![]() ![]() He proved theoretically - but I choose to believe it." Īccording to the Byrds' biographer Johnny Rogan, the song's abstract lyrics were largely interpreted by the band's audience as being about an LSD trip, much to McGuinn's dismay. The fifth dimension is the threshold of scientific knowledge." Talking to Michael Ross of Creem magazine in 1970, McGuinn further explained the song's meaning: "'5D' was an ethereal trip into metaphysics, into an almost Moslem submission to an Allah, an almighty spirit, free-floating, the fifth dimension being the 'mesh' which Einstein theorized about. But there definitely are more dimensions than five. In a 1966 interview with Hit Parader magazine, McGuinn stated, "It's sort of weird but.what I'm talking about is the whole universe, the fifth dimension, which is height, width, depth, time and something else. McGuinn has described the song's lyrics as an attempt to explain Albert Einstein's theory of relativity, and as having been directly inspired by the book 1-2-3-4, More, More, More, More by Don Landis. It was released as a single in June 1966, and also included as the title track on the Byrds' third album, Fifth Dimension. ![]() An Introduction to the Byrds The Collection Untitled There Is a Season The Essential Byrds Free Flyte Voyage America's Great National Treasure Very Best of the Byrds Fifth Dimension Greatest Hits 36 All-Time Favorites Collection Live at Royal Albert Hall 1971 Very Best of the Byrds Playlist: The Very Best of the Byrds Mr." 5D (Fifth Dimension)" is a song by the American rock band the Byrds, written by band member Jim McGuinn. 1 (1965-1967) From the Earth to the Moon The Byrds' Greatest Hits Super Hits The Byrds' Greatest Hits Fifth Dimension Full Flyte (1965-1970) The Essential Byrds Mojo Presents. Reason:ĭefinitive Collection History of the Byrds 20 Essential Tracks from the Boxed Set: 1965-90 Original Singles, Vol. If I'm ever in a situation where I know I'm near the end, I'll put on this song, or maybe the Leo Kottke version. Sorry if that seemed unnecessarily morose, but I've always found this offbeat interpretation beautiful in its own strange way. This could frighten him and inspire second thoughts, although he knows he cannot turn back that could cover the "Nowhere is there warmth to be found/Among those afraid of losing their ground" stanza. Whatever these visions are, the dying individual can only wonder whether those "shapeless forms" will become tangible and he will at last "touch down" in this foreign land when he closes his eyes to sleep (and to die) or whether they will simply fade as the last of his thoughts slip away. When I hear this song, I think of a depressed person attempting suicide, probably through inhaling gas like nitrous oxide that might at first induce a "high." When the gas is starting to reach dangerous levels and the user is nearly unconscious, the lyrics describe the faint visions that are just beginning to take shape in the suicidal person's mind, perhaps mere hallucinations (they certainly seem fragmented enough to be the inventions of an oxygen-starved mind!) perhaps distant memories, or perhaps remote visions of heaven, hell, or glimpses of an afterlife too strange for the living mind to comprehend. ![]() I'm pretty confident that this song was originally about a mere psychedelic experience, but to me it represents something a little different, although possibly related.
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