Sunday, January 26, 2020

Bob Shane obit

Bob Shane, Last Surviving Original Member of Kingston Trio, Dead at 85

Co-founder of influential folk act sang lead on hits “Tom Dooley” and “Scotch and Soda”



He was not on the list.


Bob Shane, co-founder and last surviving original member of the influential folk group the Kingston Trio, died Sunday at the age of 85.
Bob Shane in the middle

Shane died at a hospice facility in Phoenix, Arizona, where he lived the past few decades, his agent confirmed to The New York Times. Shane’s wife, Bobbie Childress, told The Washington Post that her husband had been suffering from pneumonia and other ailments prior to this death.

The members of the Kingston Trio — Shane, Nick Reynolds, and Dave Guard — formed the singing group as college students in the Bay Area in the first half of the Fifties; by the end of the decade, the Kingston Trio would become one of the nation’s most popular bands, releasing five Number One albums, including a span in 1959 when four of the albums in the Top 10 belonged to the Kingston Trio.

Shane served as vocalist and guitarist on their biggest hits, including “Scotch and Soda,” “M.T.A.,” a rendition of the murder ballad “Tom Dooley,” and the traditional song “The Wreck of the John B.,” the latter of which directly inspired the Beach Boys’ “Sloop John B.” The trio also helped popularize Pete Seeger’s “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?” and recorded “It Was a Very Good Year” before that song became a Frank Sinatra staple.

Their “Tom Dooley” sold more than 1 million copies, placed Number One on the singles chart, and helped launch the influential folk revival in popular music. The song also won Best Country and Western Recording at the Grammy Awards in 1959; 50 years later, in 2008, the Library of Congress National Registry of Historical Significant Recordings enshrined the song.

However, by the early Sixties, the Kingston Trio’s commercial style of folk was supplanted by a young batch of “pure” folk artists like Bob Dylan and Joan Baez, as well as the British Invasion. As Dylan told Rolling Stone in 2001, “There were other folk-music records, commercial folk-music records, like those by the Kingston Trio. I never really was an elitist. Personally, I liked the Kingston Trio. I could see the picture…the Kingston Trio were probably the best commercial group going, and they seemed to know what they were doing.”

Following the Kingston Trio’s breakup in 1967 and a brief solo career, Shane formed the New Kingston Trio in 1969, and he continued performing with varying lineups under the Kingston Trio moniker until his retirement in 2004.

Guard died of lymphoma in 1991, and Reynolds died of acute respiratory failure in October 2008; Guard’s replacement John Stewart, who joined in 1961 after his predecessor left and also enjoyed a renowned solo career, died from a brain aneurysm in 2008.

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