Here We Go Again Were Sick

1959 studio anthology by The Kingston Trio

Hither We Go Over again!
Herewegoagain.jpg
Studio album by

The Kingston Trio

Released October 19, 1959
Recorded May 26–27, June 1–2, 1959
Studio Capitol Studio B (Hollywood)
Genre Folk
Label Capitol
Producer Voyle Gilmore
The Kingston Trio chronology
At Large
(1959)
Here We Get Over again!
(1959)
Sold Out
(1960)
Singles from Here Nosotros Go Once again!
  1. "A Worried Human being"/"San Miguel"
    Released: 1960

Here We Go Again! is an album by American folk music group the Kingston Trio, released in 1959 (see 1959 in music). It was one of the iv the Trio would have simultaneously in Billboard's Peak 10 albums during the year. Information technology spent eight weeks at #i and received an RIAA gold certification the same day as At Big. "A Worried Man" b/w "San Miguel" was its pb-off single, though it only made the Top twenty.[1] In November, two not-album songs were released as a unmarried—"Coo Coo-U" b/due west "Green Grasses"—just did not chart.[2]

Background [edit]

The trio worked with the assistance of Lou Gottlieb on the song selection and the arrangements. Rehearsals were washed at the Cocoanut Grove club where the group was appearing at the fourth dimension. "Molly Dee" was written by John Stewart who would eventually get a member of the Trio, replacing Dave Guard. "Across the Wide Missouri" is the Trio's version of the pop American folk vocal "Oh Shenandoah". Although credited to Dave Guard, "Goober Peas" dates from the Confederate South and "A Worried Man" ("Worried Human Blues") is a song starting time recorded by The Carter Family unit in the 1930s and Woody Guthrie in the 1940s. "Haul Away" was originally credited to Jack Splittard, a pseudonym the trio members used to split copyright and royalties on public domain songs.[3]

Ben Blake states in the 1992 reissue liner notes: "Here We Go Again! was reportedly the start Kingston Trio album on which Voyle Gilmore utilized what was called 'double-voicing' whenever all three group members sang in unison. This was achieved past having them tape their vocals twice; and then Gilmore simply overdubbed one of the tracks. This gave the group a fuller audio. Recorded at Studio B in Los Angeles, Here Nosotros Go Again! also benefited from Capitol's Thou Coulee-like echo bedroom, which Gilmore used to make the Trio's instruments 'ring' like no other folk group, earlier or since."[1]

Reception [edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [4]
Allmusic [5]

Sales of Here We Go Once again! rose to over 900,000 copies reaching the number one chart position for eight weeks. At one betoken in 1959 later on the release of Hither We Get Again!, the Trio had four records at the same time among the Meridian 10 selling albums according to Billboard Mag'due south "Top X Albums" nautical chart for five consecutive weeks in November and December 1959,[6] [7] [8] [9] [10] a record unmatched now for over 50 years.[11] Here Nosotros Go Once again! received Grammy nominations in the Folk category and the Vocal Grouping category.[1]

In his retrospective review, Allmusic critic Matt Fink noted standout tracks in his review and chosen the release "a very well-rounded anthology."[four] In his review of the 1992 reissue, critic Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr. wrote "At Large and Here We Go Again! capture the Kingston Trio early in their career, grounded in the success of their offset albums and searching for new directions. Fans, folk revival enthusiasts, and the curious volition relish this 1."[5]

Reissues [edit]

  • Hither We Go Again! was reissued in 1992 on CD past Capitol with At Large.[5]
  • In 1997, all of the tracks from Here We Go Again! were included in The Guard Years x-CD box set issued by Conduct Family Records.
  • Hither Nosotros Go Once again! was reissued in 2001 past Collector'south Choice with At Big. This reissue has 3 bonus tracks: an culling version of "A Worried Homo" and the non-LP single "The Tijuana Jail" backed with "Oh Cindy."[12]

Rail listing [edit]

Side one [edit]

  1. "Molly Dee" (John Stewart)
  2. "Across the Wide Missouri" (Ervin Drake, Jimmy Shirl)
  3. "Booty Away" (Traditional)
  4. "The Wanderer" (Irving Burgess)
  5. "'Circular About the Mountain" (Lou Gottlieb)
  6. "Oleanna" (Harvey Geller, Martin Seligson)

Side two [edit]

  1. "The Unfortunate Miss Bailey" (Traditional, Gottlieb)
  2. "San Miguel" (Jane Bowers)
  3. "E Inu Tatou East" (George Archer)
  4. "A Rollin' Stone" (Stan Wilson)
  5. "Goober Peas" (Dave Baby-sit, Traditional)
  6. "A Worried Man" (Traditional, Tom Glazer, Dave Guard)

Personnel [edit]

  • Dave Baby-sit – vocals, banjo, guitar
  • Bob Shane – vocals, guitar, banjo
  • Nick Reynolds – vocals, tenor guitar, bongos
  • David "Cadet" Wheat – bass

Production notes [edit]

  • Produced by Voyle Gilmore
  • Engineered past Peter Abbott
  • Mixed by Voyle Gilmore and Male monarch Uptegraft

Nautical chart positions [edit]

Year Nautical chart Position
1959 Billboard Pop Albums ane

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c Liner notes: At Large and Hither We Get Again! Capitol Records reissue. Liner notes past Ben Blake, 1992.
  2. ^ Blake, B., Rubeck, J., Shaw, A. (1986) The Kingston Trio On Record. Kingston Korner Inc, Ill: ISBN 0-9614594-0-9
  3. ^ Bush-league, William (2013). Greenback Dollar: The Incredible Rise of the Kingston Trio. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Printing. p. 210. ISBN9780810881921.
  4. ^ a b Fink, Matt. "Hither Nosotros Go Again! > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  5. ^ a b c Lankford, Jr., Ronnie D. "At Large/Here We Go Again! > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  6. ^ Nielsen Concern Media, Inc (1959-11-xvi). Billboard Nautical chart 11/16/59. p. xxx. Retrieved August 17, 2010. billboard november 16 1959.
  7. ^ Nielsen Concern Media, Inc (1959-11-23). Billboard Chart 11/23/59. p. 29. Retrieved August 17, 2010. billboard november 23 1959.
  8. ^ Nielsen Business Media, Inc (1959-eleven-30). Billboard Chart, 11/xxx/59 . Retrieved August 17, 2010.
  9. ^ Nielsen Business Media, Inc (1959-12-07). Billboard Chart, 12/7/59 . Retrieved Baronial 17, 2010.
  10. ^ Nielsen Business Media, Inc (1959-12-fourteen). Billboard Chart, 12/14/59. p. 23. Retrieved Baronial 17, 2010. billboard december 14 1959.
  11. ^ Dreier, Peter (Oct 14, 2008). "The Kingston Trio and the Cherry Scare". The Huffington Mail . Retrieved November 30, 2009.
  12. ^ "At Large/Here We Become Again! > Reissue by Collector's Choice". Allmusic. Retrieved March 31, 2010.

External links [edit]

  • Kingston Trio Timeline.
  • Voyle Gilmore interview.

danismagas1961.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Here_We_Go_Again!

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