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“Eight Miles High” by the Byrds

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    “Eight Miles High” by the Byrds is a classic rock song.

    Song Title: Eight Miles High
    Artist: the Byrds
    Album: Fifth Dimension
    Genre: classic rock, country rock, psychedelic rock, raga rock, psychedelic pop
    Composer: Copyright © 1966 Gene Clark, Jim McGuinn, David Crosby
    Vocals: Gene Clark, Jim McGuinn, David Crosby, Chris Hillman
    Lead Guitar: Jim McGuinn
    Rhythm Guitar: David Crosby
    Bass Guitar: Chris Hillman
    Drums: Michael Clarke
    Producer: Allen Stanton
    Recorded: 24-25 January 1966, Columbia Studios, Hollywood, California, USA
    Released: 14 March 1966
    Label: Columbia
    Number of listens: 20097

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    Summary quotation from Wikipedia:

    Arguably the most famous song on the album Fifth Dimension was the hit single “Eight Miles High”, an early excursion into psychedelic rock.[ Musically, the song was a fusion of John Coltrane-influenced guitar playing—courtesy of lead guitarist Jim McGuinn—and raga-based musical structure and vocals, inspired by the Indian classical music of Ravi Shankar. Written mostly by Gene Clark in November 1965, while The Byrds were on tour in the U.S., the song was pivotal in transmuting folk rock into the new musical forms of psychedelia and raga rock. Regardless of its innovative qualities, however, many radio stations in the U.S. banned the record, believing the title to be a reference to recreational drug use. The song’s lyrics actually pertained to the approximate cruising altitude of commercial airliners and the group’s first visit to London during their 1965 English tour.

    “Eight Miles High” is a song by the American rock band The Byrds, written by Gene Clark, Jim McGuinn (a.k.a. Roger McGuinn), and David Crosby and first released as a single on March 14, 1966 (see 1966 in music). The single managed to reach the Top 20 of the Billboard Hot 100 and the Top 30 of the UK Singles Chart. The song was also included on the band’s third album, Fifth Dimension, released on July 18, 1966. “Eight Miles High” became The Byrds’ third and final U.S. Top 20 hit, and also their last release before the departure of Gene Clark, who was the band’s principal songwriter at the time.
    The song was subject to a U.S. radio ban shortly after its release, following allegations published in the broadcasting trade journal the Gavin Report regarding perceived drug connotations in its lyrics. The band strenuously denied these allegations at the time, but in later years both Clark and Crosby admitted that the song was at least partly inspired by their own drug use. The failure of “Eight Miles High” to reach the Billboard Top 10 is usually attributed to the broadcasting ban, but some commentators have suggested that the song’s complexity and uncommercial nature were greater factors.
    Musically influenced by Ravi Shankar and John Coltrane, “Eight Miles High”, along with its McGuinn and Crosby penned B-side “Why”, was influential in developing the musical styles of psychedelic rock, raga rock and psychedelic pop. As such, the song is often cited by critics as being the first psychedelic rock song, as well as a classic of the counterculture era.

Composition
    The song’s lyrics are, for the most part, about the group’s flight to London in August 1965 and their accompanying English tour, as illustrated by the opening couplet: “Eight miles high and when you touch down, you’ll find that it’s stranger than known.” Although commercial airliners fly at an altitude of six to seven miles, it was felt that “eight miles high” sounded more poetic than six and also recalled the title of The Beatles’ song “Eight Days a Week”.
    According to Clark, the lyrics were primarily his creation, with a minor contribution being David Crosby’s line, “Rain grey town, known for its sound”, a reference to London being home to the British Invasion that was dominating the U.S. charts at the time. Other lyrics found in the song that explicitly refer to The Byrds’ stay in England include the couplet: “Nowhere is there warmth to be found/Among those afraid of losing their ground”, which is a reference to the hostile reaction of the UK music press and to the English group The Birds serving the band with a copyright infringement writ, due to the similarities in name. In addition, “Round the squares, huddled in storms/Some laughing, some just shapeless forms” describes the fans who waited for the band outside their hotels, while the line “Sidewalk scenes and black limousines” refers to the excited crowds that jostled the band as they exited their chauffeur driven cars.
    Although the basic idea for the song had been discussed during the band’s flight to England, it didn’t actually begin to take shape until The Byrds’ November 1965 tour of the U.S. In order to alleviate the boredom of travelling from show to show during the tour, Crosby had brought along cassette recordings of Ravi Shankar’s music and the John Coltrane albums Impressions and Africa/Brass, which were on constant rotation on the tour bus. The influence of these recordings on the band would manifest itself in the music of “Eight Miles High” and its B-side “Why”.
    Clark began writing the song’s lyrics on November 24, 1965, when he scribbled down some rough ideas for later development, following a discussion with guitarist Brian Jones, prior to The Byrds making a concert appearance supporting The Rolling Stones. Over the following days, Clark expanded this fragment into a full poem, eventually setting the words to music and giving them a melody. Clark then showed the song to McGuinn and Crosby, with the former suggesting that the song be arranged to incorporate the influence of Coltrane. Since Clark’s death, however, McGuinn has contended that it was he who conceived the initial idea of writing a song about an airplane ride and that he and Crosby both contributed lyrics to Clark’s unfinished draft. In his book, Mr. Tambourine Man: The Life and Legacy of The Byrds’ Gene Clark, author John Einarson disputes this claim and ponders whether McGuinn’s story would be the same were Clark still alive.

