The Essential Byrds

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ALBUM INFORMATION
  • Artist: The Byrds (See All Albums by The Byrds)
  • Date Released: Apr 22, 2003

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Columbia/Legacy

Total Tracks: 33   Total Length: 97:11

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Perfect!

eMusicMiner

I guess I'm easy to please - I was thrilled to snag a bunch of my favorite songs by The Byrds! While the whole thing is certainly download-worthy, I just picked up a half a dozen or so of my faves - 1,3,5,10,13,16 from Disc 1 and 5,6,11 from Disc 2. Works for me! :)

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Missed Opportunity

Gomorrahmy

This should have been great. A 2 CD overview of one of the most important American bands in rock history. The first summation of their entire career in a concentrated burst (unlike the 1990 box set). What it winds up being is a rather feeble beast. Sure there's a bunch of fantastic music here but the balance is wrong, it's too short and the selection is perfunctory. CD 1 mostly just replicates the Greatest Hits collection, which is great, but it could and should have been fleshed out substantially. CD 2 mainly just grabs 2 tracks each from the "country-rock" albums which manages to both understate the strengths and overstate the weaknesses of that version of the Byrds. As a concise overview, especially for casual fans who don't know the later Byrds, this is a nice collection. But it is nowhere near what it could have been.

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They Say All Media Guide

While the all-killer no-filler single-disc The Byrds’ Greatest Hits remains the best distillation of their classic songs, The Essential Byrds is a smartly assembled double dose, including all 14 of the 1965-1967 tracks on Greatest Hits, but expanding its reach into their entire Columbia output, going as far as the early ’70s. Inevitably, that means that disc two — which goes, roughly, from mid-1967 to 1971 — isn’t as good as the first half, and that the last four tracks in particular are by far the least impressive, tagged on mostly so that the release spans the Byrds’ entire Columbia catalog. That’s a small reservation considering that the two-fer adds many first-rate songs not on Greatest Hits, from non-hit singles like “Lady Friend” and “Goin’ Back” to standout album cuts like “Renaissance Fair,” “Natural Harmony,” “Jesus Is Just Alright,” and “Chestnut Mare.” There are no surprises here; even the songs that eluded inclusion on albums for many years, like the early B-side “She Don’t Care About Time” and “Lady Friend,” have been commonly available in the CD era. And it’s true that this misses some other fine album tracks that could have stood with pride alongside those selected, like “I Knew I’d Want You,” “John Riley,” and “Dolphin’s Smile.” Within the confines of the two-CD format, though, it’s a very well-chosen career overview. – Richie Unterberger

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