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(2 Customer Reviews)
All songs have been digitally remastered using a 20-Bit Super Mapping system.
This is the album on which The Byrds truly exploded. They had already introduced the mainstream to a young folk singer named Bob Dylan by taking an electrified "Mr. Tambourine Man" to #1. They introduced California folk-rock to the masses, breaking ground for the likes of the Mamas & Papas and the Turtles. With FIFTH DIMENSION, The Byrds planted the seeds of psychedelia--and not just the San Francisco kind--in pop culture. The gray, dark trip of the Velvet Underground and the fuzzed-out minimalist boogie of such garage heroes as Count Five and the 13th Floor Elevators can also be found within these grooves. FIFTH DIMENSION recognized that musical higher consciousness had to be manifested in a dark side as well as a brighter one.
Gene Clark's departure from the band prior to these recording sessions, and the decision not to cover any Bob Dylan songs, streamlined the Byrds' sound and made the group's vision clear. "Eight Miles High," a highly-charged sonic release, evokes both VU's "Heroin" and John Coltrane's jazz explosions. The higher consciousness of "Eight Miles High," the harmony-driven stomp of "2-4-2 Fox Trot," and the CCR-meets-Stax boogie of "Captain Soul," all drenched in heavy guitar distortion, were unlike anything the pop world had heard. For the next three years, sounds inspired by FIFTH DIMENSION would make up the soundtrack of a cultural revolution.
The 1996 reissue of FIFTH DIMENSION includes six bonus tracks: "Why" (the B-side of the "Eight Miles High" single), "I Know My Rider (I Know You Rider)," "Psychodrama City," and alternate takes of "Eight Miles High," "Why" and "John Riley."
Recorded between December 22, 1965 and July 28, 1966.
Includes liner notes by David Fricke and Johnny Rogan.
Producers: Allen Stanton, Jim Dickson.
Reissue producer: Bob Irwin.
The Byrds: David Crosby (vocals, guitar); Jim McGuinn (vocals, 12-string guitar); Chris Hillman (vocals, bass); Michael Clarke (drums).
Additional personnel: Van Dyke Parks (keyboards); Gene Clark (tambourine, harmonica, vocals).
Entertainment Weekly (6/28-7/5/96, p.106) - "...illustrates why the best Byrds music still inspires musicians....And while time hasn't enhanced the group's forays into psychedelia....there are enough keepers to make you forgive their occasional tendency to fly into walls." - Rating: B Q (8/99) - Included in Q Magazine's "Best Psychedelic Albums of All Time" issue. Q (7/96, p.134) - 4 Stars - Excellent - "...`I See You' boasts the floaty groove, stammering guitar and jazzy chords that were coming into the repertoire of the early psychedelic groups..." Melody Maker (5/11/96, p.50) - Recommended - "...`Eight Miles High' will always breathe the same rarefied air, always hum with vividly altered perceptions. Age cannot wither it..." Musician (8/96, p.90) - "I like the sound better here. The guitar interplay emerges with greater warmth and clarity, without over-thinning the wash..." CD Buyer's Guide - "This is probably their finest" NME (Magazine) (5/11/96, p.46) - 8 (out of 10) - "...heralds a newly psychedelic Byrds hung up on the archetypal acid-fixation with the unknown...and utter confusion....it's faultless." Blender (Magazine) (p.82) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "McGuinn stepped up his game...playing spark-showering lead guitar that lifted ideas from John Coltrane's modal jazz improvisations." Fifth Dimension Music Review Average Rating: (4 out of 5 stars)   Fifth Dimension is (only) just alright This CD is okay and probably typical for the time, given 45's were the big sellers and LP's usually contained more fill than substance. Even the bonus tracks on this CD reek of filler (2 versions of "Why"!!-Okay, they are both different, but not that much). Apart from "Eight Miles High" and "What's Happening" most of the others are pretty lightweight. The Beatles and even The Dave Clark Five seemed more adventureous than The Byrds in comparison with their LP's of the time. I was a tad disappointed. Submitted by Stuey S (Glengowrie, Sth Aust, Aust)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
The start of psychedelic rock-n-roll This album was absolutely groundbreaking, due to its many varied elements. The main hit, "Eight Miles High", was an absolutely inspired piece of psychedelic rock that paved the way for acts like the Doors and Love. And, what's more, the other songs have some of the strongest songs of the group's career together. "Mr. Spaceman" was a silly piece of country-rock, "Wild Mountain Thyme" was pure pop-folk magic, and "I See You" was a subtly scary track that really makes you look over your shoulder. This album came at a time when one of the group's best songwriters, Gene Clark, suddenly quit the group because of a combination of factors. He is sorely missed on later records, and David Crosby's "What's Happening?!?!" reflects some of the confusion that the group was going through. It's still a great record, and can be enjoyed by any rock aficionado. Submitted by Galen (Anchorage, Alaska) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Fifth Dimension CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Byrds Mr. Tambourine Man CD (1965) Remastered
Fifth Dimension
$6.75 Includes original liner notes by Billy James, and new liner notes by David Fricke and Johnny Rogan.
