DumpJack Wrote:

Quote:
The Byrds' second album, Turn! Turn! Turn!, was only a disappointment in comparison with Mr. Tambourine Man. They couldn't maintain such a level of consistent magnificence, and the follow-up was not quite as powerful or impressive. It was still quite good, however, particularly the ringing number one title cut, a classic on par with the "Mr. Tambourine Man" single. Elsewhere, they concentrated more on original material, Gene Clark in particular offering some strong compositions with "Set You Free This Time," "The World Turns All Around Her," and "If You're Gone." A couple more Bob Dylan covers were included, as well, and "Satisfied Mind" was their first foray into country-rock, a direction they would explore in much greater depth throughout the rest of the '60s.
Like a lot of people my age, my introduction to The Byrds was the inclusion of "Turn Turn Turn" on the Forrest Gump soundtrack. At that time, it was about the best song I had ever heard. I guess in some way, it remains that way.
It's actually pretty amazing how much this band changed over the course of 6 months. I don't know the whole story, so it is entirely possible that the music they were playing through all of 1965 was more like
Turn! Turn! Turn! rather than
Mr. Tambourine Man, but by looking solely at release dates, the level of maturity and the change in direction between to the two albums is pretty outstanding.
To get things out of the way, as just a solo piece of work - I still enjoy their debut more, primarily because it's a collection of a bunch of the best pop songs recorded during the decade, but the songwriting on this album is stronger, the sound is thicker, and their willingness to really carve their own niche is what makes this album really exciting.
It's slower, there are more instruments involved, or focused on at least. The Rickenbacker is still the big player here, but it's balanced out a little more and more often than not it's being covered in the great harmonies of group. Again, it's not as immediately enjoyable as the debut, but looking at it as a musical statement, as a landmark album, it is the stronger album. I mean one listen to Gene Clark's "Set You Free This Time" will have you wondering how this is even the same band at all. The Dylan covers are no longer attempts at turning great poetry into great pop, but rather they are conveying Dylan's songs into arrangements that are equally as emotional as the originals. I mean c'mon, "Lay Down Your Weary Tune" is some next level stuff and even "The Times They Are A-Changing" keeps an overplayed song relatively interesting.
Crazily enough, one of the songs I've always gone back to and enjoyed is their version of "Oh Susannah", which just blows me away. I mean, I was singing this song in school at age 5, here it everywhere and generally accept it as one of the most known and unnecessarily referenced traditional American songs, but the band makes it seem really important here.
I started this review in an attempt to tell you how it's inferior to their debut, and I think in some regard, it still is. But it's still a goddamn classic album - just in a completely different way.