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Byrd Gene Clarke


DudeAsInCool

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http://www.well.com/conf/inkwell.vue/

Since 'The Well' link is gone, I am posting his bio from Wikipedia. I had the pleasure to see him play with The Byrds in high school and had a front row seat - his guitar playing was absolutely terrific. He was a very talented songwriter, too, and I had some of his solo efforts.

Born in Tipton, Missouri, the second eldest of thirteen children (his sister Bonnie was the oldest), Clark began learning the guitar at age nine and was soon picking out Hank Williams tunes, as well as material by early rockers such as Elvis Presley and the Everly Brothers. Before long, he was writing his own songs and at 13 cut his first record with a local rock & roll combo, Joe Meyers and the Sharks. Like many of his generation, Clark developed an interest in folk music because of the popularity of the Kingston Trio. Clark graduated from Bonner Springs High School in Bonner Springs, Kansas in 1962. He began performing with several folk groups working out of Kansas City at the Castaways Lounge, owned by Hal Harbaum, where he was discovered by the New Christy Minstrels, who hired him for their ensemble. After hearing the Beatles, Clark quit the Christys and moved to Los Angeles where he met fellow folkie/Beatles convert Jim (later Roger) McGuinn and in 1964 they began to assemble a band that would become The Byrds.

Gene Clark wrote many of The Byrds' best-known originals, including: "Feel a Whole Lot Better", "Set You Free This Time", "Here Without You", "She Don't Care About Time" and "Eight Miles High", and was one of the group's strongest vocalists. However, the combination of Clark's dislike of traveling (including a chronic fear of flying) and resentment by other band members about the extra income he derived from his songwriting led to internal squabbling and in early 1966 Clark left the group. After a torrid affair with Michelle Phillips, he briefly moved to Kansas City before returning to Los Angeles to form Gene Clark & the Group with Chip Douglas, Joel Larson, and Bill Rinehart.

Columbia Records, (the Byrds' record label), signed Clark as a solo artist and in 1967 he released his first solo LP, Gene Clark with the Gosdin Brothers, a mixture of pop, country rock and baroque-psychedelic tracks. Unfortunately for Clark, the album was released almost simultaneously with the Byrds' Younger Than Yesterday and (partly as a result of his 18 month-long public absence) was a commercial failure. With the future of his solo career in doubt, Clark briefly rejoined the Byrds in 1967 as a replacement for the recently-departed Crosby but left after only 3 weeks following a panic attack in Minneapolis just before boarding an aircraft.

In 1968, Clark signed with the artist-friendly A&M Records and began a collaboration with banjo player Doug Dillard as Dillard & Clark. With guitarist Bernie Leadon (later with The Flying Burrito Brothers and The Eagles), they produced two Country Rock & Bluegrass-flavored albums: The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark and Through the Morning, Through the Night both of which fared poorly on the charts but were praised by critics. In hindsight, Dillard & Clark, together with The Flying Burrito Brothers, Buffalo Springfield, Poco and The Byrds can be credited as prime influences on later soft Country Rock performers such as The Eagles, Pure Prairie League, and Firefall.

In 1970, having left Dillard & Clark in yet another quixotic search for pop stardom, Clark began work on a new single, recording a couple of tracks with the original members of the Byrds (each laid down his part separately). The resulting songs, "She's The Kind Of Girl" and "One in a Hundred", were not released at the time due to legal problems and were included later on Roadmaster. Frustrated with the music industry, Clark purchased a clifftop coastal home in Mendocino, disavowed alcohol, married, and fathered two children while living off his still substantial Byrds royalties.

In 1970 and 1971, Clark contributed vocals and two of his compositions ("Tried So Hard" and "Here Tonight") to albums by the Flying Burrito Brothers. It's been rumored that Clark was invited to replace Gram Parsons and/or Leadon as frontman of the group; however John Einarson's biography of Clark, Mr Tambourine Man, has put paid to this rumour. The Burrito's never considered enlisting Clark because of his fear of travel.

It wasn't until 1971 that a further Gene Clark solo set finally emerged, White Light, produced by Native American guitarist Jesse Ed Davis. A largely-acoustic work, the album contained many introspective tracks such as "With Tomorrow", "Because of You", " Where My Love Lies Asleep" and "For a Spanish Guitar" (hailed by Bob Dylan as a song he would have been proud to compose). All of the material was written by Clark, with the exception of the Dylan number "Tears of Rage". Launched to almost universal critical acclaim, the LP failed to gain commercial success, except in Holland where it was also voted album of the year by rock music critics.

In the spring of 1971, Clark was commissioned by Dennis Hopper to contribute the tracks "American Dreamer" and "Outlaw Song" to Hopper's film project, "The American Dreamer".

In 1972, Clark assembled a backing group to accompany him on a further album with A&M. The resulting eight tracks, together with those recorded with The Byrds in 1970/71 and another with The Flying Burrito Brothers, were belatedly released as Roadmaster only in the Netherlands where it became a best seller.

Clark then left A&M to rejoin the original Byrds and cut the album Byrds (1973) which charted well (US # 20). Clark's compositions "Full Circle" and "Changing Heart" were widely regarded as the standout tracks on a record which received overwhelmingly negative critical response. Disheartened by the bad reviews and unhappy with David Crosby's performance as the record's producer, the group members chose to dissolve The Byrds. Clark briefly joined McGuinn's solo group, with which he premiered "Silver Raven", arguably his most recognizable post-Byrds opus.

