+Bruce Berman Same here! Among the concerts I saw there was Zep in '69. I got into the sold out show for free (a friend had connections) and I bought some good acid from a guy at the front door! I know, never by drugs from a stranger in the East Village, unless you want to get ripped off but I took a chance since he told me that he was also going to the show, promised it was good and even came up to me during it to ask how it was. A rare evening!
+Da Brain Yup, never to be repeated.
This footage is incredible. What an upgrade to what I’d seen prior. Cheers.
Grooooovy mannnnn. Great jamming espec the jittering drummer. It was all hair, beards & beads led by the Beatles who the Byrd's formed on the basis of "..I can do that". Nicely filmed with all band members given a fair screen time.
I call this the country rock/jazz fusion version of Eight Miles High... love it! Awesome video!!
Geweldig! Daar kunnen ze nu wat van leren! Wat een muzikanten! Geen rijmelarij van een zogenaamd rap groepje, maar echte muziek kunstenaars!
I don't know anything about rock or music history, but I'm surprised they are playing for such a small audience. I thought by 1970 they were so famous they'd be playing in a stadium, right? Also I wonder how they made it if such a small venue. I thought like other rock stars they became millionaires. Is that true? Really though some portion of the band was touring in about 2002 and played for a festival on the Iron Range in Minnesota. I met the bass player. He said he was playing with The Byrds since 1969 and looks kind of like the guy in the film. He said he owns a hobby farm in Oregon and whenever called to play he reemerges. A guy, not Roger McGuinn, said he also played with The Byrds at their peak. So two original players then. I went to the hotel bar/restaurant where they were staying. They were all easy going down to earth people. The drummer, not the original, was so good at piano, he played the lounge's grand piano. We all sang not Byrds stuff but Beatles, Crosby - Stills... Another new Byrd member grabbed his acoustic guitar. All four sang by then and did a really great version of "Don't Let Me Down", well, great versions of everything ha! It was the greatest time until 1 or 2AM when the security guard nicely told everyone they had to quit. It was well beyond closing time. I couldn't believe it when they invited me to a special gathering at a small rural bar I think called, "Popeye's", or something like that, where nearby they all stayed at a friend's cabin on a lake near Detroit Lakes MN. People came with original Byrds albums from the Sixties and two of the original guys autographed them. I could hardly believe I was there kind of a feeling. One of the originals... forgot his name, even gave the bar/restaurant owner my name to let me in. It was a packed crowd and they played the old classics and new music they'd written. Thanks to whomever created this video!
Great stuff, MWJ! They sold more albums from 1965-'67 than at any other time … well-loved all along but nowhere near the commercial success that the Doobies, Eagles, CSN and other bands that came along a half-decade or more after them enjoyed (no justice).
@@McChazm Hi! Thanks for your informative response. I remember an old Bob Dylan quote where he said of any band he wished he played with it would be the Byrds. The one I talked to the most was really interested in a story I was writing in screenplay form. He said he wanted to write a script too... I think it was Sci-Fi. We talked at the bar for quite a while, and no big ego at all. That Iron Range fest was in about 1996 and really if two of them were originals, at least from 1969, then they wouldn't be playing like they were, at a small venue, if they were millionaires, plus joining the band after their peak you mention '65 - '67. The Letterman were there too, and only one of the four was original, yet they joked about how fans like to try to remember who was who and they said all through the Letterman's history there were changes in group members. They had serious fans who followed them on their tour too. Bob Dylan played in Duluth and for only $25 a ticket in 1999. He lowered the price maybe because Duluth area being so economically depressed. Some fans, a guy and his lady, dressed in expensive black leather outfits, said they followed them all over Europe on their tour. They said the tickets in Vegas were $150! I met 3 guys who weren't "rich" at all, worked for a golf course in Ireland, saved their money, and were following Dylan's tour then too!
I saw the Byrds w/ Michael Clark and Gene Clark, one was the drummer and the other guitar. They had Rick Roberts, from FireFall ('That's a Strange Way to Tell Me You Love Me') which they played. Blondie Chapman was in the band too and they played Sloop John B (from his time with the Beach Boys, at least that's how it was presented.) The Byrds songs were wonderful with all the leads and harmonies. It was an earlier tour, a super group of sorts and I enjoyed it very much.
It sounds to me like you met John York, who was a Byrd for two albums in 1969. The bassist here was suffering from Alzheimer's by 2002 and died in 2003. Stadiums were not played at very commonly in 1970. Even at their peak in 1965, the Byrds played in many small venues. Based on the description you provided, I honestly don't think you met any of the original 1964 members in that incident.
@@WelshKnight1066 Hi! Thanks for well informed response! Wasn't Roger with them still in 1969? One guy said he was original and I think his name was Terry, but forgot. We visited a long time about screenplays as he was writing one and I had written several. Maybe by "original" he meant since the late Sixties. They sounded very good and some there with original albums to autograph... but like you say they broke up in 1965. So Roger just soloed ever since 1965 or maybe returned for special anniversary like performances? They played the first concert in my area at a festival and stayed in the hotel I mentioned in Hibbing and that's where they jammed in the bar/lounge at I think the "Park Hotel" until 2AM even beyond closing. I car-camped when they played at "Popeye's" in Detroit Lakes, MN they said they had an old friend who owned a cabin on a lake near there. Wow, so none of them were original. They played at the "Iron Gate" festival in Chisolm, MN I think it was called back when I lived near there.
My best memories i see was the Byrds...
In the seventies. Rockpalast Gruga Hall.. Life
Great quality---esp the video
Legend has it that hitchhiker is still standing there with his thumb out looking for a ride 😂
Saw the same lineup in Indianapolis about 6 months before this concert. The Eight Miles High jam was definitely a highlight of their live show in that era.
Never heard of any full concert being 16 minutes and 17 seconds, this must be Alvin and the chipmunks version featuring Alvin Lee guest appearance he's super fast lead guitarist 😊✌️♥️
I just tuned in the see and hear Clarence! Well, the rest too....
I saw this lineup at an outdoor venue in Bloomington, Indiana, in May of 1970. It may have not been the original group, but Clarence White, OMG! Also on the bill, opening act, BB King, and the Jefferson Airplane closing the show. It is Skip Batten on bass, but not sure of the guy in the wire rim glasses (playing some kind of percussion)in the first part of 8 miles high, anyone? He did not play with them in Bloomington.
Jimmy Seiter (or something like that) on percussion. he might have been their road manager. i was at this show. if i remember right (doubtful), Delaney and Bonnie were on the bill, possibly Van Morrison, Albert King.
Camera everywhere except where it ought to be; on Clarence's amazing fingers. Not even a single shot! But the music, of course, soars...
+david fields He may have amazing fingers but he's pretty boring to watch.
+Byron Gordon You must be a Kiss fan then, am I right?
+david fields roger m 12 string clarence no one ever is his class gene parsons is just special
david fields 1000% agree ❤️
Would kill to see the rest of this show. These guys are a force of nature.
i think audio of this is on byrds untitled/unissued album
Sammy Scotch. Yeah, for a 13 year old kid who took his transistor radio everywhere he went, it was an incredible experience in an amazing venue on a beautiful summer night.
who knew this existed! CLARENCE!!!
These dudes were bad ass! Definitely The Byrds best lineup. cheers TyT
Love this song OMG love the byrds all day
stellar drums and bass
Amazing
Voor mij waren The Byrds een geweldige Band !