The Byrds (part 1): There is a Season
Series: The Byrds: There is a Season / Farther Along
From: Joyride Media
Length: 00:59:05
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The first of two one-hour documentaries on The Byrds, the continuously groundbreaking band who bridged the gaps between The Beatles, Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger, the Beach Boys, the Los Angeles psychedelic underground and classic country. Their memorable music set the stage for everyone from the Eagles to Tom Petty to R.E.M. Each hour is hosted by singer-songwriter Laura Cantrell, and covers a distinct period of their prolific history that can either be aired as one two-part series, or as your choice of two insightful one-hour programs.
THERE IS A SEASON covers 1964-1967, the all-too-brief hitmaking years of the Byrds' original five members - Roger McGuinn, David Crosby, Chris Hillman, Gene Clark and Michael Clarke. They were an electrified folk band who topped the charts with some of the decades' most innovative singles and albums. By 1967, their musical harmony was engulfed by the off-stage disharmony that pushed them to reach those heights. Instead of being directed by the singular vision of one leader, The Byrds were consistently led by everybody's contributions - from their original five members to the musicians involved with their later years.
Despite the inner turmoil that resulted in a revolving cast of characters, the Byrds always used those changes as opportunities to further their musical evolution. "They all brought something new and something defining," says journalist David Fricke, "and it all became part of the Byrds sound. They didn't change the Byrds to the degree that it changed the sound. What they did became the Byrds."
Both segments feature the wide range of music that made The Byrds of the 60s most influential bands, along with comments by its two longest-lasting members: Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman. Writers David Fricke, Anthony DeCurtis, Lenny Kaye and Byrds historian Sid Griffin are also interviewed.
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Piece Description
The first of two one-hour documentaries on The Byrds, the continuously groundbreaking band who bridged the gaps between The Beatles, Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger, the Beach Boys, the Los Angeles psychedelic underground and classic country. Their memorable music set the stage for everyone from the Eagles to Tom Petty to R.E.M. Each hour is hosted by singer-songwriter Laura Cantrell, and covers a distinct period of their prolific history that can either be aired as one two-part series, or as your choice of two insightful one-hour programs.
THERE IS A SEASON covers 1964-1967, the all-too-brief hitmaking years of the Byrds' original five members - Roger McGuinn, David Crosby, Chris Hillman, Gene Clark and Michael Clarke. They were an electrified folk band who topped the charts with some of the decades' most innovative singles and albums. By 1967, their musical harmony was engulfed by the off-stage disharmony that pushed them to reach those heights. Instead of being directed by the singular vision of one leader, The Byrds were consistently led by everybody's contributions - from their original five members to the musicians involved with their later years.
Despite the inner turmoil that resulted in a revolving cast of characters, the Byrds always used those changes as opportunities to further their musical evolution. "They all brought something new and something defining," says journalist David Fricke, "and it all became part of the Byrds sound. They didn't change the Byrds to the degree that it changed the sound. What they did became the Byrds."
Both segments feature the wide range of music that made The Byrds of the 60s most influential bands, along with comments by its two longest-lasting members: Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman. Writers David Fricke, Anthony DeCurtis, Lenny Kaye and Byrds historian Sid Griffin are also interviewed.
Transcript
The Byrds: There is a Season
Roger McGuinn: Well we had the Beach Boys and there are other rock 'n roll bands in America but we were the first to answer the British invasion and have any kind of hit with something else like other than a surf song.
Anthony DeCurtis: The Byrds came up at a time when the British invasion was completely dominating American popular music and the staked a claim for American music. They essentially combined The Beatles and Bob Dylan. I mean, if you wanted to reduce what they did to a very simple level; that's what was happening. And if you listen to those early Byrds songs like Mr. Tambourine Man, that's what was going on there. It was that incredible beautiful melodic pop that the Beatles did with the smarts and ambition of what Bob Dylan was up to and it was so distinctive. It really just created a whole new genre but just seemed to open up radio and all...
Read the full transcript
Timing and Cues
0:00 -- 20:38 Segment 1
In: "Well, we had the Beach Boys, and there were other rock and roll bands..."
Out: I'm Laura Cantrell, and you're listening to "The Byrds: There is a Season."
20:38 -- 21:38 Break 1 with music bed
21:38 -- 39:31 Segment 2
In: Welcome back to "The Byrds: There is a Season." I'm Laura Cantrell.
Out: I'm Laura Cantrell, and you're listening to "The Byrds: There is a Season."
39:31 -- 40:31 Break 2 with music bed
40:31 -- 59:00 Segment 3
In: Welcome back to "The Byrds: There is a Season." I'm Laura Cantrell.
Out: I'm Laura Cantrell, and thanks for listening.
Musical Works
Artist: The Byrds
Album: There is a Season (Box Set)
Label: Columbia/Legacy
Year: 2006
Eight Miles High
The Only Girl I Adore
The Airport Song
You Showed Me
You Movin?
Mr. Tambourine Man
You Won?t Have to Cry
I?ll Feel a Whole Lot Better
Chimes of Freedom
It?s All Over Now, Baby Blue
The Bells of Rhymney
Turn Turn Turn
So You Wanna Be A Rock And Roll Star
Eight Miles High
Time Between
Everybody?s Been Burned
Universal Mind Decoder
Additional Files
- Request program on CD (byrdsfax.doc)
- Program Clock (byrds1clock.pdf)




Bill McPherson
Posted on September 20, 2009 at 10:16 AM | Permalink
Laura Cantrel
Laura Cantrel is great!!