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Release "Mr. Tambourine Man" was the debut single by the American
rock band
the Byrds and was released on April 12, 1965 by Columbia Records, less than a month after Dylan's original. The song was also the title track of
the band's debut album, which was released on June 21, 1965. The Byrds' version is abridged and in a different key from Dylan's original. The single's success initiated the folk rock boom of 1965 and 1966, with a number of American and British acts imitating the band's hybrid of a rock beat,
jangly guitar playing, and poetic or socially conscious lyrics. The single was the "first folk rock smash hit", and gave rise to the term "folk rock" in the U.S
music press to describe the band's sound. This hybrid had its antecedents in the
American folk revival of the early 1960s,
the Animals' rock-oriented recording of the
folk song "
The House of the Rising Sun", the folk influences present in the songwriting of
the Beatles, and the
twelve-string guitar jangle of
the Searchers and the Beatles'
George Harrison. However, the success of the Byrds' debut created a template for folk rock that proved successful for many acts during the mid-1960s.
Conception Most of the members of the Byrds had a background in folk music, They had all spent time, independently of each other, in various folk groups, including
the New Christy Minstrels,
the Limeliters,
the Chad Mitchell Trio, and
Les Baxter's Balladeers. In early 1964, McGuinn, Clark, and Crosby formed the Jet Set and started developing a fusion of folk-based lyrics and melodies, with
arrangements in the style of the Beatles. In August 1964, the band's manager
Jim Dickson acquired an
acetate disc of "Mr. Tambourine Man" from Dylan's
publisher, featuring a performance by Dylan and Ramblin' Jack Elliott. Although the band members were initially unimpressed with the song, after McGuinn changed the
time signature from Dylan's 2/4 time| configuration to 4/4 time| time, they began rehearsing and
demoing it. In an attempt to make it sound more like the Beatles, the band and Dickson elected to give the song a full, electric
rock band treatment, effectively creating the musical subgenre of folk rock.
Production The master take of "Mr. Tambourine Man" was recorded on January 20, 1965, at Columbia Studios in Hollywood, before the release of Dylan's own version. The song's jangling, melodic guitar playing (performed by McGuinn on a
12-string Rickenbacker guitar) was immediately influential and has remained so to the present day. Due to producer
Terry Melcher's initial lack of confidence in the Byrds' musicianship, as a result of them not having gelled musically yet, McGuinn was the only Byrd to play on both "Mr. Tambourine Man" and its
B-side, "
I Knew I'd Want You". By the time that sessions for their debut album began in March 1965, Melcher was satisfied that the band was competent enough to record its own musical backing. The Byrds' recording of the song opens with a distinctive,
Bach-inspired guitar
introduction played by McGuinn and then, like Dylan's version, goes into the song's
chorus. In 2009, the band's bassist Chris Hillman gave
Bob Eubanks, a DJ on
KRLA and later the host of
The Newlywed Game, credit for originally breaking the song on the radio in L.A. Upon release,
Record World picked it as its "Sleeper of the Week" and called it a "funky and slow treatment of the Bob Dylan tune that has a lot to say. Moody and different treatment from a group going places." Band biographer Christopher Hjort has remarked that it is surprising that neither
Billboard or
Cashbox magazines reviewed the single, considering the efforts Columbia put into promoting the record. In the UK,
Record Mirror described the single as, "A Bob Dylan song of uncommon charm. Group is American, folksy and five-strong. Busy mandolin-style [
sic] backing. Song is the big selling point, for sure." In his review for
Music Echo, critic Brian Harvey described it as "a folksy, guitar twangy, medium tempo swinger. It's a busy number with lots of echo. Lead voice tells the story and has vocal group backing in the attractive chorus. The melody sticks even after one play." while author John Einarson has said that both
the Grass Roots and
We Five enjoyed commercial success by emulating the Byrds' folk rock sound. Unterberger also feels that, by late 1965, the Beatles were assimilating the sound of the Byrds into their
Rubber Soul album, most notably on the songs "
Nowhere Man" and "
If I Needed Someone". Both Unterberger and author Peter Lavezzoli have commented that Dylan himself decided to record with
electric instrumentation on his 1965 album
Bringing It All Back Home in part due to the influence of the Byrds' rock adaptation of "Mr. Tambourine Man". As the 1960s came to a close, folk rock changed and evolved away from the jangly template pioneered by the Byrds, Since the 1960s, the Byrds' jangly, folk rock sound has continued to influence popular music, with authors such as Chris Smith, Johnny Rogan, and Mark Deming, noting the band's influence on various acts including
Big Star,
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers,
R.E.M.,
the Long Ryders,
the Smiths,
the Bangles,
the Stone Roses,
Teenage Fanclub, and
the La's. In addition to appearing on the Byrds' debut album, "Mr. Tambourine Man" is included on several Byrds' compilation and live albums, including
The Byrds Greatest Hits,
Live at Royal Albert Hall 1971,
The Very Best of The Byrds,
The Essential Byrds,
The Byrds Play Dylan, and the live disc of The Byrds'
(Untitled) album. The Byrds' version of the song appears on compilation albums that include hit songs by multiple artists.
Personnel According to Christopher Hjort:
The Byrds •
Roger McGuinnlead vocal,
twelve-string electric guitar •
Gene Clarkharmony vocal •
David Crosbyharmony vocal
Additional musicians •
Hal Blainedrums •
Jerry Coleguitar •
Larry Knechtelbass guitar •
Bill Pitmanguitar
Note • On the final recording,
Leon Russell's
electric piano contribution was mixed out, and Hjort writes that Cole and Pitman's guitars are "barely audible".
Jim Dickson, the Byrds' manager, suggests that Clark's harmony vocal was mixed out and is only faintly audible due to
bleed. ==Charts==