by Mark Deming
As legend has it, The Byrds wrapped up the basic tracks for Byrdmaniax
in early 1971 and then hit the road for a concert tour, leaving producers
Terry Melcher and Chris Hinshaw to polish the final mix. Melcher and Hinshaw
then proceeded to add copious overdubs to what the group had set down,
drowning the songs in a swampy morass of keyboards, horns, strings, and
massed background singers in the misguided hope of making the album sound
more "commercial" (even Clarence White's superb lead guitar
often gets lost in the murk). The shame of it is that the aural gingerbread
managed to spoil what might have been one of The Byrds' better albums;
it's hard to imagine what Skip Battin's goofy "Citizen Kane"
or Roger McGuinn's witty "I Wanna Grow Up to Be a Politician"
were intended to sound like originally, but "I Trust" and "Kathleen's
Song" are lovely if you can listen past the overproduction, and "Green
Apple Quick Step" gives White and Gene Parsons plenty of room to
show off their old-time country chops. Not an awful album, but Byrdmaniax
is hardly the pleasure it could have been in the hands of a more tasteful
production team. The 1999 CD reissue adds three bonus tracks, including
an un-overdubbed alternate take of "Pale Blue" that indicates
how the album was originally intended to sound.
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