STUDIO & LIVE BYRDS SAMPLER REISSUED
Mark | Santa Monica, CA | 03/22/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
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This is a 2006 reissue of the 1995 Columbia/Holland album which is still available from Amazon [See "Definitive Collection" ASIN BOOOOOG5VL].
But it's not clear to me if these albums are identical.
I have the 1995 version which consists of two disks. Disk one has the same 25 songs listed here in the same order. Disk two re-edits 4 live songs from the original "Untitled" into a 25 minute mini-concert.
The "Product Description" for this 2006 reissue says it is a single disk of 25 tracks; but elsewhere farther down, says there are 29 tracks including live performances. So... what is it?
And which version should you get?
My only (mild) complaint about the 1995 release was that the sound quality while good was not up to 20 bit standards.
If this reissue is just a single disk of 25 songs, you would do better to buy the 1995 album with a bonus live disk -- and for a buck cheaper at that.
If this is identical to the 1995 double album, but with sound quality upgraded, I'd go with this one.
Below is my original review of the 1995 release:
A 2-DISK (STUDIO & LIVE) BYRDS SAMPLER
Although the album contents as listed above suggest a single CD, this is actually a two CD set. The first disk of 25 studio cuts runs 72:58, and a second disk of 4 live performances from '(Untitled)' clocks in at 24:56.
The first CD is probably the best single disk compilation to cover the band's entire career, and despite some curious choices it is for the most part very good listening. I love the opening programming sequence of the 5 "Tambourine" album cuts, and that promising start is sustained with growing excitement for most of the disk -- at least through "Sweetheart's" 'You Ain't Goin' Nowhere'.
The only album not covered is "Dr. Byrds", which is represented by the overdubbed single 'Lay Lady Lay' issued in that period. It failed to make the original "Dr. Byrds" album in any form, and whatever your opinion of that single (which many find either hugely impressive or disastrous), omission of 'This Wheel's on Fire' (especially), 'Drug Store Truck Drivin' Man', or something from "Dr. Byrds" is for me a significant stumble -- after which the program loses momentum and fails (in my opinion) to adequately convey the quality of the later albums.
'America's Great National Pastime' was for me an unworthy conclusion to a Byrds career retrospective. Almost anything else from "Farther Along" would have been more satisfying.
Still I have to admit enjoying the way this program laces the obligatory cuts with unexpected choices like 'Lay Lady Lay' and 'I Trust'. This makes for a fresh listening experience to USA fans, where the first of these did not chart and the second was never issued as a single.
The sound quality is good but a little short of first rate, so I suspect these were compiled from European EQ masters rather than the originals. In fact there's a production error tip-off: the slamming door that opens 'Get To You' on "Notorious Byrd Brothers" appears here at the end of 'Wasn't Born To Follow'; the engineer thought it closed the latter track instead of opening the former. Clearly, he was working from an EQ copy of the "Notorious" album, not the song's master. And 'Lady Friend' is a rarity, the original monaural single, which may interest collectors. It sounds fine and you probably won't notice the monaural track without headphones.
The second disk of live performances from "(Untitled)" is an entertainingly edited little excerpt that seamlessly melds 'Lover of the Bayou' and 'Mr. Tambourine Man' into a continuous performance, followed by the 16 minute 'Eight Miles High' jam. As on "(Untitled)" the jam ends with a bridge song and McGuinn's farewell to the audience...but this disk then edits in "Mr. Spaceman" as an encore brought on by the cheering crowd.
Overall I found this an entertaining album worth buying even for Byrds fans who have everything. The sheer volume of material rates four stars at the least. It's a nice alternate program for those times when you're in the mood for the Byrds from a fresh perspective, and not a bad introductory album.
I also like having a 25 minute Byrds live mini-concert on a separate disk.
However, as a full career retrospective of this band's long run on Columbia, "Definitive Collection" fails to beat out the 2 CD set "The Essential Byrds".
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