Kingston Trio #16/Sunny Side!
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Reverend Mr. Black
- Road to Freedom
- River Run Down
- Big Ball in Town
- One More Round
- Oh Joe Hannah
- Run the Ridges
- Try to Remember
- Mark Twain
- Low Bridge
- Ballad of the Quiet Fighter
- Bamba
- Desert Pete
- Marcelle Vahine
- Sing Out
- Ballad of the Thresher
- Blowin' in the Wind
- Goo Ga Gee
- Jackson
- Two-Ten, Six-Eighteen (Doesn't Anybody Know My Name)
- Those Brown Eyes
- Those Who Are Wise
- Rider
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #94384 in Music
- Released on: 2000-04-11
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .20 pounds
Customer Reviews
#16 - The very best Kingston Trio recording
My sister purchased #16 when I was about 5 or 6 and played it on a portable record player. This album became the soundtrack to my early memories. I've listened to a lot of Kingston Trio albums, and they are all great, but this is my favorite of all the Kingston Trio albums. #16 features John Stewart's influence in full force. His singing and harmony, tasteful playing, and songwriting really blended well with Nick Reynolds and Bob Shane. This album seems to have recieved a little more polished studio treatment than most of their albums instrumentally, but at the same time, they really cut loose vocally with rousing versions of "La Bamba", "Old Joe Hannah", "Big Ball in Town", "Low Bridge", and "Mark Twain". Their solid harmonies shine in more reflective songs like my favorite "Reverend Mr. Black", "Run the Ridges" "Road to Freedom" and the well known "Try to Remember". This is the Kingston Trio album I have been waiting to purchase on CD and I'm very glad to finally see it released. I hope that more of the John Stewart era KT albums are released on CD. I don't know much about the other half of this double CD except for a couple of selections that I've heard on other complilations. But as with all Kingston Trio releases, though, you can't go wrong!
#16
My father's vinyl copy of The Kingston Trio #16 is one of our family's most treasured items, and is one of the greatest albums ever released. Every song was engrained in my head from my earliest memory. My brothers and I have sought another copy for years; we lost hope prior to finding this long overdue CD release.
Even the great Johnny Cash could not match The Kingston Trio's version of Delia's gone, "One More Round." And "Run the Ridges" is musical perfection - perhaps my favorite song of all time. This song is the high point of the album's incredible intensity of patriot and rebel spirit. This intensity is felt throughout, from the fervent conviction of "The Reverend Mr Black," the heartfelt nostalgia of "Mark Twain," the morbid anguish of "One More Round," to the quiet fury of "Ballad of the Quiet Fighter."
Extremely listenable, the album provides the full range of emotion and variety while maintaining a consistent, unique sound that shifts effortlessly throughout that spectrum of feeling.
Bottom line - all very cool, classic songs that no one should go through life without hearing, and every American should own.
The last great album by the Kingston Trio during the Capitol years
Collected on this one CD are a pair of Kingston Trio album from 1963, which puts them at the end of the first stage of the history of the group. "#16" made it to #4 on the Billboard album chart, which would actually be a tad disappointing given the group's track record. Fans will find more original compositions than usually end up on a Kingston Trio album. John Stewart wrote "Road to Freedom," "Run the Ridges," and "Ballad of the Quiet Fighter," while joining with Bob Shane and John Stewart to write "One More Round," "Low Bridge," and their arrangement of "La Bamba," which gets points for not sounding anything like the Richie Valen's version everybody knows. The big hit from this album was "Reverend Mr. Black," which made it to #8 on the Billboard singles chart (and the fellow playing banjo on the song turns out to be Glen Campbell). You should also recognize "Try to Remember" from the off-Broadway hit "The Fantasticks." On the lighter side, they do a song about "Mark Twain," which is actually about measuring two fathoms father than Samuel Langhorn Clemens. That one contrasts nicely with the gentle "River Run Down," so you get the usual excellent mix of folk music styles on this one, which is arguably the last great album the Kingston Trio did for the Capitol label.
"Sunny Side!" was the album that was rushed out to capitalize on the Kingston Trio's hit single "Reverend Mr. Black." The cover art is pretty cheap looking and too many of the songs simply do not have the polish that you expect from this group. Still, it remains an enjoyable listen. "Desert Pete" made it to #33 as a single and the album made it up to #7 on the Billboard chart, which made it an average success for the group given what it had accomplished previously. "Rider" and "Sing Out" are solid efforts, and you will probably recognize "Jackson" from the covers done by duos such as Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash or Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood. The other song that grabs your attention is "Ballad of the Thresher," which is about the U.S. nuclear submarine that was lost on April 10, 1963 with 129 officers and crew. It is hard to get more topical than a song like that, although the group would be back in the studio in November of that same year to write a song about a far greater national tragedy. Also, if you have been waiting to hear the Kingston Trio sing Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind," then your search is over because it is covered on this album. "#16" is a five-star album and this one is four-star at best, but put them together on one CD and you have to round up.




