THE BYRDS: FIFTH DIMENSION (1966)
1) 5D (Fifth Dimension); 2)
Wild Mountain Thyme; 3) Mr. Spaceman; 4) I See You; 5) What's Happening; 6) I
Come And Stand At Every Door; 7) Eight Miles High; 8) Hey Joe; 9) Captain Soul;
10) John Riley; 11) 2-4-2 Fox Trot (The Lear Jet Song).
For some reason, the general critical consensus
seems to have had a bone with the Byrds' third album from the very beginning,
and even today it is usually described as an «uneven», «transitional» record
that lacks both the freshness and inspiration of their first two efforts and
the art-pop perfection of Younger Than
Yesterday. I have never seen it that way myself — not only am I still
enjoying the absolute majority of the tunes here, but in a way, Fifth Dimension is the Byrds album for me: that one collection of musical ideas where
they really showed the world that they could not only invent a successful
musical formula, but they could also transcend it, and participate in the
«great progressive race» of the mid-Sixties along with the best of 'em. This is
their Revolver, if you wish, and it
actually came out before Revolver, so there.
The high quality of the music is all the more
astounding considering that it was recorded in the wake of the band's first
(but far from the last) great cataclysm — the departure of Gene Clark due,
among other things, to his fear of flying (as a mocking parting gift, this is
reflected in the band's decision to finish the record with ʽThe Lear Jet
Songʼ). His only contribution, ironically, is yet another song about the
strangeness of flying (ʽEight Miles Highʼ), with McGuinn and Crosby both taking
additional credits, even if no one really knows how justified that was (well, I
guess at least McGuinn deserves plenty of credit for the famous guitar solo).
This explains the continuing high ratio of cover material — but the covers are
mostly good, and beyond that, Clark's departure did stimulate McGuinn and
Crosby to develop their own songwriting talents.
Most importantly, though, Fifth Dimension simultaneously takes The Byrds in more directions
(dimensions?) than any other of their albums. Word of the day is diversity, as
if they themselves looked back in horror at the clonish nature of Turn! Turn! Turn! and said, «if we go
on this way, we'll never catch up with them Beatles», and now they are firing
all the cannons at once. There's still some of the old trusty jingle-jangle
folk-rock vibe, of course (title track; ʽI Come And Stand At Every Doorʼ), but
there's also lushly orchestrated art-pop (ʽWild Mountain Thymeʼ), psychedelic
rock with jazz and Indian influences (ʽEight Miles Highʼ, ʽI See Youʼ), speedy,
catchy, quirky country-pop (ʽMr. Spacemanʼ), Booker T.-influenced R&B with
jagged edges (ʽCaptain Soulʼ), and even a pre-Hendrix version of ʽHey Joeʼ so
that they could always say that they were first, and pout their lips to the
max.
You could join the chorus of disappointed
grunts and point out individual problems with these songs — the sound is too
thin, the grooves are too repetitive, Crosby overacts like an idiot while
singing ʽHey Joeʼ — but instead of picking at minutiae, I recommend simply
embracing this universe as a whole, and getting the most of it. See Jim
McGuinn invent the motif of the «space cowboy» with ʽMr. Spacemanʼ, a song that
sounds as if it should have been a hit for Buck Owens, but is actually a
ten-years-early theme for Close
Encounters Of The Third Kind! Watch him set a poem by Nâzım Hikmet to a
morbidly slow-waltzing theme and reimagine the lyrics as coming from the ghost
mouth of a 7-year old victim of Hiroshima! Revel in the wind-gusty string
swoops of ʽWild Mountain Thymeʼ as they smash into the guitar jingle-jangle
that bravely withstands each new assault! And look, David Crosby can actually
write a song that has a steady, fast rhythm and a catchy vocal melody to go
along with the famous «lost in time and space, and loving it» Crosby vibe. Even
Yes would admire it to the point of covering the song on their first album —
something they'd probably never dream of doing over the likes of ʽAlmost Cut My
Hairʼ.
It is probably the towering awesomeness of
ʽEight Miles Highʼ — eight-mile towering, right? — that forms this impression
that the entire album is centered around one song, and everything else is just
filler in comparison. (Much the same way people like to dismiss Sgt. Pepper as an album that really
only has one great song on it — you know which one). Naturally, ʽEight Miles
Highʼ is a classic and a milestone: with its Indian raga and Coltrane
influences, it invents The Velvet Underground before there was a proper Velvet
Underground, and the combined effect of hard-rocking rhythm guitars, droning
leads, and stratospheric lyrics unequivocally makes this one of the defining
tracks of 1966, along with ʽTomorrow Never Knowsʼ (a song that seems to pursue
much the same goals, albeit in a totally different manner). However, it is just
because the song's innovative gamble is thrust straight in your face here — the
tasks that are accomplished on the other songs are more subtle and humble, and
may take a little time to appreciate.
I even hold a high opinion on ʽCaptain Soulʼ, a
jammy blues-rock instrumental that should not normally be associated with the
likes of The Byrds — but I've always admired the energy level on it, as two
lead guitars and one wailing harmonica compete for attention like a trio of
brawny, unrestrained kids. Were this a real
Booker T. & The M.G.'s jam, they would only let one instrument solo at a
time, and the solo would be all restrained and dignified and potentially quite
boring. These guys, on the other hand, make it feel like a garage happening —
all the more exciting coming from a bunch of «softies»... in a way, you can
almost feel the seeds of the classic Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young live
electric jams planted on this track, or at least understand why Stills and
Young even bothered letting ol' Cros' in on their little games.
