# March 18, 1965: The Byrds Release "Mr. Tambourine Man"
On March 18, 1965, The Byrds released what would become not just their signature song, but the track that essentially invented an entirely new genre: folk-rock. Their electrified cover of Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man" hit record stores on this day and immediately began its ascent to the top of the charts, where it would peak at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 by June.
What made this recording so revolutionary was the marriage of two seemingly incompatible worlds. You had Bob Dylan's poetic, surrealist lyrics meeting the jangly, ringing electric 12-string Rickenbacker guitar of Roger McGuinn, all wrapped up in gorgeous Beatles-influenced harmonies. The result was pure magic – a sound that was simultaneously folk music's future and rock and roll's literary awakening.
Here's a delicious bit of studio intrigue: despite The Byrds being a full band, the actual recording featured only Roger McGuinn on guitar and vocals, with legendary session musicians from the "Wrecking Crew" playing the other instruments. Producer Terry Melcher (yes, Doris Day's son) thought the band wasn't tight enough yet, so bass legend Larry Knechtel, drummer Hal Blaine, and others filled in. The other Byrds – David Crosby, Chris Hillman, Gene Clark, and Michael Clarke – were essentially backing vocalists on this track. This was a closely guarded secret at the time and caused considerable tension within the group.
The 12-string Rickenbacker sound that McGuinn created became instantly iconic and was obsessively copied by bands throughout the mid-1960s. McGuinn achieved this shimmering, bell-like tone partly by accident – he was trying to emulate the sound of John Coltrane's soprano saxophone on a guitar!
Bob Dylan himself hadn't released his own version yet (it wouldn't appear until his "Bringing It All Back Home" album later that month), but he'd played "Mr. Tambourine Man" live and given The Byrds an acetate demo. The band transformed Dylan's four-verse, meandering original into a tight, radio-friendly two-minute-and-twenty-second pop confection, proving that Dylan's complex wordplay could coexist with AM radio commercialism.
The impact was seismic. The song opened the floodgates for folk artists to go electric (helping pave the way for Dylan's controversial electric performance at Newport Folk Festival that July), and it legitimized rock music as a vehicle for serious, poetic lyrics. Without "Mr. Tambourine Man," you don't get the folk-rock explosion of 1965-1966, no "Like a Rolling Stone," no Simon & Garfunkel going electric, no Buffalo Springfield, and the entire trajectory of late-'60s rock would look completely different.
The song's influence echoed through decades – you can hear its DNA in everything from Tom Petty's jangle-pop to R.E.M.'s early sound to The Smiths' guitar work. That Rickenbacker jangle became as fundamental to rock guitar as the Chuck Berry riff.
So on this day in 1965, a record hit the streets that proved poetry and pop, folk and rock, acoustic traditions and electric futures could not only coexist but create something more beautiful than either could alone. Not bad for a Tuesday!
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