A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 128: “Mr. Tambourine Man” by the Byrds
Episode Date: July 22, 2021Episode one hundred and twenty-eight of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “Mr. Tambourine Man” by the Byrds, and the start of LA folk-rock. Click the full post to read... liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a ten-minute bonus episode available, on “I Got You Babe” by Sonny and Cher. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt’s irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs by Andrew Hicke.
Episode 128, Mr. Tambourine Man, by the Birds.
Today, we're going to take a look at one of the pivotal recordings in folk rock music,
a track which, though it was not by any means the first folk rock record,
came to define the sub-genre in the minds of the listening public,
and which by bringing together the disparate threads of influence from Bob Dylan,
the searchers, the Beatles and the Beach Boys,
manages to be arguably the record that defines early 1965.
We're going to look at Mr Tambourine Man by the Birds.
Folk rock as a genre was something that was bound to happen sooner rather than later.
We've already seen how many of the British R&B bands
that were becoming popular in the US
were influenced by folk music,
with records like House of the Rising Sun,
taking traditional folk songs
and repurposing them through a rock idiom.
And as soon as British bands started to have a big influence on American music,
that would have to inspire a reassessment by American musicians
of their own folk music.
Because, of course, while the British bands were inspired by rock and roll,
they were all also coming from a skiffle tradition,
which saw Woody Guthrie, led Bell and,
Billy, Big Bill Brunsie and the rest, as being the people to emulate, and that would show up in their music.
Most of the British bands came from the bluesier end of the folk tradition, with the exception of the Liverpool bands,
who pretty much all liked their black music on the poppy side, and their roots music to be more in a country vein.
But they were still all playing music which showed the clear influence of country and folk, as well as blues.
and that influence was particularly obvious to those American musicians
who were suddenly interested in becoming rock and roll stars,
but who had previously been folkies, musicians like Gene Clark.
Gene Clark was born in Missouri,
and had formed a rock and roll group in his teens called Joe Mayers and the Sharks.
According to many biographies,
the Sharks put out a record of Clark's song Blue Ribbons,
but as far as I've been able to tell,
this was Clark embellishing things a great deal.
The only evidence of this song that anyone has been able to find
is a home recording from this time,
of which a few seconds were used in a documentary on Clark.
After his period in the Sharks,
Clark became a folk singer,
starting out in a group called the Surf Riders.
But in August 1963,
he was spotted by the new Christyman's trolls,
a 14-piece ultra-commercial folk group
who had just released a big hit single,
Green Green, with the lead song.
by one of their members, Barry Maguire.
Clark was hired to replace a departing member and joined the group,
who as well as McGuire at that time also included Larry Ramos,
who would later go on to join the association
and sing joint lead on their big hit, Never My Love.
Clark was only in the new Christie Menstrues for a few months,
but he appeared on several of their albums.
They recorded four albums during the months he was with the group,
but there's some debate as to whether he appeared on all of them,
as he may have missed some recording sessions when he had a cold.
Clark didn't get much opportunity to sing lead on the records,
but he was more prominent in live performances,
and can be seen and heard in the many TV appearances the group did in late 1963.
But Clark was not a good fit for the group.
He didn't put himself forward very much,
which meant he didn't get many lead vocal,
which meant in turn that he seemed not to be pulling his weight.
But the thing that really changed his mind
came in late 1963 on touring Canada,
when he heard this.
Clark knew instantly that that was the kind of music he wanted to be making,
and when I Want to Hold Your Hand came out in the US soon afterwards,
it was the impetus that Clark needed
in order to quit the group and move to California.
There he visited the Trubodore Club in Los Angeles
and saw another performer who had been in an ultra-commercial folk group
until he had been bitten by the beetlebug.
Roger McGuin.
One note here.
Roger McGwin at this point used his birth name,
but he changed it for religious reasons in 1967.
I've been unable to find out his views on his old name,
whether he considers it closer to a trans person's dead name,
which would be disrespectful to mention,
or to something like Reg Dwight becoming Elton John
or David Jones becoming David Bowie.
As I presume everyone listening to this has access to a search engine
and can find out his birth name if at all interested,
I'll be using Roger McGuin throughout this episode
and any other episodes that deal with him,
at least until I find out for certain how he feels about the use of that name.
McGuin had grown up in Chicago and become obsessed with the guitar
after seeing Elvis on TV in 1956.
