Upon release, (Untitled) was met with positive reviews and strong sales, with many critics and fans regarding the album as a return to form for the band. The single was later released in the UK in January 1971, where it did considerably better, reaching number 19 on the UK Singles Chart. in October 1970, but missed the Billboard Hot 100 chart, bubbling under at number 121. A single taken from the album, " Chestnut Mare" b/w "Just a Season", was released in the U.S. The album peaked at number 40 on the Billboard Top LPs chart and reached number 11 on the UK Albums Chart. Five of the songs that had been intended for Gene Tryp were instead recorded by the Byrds for (Untitled)-although only four appear in the album's final running order. The production was to have been based on Henrik Ibsen's Peer Gynt and staged under the title of Gene Tryp (an anagram of Ibsen's play), but plans for the musical fell through. The studio album mostly consists of newly written, self-penned material, including a number of songs that had been composed by band leader Roger McGuinn and Broadway theatre director Jacques Levy for a planned country rock musical that the pair were developing.
The album represented the first official release of any live recordings by the band, as well as the first appearance on a Byrds' record of new recruit Skip Battin, who had replaced the band's previous bass player, John York, in late 1969. It is a double album, with the first LP featuring live concert recordings from early 1970, and a second disc consisting of new studio recordings.
(Untitled) is the ninth album by the American rock band the Byrds and was released in September 1970 on Columbia Records.