*** Welcome to piglix ***

The Kingston Trio (Nick Bob John)

The Kingston Trio (Nick Bob John)
Nickbobjohn.jpg
Studio album by The Kingston Trio
Released December 7, 1964
Recorded 1964
Genre Folk
Length 38:03 (reissue)
Label Decca
Producer Frank Werber
The Kingston Trio chronology
Back in Town
(1963)Back in Town1963
The Kingston Trio (Nick Bob John)
(1964)
Stay Awhile
(1965)Stay Awhile1965
Singles from The Kingston Trio
  1. "My Ramblin' Boy"/"Hope You Understand"
    Released: 1964
  2. "I'm Going Home"/"Little Play Soldiers"
    Released: 1964
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars

The Kingston Trio (Nick Bob John) (more commonly known as Nick Bob John) is an album by the American folk music group the Kingston Trio, released in 1964 (see 1964 in music). Nick Bob John failed to reach the Top 40, peaking at number 53 on the Billboard Pop Albums chart.

The Kingston Trio (Nick Bob John) was the trio's first release on the Decca label after seven years,19 albums and worldwide record sales in the tens of millions (three million on "Tom Dooley" alone) with Capitol Records. The names are those of the Trio's members, Nick Reynolds, Bob Shane, and John Stewart.

Two singles were released: "My Ramblin' Boy" b/w "Hope You Understand" and "I'm Going Home" b/w "Little Play Soldiers". Neither single, and notably, none of the Decca singles, reached the Top 100 in the charts.

The album was produced by Frank Werber, the Trio's manager since its inception.

"I'm Going Home", by Fred Geis, remained a concert favorite of the Trio in this and future incarnations of the group, sometimes re-titled "California". Geis was the subject of a lawsuit over the melody resembling music from the Broadway musical Milk and Honey by Jerry Herman.

In his Allmusic review, music critic Bruce Eder called the album "one of the strongest albums of the group's entire history, containing an embarrassment of riches among its original dozen songs. And it's also a surprisingly contemporary record for a group that was supposedly long past its prime in 1965..." but noted the sound quality was "a little flat-sounding compared with the group's prior work at Capitol's studios..."


...
Wikipedia

...