But as Rockabilly had waned in popularly,
He had moved into folk music, taking lessons from Frank Hamilton, a musician who had played in a group with rambling Jack Elliot, and who would later go on to join a 1960s line-up of the Weavers.
Hamilton taught McGuin, Led Belly and Woody Guthrie songs, and taught him how to play the banjo.
Hamilton also gave McGuin an enthusiasm for the 12-string guitar, an instrument that had been popular among folk musicians like Leadbelly, but which had largely fallen out of fashion.
McGuin became a regular in the audience at the Gate of Horn,
a folk club owned by Albert Grossman,
who would later become Bob Dylan's manager,
and watched performers like Odetta and Josh White.
He also built his own small repertoire of songs
by people like Ewan McColl,
which he would perform at coffee shops.
At one of those coffee shops,
he was seen by a member of the Limeleaders,
one of the many Kingston Trio-like groups
that had come up during the folk boom.
The Lineleaders were after a guitarist
to back them, and offered McGuin the job. He turned it down at first as he was still in school,
but as it turned out, the job was still open when he graduated, and so young McGuin found himself
straight out of school playing the Hollywood Bowl on a bill including Earth a kit. McGuin only played
with the limelighters for six weeks, but in that short time he ended up playing on a top five
album, as he was with them at the Ashgrove when they recorded their live album, Tonight in Person.
much nicer than beer. I don't care for sherry, and one cannot drink stout, and pour it is a wine.
I can well do without the... It's really a case of shacking a song gout.
Have some, my dear, my dear.
McGuin spent a short while playing the clubs around LA,
before being hired by another commercial folk group,
the Chad Mitchell trio,
who, like the limelighters before them, needed an accompanist.
McGuin wasn't particularly happy working with the trio,
who in his telling regarded themselves as the stars
and McGwin very much as the hired help.
He also didn't respect them as musicians,
and thought that they were little to do with folk music
as he understood the term.
Despite this, McGuin stayed with the Chad Mitchell Trio
for two and a half years
and played on two albums with them.
Mighty Day on campus and live at the bit of end.
We've already named.
Well, NCA has agents that are flatly unashamed.
We're after Rosie Cludey.
We've gotten Pinky Lee.
And the day we get Red Skelton, won't that be a victory?
Oh, we're the John Birch Society,
the John Birch Society.
Norman Vincent Peel may think he's kidding us along.
But the John Verch Society knows he's standing.
Bill the Bees, he keeps on preaching brotherhood, but we know what he means.
McGuin stuck it out with the Chad Mitchell Trio until his 20th birthday, and he was just about
to accept an offer to join the new Christie Minstrels himself, when he got a better one.
Bobby Darren was in the audience at a Chad Mitchell Trio show, and approached McGuin afterwards.
Darren had started out in the music business as a songwriter, working with his friend Don Kirshner,
but had had some success in the late 50s and early 60s, as one of the one of the music,
one of the interchangeable teen idol bobbies who would appear on American bandstand,
with records like Dream Lover and Splish Splash.
But Darren had always been more musically adventurous than most of his contemporaries.
But Darren had always been more musically adventurous than most of his contemporaries.
and with his hit version of Mac the Knife,
he had successfully moved into the adult cabaret market.
And like other singers breaking into that market,
like Sam Cuck,
he had decided to incorporate folk music into his act.
He would do his big band set,
then there would be a 15-minute set of folk songs,
backed just by guitar and stand-up bass.
Darren wanted McGuin to be his guitarist and backing vocalist for these folk sets,
and offered to double what the Chad Mitchell Trio was paying him.
Darren wasn't just impressed with McGuyn's musicianship
He also liked his showmanship
Which came mostly from McGwin being bored
And mildly disgusted with the music he was playing on stage
He would pull faces behind the Chad Mitchell trio's back
The audience would laugh
And the trio would think the laughter was for them
For a while McGwin was happy playing with Darren
Who he later talked about as being a mentor
But then Darren had some vocal problems
And had to take some time off the road
However, he didn't drop McGuin altogether.
Rather, he gave him a job in the Brill Building,
writing songs for Darren's publishing company.
One of the songs he wrote there was Beach Bowl,
co-written with Frank Gary.
A knock-off of To Do Run Ron Ron,
re-tooled as a beach party song.
The recording released as by The City Surfers
apparently features McGuin, Gary,
Darren on drums,
and Terry Melcher on piano.
