Home Search by Brand Hand Tools Clamps Hammers Wrenches  
  What are you shopping for?  


 

The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark/Through the Morning, Through the Night

The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark/Through the Morning, Through the Night
MSRP: $14.98
Your Price: $14.98
Shipping: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Polygram UK
Buy The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark/Through the Morning, Through the Night
 

Related The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark/Through the Morning, Through the Night Products

Fantastic Clark/Through & Through Morning, the of Expedition The Night the Dillard
Fantastic & The Night Through Expedition Dillard the of Clark/Through the Morning,
The Clark/Through the Dillard the of Morning, Through Fantastic Expedition Night &
Dillard of the Fantastic Clark/Through Night Through Expedition Morning, The the &
Morning, The Expedition Through of the the Dillard & Clark/Through Fantastic Night
 

Additional The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark/Through the Morning, Through the Night Information

Digitally remastered reissue featuring all of the known A&M recordings by this pioneering country rock duo comprised of banjo player/ vocalist Doug Dillard (of early '60s bluegrass outfit The Dillards) & guitarist/ vocalist Gene Clark (one of the founding members of The Byrds). Contains their 1968 debut 'The Fantastic Expedition Of Dillard & Clark', 1969's 'Through The Morning Through The Night' and all four of t he tracks from the two singles they released between the two LPs. 23 tracks total --the first time their entire A&M output has been released on a single CD! 1999 release.

 

What Customers Say About The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark/Through the Morning, Through the Night:

"Rocky Top" and "Roll in My Sweet Baby's Arms" are travesties, but in a way make the album all the more interesting, like 'What were they thinking.'Yes, the liner notes are atrocious, but the music's all there. The title track and "Polly" are both great Clark compositions, as is "Kansas City Southern".

Almost like a Rosetta Stone for much of what followed -- and not nearly as well known or celebrated as the Gram Parsons/Flying Burrito Bros. These recordings are some of the greatest AND earliest hybrids of rock and country.

"Expedition" is the more highly regarded of the albums, but I think "Through the Morning" has a lot going for it, too. stuff.

This cd compiles their entire recorded output for A&M records -- two albums and one single, I think it is. The covers are mostly good, too.

And this is essential stuff.

Ironically enough, former Byrd Gene Clark was working on the first album of this two-fer at about the same time as his former bandmates were recoding their better-known country-rock milestone Sweetheart of the Rodeo. Both albums conjure up that sun-drenched, weed-smoked Southern California vibe, but the first album takes the prize due to the presence of better Gene Clark originals, including the lost gem Why Not Your Baby.

Put two guys from Missouri, one of whom was a frontman in arguably the greatest folk-rock band there ever was, the other of whom is arguably second only to Earl Scruggs as a bluegrass banjo master, and what you had was a musical pairing that, during the tail end of the 1960s in Southern California, redrew the musical boundaries between folk, bluegrass, country, and rock, and thus helped set the table for many musical movements of the next several decades. Clark and Leadon were fruitful songwriting collaborators, too, coming up with at least two significant country-rock setpieces: "Train Leaves Here This Morning" (which Clark sings lead on here, and which Leadon later sang the lead on the Eagles' debut album in 1972); and "She Darked The Sun", done here almost as a traditional Appalachian ballad (Linda Ronstadt would later put her own stamp on it as "He Dark The Sun" on her 1970 album SILK PURSE, with Leadon harmonizing).Less successful are the lead vocals of Dillard's then-girlfriend Donna Washburn on the Osborne Brothers' "Rocky Top"; she sounds much too hillbilly (here's where they could have used Linda's husky Southwestern drawl), though her harmonizing with Clark on "Through The Morning, Through The Night" helps to make up for that lapse. What you had was the Fantastic Expedition of Gene Clark and Douglas Dillard. Although their collaboration was a short one, lasting all of two albums (1968's THE FANTASTIC EXPEDITION OF DILLARD AND CLARK; 1969's THROUGH THE MORNING, THROUGH THE NIGHT), those two albums have now been put onto one CD whose contents truly define the term "Eclectic." And while their eclecticism didn't win them much in the way of record sales or even an audience (partly because of them not being too terribly rehearsed in concert), as always in retrospect, they nevertheless accelerated the growth of musical movements that flourish even today.With help from folks like Chris Hillman and Michael Clarke (Clark's ex-Byrds bandmates), and soon-to-be Eagle Bernie Leadon (no slouch at either guitar or banjo), Dillard and Clark took to not only bringing traditional country and bluegrass to people's attentions through their covers of Flatt and Scruggs' "Get In Line Brother" (here titled "Git In On Brother") and "Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms", but to come up with a few of their own, in which unusual instruments (like the harpsichord on "The Radio Song") blend in with the traditional banjo, mandolin, and steel guitar sounds of modern country and bluegrass. The boys round things up with acoustic folk/country nods to the Everlys ("So Sad [To Watch Good Love Go Bad]"), the Beatles ("Don't Let Me Down"), and even the King himself ("Don't Be Cruel").The lack of liner notes aside, this pairing of these two landmark country/bluegrass albums is historically significant, not only for what was to come in the immediate future (Eagles), but also what came decades later with Alison Krauss, the New Grass Revival, and even the Dixie Chicks, where bluegrass and country managed to appeal to rock fans by losing only its redneck hayseed image and not its rootsiness. This is highly recommended for anyone with a wildly eclectic musical pallette.

