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Mr. Tambourine Man album for sale Product Description
Mr. Tambourine Man album for sale by Byrds was released Feb 21, 2006 on the Sundazed label. Includes original liner notes by Billy James, and new liner notes by David Fricke and Johnny Rogan. Mr. Tambourine Man CD music All songs have been digitally remastered using a 20-Bit Super Mapping system. Mr. Tambourine Man buy CD music Few debut singles in the history of rock & roll have had the immediate and overwhelming impact of The Byrds' version of Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man." Marrying a Beatles-like electric jangle to Dylan's insight and folky melody (in many ways, breaking Dylan into the pop market), it not only forecast the band's influence on the future of pop music but reestablished an American rock & roll presence in the face of the British Invasion. Mr. Tambourine Man CD music contains a single disc with 12 songs. ...See Full Description
Byrds - Mr. Tambourine Man Album Track Listing
Mr. Tambourine Man buy CD music Customer Reviews
| Average Rating: |  |
| The start of a legend. Before the Byrds ever came along, these people were almost complete unknowns. And this album exploded them onto the public scene. These people inspired the Beatles to make Rubber Soul, and this album proves it. All of the songs are absolute sixties-pop masterpieces, with some incredible songwriting inside and outside of the group. One thing that is interesting, though, is that the group wasn't all that tight together, which resulted in session musicians (with the exception of Roger McGuinn's electric twelve-string Rickenbacker) being hired for the background tracks. But the songs and the vocals are completely the group's. This album has so many memories and so many highlights that it just cannot be summed up. You have to listen to this to understand it. This album, absolutely, confidently kick-started the ubiquitous genre of "folk-rock", and once again, for goooood reason. By Galen (Anchorage, Alaska) This review is for a different format. |
| Who Said That Mono Mixes aren't excellent? In The middle of sixties, the productors (example G. Martin of The Beatles), expend much more time mixes the songs in Mono than Stereo. Because people hadn't stereo pickups. So, in my opinion, the records of this years, sound better in Monoaural (¡And if it is Hybrid-Sacd then... Wow!), so the mixes in stereo are, in general, mock-stereo. JC_FDEZ (SPAIN) By jc_fdez (SPAIN)  This review is for a different format. |
| Astounding Sound Quality! WOW! This is my first Mobile Fidelity product... Definitely not my last! By princetone (NY, NY USA) This review is for a different format. |
| Simply Gorgeous! This CD is just a beautiful masterpiece, that's it. It was great in 1965 when I was 15, and it is still great now. It was the second thing to make my head spin. (The Beatles were the first.) When I heard it, I knew it was something important. It was - it was called folk-rock, and I never got over it! By stevenx9 (Mandeville, LA) This review is for a different format. |
| Ahhh!!!! Unlike most music today that has no higher value then the latest fad for blue jeans, there was a time when musicians had high asperations for their music. The Byrds are a breath of fresh air with this album. A must have for any collection. By Stevem (Lincoln, NE, USA) This review is for a different format. |
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