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Martin Chilton
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
The Kingston Trio self-titled debut album artwork web optimised 820

The Kingston Trio have a central place in the folk music revival of the late 50s and early 60s, when, for a couple of years, they were arguably the most popular vocal group in the world.

Senator Joe McCarthy’s communist witch-hunts in the early 50s had damaged folk music, branding it subversive and blacklisting bands such as The Weavers. It wasn’t until the 1958 release of The Kingston Trio’s self-titled debut album – featuring the million-selling “Tom Dooley” – that folk music was again heard on the airwaves.

Listen to The Kingston Trio’s debut album right now.

The trio, initially made up of Dave Guard (vocals, six-string guitar, 12-string guitar, and five-string banjo), Bob Shane (vocals, tenor banjo, and six-string guitar), and Nick Reynolds (vocals, tenor guitar, conga, and bongos) stayed clear of radical music, but their commercial popularity brought folk back into the mainstream and paved the way for Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs and Peter, Paul And Mary. “The first thing that turned me on to folk singing was Odetta… from Odetta, I went to Harry Belafonte and then The Kingston Trio,” said Dylan.

The band’s inception was fortuitous. During a particularly boring accounting class at Menlo College, near San Francisco, in 1954, Reynolds, who planned to be a hotelier, noticed a student asleep. Shane recalled: “He nudged me and said ‘Hey, I’m Nick Reynolds – have you got a car? Mine just blew up.’ We started singing the first day we met.”

Shane in turn introduced Reynolds to Guard, a student at Stanford University, with whom he had played music in their native Hawaii. All three performed at a coffee shop in Palo Alto, calling themselves The Kingston Trio, which was a nod to the popularity of West Indian calypsos. They were spotted by a young impresario, Frank Werber, who signed them on the spot, scribbling a contract on a paper napkin. He paid for some professional singing lessons and then booked the group into The Purple Onion, an influential club in San Francisco.

A subsequent tour took the trio from the West Coast to Chicago and New York, and, during a four-month residency at the hungry i club in San Francisco, they recorded their self-titled debut album for Capitol Records over three days. It was produced by Voyle Gilmore, who worked with Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland, and Dean Martin. Gilmore had exactly the rigor an inexperienced band needed (he famously made them do 137 takes on one song for a later album).

The Trio scored an immediate hit with “Tom Dooley,” an obscure 19th-century ballad about a man hanged for killing his wife. “Tom Dooley” became a favorite of Paul Colburn, a DJ in Salt Lake City, who began playing it incessantly, urging other radio stations to follow his lead.

Capitol released it as a single in July 1958 and “Tom Dooley” was in the charts for nearly five months, selling more than three million copies. In the UK it was a simultaneous Top 10 hit for both The Kingston Trio and Lonnie Donegan, with both versions making the Top 5. In 1959, the single won a Grammy for the Best Country And Western Recording, as there were no folk categories that year.

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As well as their tight harmonies, the band offered a wholesome clean-cut style to the 50s public. The Kingston Trio’s stage wear was almost like a uniform – button-down, striped, short-sleeved shirts – and was copied by The Beach Boys, who later recorded the Bahamian folk song “John B Sails” from this debut album (under its alternate name “Sloop John B,” for their classic 1966 album, Pet Sounds). Frank Werber made other astute decisions. He recruited Purple Onion house bassist Buzz Wheeler to play on the album, which was released in June 1958, and vetoed the sort of orchestral accompaniment that was almost universal at the time. As a result, the Trio’s clean, close-harmony style allowed the lyrics to shine.

The song selections reflected the repertoire the musicians were familiar with – re-imagined traditional songs inspired by The Weavers, such as “Bay Of Mexico” and the sea shanty “Santy Anno,” and a calypso-infused tune, “Banua,” reminiscent of the hugely popular Belafonte singles of the time.

Other highlights include “Fast Freight” by Terry Gilkyson, a talented songwriter who co-wrote “Memories Are Made Of This,” and “Hard, Ain’t It Hard,” a Woody Guthrie song from 1941. “The Three Jolly Coachmen” was a lighthearted traditional love song, while “Scotch And Soda” was a song that Guard had heard from a friend. The group were never able to establish its true origins or composer. “Little Maggie,” meanwhile, was a gambling song dating back to the Appalachian region in the late 1800s, and which had been popularised by bluegrass band The Stanley Brothers in the 40s.

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Whether it was with traditional folk ballads or 20th-century songs, the formula was astonishingly successful: striking storytelling with a warm delivery. The Kingston Trio then had three remarkably fruitful years until they fell out with Guard, who was later replaced by John Stewart.

They were not only successful. They changed the landscape of popular music. As Reynolds said: “We got America up and singing.”

The Kingston Trio’s debut album can be listened to here.

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Max Pilley
Last reply · posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Nicolas Cage in Spider-Noir


Spider-Noir is streaming in full now, but does Nicolas Cage’s Ben Reilly become The Spider again? Find out below.


The show is based on the Marvel Comics character Spider-Man Noir and follows Reilly, an aging private investigator and superhero in 1930s New York who grapples with his past in the aftermath of a personal tragedy.

It is set within the world of Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse, with Cage reprising his role from the 2018 film, and all eight episodes of the show are streaming now on MGM+ in the US and on Amazon Prime Video internationally.

It was developed by Oren Uziel, previously known for 22 Jump Street and The Cloverfield Paradox, and it also starred Brendan Gleeson, Lamorne Morris, Li Jun Li, Karen Rodriguez, Abraham Poppola and Jack Huston.

