Your favourite Bear Family releases

Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by GodBlessTinyTim, Mar 3, 2015.

  1. The Killer

    The Killer Dung Heap Rooster

    Location:
    The Cotswolds
    Another couple of newbies, the Davis Sisters is superb.

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  2. GodBlessTinyTim

    GodBlessTinyTim Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Ontario, Canada
    Both great collections, especially the Davis Sisters. I think there's little question that Skeeter's records with Betty Jack (and Georgia) Davis were the best of her career. On their greatest performances you may as well have called them the Louvin Sisters.

     
  3. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
  4. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
  5. Tribute

    Tribute Senior Member

    Bob Shane, Last of the Original Kingston Trio, Dies at 85
    The group spearheaded a commercially successful folk revival in the late 1950s and early ’60s, with Mr. Shane singing lead most of the time.

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    Bob Shane, left, with other members of the Kingston Trio — John Stewart, center, and Nick Reynolds — in Hollywood in 1967. The group spearheaded a folk revival in the late 1950s. Mr. Shane, Mr. Reynolds and Dave Guard were the original members; Mr. Stewart replaced Mr. Guard in 1961.Credit...Associated Press
    By Peter Applebome

    • Jan. 27, 2020
    Bob Shane, the last surviving original member of the Kingston Trio, whose smooth close harmonies helped transform folk music from a dusty niche genre into a dominant brand of pop music in the 1950s and ’60s, died on Sunday in Phoenix. He was 85.

    Craig Hankenson, his longtime agent, confirmed the death, in a hospice facility.

    Mr. Shane, whose whiskey baritone was the group’s most identifiable voice on hits like “Tom Dooley” and “Scotch and Soda,” sang lead on more than 80 percent of Kingston Trio songs.

    He didn’t just outlast the other original members: Dave Guard, who died in 1991, and Nick Reynolds, who died in 2008; he also eventually took ownership of the group’s name and devoted his life to various incarnations of the trio, from its founding in 1957 to 2004, when a heart attack forced him to stop touring.

    Along the way, the trio spearheaded a reinvention of folk as a youthful, mass media phenomenon; at its peak, in 1959, the group put four albums in the Top 10 at the same time. Touring into the 21st century, the group remained a nostalgic presence for its fans, drawing many to its annual Trio Fantasy Camp in Scottsdale, Ariz.

    Mr. Shane was born Robert Castle Schoen on Feb. 1, 1934, in Hilo, Hawaii, to Arthur Castle Schoen and Margaret (Schaufelberger) Schoen. His father, whose German ancestors had settled in Hawaii in the 1890s, was a successful wholesale distributor of toys and sporting goods. His mother, from Salt Lake City, met her future husband when both were students at Stanford University in the 1920s.

    In Hilo, Mr. Shane’s father had planned for Bob to take over the family business. But at the private Punahou School in Honolulu, Bob learned the ukulele and songs of the Polynesian Islands and met Mr. Guard, with whom he formed a duet. After high school, Mr. Shane, Mr. Reynolds and Mr. Guard occasionally played together while attending college in Northern California — Mr. Shane and Mr. Reynolds at Menlo College, and Mr. Guard nearby at Stanford.

    After graduating in 1956, Mr. Shane returned to Hawaii to learn the family business, but he found himself more drawn to music. As he told it, he performed as “the first-ever Elvis impersonator” and counted Hawaiian music, Hank Williams, Harry Belafonte and the Weavers as among his influences.

    A year later, when Mr. Guard and Mr. Reynolds decided to make a go of a professional music career, Mr. Shane joined them and returned to California, where the Kingston Trio was born, in 1957. The name, a reference to Kingston, Jamaica, was meant to evoke Calypso music, which was popular then. The members exuded a youthful, clean-cut collegiate style, exemplified by their signature look: colorful, vertically striped Oxford shirts.

    A year later, its first album on Capitol Records included a jaunty version of a ballad based on the 1866 murder of a North Carolina woman and the hanging of a poor former Confederate soldier for the crime. The song, “Tom Dooley,” rose to No. 1 on the singles charts, selling three million copies and earning the trio a Grammy for best country and western performance. (There was no Grammy category for folk at the time.)

    From its founding to 1965, the group had 14 albums in Billboard’s Top 10, five of which reached No. 1. The trio inspired scores of imitators and, for a time, was probably the most popular music group in the world. John Stewart replaced Mr. Guard in 1961. (Mr. Stewart died in 2008.)