That wasn't a hit,
but a cover version by Jimmy Hannan
was a local hit in Melbourne, Australia.
backing vocalists, three brothers who would soon go on to become famous as the Bee Gees.
Darren soon advised McGuin that if he really wanted to become successful,
he should become a rock and roll singer, and so McGuin left Darren's employ and struck out as a
solo performer, playing folk songs with a rock backbeat around Greenwich Village,
before joining a Beatles tribute act playing clubs around New York.
He was given further encouragement by Dian Demucci, another late 50s singer who liked
Darren was trying to make the transition to playing for adult crowds.
Demucci had been lead singer of Dion and the Belmonts,
but had had more success as a solo act with records like The Wanderer.
Dion was insistent that McGuin had something,
that he wasn't just imitating the Beatles, as he thought,
but that he was doing something a little more original.
Encouraged by Dion, McGuin made his way west to L.A.,
where he was playing the Trubodore supporting Roger Miller
when Jean Clark walked in.
Clark saw McGuin as a kindred spirit,
another fokey who had had his musical world revolutionised by the Beatles,
and suggested that the two become a duo,
performing in the style of Peter and Gordon,
the British duo who'd recently had a big hit with World Without Love,
a song written for them by Paul McCarney.
The duo act didn't last long, though,
because they were soon joined by a third singer, David Crosby.
Frostby had grown up in L.A.
His father, Floyd Crosby, was an award-winning cinematographer,
who had won an Oscar for his work on Taboo,
a story of the South Seas, and a Golden Globe for High Noon,
but is now best known for his wonderfully lurid work
on a whole series of films starring Vincent Price,
including The Pit and the Pendulum, House of Usher,
Tales of Terror, and Comedy of Terror's.
Like many children of privilege,
David had been a spoiled child,
and he had taken to burglary for kicks,
and had impregnated a school friend
and then run off rather than take responsibility for the child.
Travelling across the US as a way to escape the consequences of his actions,
he had spent some time hanging out with musicians like Fred Neal,
Paul Cantner and Travis Edmonton,
the latter of whom had recorded a version of Crosby's first song,
Cross the Plains.
Edmondson had also introduced Crosby to cannabis, and Crosby soon took to smoking everything he could, even once smoking aspirin to see if he could get high from that.
When he'd run out of money, Crosby, like Clark and McGuin, had joined an ultra-commercial folk group.
In Crosby's case, it was Les Baxter's Balladeers, put together by the bandleader, who was better known for his Exotica recordings.
While Crosby was in the Balladiers, they were recorded for an album called Jack Link Letter Presents a
Folk Festival, a compilation of live recordings hosted by the host of Hootinani.
It's possible that Crosby got the job with Baxter through his father's connections.
Baxter did the music for many films made by Roger Corman, the producer and director of
those Vincent Price films. Either way, Crosby didn't last long in the balladeers.
After he left the group, he started performing solo sets, playing folk music but with a jazz
tinge to it. Crosby was already interested in pushing the boundaries of what chords and melodies
could be used in folk. Crosby didn't go down particularly well with the folk club crowds,
but he did impress one man. Jim Dixon had got into the music industry more or less by accident.
He had seen the comedian Lord Buckley, a white man who did satirical routines in a hipsterish argut
that owed more than a little to black slang, and had been impressed by him. He had recorded
Buckley with his own money and had put out Buckley's first album,
Hipsters, Flipsters and Finger Popping Daddy is Knock Me Your Lobes
on his own label, before selling the rights of the album to Elektra Records.
He was my buddy, and he leveled with me.
Yet Brutus digs that he has eyes for power,
and Blutis is a solid cat.
It is true he hath returned with many freaks and chains,
and brought them home to Rome, yea, the booty was looty, and hipped the treasury well,
dost thou dig this while Caesar's groove for the push?
When the cats with the empty kicks hath copped out,
Yea, Caesar hath copped out.
Dixon had gone on to become a freelance producer, often getting his records put out by Elektra,
making both jazz records with people like Red Mitchell
and Country Folk and Bluegrass Records
with people like the Dillards
whose first few albums he produced.
Dixon had also recently started up a publishing company
Tixon Music with a partner
and the first song they had published
had been written by a friend of Crosby's
Dino Valenti, with whom at one point Crosby had shared a houseboat.
