THE BYRDS GREATEST HITS and BYRDS TURN, TURN, TURN: THE ULTIMATE COLLECTION (3-CD Set)

How much you like The Byrds might determine which of these Greatest Hit collections you’d prefer. Surprisingly, The Byrds Greatest Hits came out in 1967–early in their career. The Byrds Turn, Turn, Turn: The Ultimate Collection came out in 2015 and features many of the songs on the first Greatest Hits album…plus many more songs I’d never heard of before I listened to this 48 song 3-CD set.

I like most of the covers The Byrds did of Bob Dylan songs. The Byrds benefited from the Folk-Rock movement in the Sixties. But, once that faded out…so did they. The Byrds formed in Los Angeles, California, in 1964. The band underwent multiple lineup changes throughout its existence, with frontman Roger McGuinn (known as Jim McGuinn until mid-1967) remaining the sole consistent member. In 1973, The Byrds produced their last album, Byrds, and flew away. Are you a fan of The Byrds? Any favorite songs here? GRADE: B+ for both CDs

TRACKLIST:

A1Mr. Tambourine Man Written By Bob Dylan2:17
A2I’ll Feel A Whole Lot Better Written-By – G. Clark2:31
A3The Bells Of Rhymney Written-By – I. Davies*, P. Seeger3:31
A4Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is A Season) Adapted By [Words From The Book Of Ecclesiastes]3:35
A5All I Really Want To Do Written By Bob Dylan2:02
A6Chimes Of Freedom Written By Bob Dylan3:52
B1Eight Miles HighWritten-By – D. Crosby*, G. Clark3:36
B2Mr. Spaceman Written by J. McGuinn2:09
B35 D (Fifth Dimension) Written by J. McGuinn2:33
B4So You Want To Be A Rock ‘N’ Roll StarWritten-By – C. Hillman2:03
B5My Back Pages Written by Bob Dylan3:05

TRACKLIST:

1-1All I Really Want To Do
1-2I’ll Feel A Whole Lot Better
1-3I Knew I’d Want You
1-4Mr. Tambourine Man
1-5Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is A Season)
1-6She Don’t Care About Time
1-7The World Turns All Around Her
1-8Here Without You
1-9She Has A Way
1-10Spanish Harlem Incident
1-11It Won’t Be Wrong
1-12Why
1-13Mr. Spaceman
1-14What’s Happening?
1-15Captain Soul
1-165d (Fifth Dimension)
2-1Eight Miles High
2-2Set You Free This Time
2-3Wild Mountain Thyme
2-4So You Want To Be A Rock’n’Roll Star
2-5Everybody’s Been Burned
2-6My Back Pages
2-7Have You Seen Her Face
2-8Don’t Make Waves
2-9Lady Friend
2-10Old John Robertson
2-11Chimes Of Freedom
2-12Goin’ Back
2-13Change Is Now
2-14Artificial Energy
2-15Pretty Boy Floyd
2-16I Am A Pilgrim
3-1You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere
3-2The Christian Life
3-3Hickory Wind
3-4You’re Still On My Mind
3-5One Hundred Years From Now
3-6Bad Night At The Whiskey
3-7Drug Store Truck Drivin’ Man
3-8Old Blue
3-9Wasn’t Born To Follow
3-10Child Of The Universe
3-11Ballad Of Easy Rider
3-12Oil In My Lamp
3-13Jesus Is Just Alright
3-14Lay Lady Lay
3-15It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue
3-16Chestnut Mare

27 thoughts on “THE BYRDS GREATEST HITS and BYRDS TURN, TURN, TURN: THE ULTIMATE COLLECTION (3-CD Set)

  1. Jeff Smith

    I always liked the Byrds; I didn’t buy all their albums, but I played what I had often. I guess I played the Greatest Hits lp and the mixed live/studio (Untitled) the most. I bought their first cd box set, just called The Byrds, when it came out in 1990, and played those four cds a lot. And just last week I loaded their later 4-cd set, There Is a Time, into Apple Music and lived with that for a few days. I’m not familiar with this 3-disc set, but most everything on it is on both of the two 4-disc ones.

    That first Greatest Hits lp covered only their first four albums — but those four albums contained a lot of hit singles. My favorite is probably Eight Miles High, but there are a lot of great songs on there. The Turn Turn Turn collection includes seven of the eleven tracks from Sweetheart of the Rodeo, a seminal country-rock album. Among the later songs, Jesus Is Just Alright is probably my favorite.

    Lots of great stuff here.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Jeff, I somehow missed THERE IS TIME, that 4-CD set you mentioned. I agree with you, there’s lots of great stuff on these CDs!

