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The World Needs a Melody
Studio album by
The New Kingston Trio
ReleasedApril 1973
Genre Folk
Label The Longines Symphonette Society
The New Kingston Trio chronology
The World Needs a Melody
(1973)
The Lost Masters 1969–1972
(1997)
The Kingston Trio chronology
Once Upon a Time
(1969)
The World Needs a Melody
(1973)
Aspen Gold
(1979)

The World Needs a Melody is an album by The New Kingston Trio, released in 1973. [1]

History

Two years before the release of Once Upon a Time in 1969, the Kingston Trio disbanded in 1967 following a two-week farewell engagement at San Francisco's Hungry i, the nightclub at which they had started their rise to prominence a decade earlier. John Stewart began a solo career, Nick Reynolds retired from the music business and, after a short-lived solo career, Bob Shane created a new group, The New Kingston Trio. The first configuration of this new group lasted approximately three years and consisted of Shane, Pat Horine, and Jim Connor; a second troupe including Shane, Bill Zorn, and Roger Gambill toured from 1973 to 1976 before Shane bought the rights to the Kingston Trio name outright and assembled a new group with Gambill and George Grove. [1]

The only full-length album released by either group was The World Needs a Melody (though 25 years later FolkEra Records issued The Lost Masters 1969-1972, a compilation of previously unreleased tracks from the Shane-Horine-Connor years), and its sales were negligible. Though both troupes of the New Kingston Trio made a limited number of other recordings and several television appearances, neither generated very much interest from fans or the public at large. [2]

There were no credits included on the album packaging. The back cover consisted of a track listing and an essay and photographs titled "The Secret of Longines Symphonette" describing the process of recording LPs.

Track listing

  1. " The World Needs a Melody" (J. Slate, L. Hinley, H. Delaughter)
  2. "Grandma's Feather Bed" (Jim Connor)
  3. "In Tall Buildings" ( John Hartford)
  4. "Riley's Medicine Show"
  5. "Blue Skies and Teardrops" (Mike Williams)
  6. "Jug Town" ( Billy Edd Wheeler)
  7. "Lovin' You Again"
  8. "Come the Morning"
  9. "Roll Your Own, Cowboys"
  10. "Nellie" (Barry Etris)

Personnel

  • Bob Shane - vocals, guitar
  • Pat Horine - vocals, guitar
  • Jim Connor - vocals, guitar, banjo
  • Stan Kaess - bass
  • Frank Sanchez - drums

References

  1. ^ a b Blake, B., Rubeck, J., Shaw, A. (1986) The Kingston Trio On Record. Kingston Korner Inc, ILL: ISBN  0-9614594-0-9
  2. ^ Kingston Trio On Record, pp. 129, 132.

External links