Recording
    The master recording of “Eight Miles High” was recorded on January 24 and 25, 1966, at Columbia Studios in Hollywood, with record producer Allen Stanton guiding the band through the recording process. John Einarson has noted that the influence of Coltrane’s saxophone playing and, in particular, his song “India” from the Impressions album, can be clearly heard in “Eight Miles High”—most noticeably in McGuinn’s reoccurring twelve-string guitar solo. In addition to this striking guitar motif, the song is also highlighted by Chris Hillman’s driving and hypnotic bass line, Crosby’s chunky rhythm guitar playing and the band’s ethereal harmonies.
    “Eight Miles High” also exhibits the influence of sitarist Ravi Shankar, particularly in the droning quality of the song’s vocal melody and in McGuinn’s guitar playing. However, the song does not actually feature the sound of the sitar, despite The Byrds having appeared brandishing the instrument at a contemporary press conference held to promote the single. In a 1966 promotional interview, which was added to the expanded CD reissue of the Fifth Dimension album, Crosby said that the song’s ending made him “feel like a plane landing.”
    An earlier version of “Eight Miles High” was recorded at RCA Studios in Los Angeles on December 22, 1965, but Columbia Records refused to release that recording because it had not been produced at a Columbia-owned studio. McGuinn has since stated that he believes this original version of the song to be more spontaneous sounding than the better known Columbia release. That opinion was echoed by Crosby, who commented “It was a stunner, it was better, it was stronger. It had more flow to it. It was the way we wanted it to be.” This original version of “Eight Miles High” initially saw release on the 1987 archival album Never Before and was also included as a bonus track on the 1996 Columbia/Legacy CD reissue of Fifth Dimension.

Release and legacy
U.S. radio ban
    “Eight Miles High” was released on March 14, 1966 in the U.S. and May 29, 1966 in the UK, reaching number 14 on the Billboard Hot 100, and number 24 on the UK Singles Chart. Following its release, the band faced allegations of advocating the use of recreational drugs from Bill Gavin’s Record Report, a weekly newsletter circulated to U.S. radio stations. This resulted in “Eight Miles High” being banned in a number of states within a week of the report being published, a factor which contributed to the single’s failure to break into the Billboard Top 10. The Byrds and their publicist, Derek Taylor, countered by strenuously denying that the song was drug-related, with Taylor issuing an indignant press release unequivocally stating that the song was about the band’s trip to England and not drug use. However, by the early 1980s, both Crosby and Clark were prepared to admit that the song was not entirely as innocent as they had originally declared, with the former stating “Of course it was a drug song! We were stoned when we wrote it.” Clark was less blunt, explaining in interview that “it was about a lot of things. It was about the airplane trip to England, it was about drugs, it was about all that. A piece of poetry of that nature is not limited to having it have to be just about airplanes or having it have to be just about drugs. It was inclusive because during those days the new experimenting with all the drugs was a very vogue thing to do.”
    Research analyst Mark Teehan, writing for Popular Musicology Online, has challenged the widely held view among critics, music historians and The Byrds themselves that the U.S. radio ban hurt sales of “Eight Miles High”. Having examined the local music surveys and the Billboard regional retail sales charts, as they relate to the national charting of “Eight Miles High”, Teehan has uncovered evidence suggesting that the progressive and uncommercial nature of the song was a much bigger factor in its failure to reach the Billboard Top 10. The author’s research revealed that “Eight Miles High” failed to reach the Top Five in any of his sample of 23 regional markets, and most telling, among the thirty radio stations included within this sample, it reached the Top 10 on only seven of them (23%).
    Teehan also points out that although the Gavin Report recommended that radio stations withdraw the single from airplay, many stations did not comply with this request. In addition, Teehan notes that the radio ban was not suggested by the Gavin Report until April 29, 1966, almost seven weeks after the single had initially been released—ample time for it to have made its mark on the charts. Teehan has also uncovered evidence showing that “Eight Miles High” was already decelerating on the national charts prior to the end of April 1966. The author concludes that the groundbreaking song lacked strong commercial appeal by virtue of its complexity, unique sound and excessive length (commercial radio stations were reluctant to play songs that were over two-and-a-half minutes long during the mid-1960s), and that it also suffered from uncoordinated and inefficient promotion by Columbia Records.

