| Folk music wasn't born in
1958. Nor, for that matter was the Kingston Trio. But
then, in that year, the Trio's song about the doomed
"Tom Dooley" started spinning out of the radios
and juke boxes of America, something very big was
born. It came to be called The Folk Era -- the time when
folk music came out of the hills, out of the archives,
and back to where it belonged. It came back to the
people, all kinds of people, to be sung and heard and to
become a living part of everyday life. The Kingston Trio started it all, made it grow, grew with it, and now, in three records and thirty-three songs, they tell the story of that era. It is their story, too. The songs are grouped in three sections to most clearly relate this musical history. Sides one and two contain TRADITIONAL FOLK SONGS; sides three and four are in two parts: (a) NEW WORDS TO OLD TUNES and (b) "FOLK DESTINATION"; and sides five and six contain CONTEMPORARY FOLK SONGS. That's part of the story: how folk music expanded and found new writers and new singers to bring songs of meaning and beauty and joy and sorrow to the hearts of so many people. There are, of course, purists who hold that a folk song, to be a true folk song, must be a song that was never written but always sung. Fortunately there are those who are more interested in writing and singing than defining. "We are not students of folk music," once said original Kingston Trio member Dave Guard. "The basic thing for us is honest and worthwhile songs, songs that people can pick up and become involved in. Like ancient poetry, songs like that are successful because the audience participates in what the artist is doing." Another third of the Trio, Nick Reynolds, continued the discussion. "We don't collect old songs in the sense that the academic cats do. We get new tunes to look over every day. Each one of us has his ears open constantly to new material or old stuff that's good. As we progress musically in search of new material, we put only two restrictions on new songs: They must have a basic intelligent thought and they must be in good taste." "Good songs,"
added Bob Shane, "are songs that can be made to live
during the performance." TRADITIONAL Traditional songs can come from many places, many folks. "Old Joe Clark" comes from the bluegrass hills, "The Unfortunate Miss Bailey" was born back in sixteenth-century England, "Saro Jane" rode the waves as a nineteenth-century sea chantey, and so it goes. Each has a truth, a beauty, a story worth re-telling. New interpretations may vary, probably will, and if the singer comes up with a new set of lyrics, or a revised melody, it's all still in the folk tradition, and he can often obtain a copyright on his new version of the old song. NEW WORDS TO OLD TUNES It was a doubly interesting situation with "Tijuana Jail." Writer Denny Thompson wrote a song, original words and music all about the north-of-the-border police. He even got the song recorded. But when the Trio recorded it, they decided to use a traditional melody with Denny's lyrics, the result being a hit for all concerned. "Folk Destination" is a phrase that was coined by Dr. Lou Gottlieb, eminent musicologist, bass player, wit and singing Limeliter, to describe songs that, in spite of their non-folk origin, seem destined to become accepted folk songs. Excellent examples of this are "They Call The Wind Maria," a song written by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe for their Broadway musical, "Paint Your Wagon," and the song "Scarlet Ribbons," which was written just a few years ago, but somehow has the sound of a traditional song to such a degree that it has gained folk acceptance. CONTEMPORARY FOLK SONGS There have been contemporary folk songwriters before, the aformentioned Woodie Guthrie, for example, or Leadbelly or Big Bill Broonzy. But theirs was usually a limited world with a limited audience. The current explosion of folk music has thrown open the doors to writers, singers and listeners alike, and they have joined in a sympathetic meeting of minds and hearts. Pete Seeger, with deep roots in the folk past, has remained a dominant figure in the field, supplying the Trio with one of the biggest hits, "Where Have All The Flowers Gone." Young Bob Dylan is a strong new voice, his "Blowin' In The Wind" being a big record for the Trio, and other folk singers as well. Broadway-based Sheldon Harnick wrote "The Merry Minuet," writer-singer Rod McKuen came up with "Two-Ten, Six-Eighteen." And so it goes -- Ed McCurdy, Billy Edd Wheeler, Malvina Reynolds, Hoyt Axton and others, all alive and feeling and writing great folk songs of and for today. These, then, are the examples of the songs of The Folk Era. But what about the four young men who have been The Kingston Trio and done so much to breath new life into this music? It started because Nick Reynolds and Bob Shane, students at Menlo College in northern California, knew and liked to sing with Dave Guard, who was attending nearby Stanford University. There was something special about their singing; they were not very different from thousands of other young college students around the country who were getting together with voices and guitars. Not very different, but a little bit different, a little bit better. So they decided to take a crack at being professionals and talked themselves into a job at the Cracked Pot, a hangout just off the Stanford campus in Palo Alto. There they sang, for kicks and beer and pretzels, until one night a San Francisco publicist named Frank Werber came to hear the group. When he heard them he knew they had something, so, then and there, he became their manager and signed them up, their basic contract being scribbled on a convenient paper napkin. That was the first step. From that night on they continued to sing, but