The Byrds- Byrdmaniax
"Byrdmaniax" is a marvelous late-period Byrds album, with some stellar songs and
affecting performances. In fact, there are several all- time Byrds classics to
be found: 'Pale Blue', 'I Wanna Grow Up To Be A Politician' and 'Glory, Glory'.
The very best tracks, though, are better than anything The Byrds had ever come
up with to that time. McGuinn's amazing 'I Trust' and Skip Battin's strange ode
to old Hollywood, 'Citizen Kane' (the guitars on that track, along with the raw
attack of Gene Parson's drumming, seems to predict grunge...I'm just babbling
now). Then there's Skip's pastoral 'Absolute Happiness' which is not at all bad.
Actually, all of the material in "Byrdmaniax" is downright great; the only
flaw--and this is a big one-- is the overproduction. The Byrds were at their
height at this point, with the McGuinn-Battin-Parsons-White lineup; and yet
they're buried underneith tons of ridiculous strings. That pretty much destroyed
the wonderful 'Kathleen's Song' (without the kitchen sink it is included on the
1990 Byrds box set) and vastly diminishes the power of 'Pale Blue' and 'My
Destiny'. It should be noted that The Byrds were not responsible for this and
were incensed tremendously that their producer would screw them so badly; as a
direct result the band itself produced the next lp, "Farther Along". That album
has the edge over "Byrdmaniax" due to it's amazingly quiet and clean simplicity
of both material and production. But don't pass up "Byrdmaniax". There are
several great cuts that didn't make the box set (why in the world was 'Citizen
Kane' not included in the box? ) and that are necessary for anyone wishing to
gain a complete understanding of one of America's greatest and most influential
country-rock bands.
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