I make the angels cry
know that love is on the wing and you need not know why
Oh people now
And get together will smile on your brother trying to write
Unfortunately for Dixon
Before that song became a big hit for the Youngbloods
He had had to sell the rights to it
To the Kingston Trio's managers
As Valenti had been arrested and needed bail money
and it was the only way to raise the funds required.
Dixon liked Crosby's performance and became his manager.
Dixon had access to a recording studio
and started recording Crosby singing traditional songs
and songs to which Dixon owned the copyright.
At this point, Crosby wasn't writing much,
and so Dixon got him to record material like Get Together.
Unfortunately for Crosby,
Dixon's initial idea, to get him signed to one of others' records as a solo artist using those recordings, didn't work out.
But Gene Clark had seen Crosby perform live and thought he was impressive.
He told McGuin about him, and the three men soon hit it off.
They were able to sing three-part harmony together as soon as they met.
This is one characteristic of Crosby that acquaintances often note.
He's a natural harmony singer and is able to fit his voice into pre-existing groups of other singers.
very easily, and make it sound natural.
Crosby introduced the pair to Dixon, who had a brainwave.
These were folkies, but they didn't really sing like foekees.
They'd grown up on rock and roll, and they were all listening to the Beatles now.
There was a gap in the market between the Beatles and Peter Paul and Mary,
for something with harmonies, a soft sound, and a social conscience,
but a rock and roll beat, something that was intelligent but still fun,
and which could appeal to the screaming teenage girls and to the,
the college kids who were listening to Dylan.
In Crosby, McGuin and Clark, Dixon thought he had found the people who could do just that.
The group named themselves the jet set, a name thought up by McGuin, who loved flying and
everything about the air, and which they also thought gave them a certain sophistication,
and their first demo recording, with all three of them on 12-string guitars, shows the direction
they were going in.
The only girl I adore, written by McGuin and Clark, has what I can only assume is the group
trying for Liverpool accents and failing miserably, and call-and-response and
yeah-year vocals that are clearly meant to evoke the Beatles. It actually does a remarkably good
job of evoking some of Paul McCartney's melodic style, but the rhythm guitar is pure Don Averley.
What you are, what you are, darling to me, you're the first, evening star, and the only
Star I see
You're my life
And you're so much, so much more
Don't you know
Because you're the only girl
I adore
The Jet set
Jettisoned their folk instruments for good
After watching a hard day's night
Roger McGwin traded in his banjo
And got an electric 12-string wickenbacker
Just like the one that George Harrison played
And they went all in on the British invasion sound
copying the Beatles, but also the Searchers,
whose jangly sound was perfect for the Rickenbacker,
and who had the same kind of solid harmony sound
the jet set were going for.
Of course, if you're going to try to sound like the Beatles and the searches,
you need a drummer,
and McGuin and Crosby were both acquainted with a young man
who had been born Michael Dick,
but who had understandably changed his name to Michael Clark.
He was only 18, and wasn't a particularly good drummer,
but he did have one huge advantage,
which is that he looked exactly like,
Brian Jones. So the Jetset set now had a full line-up. Roger McGuin on lead guitar,
Gene Clark on rhythm guitar, David Crosby was learning bass and Michael Clark on drums.
But that wasn't the line-up on their first recordings. Crosby was finding it difficult to learn
the bass, and Michael Clark wasn't yet very proficient on drums. So for what became their first
record, Dixon decided to bring in a professional rhythm section, hiring two of the
wrecking crew, bass player Ray Pullman and drummer Earl Palmer, to back the three singers,
with McGuin and Jean Clark on guitars. That was put out on a one single deal with Elektra Records,
and Jim Dixon made the deal under the condition that it couldn't be released under the group's
real name. He wanted to test what kind of potential they had without spoiling their reputation.
So instead of being put out as by the jet set, it was put out as by the Beef Eaters,
the kind of fake British name that a lot of American bands were using at the time
to try and make themselves seem like they might be British.
The record did nothing, but nobody was expecting it to do much,
so they weren't particularly bothered.
And anyway, there was another problem to deal with.
David Crosby had been finding it difficult to play bass and sing.
This was one reason that he only sang and didn't play on the Beefeeters single.
His bass playing was wooden and rigid, and he wasn't getting better,
so it was decided that Crosby would just sing and not play anything at all.