Of course, Crosby can be a weak link at times — the band's version of ʽHey Joeʼ is
dramatically overwrought and rushed, never even hoping to be as doom-laden and
imposing as the Hendrix cover; and ʽWhat's Happening?!?!ʼ already goes over the
top with psychedelic «Indian» guitars, a process that would reach rather an
ugly culmination on next year's ʽMind Gardensʼ. But even so, ʽWhat's
Happening?!?!ʼ is hardly worse than, say, any random Love track from 1966-67,
and at this point, Crosby is still conservatively writing structured songs
rather than impressionist fantasies which would eventually become his primary,
if not only, style of writing.
Moreover, he had not yet grown his walrus moustache yet, so there's really no
need to worry.
Maybe a few of the idealistic / psychedelic
touches here have dated rather poorly
— particularly the lyrics of the title track, with its clichéd references to
"my two dimensional boundaries" and "scientific delirium
madness" — but only a few, and they are no more than cute bookmarks of a
time when child-like earnestness in popular music could be a source for
inspiration rather than immediate derision. In their own way, The Byrds were
doing here the same thing that The Beach Boys were doing with Pet Sounds (I mean, if I already
mentioned Revolver, it was only a
matter of time before a reference to Pet
Sounds would show up, right?), although their vision was more expansionist
and «macrocosmic» at the time — even boy-girl relations are seen here as
requiring the mediation of an extra dimension. After all, what kind of square
loser would want to have sex in 1966 without the added benefit of certain
chemical substances?..
Even the bonus tracks on the CD release are
excellent — an early version of the dreamy pop rocker ʽWhy?ʼ, an electric pop
reimagining of the traditional ʽI Know My Riderʼ with a riff that sounds suspiciously
similar to the Beatles' ʽDr. Robertʼ, and Crosby's talking psychedelic blues
ʽPsychodrama Cityʼ with another bunch of those messy, chaotic, avant-jazz
solos. But why is that final track dubbed as an «instrumental» version of ʽJohn
Rileyʼ? It sounds nothing like ʽJohn Rileyʼ. Just a fast groove with even more
jazzy guitar playing. (Could have been a nice move, though, if it were spliced
with the actual ʽJohn Rileyʼ, speeding and jazzifying it up after three
original minutes of electrofolk prettiness).
As far as I'm concerned, Fifth Dimension is the ultimate Byrds experience — not a «perfect»
album (the Byrds don't have a perfect album), but one that gives you everything
they could do well, shows you how much of a vision they had, and never ever
creates the impression of this band as a one-trick pony. Diehard fans of the
jingle-jangle, who think the band lost its strength as long as it stayed away
from the jingle-jangle, will indeed prefer 1965 or 1967 to 1966; but those who
really think that The Byrds are worthy of their own legend, and that in their
prime they were able to rival the
scope of The Beatles, at least in «mini-mode», will just have to agree that Fifth Dimension is really where it's
at, and accept the significance of this particular thumbs up.
I agree, this is indeed their best album (well, tied with Younger than Yesterday, at least). The only track I'm not a big fan of is "Hey Joe", but every other one is a gem, including David's hypnotic "What's Happening?!?!". What is this drum pattern? Why does it have a proto-disco feel to it? I've read that the intent of the warbling guitar fills after each vocal line is supposed to be a response of sorts to David's questions, and in the context, it works. In the creepy hidden bonus track interview (the one where the questions have been mixed out), David and Jim/Roger refer to their music as philoso-rock, and I definitely agree with the concept (though maybe philo-rock makes more sense, or philosopho-rock or something)
ReplyDeleteI think the disco feel might be the high hat Mike Clarke beats out on that one. This was probably his best album in terms of playing with feeling and power.
DeleteYou can definitely tell it's Clarke, and not Hal Blaine or Jim Gordon. He plays desperately far behind the beat, and there's a nasty stumble at the 1:54 mark that should have gotten him fired on the spot!
DeleteI read somewhere the only reason Clarke was chosen was because of his looks and nothing else
DeleteThank you, I've always appreciated this album more than their debut and it seems to get a lesser reputation. I agree with the above commenter: "Hey Joe" is the worst track (though not bad) and the rest is great!
ReplyDeleteEnter the Space Rock Epoch of Byrdshistory. Definitely their most overtly psychedelic and philosophical record, three months before the Beatles and a whole year before the rest of the world. Also their creepiest (Triad and Mind Gardens not withstanding). I Come and Stand makes me shiver every time I hear it. John Riley is another anthem to death and love. Mr. Soul makes me wince with all of the sucking Gene does on the harp. 5D (naturally featuring Van Dyke Parks on organ) is a total trip, and I feel a certain sympathy for the wide-eyed wacko in Mr. Spaceman. And yes, 8MH is indeed a giant. Probably my favorite Byrds song EVER. That bass line, the cranky guitars, the spooky vocals. It's proto-death metal as far as I'm concerned.
ReplyDeleteGreat, great album, but is it absolutely their best? YTY and NBB are strong contenders for the title as well. Something about 5D has always felt unfinished and a bit rushed, although it's also true that the Byrds never really put together a consistently satisfying album. "Eight Miles High" is undoubtedly the highest point in their career, and there are other influential and highly regarded tracks elsewhere on the disc. However, I would rant YTY and NBB just a bit higher on the scale of absolutely essential Byrds discs.
ReplyDeleteI like this one (all of their first 4 LPs are superb, really), but I would rate it the weakest of the first four. It kind of lacks an identity, and it's also something musically -- and that something is Mr. Gene Clark. On the next album, they dealt with that problem by Chris Hillman suddenly becoming a great songwriter/singer, but on this one they're exposed and the album is a bit thin. Still enjoyable, though.
ReplyDelete