Goin' Places (The Kingston Trio album) explained

Goin' Places
Type:Album
Artist:The Kingston Trio
Cover:Goinplaceskingstontrio.jpg
Released:June 5, 1961
Recorded:January 1961
Studio:Capitol Studio B (Hollywood)
Genre:Folk
Length:30:46
Label:Capitol
Producer:Voyle Gilmore
Prev Title:Make Way
Prev Year:1961
Next Title:Close-Up
Next Year:1961

Goin' Places is the tenth album by the American folk music group The Kingston Trio, released in 1961 (see 1961 in music). It peaked at number three on the Billboard charts and spent 41 weeks in the Top 40. The lead-off single was "You're Gonna Miss Me" (a new arrangement of "Frankie and Johnny") which failed to chart. Its B-side was "En El Agua" from the earlier Make Way album. Goin' Places was the last album recorded with founder Dave Guard as a member.[1]

History

The day after the completion of the Goin' Places recording sessions, the Trio embarked on their first foreign tour. After their return, Guard announced his intention to resign from the group. Guard stated in numerous interviews he left the Trio for two main reasons: he was upset with a discrepancy in publishing royalties and he felt the Trio needed to grow musically. The other members, Nick Reynolds and Bob Shane, disagreed on both counts.[2] Guard stayed on to fulfill the group's concert commitments through November and Reynolds and Shane, having decided to keep the group going, hired John Stewart as Guard's replacement.[1] Guard later formed the folk-oriented group Whiskeyhill Singers — which disbanded after one Capitol album and virtually no success — before moving on to other endeavors.[3]

In an interview for Frets magazine in 1984 and included in the liner notes to The Guard Years, Reynolds stated: "Basically, David wanted to take it on to another level. Bobby and I were just hangin' out, having a good time. We were happy with the format and working way too hard to consider sitting down and learning how to read music... We were killing ourselves as it was with the work, and David was insisting that we take lessons. He was also upset about the publishing thing, and didn't think people were taking care of business, and he became dissatisfied with everything from photography to the management. It might have been an overreaction on Dave's part, but I believe that he honestly wanted to take it to a higher plane..."[4]

The Trio's long-time bassist, David "Buck" Wheat is pictured with the group on the cover.

The final live performances of the original trio were released in 2007 as Live at the Santa Monica Auditorium.

Reception

Music critic Bruce Eder wrote for Allmusic that the original Trio's final album "shows no sign of the group slackening its standards or rushing through the material." and while praising all the tracks, singled out "Razors in the Air" as "a delightfully played and sung piece of pure fun that gives Dave Guard, in particular, an opportunity to show off his prodigious banjo skills before leaving the lineup of the group he founded."

Reissues

Track listing

"Coast of California" and "This Land Is Your Land" were originally recorded during the String Along sessions but did not appear for a year until the release of Goin' Places.[1] The former song is "Si me quieres escribir", a Republican song from the Spanish Civil War (possibly learned from Pete Seeger), with the lyrics rewritten to be politically safe.

Side one

  1. "You're Gonna Miss Me" (John Cohen, Dave Guard, Tom Paley, Mike Seeger)
  2. "Pastures of Plenty" (Woody Guthrie)
  3. "Coast of California" (Jane Bowers, Guard)
  4. "It Was a Very Good Year" (Ervin Drake)
  5. "Guardo el Lobo"[6] (Mateo Flecha el Viejo (1556); Erich Schwandt)
  6. "Razors in the Air" (Schwandt)

Side two

  1. "Billy Goat Hill" (George Arno, James Day)
  2. "This Land Is Your Land" (Guthrie)
  3. "Run Molly, Run" (Bill Monroe)
  4. "Senora" (Bowers, Guard)
  5. "Lemon Tree" (Will Holt)
  6. "You Don't Knock" (Roebuck "Pops" Staples, William Westbrook)

Personnel

External links

Notes and References

  1. Liner notes: Make Way and Goin' Places Capitol Records reissue. Liner notes by Ben Blake, 1992.
  2. Life Magazine. Kingston Trio's Big Bust-Up. June 9, 1961. Vol. 50, No. 23
  3. Liner notes: The Kingston Trio: The Guard Years, 1997, by Bill Bush.
  4. Frets Magazine, June 1984. Bill Bush
  5. Blake, B., Rubeck, J., Shaw, A. (1986) The Kingston Trio On Record. Kingston Korner Inc, ILL:
  6. https://www.cpdl.org/wiki/index.php/Riu,_riu,_chiu_(Mateo_Flecha_el_Viejo) Riu, riu, chiu at ChoralWiki