As a result, the group needed a new bass player,
and Dixon knew someone who he thought would fit the bill,
despite him not being a bass player.
Chris Hillman had become a professional musician in his teens,
playing mandolin in a bluegrass group called the Scottsville Squirrel Barkers,
who made one album of bluegrass standards for sale through supermarkets.
Hillman had moved on to a group called the Golden State Boys,
which featured two brothers, Vern and Rex Gosden.
The Golden State Boys had been signed to a management contract by Dixon,
who had renamed the group The Hillmen after their mandolin player.
Hillman was very much in the background in the group,
and Dixon believed that he would be given a little more confidence
if he was pushed to the front.
The Hillman had recorded one album,
which wasn't released until many years later,
and which had featured Hillman's singing lead on the Bob Dylan song
when the ship comes in.
Hillman had the shoreline
The riverline
The same
The hour when the ship will split
And the shoreline sand
The hillman had gone on from there
To join a bluegrass group
managed by Randy Sparks
The same person who was in charge of the new
Christie Minstrels
And who specialised in putting out
Ultra-commercialised versions of Roots
Music for pop audiences
but Dixon knew that Hillman didn't like playing with that group
and would be interested in doing something very different.
So even though Hillman didn't play bass,
Dixon invited him to join the group.
There was almost another line-up change at this point as well.
McGuin and Gene Clark were getting sick of David Crosby's attitude.
Crosby was the most technically knowledgeable musician in the group,
but was at this point not much of a songwriter.
He was not at all shy about pointing out what he considered flaws
in the songs that McGuin and Clark were writing,
but he wasn't producing anything better himself.
Eventually, McGwin and Clark decided to kick Crosby out of the group altogether,
but they reconsidered when Dixon told them that if Crosby went, he was going too.
As far as Dixon was concerned, the group needed Crosby's vocals and that was an end of the matter.
Crosby was back in the group and all was forgotten.
But there was another problem related to Crosby,
as the Jetset found out when they played their first gig,
an unannounced spot at the troubadour.
The group had perfected their image
with their Beatles' suits and pose of studied cool,
but Crosby had never performed without an instrument before.
He spent the gig prancing around the stage
trying to act like a rock star,
wriggling his bottom in what he thought was a suggestive manner.
It wasn't, and the audience found it hilarious.
Crosby, who took himself very seriously at this point in time,
felt humiliated
and decided that he needed to get an instrument to play.
Obviously, he couldn't go back to playing bass,
so he did the only thing that seemed possible.
He started undermining Gene Clark's confidence as a player,
telling him he was playing behind the beat.
Clark, who was actually a perfectly reasonable rhythm player,
was non-confrontational by nature and believed Crosby's criticisms.
Soon he was playing behind the beat,
because his confidence had been shaken.
Crosby took over the rhythm guitar role
and from that point on it would be Gene Clark,
not David Crosby, who would have to go on stage without an instrument.
The jet set was still not getting very many gigs,
but they were constantly in the studio, working on material.
The most notable song they recorded in this period is You Showed Me,
a song written by Gene Clark and McGuin,
which would not see release at the time,
but which would later become a hit for both the turtles and the lightning seeds.
Clark in particular what you say in that very special way,
Oh, oh, oh, it's true, you fell for,
It's not a...
Clark in particular was flourishing as a songwriter,
and becoming a genuine talent.
But Jim Dixon thought that the song that had the best chance of being the JetSets breakout hit
wasn't one that they were writing themselves,
but one that he'd heard Bob Dylan performing concert,
for which Dylan had not yet released himself.
In 1964, Dylan was writing far more material than he could reasonably record,
even given the fact that his albums at this point often took little more time to record than to listen to.
One song he'd written but not yet put out on an album was Mr Tambourine Man.
Dylan had written the song in April 1964 and started performing it live as early as May.
That performance was later released in 2014 for,
copyright extension purposes on vinyl in a limited run of 100 copies. I believe this recording is from that.
Jim Dixon remembered the song after seeing Dylan perform it live
and started pushing Whitmark music, Dylan's publishers,
to send him a demo of the song.
Dylan had recorded several demos,
and the one that Whitmark sent over was a version that was recorded
with Rambling Jack Elliott singing Harmony,
recorded for Dylan's album another side of Bob Dylan,
but left off the album as Elliot had been off key at points.
There have been
Strip
My senses have been stripped.
My hands can't feel to grip.