      Reply
  2. Michael+Padgett

    I loved The Byrds and can still listen to them with great pleasure, but like many of the bands of that era they were more adept at making music than they were at getting along. They seem to be known mostly for their Dylan covers, but they also produced some great stuff of their own like “Eight Miles High”, my own favorite. Everyone but the most rabid Byrds fans can get the first collection and skip the other one.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Michael, as Jeff points out, THE BYRDS GREATEST HITS album included songs from their first four albums where most of their best-selling songs appeared.

      Reply
  3. Deb

    We have the same 4-CD set that Jeff S has—but when we play it, we tend to just hit the songs on the Greatest Hits album, so what Michael says is valid. My favorites are “8 Miles High” and “So You Want to Be A Rock ’n’ Roll Star” (of which Tom Petty did a great cover).

    Reply
      1. Steve+A+Oerkfitz

        Patti Smith also did a good cover of If You Want to be a Rock and Roll Star. Last time I saw her play live she was still part of her set.
        I have the 4 CD box set. It contains a couple of very early songs that sound a bit like the Beatles.

      2. george Post author

        Steve, all sorts of bands tried to sound like the Beatles in the Sixties. But those crafty Beatles kept changing their sound.

      3. Todd Mason

        But the Beatles were also trying to sound like the Byrds, most obviously with songs such as “Rain”…the Byrds were at least as protean, and it was mostly CBS that wanted to push the Dylan songs, even if Pete Seeger wrote/adapted one of their early hits. Gene Clark wrote one great and good song after another for the band, but just couldn’t stand flying…tough for a Byrd.

  4. Michael+Padgett

    There’s a very interesting documentary called DAVID CROSBY: REMEMBER MY NAME about one of the original Byrds who was kicked out of the band and later became a member of an even bigger band, CSN, which lasted a lot longer than the Byrds. In an interview Crosby says “The Byrds didn’t kick me out of the band because they didn’t want to record my songs. They kicked me out because I was an asshole. “

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Michael, I’ll have to check out DAVID CROSBY: REMEMBER MY NAME. Over time, I’ve heard various band mates of Crosby refer to him as an asshole.

      Reply
      1. Jeff+Meyerson

        Yes, check it out, George. We watched the Crosby documentary too, and he was an @sshole. I was impressed when I first learned that he was Hollywood Royalty, second generation, as the son of cinematographer Floyd Crosby, who won an Academy Award in 1931 for TABU, and also filmed HIGH NOON, among others. David fucked away much of his talent and most of his friends with horrible behavior over the years.

        I was never more than a moderate Byrds fan. I always liked their cover of Dylan’s “My Back Pages.”

        “Ah, but I was so much older then, I’m younger than that now.”

        We’ve seen Roger McGuinn a few times as the one professional musician playing with Dave Barry, Stephen King and the rest of the Rock Bottom Remainders.

  5. Beth+Fedyn

    Well, I’m the naysayer here.
    Not a fan of the Byrds, the Doors, or the Animals.
    I’ll pass on this one.

    Reply
    1. Todd Mason

      I can see where you’re coming from with the Doors…but that’s an interesting grouping. I love harmony, jazz and folk influences, and bluegrass, so a whole Lot of Byrds music is my jam. Morrison lyrics don’t compare well.

      Reply
      1. Beth+Fedyn

        Jim Morrison was a little TOO zoned out for my taste. After reading the Grace Slick memoir, I can see why he died young.

  6. Todd Mason

    THE BYRDS, the 1973 Arista album, was a not-bad reunion of the first quintet. I prefer, on balance, Clark to Dylan as a songwriter, so you know I’d prefer the second anthology to the first.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Todd, since I have both THE BYRDS GREATEST HITS and BYRDS TURN, TURN, TURN: THE ULTIMATE COLLECTION I can listen to one or the other depending on my mood.

      Reply
  7. Todd Mason

    Rather like the Beatles also, covers of Byrds compositions became hits for other bands as well, one example being “You Showed Me” for both the Turtles and Salt-N-Pepa…and their influence was massive.

    Reply
      1. george Post author

        Todd, I remember the politicians railing against “drug music” over the years. And the FBI seemed convinced “Louie Louie” was a drug song but they couldn’t decipher the lyrics!

      2. Todd Mason

        I think they were more worried, and almost sensibly (but not really), that it was a sex song (after all, the early ’60s, and films such as THE EXPLOSIVE GENERATION were still popping up in theaters). You know, Youth aren’t Led Down the Primrose Path without Bad Influences! Hormones must be channeled into Eagle Scouting!

        The Kingsmen and most of their immediate contemporaries, were advocates of the hard stuff–multiple sixpacks of whatever you could afford, and maybe mix in some Everclear.

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