Six or Eight Miles High

Those who flock to The Byrds
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jimk
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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Scastles wrote: I would have just been pleased to see Clark, no matter what. I'm sure his version was stellar, as were many of the songs he wrote (not to take anything away from the Byrds version. It too was fantastic.) Clark was under appreciated, especially as a songwriter, IMO.
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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Scastles wrote:
kvalois wrote:In 1987, I saw Gene Clark play at a small coffee house in Hartford. When he introduced "Eight Miles High," he mentioned how HE was the principal author of the song-- and the way he wrote it was very different!!! He then stated that he was going to play it the way he intended-- not like the Byrds version!!!

I wish that I could have recorded it that night. But, it was much slower and the verses were hauntingly beautiful. At one point, he did stop briefly to mention that: "at this juncture, Roger McGuinn comes in with a blistering solo-- but, I can't do that!!!! :D

Karl

I would have just been pleased to see Clark, no matter what. I'm sure his version was stellar, as were many of the songs he wrote (not to take anything away from the Byrds version. It too was fantastic.) Clark was under appreciated, especially as a songwriter, IMO.
Under appreciated by the masses most certainly but equally certainly, not by any of us!

I wish I had the words of Chris Hillman handy. They may have been said in John Einarson's "Mr. Tambourine Man" but it was something to the effect of how Gram Parsons gets so much credit for his very influential influence on country flavoured rock but how Gene did so much more and did it so well. That is roughly the gist of what Hillman was saying though it was not in those words.
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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I thought I'd found it. I went to youtube and stuck in "Gene Clark" and Eight and up popped a 1985 band performance with his "dream team band."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuWDk2tb-HE

But they play the Byrds version, even with a bit of a McGuinn type solo. (And pardon for the sound which is garbled by a damaged video, and for the fact that it ends early. Otherwise it is pretty hot.)
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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jimk wrote:
Scastles wrote: I would have just been pleased to see Clark, no matter what. I'm sure his version was stellar, as were many of the songs he wrote (not to take anything away from the Byrds version. It too was fantastic.) Clark was under appreciated, especially as a songwriter, IMO.
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I have always felt Gene would have been happier with a guitar in his hands......he mighta stayed in the band and who knows the great songs he'd have written......
"All these things will be lost in time....like....tears....in rain...."----Roy Batty, Bladerunner
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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More on Gene Clark-----he was stuck in some hoky role, I believe, as the "lead singer with the tambourine"......with a third guitar, the band would have looked great and would have had a fatter sound live---there was often a third guitar on their recordings anyway.....

That whole wacky "male lead singer/frontman with a combo" started in the 60s and has only worked in 2 bands--The Who and Led Zeppelin.....in the real world of nightclub musicians there is nothing more worthless that a male singer who plays no substantive instrument......lead girl singers?....that's a whole different deal...if they LOOK good and sing pretty good, it can take a band a long way.....
"All these things will be lost in time....like....tears....in rain...."----Roy Batty, Bladerunner
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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vynesmusic wrote:
That whole wacky "male lead singer/frontman with a combo" started in the 60s and has only worked in 2 bands--The Who and Led Zeppelin.....in the real world of nightclub musicians there is nothing more worthless that a male singer who plays no substantive instrument......lead girl singers?....that's a whole different deal...if they LOOK good and sing pretty good, it can take a band a long way.....

Unfortunately for Gene he shared lead mic time with McGuinn. If Gene had been the 'go to guy' on lead vocals for every number his stage presence might not have seemed as stilted in appearance. As it was Gene was made to look even more like the 5th wheel just standing there with nothing more than a tambourine when McGuinn took the lead.
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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vynesmusic wrote:More on Gene Clark-----he was stuck in some hoky role, I believe, as the "lead singer with the tambourine"......with a third guitar, the band would have looked great and would have had a fatter sound live---there was often a third guitar on their recordings anyway.....