There have been all sorts of hypotheses
about what Mr. Tambourine Man is really about.
Robert Shelton, for example,
suspects the song is inspired by Thomas De Quincey's
Confessions of an opium eater.
De Quincey uses the term for opium,
The Dark Idol,
which is supposedly a translation of the Latin phrase
Marta Tenebrarum, which actually means Mother of Darkness, or Mother of Death or Mother of
Gloom. Shelton believes that Dylan probably liked the sound of Marta Tenebrarum and turned it into
Mr. Tamborine Man. Others have tried to find links to the Piper of Hamelin, or claimed that
Mr. Tambourine Man is actually Jesus. Dylan, on the other hand, had a much more prosaic explanation
that Mr Tambourine man was a friend of his named Bruce Langhorne,
who was prominent in the Greenwich Village folk scene.
As well as being a guitarist,
Langhorne was also a percussionist
and played a large Turkish framed drum,
several feet in diameter,
which looked and sounded quite like a massively oversized tambourine.
Dylan got that image in his head and wrote a song about it.
Sometimes a tambourine is just a tambourine.
Also, in a neat little coincidence,
Dylan has acknowledged that he took the phrase
Jingle-Jangle from a routine by Jim Dixon's old client,
Lord Buckley.
Dixon was convinced that Mr. Tambourine Man would be a massive hit,
but the group didn't like it.
Gene Clark, who was at this point the group's only lead singer,
didn't think it fit his voice or had anything in common with the songs he was writing.
Roger McGuin was nervous about doing a Dylan song,
because he'd played at the same Greenwich Village clubs as Dylan
when both were starting out.
He had felt a rivalry with Dylan then
and wasn't entirely comfortable with inviting comparisons
with someone who had grown so much as an artist
while McGuin was still very much at the beginning of his career
and David Crosby simply didn't think that such a long, wordy song
had a chance of being a hit.
So Dixon started to manipulate the group.
First, since Clark didn't like singing the song,
he gave the lead to McGuin.
The song now had one champion in the band.
And McGuin was also a good choice
as he had a hypothesis that there was a space for a vocal sound
that split the difference between John Lennon and Bob Dylan
and was trying to make himself sound like that,
not realising that Lennon himself was busily working on making his voice
more Dylan-esque at the same time.
But that still wasn't enough,
even after Dixon worked with the group to cut the song down
so it was only two choruses and one verse,
and so came in under two minutes,
rather than the five minutes that Dylan's original version lasted,
Crosby in particular was still agitating that the group should just drop the song,
so Dixon decided to bring in Dylan himself.
Dixon was acquainted with Dylan and told him that he was managing a Beatles-style group
who were doing one of Dylan's songs,
and invited him to come along to a rehearsal.
Dylan came, partly out of politeness,
but also because Dylan was as aware as anyone of the commercial realities of the music business.
Dylan was making most of his money at this point as a songwriter,
from having other people perform his songs,
and he was well aware that the Beatles had changed
what hit records sounded like.
If the kids were listening to beat groups
instead of to Peter Paul and Mary,
then Dylan's continued commercial success
relied on him getting beat groups to perform his songs.
So he agreed to come and hear Jim Dixon's beat group
and see what he thought of what they were doing with his song.
Of course, once the group realized that Dylan was going to be coming to listen to them,
they decided that they had better actually work on their own.
arrangement of the song. They came up with something that featured McGuins'
searcher-style 12-string playing, the group's trademark harmonies, and a rather
incongruous-sounding marching beat. Dylan heard their performance and was impressed,
telling them, you can dance to it. Dylan went on a charm offensive with the group,
winning all of them round except Crosby. But even Crosby stopped arguing the point,
realizing he'd lost. Mr. Tambourine Man was now a regular part of their repertoire.
but they still didn't have a record deal, until one came from an unexpected direction.
The group were playing their demos to a local promoter, Benny Shapiro,
when Shapiro's teenage daughter came into the room, excited because the music sounded so much like the Beatles.
Shapiro later joked about this to the great jazz trumpet player Miles Davis,
and Davis told his record label about this new group, and suddenly they were being signed to Columbia Records.
Mr. Tambourine Man was going to be their first single, but before that they had to do something about the group's name, as Columbia pointed out that there was already a British group called the Jet Set. The group discussed this over Thanksgiving Turkey, and the fact that they were eating a bird reminded Jean Clark of a song by the group's friend Dino Valenti, Birdses.