Watch the trailer here:


NME gave the show a three-star review, noting: “In the end, Spider-Noir may face an uphill battle for ratings – how much crossover do the modern Marvel blockbuster and pre-war crime fiction fandoms have? – but there’s a lot of fun to be had here. Much more than with any other recent Spider-Man spin-off, that’s for sure.”

The ending of Spider-Noir explained: does Ben become The Spider again?​


Throughout the season, Cage’s Ben Reilly was resisting re-embracing his superhero alter ego, choosing to run from his past following the death of his girlfriend.

At the start of the finale, Brendan Gleeson’s Silvermane and his gang have captured him and his secret identity is on the verge of being exposed. Cat Hardy (Li Jun Li) reveals that she had betrayed Silvermane, however, while Robbie Robbertson (Lamorne Morris) disguises himself as The Spider to protect Ben.

Cat kills Silvermane as his mob empire collapses, while Ben faces off with the superpowered Dirk Leyden, in his persona of Megawatt, eventually throwing him into the path of an oncoming train and killing him.

Ben finally has access to the last dose of the antidote, which could let him escape the burden of The Spider for good, but instead he gives it to Flint Marko, saving him and allowing him to be with Cat.

By giving up his own chance at freedom, Ben accepts the responsibility that he had previously been resisting, and embraces his role and destiny as The Spider.

The post The ending of ‘Spider-Noir’ explained: does Ben become The Spider again? appeared first on NME.

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Last reply · posted in 🎤 DJ Booth
I think that DJs earn a good amount of money in clubs. However, becoming a DJ is not that easy. You need to have a good understanding of music. There are many people who want to become a DJ, but they end up choosing a different profession. So, have you ever thought about becoming a DJ?
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Last reply · posted in 🐾 Pets & Animals
so i was looking into this for my cat because vet bills are no joke but then i saw the fine print and it’s like… is this even worth it? they dont cover pre-existing stuff and half the time you still end up paying a ton out of pocket. is anyone here actually using pet insurance and finding it helpful or is it just another scam to make you feel better until something actually goes wrong? i get the idea but…
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· posted in ⭐ Song & Artist Spotlights
like not a big life event or anything, just some random ass moment that stuck with you for no reason. i was listening to this one track earlier and it reminded me of this time i was stuck in a parking lot waiting for my buddy to get out of target because he insisted on “just running in real quick” and ended up being 40 minutes i was blasting this song on repeat cause it was the only one i had downloaded at the time and now i cant hear it without thinking of that dumb parking lot and how annoyed i was anyway share yours, i feel like everyone’s got at least one of these
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· posted in 🤘 Rock & Alternative
tbh okay so i was listening to starset the other day (i know theyre kinda cheesy but the sci-fi vibes!!!) and it got me thinking... theres a surprising amount of bands out there with space or astronomy names like moon tooth, mars volta, galaxy declined... even sunn o))) sorta counts if you squint whats up with that?? is it just because space is Mysterious and Cool or do musicians actually know their stuff about black holes and pulsars and stuff?? (probably not but a girl can dream.)

also side note: has anyone here actually listened to starset beyond their big singles?? some of their deep cuts are... um... a choice but monster still slaps anyway now im curious if theres a band literally called black hole or something equally on the nose. id totally check them out even if theyre terrible...
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Last reply · posted in 🎬 Movies & TV
I think that terminator is one of the most popular movies out there and there are many people who like terminator movies. Some people claim that earlier movies of terminator were much better. So, do you like terminator movies?
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Last reply · posted in ☕ General Discussion
mine was this pack of "smart" sticky notes that are supposedly reusable but i have no idea how to actually reuse them without ruining the adhesive?? now theyre just sitting on my desk looking sad lol... also yesterday i bought a book about obscure 17th century marine chronometers because of course i did... like i dont even know why i thought i needed that but here we are what about you guys?? anything you bought recently that made you go “why did i think this was necessary”?? haha
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Last reply · posted in 🎹 Pop Music
like i get the whole tiktok era thing shortened attention spans or whatever but some of these tracks legit feel like they end before they even start. you finally get into the vibe and then it’s over. im not asking for a 10-min epic but cmon give us at least 3 solid minutes to enjoy it. feels like half the time im hitting repeat just to feel like i actually listened to the song maybe im getting old but back in the day you could at least count on a solid chorus-bridge-chorus structure. now its like intro, drop, done anyone else feel this way or am i just being a grouch
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Last reply · posted in 🎤 DJ Booth
seriously, whats with names like "bassquaker" or "glitchflux"? its like they just smashed two vaguely tech-sounding words together and called it a day. dont get me wrong, some are cool, but others just scream "i used a generator." feels like no one even tries to check if it sounds dumb out loud ive seen a few threads lately about branding for new djs and this keeps coming up. like, if youre trying to stand out, at least pick something that doesnt sound like it belongs on a bad startup logo. or am i the only one who cringes at this stuff? also, quick tip for anyone picking a name: say it in a sentence. "youre listening to dj bassquaker" should not make you laugh.
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Last reply · posted in 🐾 Pets & Animals
like, i dont need a robodog that just sits there looking vaguely sad when i forget to charge it for three days. lowkey im talking about one that can remind me im late for work, knows when im stressed and plays calming whale sounds (lol, yeah im into that), and maybe even roleplays as a hype squad when im trying to finish a side project?! theres gotta be a way to program that... right? imagine a little robo-kitten that climbs on your keyboard but instead of being annoying it auto-saves your half-baked draft first or better yet, it tells you **exactly** where you left off because lets face it, i cant keep track of anything anymore... idk maybe this is too much to ask but between space launches and indie bands dropping albums named after pulsar coordinates (look up psr b1919+21, its wild), i feel like we should be farther along with this tech by now. anyone else feel this way or am i just overcomplicating my life again???
7 Replies · 50 views
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