That whole wacky "male lead singer/frontman with a combo" started in the 60s and has only worked in 2 bands--The Who and Led Zeppelin.....in the real world of nightclub musicians there is nothing more worthless that a male singer who plays no substantive instrument......lead girl singers?....that's a whole different deal...if they LOOK good and sing pretty good, it can take a band a long way.....
Not exactly sure what you mean by "worked", but there have been scores of successful groups with non-guitarist frontmen, starting with the Rolling Stones!

To that you can add the Kinks, Animals, Doors, J. Geils, Aerosmith, Bad Company, Queen, Van Halen, Guns & Roses... the list is endless. Whether you like the music or not is certainly debatable, but these are (or were) all successful groups.

Notable bands with three performing guitarists are far more the exception than the rule. And in the world of lower-echelon nightclub bands, unless a third guitar brings something extremely vital to the sound, it cuts a fifth of each member's take for the gig.
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

Post by dbailey62 »

janglebox wrote:
vynesmusic wrote:More on Gene Clark-----he was stuck in some hoky role, I believe, as the "lead singer with the tambourine"......with a third guitar, the band would have looked great and would have had a fatter sound live---there was often a third guitar on their recordings anyway.....

That whole wacky "male lead singer/frontman with a combo" started in the 60s and has only worked in 2 bands--The Who and Led Zeppelin.....in the real world of nightclub musicians there is nothing more worthless that a male singer who plays no substantive instrument......lead girl singers?....that's a whole different deal...if they LOOK good and sing pretty good, it can take a band a long way.....
Not exactly sure what you mean by "worked", but there have been scores of successful groups with non-guitarist frontmen, starting with the Rolling Stones!

To that you can add the Kinks, Animals, Doors, J. Geils, Aerosmith, Bad Company, Queen, Van Halen, Guns & Roses... the list is endless. Whether you like the music or not is certainly debatable, but these are (or were) all successful groups.

Notable bands with three performing guitarists are far more the exception than the rule. And in the world of lower-echelon nightclub bands, unless a third guitar brings something extremely vital to the sound, it cuts a fifth of each member's take for the gig.
Valid points but Ray Davies played rhythm guitar in the Kinks ... and in regards to the Byrds, I've always wished Gene had a guitar in his hands even if he would have been by far the weakest guitar player of the four (including Chris). I'm not putting down any of the groups you've mentioned but I've always liked the look of the Stones when Mick picked up a guitar or the Who when Roger picked up a guitar.

It adds to their musical cachet IMHO.
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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kvalois wrote:In 1987, I saw Gene Clark play at a small coffee house in Hartford. When he introduced "Eight Miles High," he mentioned how HE was the principal author of the song-- and the way he wrote it was very different!!! He then stated that he was going to play it the way he intended-- not like the Byrds version!!!

I wish that I could have recorded it that night. But, it was much slower and the verses were hauntingly beautiful. At one point, he did stop briefly to mention that: "at this juncture, Roger McGuinn comes in with a blistering solo-- but, I can't do that!!!! :D

Karl

I dug through my files and found a live solo recording of Gene Clark singing Eight Miles High. It sounds just like what Karl describes. It is slower and haunting and more expressive than the Byrds version.

However, I am very fond of the McGuinn solo version - and in a good night (after a few other good nights practice) can hack out a poor imitation. Better than the Clark version? well that is like comparing apples and oranges. Clark is more expressive in his vocals, but McGuinn gives a great compbined insrumental and vocal presentation.
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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dbailey62 wrote:Valid points but Ray Davies played rhythm guitar in the Kinks ... and in regards to the Byrds, I've always wished Gene had a guitar in his hands even if he would have been by far the weakest guitar player of the four (including Chris). I'm not putting down any of the groups you've mentioned but I've always liked the look of the Stones when Mick picked up a guitar or the Who when Roger picked up a guitar.