Clark suggested the birds
But the group agreed that it wasn't quite right,
though McGuin, who was obsessed with aviation,
did like the idea of a name that was associated with flight.
Dixon's business partner Eddie Tickner suggested that they just call themselves the
birds, but the group saw a problem with that too.
Bird being English slang for girl, they worried that if they called themselves
themselves that, people might think they were gay. So how about messing with the vowels,
the same way the Beatles had changed the spelling of their name? They thought about birds with a
U and birds with an E, before McGuin hit on birds with a Y, which appealed to him because
of an admiral bird, an explorer and pioneering aviator. They all agreed that the name was perfect.
It began with a bee, just like the Beatles and Beach Boys. It was a pun like the Beatles, and it
signified flight, which was important to McGuin. As the group entered 1965, another major event
happened in McGuin's life, the one that would lead to him changing his name. A while earlier,
McGuin had met a friend in Greenwich Village and had offered him a joint. The friend had refused,
saying that he had something better than dope. McGuin was intrigued to try this something better,
and went along with his friend to what turned out to be a religious meeting. Over the new religious
movement Subud, a group which believes, among other things, that there are seven levels of existence
from gross matter to pure spirit, and which often encourages members to change their names.
McGuin was someone who was very much looking for meaning in his life. Around this time,
he also became a devotee of the self-help writer Norman Vincent Peel, thanks to his mother
sending him a copy of Peel's book on positive thinking, and so he agreed to give the organisation
ago. Suburd involves a form of meditation called Delithen, and on his third attempt at doing
this meditation, McGuin had experienced what he believed was contact with God, an intense
hallucinatory experience which changed his life forever. McGuin was initiated into Suburd
10 days before going into the studio to record Mr. Tambourine Man, and according to his
self-description, whatever Bob Dylan thought the song was about, he was singing to God when he sang it.
In earlier interviews he said he was singing to Allah,
but now he's a born-again Christian, he tends to use God.
The group had been assigned by CBS to Terry Melcher,
mostly because he was the only staff producer they had on the West Coast
who had any idea at all about rock and roll music.
And Melcher immediately started to mould the group into his idea of what a pop group should be.
For their first single, Melcher decided that he wasn't going to use the group,
other than McGuin, for anything other than vocals.
Michael Clark in particular was still a very shaky drummer
and would never be the best on his instrument,
while Hillman and Crosby were adequate,
but not anything special on bass and guitar.
Multure knew that the group sound
depended on McGuyn's electric 12-string sound,
so he kept that.
But other than that,
the bird's only contribution to the ace side
was McGwin, Crosby and Clark on vocals.
Everything else was supplied by members of the wrecking crew.
Jerry Cole on guitar,
Larry Nectal on bass, Leon Russell on electric piano, and Hal Blaine on drums.
Indeed, not everyone who performed at this session is even clearly audible on the recording.
Clark and Leon Mussel were actually mixed out by Melcher. Both of them are audible, Clark
more than Muscle, but only because of leakage onto other people's microphones. The final arrangement
was a mix of influences. McGuin's 12-string sound was clearly inspired by the searchers, and the
parties playing is allegedly influenced by Bark, though I've never seen any noticeable resemblance to
anything Bark ever wrote. The overall sound was an attempt to sound like the Beatles, while Melcher always
said that the arrangements and feel of the track was inspired by Don't Worry Baby by the Beach
Boys. This is particularly noticeable in the bass part. Compare the part on the Beach Boys record
to the tag on the Bird's record. Five days before the birds recorded their single, Bob Dylan
had finally recorded his own version of the song with the tambourine man himself, Bruce Langhorne,
playing guitar, and it was released three weeks before the Bird's version as an album track on Dylan's
bringing it all back home.
Dylan's album would become one of the most important of his career,
as we'll discuss in a couple of weeks when we next look at Dylan.
But it also provided an additional publicity boost for the birds,
and as a result their record quickly went to number one
in both the UK and America,
becoming the first record of a Dylan song
to go to number one on any chart.
Dylan's place in the new pop order was now secured.
The birds had shown that American artists
could compete with the British invasion on its own terms,
that the new wave of guitar bands still had a place for Americans,
and folk rock was soon identified as the next big commercial trend.
And over the next few weeks,
we'll see how all those things played out throughout the mid-60s.
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