    The Kingston Trio’s critical reception did not match its popular success. To many folk purists, the trio was selling a watered-down mix of folk and pop that commercialized the authentic folk music of countless unknown Appalachian pickers. And mindful of the way that folk musicians like Pete Seeger had been blacklisted during the McCarthy era, others complained that the trio’s upbeat, anodyne brand of folk betrayed the leftist, populist music of pioneers like Woody Guthrie and Cisco Houston.

    Members of the trio said they had consciously steered clear of political material as a way to maintain mainstream acceptance. Besides, Mr. Shane said, the folk purists were using the wrong yardstick.

    “To call the Kingston Trio folk singers was kind of stupid in the first place,” he said. “We never called ourselves folk singers.” He added, “We did folk-oriented material, but we did it amid all kinds of other stuff.”

    Indeed, some of Mr. Shane’s finest moments, like the smoky cocktail-hour ballad “Scotch and Soda,” had nothing to do with folk. In 1961, Ervin Drake wrote “It Was a Very Good Year” for Mr. Shane. He sang it with the trio long before Frank Sinatra made it one of his classic recordings.

    Still, more than any group of its time, the Kingston Trio captured the youthful optimism of the Kennedy years. The title song of a 1962 album was “The New Frontier,” echoing President John F. Kennedy’s own phrase and alluding to his inaugural address with the lyrics “Let the word go forth from this day on/ A new generation has been born.”

    About the same time, the trio had an unlikely hit with the kind of material it had avoided: Mr. Seeger’s antiwar song “Where Have All the Flowers Gone.”

    But by then the trio was on the verge of being supplanted as the face of folk by a new generation of harder-edged singers like Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs and Joan Baez, and by hipper ones like Peter Paul and Mary. Then the coming of the British invasion and the rise of rock utterly marginalized the group.

    Over time, others, including Mr. Dylan and Ms. Baez, have given the group more credit for popularizing folk music and for serving as a bridge to the more adventurous folk, folk rock and rock of the 1960s.

    As Ms. Baez wrote in her memoir “And a Voice to Sing With”: “Before I turned into a snob and learned to look down upon all commercial folk music as bastardized and unholy, I loved the Kingston Trio. When I became one of the leading practitioners of ‘pure folk,’ I still loved them.”

    Mr. Shane’s admirers said his talents were never fully recognized.

    “Bob Shane was, in my opinion, one of the most underrated singers in American musical history,” George Grove, a trio member since 1976, said in an email in 2015. “His voice was the voice, not only of The Kingston Trio but of an era of musical story telling.”

    The group disbanded in 1967, but after a brief stint as a solo artist, a year later, Mr. Shane was back, first with what was billed as the New Kingston Trio, then with various Kingston Trio lineups.

    Mr. Shane, even by the group’s wholesome standards, stood out and was billed, half seriously, as the trio’s sex symbol. Over the years his hair went from frat boy neat to a snowy mane, but he remained congenitally upbeat, like a gambler accustomed to drawing winning hands.

    After retiring, Mr. Shane lived in Phoenix in a home full of gold records and Kingston Trio memorabilia. Fond of cars and dirt bikes, he also collected Martin guitars and art. His survivors include his wife, Bobbi (Childress) Shane. He had two children from an earlier marriage, to Louise Brandon. A complete list of survivors was not immediately available.

    “The thing I’m most proud of next to my kids is that I have played live to over 10,000,000 people,” he said on the group’s website.

    Even after his retirement, he still found ways to perform.

    “Occasionally someone will call me and ask me to go onstage, and I pack a couple of oxygen tanks and go,” he said in a 2011 interview. “I always tell people I intend to live forever. So far, so good.”
     
  6. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway

    Bob Shane & The Kingston Trio - "The Dutchman" - Music Video - Director: Chip Miller
    KINGSTON TRIO & FRIENDS REUNION (1981)
     
    JazzFanatic, rod and Reader like this.
  7. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
  8. Rick Bartlett

    Rick Bartlett Forum Resident

    This was another good compilation release on Raven Records.
    It's listed on Bears website, but sadly it's another one that's OOP.
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  9. Rick Bartlett

    Rick Bartlett Forum Resident

    Another artist worthy of the BF treatment.
    Boxcar Willie.
    His material is scattered.
    It would be great to have his material in one place.
    His rise into music is interesting, considering he didn't start until he
    retired from the Air Force as a flight engineer!
    That's a story in itself.
    The guy was a natural country star.
    His early material is of interest to me, as he also wrote his own material.
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    He obviously gained more attention doing cover version songs later on, which I think are still worthy
    of inclusion into or on a BF release and/or box.
     