Influence and reception
    The song’s use of Indian and free-form jazz influences, along with its impressionistic lyrics, were immediately influential on the emerging genre of psychedelic rock. As such, a number of authors and music historians, including Eric V. D. Luft, Domenic Priore and Dwight Rounds, have described “Eight Miles High” as being the first bona fide psychedelic rock song. In his book Riot On Sunset Strip: Rock ’n’ Roll’s Last Stand in Hollywood, Priore also cites “Eight Miles High” as being the record that kicked off the psychedelic craze, explaining “prior to ‘Eight Miles High,’ there were no pop records with incessant, hypnotic basslines juxtaposed by droning, trance-induced improvisational guitar.”
    The song was also responsible for the naming of the musical subgenre raga rock, when journalist Sally Kempton, in her review of the single for The Village Voice, first used the term to describe the record’s experimental fusion of eastern and western music. However, although Kempton was the first person to use the term “raga rock” in print, she had actually borrowed the phrase from the promotional material that The Byrds’ press office had supplied to accompany the “Eight Miles High” single release. In his 1968 Pop Chronicles interview, McGuinn denied that the song was in fact an example of “raga rock”, while Crosby, speaking in 1998, dismissed the term, stating “they kept trying to label us; every time we turned around, they came up with a new one … it’s a bunch of bullshit.” Nonetheless, the experimental nature of the song placed The Byrds firmly at the forefront of the burgeoning psychedelic movement, along with The Yardbirds, The Beatles, Donovan, and The Rolling Stones, who were all exploring similar musical territory concurrently.
    Contemporary reviews for the single were mostly positive, with Billboard magazine describing the song as a “Big beat rhythm rocker with soft lyric ballad vocal and off-beat instrumental backing.” Record World magazine also praised the song, commenting “It’s an eerie tune with lyrics bound to hypnotize. Will climb heights.” In the UK, Music Echo described the song as “wild and oriental but still beaty”. The publication also suggested that with the release of “Eight Miles High” The Byrds had jumped ahead of The Beatles in terms of creativity, stating “[By] getting their single out now they’ve beaten The Beatles to the punch, for Paul [McCartney] admitted recently that the Liverpool foursome are working on a similar sound for their new album and single.” In recent years, Richie Unterberger, writing for the Allmusic website, has described “Eight Miles High” as “one of the greatest singles of the ’60s.”
    In 1999, the song was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, an honor reserved for “recordings of lasting qualitative or historical significance that are at least 25 years old.” In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked “Eight Miles High” at number 151 on their list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time and in March 2005, Q magazine placed the song at number 50 on their list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Tracks.

Post-release
    During the same month that “Eight Miles High” was released as a single, The Byrds’ main songwriter, Gene Clark, left the band. His fear of flying was stated as the official reason for his departure, although other contributing factors, including his tendency towards anxiety and paranoia, as well as his increasing isolation within the group, were also at work. Following the release of “Eight Miles High” and Clark’s departure, The Byrds never again managed to place a single in the Billboard Top 20.
    The Byrds performed “Eight Miles High” on a number of television programs during the 1960s and 1970s, including Popside, Drop In, Midweek, and Beat-Club. Additionally, the song would go on to become a staple of the band’s live concert repertoire, until their final disbandment in 1973. A sixteen-minute live version of “Eight Miles High” was included on the Byrds’ (Untitled) album in 1970 and another live version was released as part of the 2008 album, Live at Royal Albert Hall 1971. The song was also performed live by a reformed line-up of The Byrds featuring Roger McGuinn, David Crosby and Chris Hillman in January 1989.
    The song would remain a favorite of Clark’s during his post-Byrds solo career and would often be performed live at his concert appearances until his death in 1991. McGuinn also continues to perform an intricate acoustic guitar rendition of the song in his live concerts. Crosby has revisited “Eight Miles High” infrequently during his post-Byrds career, but it was performed during Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young’s reunion tour of 2000, with Neil Young handling McGuinn’s complex guitar solo, while the other three members sang the song’s three-part harmonies. Additionally, The Byrds’ bass player, Chris Hillman, recorded an acoustic version of “Eight Miles High” as part of his 2005 album, The Other Side.
    In addition to its appearance on the Fifth Dimension album, “Eight Miles High” also appears on several Byrds’ compilations, including The Byrds’ Greatest Hits, History of The Byrds, The Original Singles: 1965–1967, Volume 1, The Byrds, The Very Best of The Byrds, The Essential Byrds and There Is a Season.

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