It adds to their musical cachet IMHO.
Interesting outlook. I've always felt that guitars just looked like props in the hands of guys known primarily for singing. Sort of like seeing a great baseball pitcher flexing a bat, or an offensive lineman holding a football. It's not like these singers are really adding substantively to the band's signature sound with their guitar playing, anyway.
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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janglebox wrote:
dbailey62 wrote:Valid points but Ray Davies played rhythm guitar in the Kinks ... and in regards to the Byrds, I've always wished Gene had a guitar in his hands even if he would have been by far the weakest guitar player of the four (including Chris). I'm not putting down any of the groups you've mentioned but I've always liked the look of the Stones when Mick picked up a guitar or the Who when Roger picked up a guitar.

It adds to their musical cachet IMHO.
Interesting outlook. I've always felt that guitars just looked like props in the hands of guys known primarily for singing. Sort of like seeing a great baseball pitcher flexing a bat, or an offensive lineman holding a football. It's not like these singers are really adding substantively to the band's signature sound with their guitar playing, anyway.
I'm with you, Steve. Usually, when I see one of those lead singers with a guitar, I picture the Partridge Family for some reason. Somethin' just doesn't look right. Gene certainly had the voice to front the Byrds. Maybe his competition was more aggressive than he was. On a bunch of the video I've seen of the Byrds, Mr. McGuinn gets a lot of camera time and looks like the frontman.

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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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vynesmusic wrote:That whole wacky "male lead singer/frontman with a combo" started in the 60s and has only worked in 2 bands--The Who and Led Zeppelin.....in the real world of nightclub musicians there is nothing more worthless that a male singer who plays no substantive instrument...
Errr.....Yes? Genesis (way back when they were a real band)? Gentle Giant? CAPTAIN BEEFHEART???? I'm gonna say that stuff 'worked'...

The first band I played in ('74-'78) had a male lead singer who was a great bass player and guitarist, but his voice was so amazing we convinced him just to concentrate on singing with us. "In the real world of nightclub musicians", we could pretty well 'wow' the crowd because we were all good players, but when that guy opened up his pipes you could see people's jaws drop to the floor. There were plenty of competent bands working in our scene, but nobody could touch us with that kind of voice up front. A stellar human being, too...if he hadn't been killed on his motorcycle at the age of 26, I'd probably still be playing with him.
vynesmusic wrote:lead girl singers?....that's a whole different deal...if they LOOK good and sing pretty good, it can take a band a long way.....
Well, most folks here know all about my political leanings, so I'm not even going to touch that one...
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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Oh, yeah...there was another band in Phoenix a few years older than us with a front man who did pretty well in 'the real world of nightclubs'. They were called The Beans, but changed their name when they moved to SF. Their singer called himself 'Fee Waybill'...

(I've spent a lot of time in nightclubs...a LOT of time...but I can't say I ever thought of 'em as 'the real world'...)
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

Post by wayang »

Man...I just remembered another one from me grand ol' childhood...what about David Clayton Thomas in BS&T? I seem to recall that arrangement 'working' as well. One of my (many) million dollar ideas is to arrange a 'tribute to BS&T' album featuring all the Seattle 'grunge' bands, since all them singers were pretty much ripping off DCT anyway.

(Really, I just want to hear Eddie Vedder singing 'Spinning Wheel'. Can you not pitchah him grinding out lines like "Rrride a painted pony..."?)
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Re: Six or Eight Miles High

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wayang wrote:Man...I just remembered another one from me grand ol' childhood...what about David Clayton Thomas in BS&T? I seem to recall that arrangement 'working' as well. One of my (many) million dollar ideas is to arrange a 'tribute to BS&T' album featuring all the Seattle 'grunge' bands, since all them singers were pretty much ripping off DCT anyway.

(Really, I just want to hear Eddie Vedder singing 'Spinning Wheel'. Can you not pitchah him grinding out lines like "Rrride a painted pony..."?)
After hearing him sing "Rockin' in the Free World" with Neil Young, and a solo (w/Mike McCready) "Masters of War" on some MTV awards thing — both years ago — I think Eddie Vedder could more than handle his own on a DCT/BS&T tribute. 8)
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