Following its appearance on the
Turn! Turn! Turn! album, the song was issued as the
A-side of a single on January 10, 1966. However, initial sales were relatively poor, with the single only managing to reach number 79 on the
Billboard Hot 100. As a result,
Columbia Records in America began promoting the single's
B-side "
It Won't Be Wrong" instead, which resulted in the single eventually climbing to number 63. In the UK, after a review in the
NME stated that the B-side was better than "Set You Free This Time",
CBS Records went a step further and actually re-released the single with "It Won't Be Wrong" as the A-side. This reissuing of essentially the same single twice within two weeks caused confusion among British DJs over which of the two songs they should play and contributed to the single's failure to chart. To accompany its UK release as a single, the
BBC commissioned a short promotional film from the Byrds. However, on the day of filming a physical altercation occurred between the band's manager Jim Dickson and rhythm guitarist
David Crosby, and although some footage was shot, the clip was never aired. ==Reception==