All songs have been digitally remastered using a 20-Bit Super Mapping system.
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 ...
| | Byrds Turn! Turn! Turn! CD (1965) Remastered
Fifth Dimension
$8.29 Includes original release notes by Derek Taylor and new liner notes by David Fricke and Johnny Rogan.
All songs have been digitally remastered using a 20-Bit Super Mapping system.
More of a companion piece than a follow-up to their debut, TURN! TURN! TURN! established The Byrds' place in the puzzle that was American rock & roll in the mid-'60s, but not for reasons commonly attributed to it. On the one hand, this was another batch of songs furthering the California folk-rock ...
| | Byrds Younger Than Yesterday CD (1967)
Fifth Dimension
$7.59 Recorded in 1966-67. Includes liner notes by David Fricke and Johnny Rogan.
Released in April 1967, months before the Summer Of Love, YOUNGER THAN YESTERDAY was proof that The Byrds had already graduated from their fascination with the psychedelic "scene." "Eight Miles High" may have introduced the general public to the counter culture's interests and fascinations, but this song cycle found The Byrds reluctant to rest their faith in either the growing ...
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Fifth Dimension
$10.69 This package contains the original MACHINE HEAD plus quadrophonic mixes of 2 songs on one disc, MACHINE HEAD remixed by Roger Glover in 1998, and a 28 page booklet.
A probable contender for one of hard rock's "all-time most influential albums," Deep Purple's MACHINE HEAD has all the markings of a heavy classic. It was here that the band's combination of amped-up blues, progressive ...
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| | Dark Meat Universal Indians CD (2006) Digipak
Fifth Dimension
$11.75 Originally released in 2006 and reissued in '08 on the Vice label, UNIVERSAL INDIANS introduces the world to Dark Meat, a psychedelic-rock collective from Athens, Georgia, whose membership usually hovers around 16-18 musicians. Bolstered by cacophonous horn lines, the group's songs channel Iggy Pop through a funnel lined with brown acid, as revealed on the oddly raucous "Three Eyes Open."
Although it is nominally led by singer/songwriter/guitarist Jim McHugh, Dark Meat list 23 singers and musicians in the credits to their debut album, Universal Indians, and it often seems as if all of them are singing and playing at the same time. Producer, mixer, and engineer Asa Leffer (who also gets credits for keyboards and "beercan") creates a Phil Spector-like Wall of Sound out of a band that boasts basic rock instrumentation plus extra percussionists, backup singers, horns, reeds, a violin, a pedal steel guitar, a bamboo flute, a Celtic harp, a didgeridoo, and "field recordings." Actually, "wall of noise" is more like it much of the time, as the sound picture is filled up in an approximation of an aural tornado -- individual voices and instruments emerge and disappear, but the overall effect is of a giant, swirling mass. Over the top (in more ways than one) is McHugh, whose singing may remind the listener (depending on age) of Richard Fariña ('60s), Richard Hell ('70s), or Larry Kirwan of Black 47 ('90s). If those references don't inform, call McHugh's voice high, adenoidal, whiny, and almost hysterical much of the time. It is not as distinct or as prominent in the mix as those of Fariña, Hell, or Kirwan on their recordings, and it is often accompanied by one or ...
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