The Byrds - Changing Heart video free download


125,956
Duration: 02:42
Uploaded: 2007/09/29

Underrated and ignored Byrds tune. One of my favorites.

Comments

8 years ago

joe benintende

I forgot all about this song and I used to play it on guitar, too boot, 40 odd years ago. Gene Clark sure could write and sing a song !

9 years ago

heliomar gonçalves

O inicio do grande david crosby.

11 years ago

john iorio

nice chords...c, aminor, d

11 years ago

Smilin Charlie Lockwood

oh, Yoko.....

11 years ago

joeyrider

awesome tune Gene at his best

12 years ago

unclebobunclebob

This was a great album. I never understood why it was panned.

12 years ago

Glenn Wheatcroft

@2BlackBird The 12 string electric was way overused by this band. You dont have to have every godamn song with it. They limited themselves by this and it created a straightjacket in that every song sounded the same. A great sound mind you but any great sound wears after a short while when that's all there is.

12 years ago

Jorge Núñez

Probably the best song in the reunion album and one of the most underrated and ignored songs by The Byrds. I love that folkie tune and his harp phrases. Lovely.

13 years ago

incongra

Can't believe I had totally forgotten about this album, it's beautiful. I have the vinyl up my loft somewhere, oh and I want to know, where does the time go! Thanks for posting

13 years ago

konaspirit

@abata15 I knew Gene. We had the same manager in 80. Him and I became good friends on the account that we are both American Indian. We really didn't collaborate on anything, however, he did like my version of Gordon Lightfoot's "If you could read my mind" and later did an album with that song on it. He was also friends with Jesse Ed Davis, who had passed away by then(wish I could have met him). Gene inspired me, but its not til now that I've gotten it together with my band, Medicine Road.

13 years ago

CleanLineFilms

Long Live the Byrds

13 years ago

ioriorioriorio

Remindws me of campin upstate n.y. in the early 70's...those were stellar times!!

13 years ago

shane henning

great song

13 years ago

2BlackBird

David - bad boy Crosby- produced the CD, that may explain why Roger's 12 string is undermixed. Or is it suppose to be understated? Maybe they all agreed to give up something on this LP, as in "Can we all just get along?"

13 years ago

johnhamilton08

This is an extremely underrated song.

14 years ago

Frank Carrado

Perhaps, but "Deja Vu" was lifted from Essra Mohawk's "I Have Been Here Before" & he never owned up to it. It's from PRIMORDIAL LOVERS that's been called the Mother Album of "grrrl power." FYI, of course...

14 years ago

anthonypepitoneVideo

Not underrated or ignored by me - this is one of my very favorite Byrds tunes! Love the words and the harmonizing on the chorus is absolutely magnificent!!

14 years ago

Forque YU Gugle

STRATman.. sure ... Crosby had a big ego back then.. BUT- keep in mind the Byrds would NOT have been what they were( particularly in the vocal dept) as Croz did all those stellar high harmonies-some of the best EVER committed to tape. Wrote a few pretty good tunes, too. Certainly he was a crucial part of the Byrds sound.

14 years ago

gerardusch

They should remaster this album and bring forward Mcguinn's 12 string, which is now buried almost inaudibly deep into the mix most of the time. With earphones, the rickenbacker van be heard faintly, if you have good ears though. All of this thanks to producer Crosby who kept Mcguinn off the album as much as possible, due to unsettled ego clashes between them.

14 years ago

MadeinChinuh

this song is legit

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