    MerseyBeatle, Mr. H and Svein Arne like this.
  10. Rick Bartlett

    Rick Bartlett Forum Resident

    Also a natural born Country Music entertainer.
    I buy right into the clothing attire and the hobo thing too.....
     
    Svein Arne likes this.
  11. Rick Bartlett

    Rick Bartlett Forum Resident

    For those who are unaware, a brief look into the life of Boxcar Willie.
     
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  12. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
  13. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
  14. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
    More interesting things i found:
    4 Star (Calif.) (RCS Label Listing)
     
  15. GodBlessTinyTim

    GodBlessTinyTim Forum Resident Thread Starter

    Location:
    Ontario, Canada
    Damn, missed out on a great deal on the elusive first Freddie King box because the seller wouldn't ship to Canada. $110 US. The only other copy I can find for sale online is from someone with a 0% feedback rating and costs nearly twice as much.

    In non-ursine news, White Gospel Bangers: Chapter 2 is out. Compilations of this style of gospel are hard to come by from my experience, so the more the merrier.

    https://www.ebay.com/itm/WHITE-GOSPEL-BANGERS-Chapter-2-15-Heaven-Sent-Rockers-Ltd-Edition-333/283746968505?hash=item4210a323b9:g:1dwAAOSw-s5eIK1e
     
  16. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
    Thanks for headsup for this.WHITE GOSPEL BANGERS - Chapter 2 - 15 Heaven Sent Rockers - Ltd Edition 333! | eBay
    I just bought it.:tiphat:
     
  17. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
  18. Svein Arne

    Svein Arne Forum Resident

    Location:
    Norway
    baptistbusman likes this.
  19. baptistbusman

    baptistbusman Compact Disc Advocate

    Location:
    Bloomsdale, MO
    I’ve been looking for the Johnnie Lee Wills set for years. I bought the Bill Lister disc on eBay a few years ago for $3. I think some “Hank Sr” lover was looking for the quintessential “Tear in my Beer” and got this and was disgusted by the Country Music and had to unload it quick.

    That Hank Thompson disc was awesome when it came out. Varese was a Godsend. I remember they released Bill Anderson and Roy Clark discs when there was no hope of ever having them back then. I have both of Hanks Bear Sets and most of his later day releases. The only one I am missing is the Step One “Here’s To Country Music” and it’s gotten pretty elusive.
     
    The Killer likes this.
  20. baptistbusman

    baptistbusman Compact Disc Advocate

    Location:
    Bloomsdale, MO
    After combing the net for The Chuck Wagon Gang set, which has been deleted, County Sales came through for me again! They even listed it as "sold out" for months, then all the sudden I one more copy for sale on their website last Sunday. Nothing...Nothing like opening the shipping box for a brand new Bear Family set and seeing it looking back at you.

    Thanks County Sales! P.S. Don't anyone buy up stuff before I can get it.

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  21. Mr. H

    Mr. H Forum Resident

    I’m with you on the hunt for some deleted items. I just scored the Hawkshaw Hawkins set which is available again for a limited time. And Claude King is on the way though I’m not 100% that that ones been deleted.
     
  22. baptistbusman

    baptistbusman Compact Disc Advocate

    Location:
    Bloomsdale, MO
    I just wish we could be given a “heads up” when the sets get deleted. I would have gotten Gene Autry and Anita Carter when Amazon.De had them for $80 before they were gone forever.
     
    Mr. H likes this.
  23. Mr. H

    Mr. H Forum Resident

    Yeah, I went looking for the Maddox Brothers and Rose set and County Sales and ET Record Shop and neither of them knew it was deleted either! They both very politely offered to special order the set and they both discovered it’s unavailability while on the phone with me. Bummer!
     
  24. Tribute

    Tribute Senior Member

    It seems that the number of deleted sets is climbing rapidly. Unlike earlier years, I doubt that many will be reprinted. Thanks to those who switched to streaming.

    We knew this day would come, but did not expect it would sneak up so quickly.
     
  25. Zappateer

    Zappateer Forum Resident

    Ella Mae Moorse box
    Johnny Horton boxes
    Atomic Bomb box
    Korean War box
    Everly Bro’s boxes
    Gene Vincent boxes (if you count the out takes too)
    Eddie Cochran Box
    The set of Complete Sun singles boxes
    Sun Country Box
    Connie Smith boxes
    Chuck Berry box
     

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