This record, would be in fact, about five years ahead of it's time.Gene, was already established as one of the sixties greatest songwriters, and Doug was about {behind Earl Scruggs} the best banjo picker of his day.So this concept could be good, or even great. Until the Mid 1970's and the big sucess of The Eagles, this form of music had little to no audience in the rock world, and the Nashville crowd went public calling these fine players: "Stinkin' Hippy Commie-Freaks" {Merl Haggard, this ain't.}Now, we can look back to these two fine Albums and marvel at how great they were.BUT, they were so outta place in their day. But Gene Clark and Doug Dillard, were goin' for broke, a full-blown country-rock-bluegrass record. The Byrds and the Buffalo Springfield, had both hinted at this radical concept before 1968, on their albums. When Gene Clark {The Byrds} met up with Doug Dillard {The Dillards} in 1968, they hit upon something at least a little out of place in the tripped-out summer of 68. Gene & Doug have made two real fine Records here. In the year The Byrds released their country record: "The Sweetheart of the Rodeo" to mixed reviews and mild record sales, these Dillard & Clark Records recieved a lot of critical praise and could not be found anywhere near the pop charts in 1968-69. The second offering: "Through The Morning ~ Through The Night" is almost as good.

The singing & harmonies are second-to-none. This CD combines the band's two records on one CD. A group that would merge bluegrass, rock, folk & country music, together in one neat little package called: "Dillard & Clark". With some of Gene's Best Tunes included; "Out On The Side", "She Darked The Sun","Train Leaves Here This Morning" "Kansas City Southern" and "Something's Wrong" and standards such as: Rocky Top" & "Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms" and 50's rock: "Don't Be Cruel" & "So Sad" these guys could play just about anything, and they played very well.There is more than bluegrass here, rock, blues and a bit of 50's style rock 'n' roll, is mixed in what is supposed to be a: "Country Record". They both could sing a bunch, and together could blend some sweet harmonies. The first one: "The Fantastic Expedition Of Dillard & Clark" is great. This is: "Back Porch" country music, that would be more akin to the 1930's and not the pop/junk that is passed-off on the radios of 2008 as: "Country". Track 23 is from 1969, and it is the band's version of The Beatles: "Don't Let Me Down", you almost don't recognize it as it is now a lot different from what Paul & John, intended.This is a: "Lost Classic"Four Stars.

I love some bluegrass/country like Allison Kraus etc. Clark's contributions seem out of place and it just isn't the format for him to excel in.

White Light was a really cool Album. I love Gene Clark.

The guys should have stuck with Andy and Barney as far as I can tell. I loved Gene with the Byrds.

I thought I would give this one a go, but it is a no go for me. I know that this was kind of ahead of it's time and all that but I just can't see it past the soggy bottom boyish stuff that it is.

but this is mediocre stuff at anytime, and Clarke did nothing to help.

Buy The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark/Through the Morning, Through the Night
© 2006 - 2010 AZSources.com - Power Tools : Privacy Policy