Once more solo and on the basis of the quality of his Byrds contributions, Clark signed with David Geffen's Asylum Records in early 1974. Asylum was the home of the most prominent exponents of the singer-songwriter movement of the era and carried the kind of hip cachet that Clark hadn't experienced since his days with The Byrds. He retired to Mendocino and spent long periods at the picture window of his living room with a notebook and acoustic guitar in hand, staring at the Pacific Ocean. Deeply affected by his visions, he composed numerous songs which would serve as the basis for his only Asylum LP, the aptly titled No Other. Recorded with a vast array of session musicians and backing singers, the album was an amalgam of country rock, folk, gospel, soul and choral music with poetic, mystical lyrics but it was not well received by many contemporary critics who categorised it as an overproduced baroque indulgence. Because "No Other" was not a conventional pop/rock opus, its chances of success were greatly minimised by Clark's relative obscurity. Furthermore, it was released with only eight tracks (the rumour that it was originally intended to be a double-album has been put to rest by Einarson's biography). However, the huge recording costs infuriated Geffen, who ended the sessions after recording costs skyrocketed into the $100,000 range. Shortly after, Clark drunkenly assailed Geffen and the label refused to expand or promote the album which stalled in the charts at #144. On a more personal note, the singer's return to Los Angeles and his adoption of the hedonistic lifestyle of the era resulted in the disintegration of his marriage. In spite of these setbacks, he mounted his first solo tour in an attempt to salvage No Other, playing colleges and clubs with backing group the Silverados.

Throughout 1975 and 1976, Clark hinted to the press that he was assembling a set of "cosmic Motown" songs fusing country-rock with R&B and funk, elaborating on the soundscapes of No Other. A set of ten demos were submitted to Asylum who promptly bought out Clark's contract.

In 1977 Clark released his RSO Records debut entitled Two Sides to Every Story. The record was another characteristic offering of his form of country-rock balladry but failed to achieve US chart success. In a belated attempt to find an appreciative public, he temporarily overcame his fear of flying and launched an international promotional tour. For his British dates, Clark found himself booked with ex-Byrds Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman, the success of which led the three to sign with Capitol Records which released their self-titled debut in 1979.

McGuinn, Clark and Hillman was a rebirth in both performing and songwriting for Clark. The media loved the band and they performed on many TV rock shows, including repeated performances on The Midnight Special, where they played both new material and Byrds hits. "Don't You Write Her Off" reached #33 in April 1979 and Clark contributed heavily to the band since it was an outgrowth of his London shows. While some feel that the slick production and disco rhythms didn't flatter the group and the album had mixed reviews both critically and commercially, it sold enough to generate a follow up. McGuinn, Clark and Hillman's second release was to have been a full group effort entitled "City", but a combination of Clark's unreliability and his dissatisfaction with their musical direction (mostly regarding Ron and Howard Albert's production) resulted in the billing change on their next LP "City" to "Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman, featuring Gene Clark". Despite the turmoil, Clark penned a classic love song, "Won't Let You Down", rumoured to have been offered as an olive branch to the other former Byrds. By 1981 Clark had left and the group briefly continued as "McGuinn/Hillman."

Clark stayed on the sidelines for several years, assembling a band called Flyte which failed to score a record deal, before re-emerging in 1984 with a new band and an album named Firebyrd. The rising popularity of jangle-rockers such as R.E.M. and Tom Petty had sparked a new interest in the Byrds and Clark began developing new fans among L.A.'s roots-conscious paisley underground scene. He embraced his new status by appearing as a guest with the Long Ryders and cutting a duo album with Carla Olson of the Textones titled So Rebellious a Lover in 1987.

Rebellious was well-received and became a modest commercial success (it was the biggest selling album of Clark's solo career), but Clark began to develop serious health problems; he had ulcers, aggravated by years of heavy drinking (often used to alleviate his chronic travel anxiety, most likely caused by undiagnosed panic disorder), and in 1988 he underwent surgery, during which much of his stomach and intestines had to be removed. Clark also lost a certain amount of goodwill among longtime Byrds fans when he joined drummer Michael Clarke for a series of shows billed "A 20th Anniversary Celebration of the Byrds." Many clubs simply shortened the billing to "the Byrds" and the pair soon found themselves in an ugly legal battle with Roger McGuinn, David Crosby, and Chris Hillman over usage of the group's name. The Byrds set aside their differences long enough to appear together at their induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in January of 1991, where the original lineup played a few songs together, including Clark's "Feel a Whole Lot Better." However, Clark's health continued to decline as his drinking accelerated and on May 24, 1991, not long after he had begun work on a second album with Carla Olson, Gene Clark died at the age of 46, the coroner declaring that he succumbed as a result of "natural causes" brought on by a bleeding ulcer. He was buried in Tipton under a simple headstone inscribed "Harold Eugene Clark - No Other".

And here is a video, in which her peforms with Robbin Sorrell

post-9-1184098109.jpg

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yeah, i can imagine...i'm not too interested in him anymore although he was very nice after i dissed him, very polite to me in his mails (typical Brit). :)

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