more than that they continued to study, to rehearse, to think to plan, to work closely with Werber in the development of a polished and professional act. Several months passed, then they debuted in San Francisco. The Purple Onion signed them for a week that became seven months. They appeared at Facts II, "the hungry i," and became the most popular act in Bay City nightclub history. And their fame spread. On their way East they played Mr. Kelly's in Chicago, then on to the Village Vanguard in New York. Everyplace was the same as San Francisco -- smash success. It was a large and well established fact by now: The Kingston Trio was something new, something good, and something very important in show business. In January of 1958, the Trio signed a long-term exclusive contract with Capitol Records. Their first album, THE KINGSTON TRIO, was released in June of that year. It sold well, but was by no measure an overnight hit. One member in the album, however, was a haunting, century-old song called "Tom Dooley." For some reason it appealed to a few disc jockeys around the country and they started playing it. Before long there was sufficient demand for Capitol to release a single record of the song. That's when history started moving fast. The record started gaining momentum from the day of it's release and virtually shot to the top of the national best-seller lists, where it stayed for months, finally passing the million mark shortly before Christmas. This was the beginning of the greenback dollar years. From "Tom Dooley" the Kingston Trio went on to "Tijuana Jail," "M.T.A." and many, many other big hits. In a Billboard poll of disc jockeys they were voted the "most promising singing group of the year." That promise was quickly fulfilled. One after another of their albums and single records became best-sellers, most of them going over that almost impossible million mark. They started on nationwide television shows, they toured the clubs and campuses of the country, their concerts were sellouts. It was a success story unparalleled in show business history, and it's still going strong. There were many reasons for the popularity of the Kingston Trio. They are visually attractive -- young and vibrant, the spirit of collegians who make up much of their audience. They sing well -- in tune, with an interesting harmonic approach, a solid beat. And always a delight to their fans has been their repertoire, a rare mixture of old and new songs chosen and arranged with taste and imagination. Sometimes harmonious, sometimes carrying a message, sometimes simply telling a tale, the songs of the Kingston Trio reflect the diversity of backgrounds of its members, a cultural richness that has played no small part in their sustained popularity. Dave Guard and Bob Shane were both born in Hawaii and spent their growing-up years there, playing ukuleles, singing native songs, being exposed to the musical crossroads of the Pacific Islands. They attended Panahou School. Swam, surfed and went skin diving like the natives they were. Then eventually both came east to California and higher education. Dave worked his way through Stanford, continued his singing, became a judo expert, got his B.A. in Economics, and eventually married a Stanford co-ed, the former Gretchen Ballard of Pasadena, California. And now they have two children. Bob Shane landed at Menlo College in California, where his interest was Business Administration. He made it all right, even went back to Hawaii and honestly tried to keep his mind on the business world. But no go. He just couldn't stop playing and singing, and he had so much encouragement that he headed on back to Dave and Nick and the beginnings of what became the Kingston Trio. Bob is married too, to the former Louise Brandon of Atlanta, whom he met in, of all places, Honolulu, during a Kingston Trio engagement there in 1958. Like his former singing partner, Bob has also become a father, Little Joan being a large pleasure but also somewhat of a deterrent to his pursuit of power-boating, skeet-shooting and sports-car driving. Nick Reynolds is another sports-car and skeet-shooting enthusiast, but he still devotes a lot of time to photography and being a businessman, plus being a happily married man, to ex-comedienne Joan Harriss. Nick was born down San Diego, California, way with a career Navy man for a father. That meant lots of traveling for Nick, but it was happy traveling, for they picked up songs wherever they went and as Nick puts it, "Dad plays a very swinging guitar." It was while he was at Menlo College getting his degree in Business Administration that Nick met Bob and started singing with him. And since Bob knew Dave, and Menlo was near Stanford, circumstances were right for the Kingston Trio to "happen." During their ride to the top, the Kingston Trio met a young musician and songwriter named John Stewart. In the course of the Trio's career, Stewart became more and more involved with the group, writing many of their arrangements and composing some of the most popular tune in their repertoire -- "Molly Dee," "Green Gasses" and, in this album, "Song To A Friend." The boys took a personal interest in John's career and helped him when he formed his own folk group, The Cumberland Three. In the Spring 1961, after the Trio returned from a tour of Australia, New Zealand and Japan, Dave Guard decided to go his own professional way, which left Nick Reynolds and Bob Shane as a two-man trio. This would never do, so manager Werber, Nick and Bob called John and asked him to join them. "John was natural," says Nick. "He's not only a talented performer and a swinging musician, but he has a great personal quality of contagious enthusiasm that means so much to our performances."
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