Gene Clark - No Other

4AD / 8 November
Reissue of the Year
 

Our 2019 reissue of the year is the long overdue appraisal of Gene Clark’s 1974 masterpiece No Other. Released on the eve of what would have been American singer- songwriter and Byrds founding member Gene Clark’s 75th birthday, this version has been remastered from the original tapes, and the results are spectacular. Originally released on Asylum Records - a year after the Byrds’ short-lived reunion - Clark put his everything into actualising the grandeur he could hear, an album of psychedelic rock, folk, country and soul. It famously cost a small fortune to make and although warmly received by critics, it flopped and was soon deleted, a failure that Clark never came to terms with. He rightly considered it his masterwork, a seamless blend of American music with the richest tapestry of timbres and, most importantly, a brilliant set of songs. The guitars jangle and strut, the rhythm section are as adept with pastoral country as they are funk and soul, the backing singers swell and oat around Clark - who sounds vocally effervescent - and track for track, it has the sort of indescribable vibe that makes a classic album glow. A damn shame that it took 45 years for everyone to come around, but the good ones always remain the good ones, and revisiting this one reaffirms Clark’s belief. A beautiful edition full of notes, photographs and musical addendums that highlight just what an incredible record it is, certainly one that should never have been forgotten for so long.

+ Whilst stocks last, pick up an exclusive ‘Some Misunderstanding’ flexi disc when you purchase this record at Drift.

Gene Clark 1974, (c) John Dietrich.
Hindsight has burnished No Other, as it has redeemed other albums that went on to be reconstructed as rock repertory, like Big Star’s Third/Sister Lovers and Lou Reed’s Berlin
— New York Times