

Tambourine Man' by the Byrds, and the start of LA folk-rock. It was also the title track for the bands debut album. Tambourine Man / Take Me as I Am / Here Comes the Sun (Klos. Overall, good job but you might want to check the BGV levels.įor 12 string emulation yes i simple dup track and +12 transpose all six strings.and yes it is easier to buy a 12 string guitarįor harmonies i think there are three harmonies I can't decode the third that connects the vocals so i record only two Episode one hundred and twenty-eight of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at 'Mr. The Byrds first single, Mr Tambourine Man, was released on 12 April 1965. Recordings 1988, Rockmine Medley 1: Drive My Car / Here Comes the Sun / The Bells of Rymney / Mr. I guess the simplest answer is to buy a 12 string. Not sure it really worked though, as it's hard to isolate notes played on B And E as you want to duplicate rather than octave them. It launched The Byrds, convinced Dylan to 'go electric,' and started the folk-rock. Tambourine Man' changed the face of rock music. Last time I did it I used Melodyne on a dup track and then removed all the very high notes to try and get closer to a real 12 string then created a separate dup track of the B and E string notes. I could take 'em or leave 'em, never hung me up.' 'Mr. I'm interested to know you did that - just a simple dup track and octave transpose of all six strings? Comment below with facts and trivia about the song and we may include it in our song facts Comments. I think the original might have had more than a two-part harmony but I'd have to have another listen. Mr Tambourine Man was the 8 song in 1965 in the Pop charts. Steve is right, those harmonies aren't quite right in volume - mix 1 is better.
