We are devastated to
report that John Stewart passed away early on the morning of January
19th. John suffered a massive stroke on Thursday evening. He
was surrounded by his family & friends.
The world has
lost one of its best men, but a man who lived well and made many
people happy with his love, his wit and his music. John Stewart
lives on in all of us and will never be
forgotten. |
Below is
a beautiful letter written about Johnny by Tom Delisle...Tom, no one
says it any better than this ~ Bob Shane
|
My friend John Stewart
died this morning in San Diego, California ... in the hospital
he was born in on September 5th, 1939 ... 68 years ago.
John
suffered a massive stroke or brain aneurysm early Friday morning in
San Diego. Doctors had determined that any difficult surgical
remedies that might have been employed to save his life-- even
if successful -- would had left John immobile and unable to speak.
It wasn't generally known, but doctors had told John in recent years
that he had apparently experienced various minor strokes, likely in
his sleep.
In the early 1970s, Stewart wrote "Cooler Water,
Higher Ground," one of his many highly personalized songs, in which
he sang "I was born in the heat of September, and I died in the cool
of the fall ... borning and dying we do all the time, it don't mean
much of nothing at all." But his passing will mean so much, to so
many, around the world.
John's all-time companion and wife
Buffy, and his children -- Mikael, Jeremy, Amy, and Luke -- were at
his side when he passed peacefully around 7:30 a.m. Pacific time.
John never regained consciousness after collapsing in his hotel room
late Thursday/early Friday, and was not in pain during his time at
Scripps Mercy Hospital in San Diego.
John Stewart leaves a
compilation of musical excellence unparalleled in his time. He
recorded over 45 solo albums following his seven years in the
Kingston Trio, 1961-67. He worked all the way up to the time of his
death, having recently completed his latest as-yet untitled album.
It is estimated that he wrote more than 600 unique and highly
personal songs, many of them constituting a modern musical history
of his beloved America.
He leaves behind a wide-ranging
group of fans who have felt a passion for him and his music that
bordered on fanaticism. Chief among them are the Bloodliners, a
hard-core legion of supporters who communicated via computer
everyday in discussing John and his career.
It can now be
said that John was told last summer, shortly before Trio Fantasy
Camp 8, that he was suffering from the initial stages of Alzheimer's
disease. That news was kept from the public in the hope that his
condition would stabilize and allow him to work in the following
years until the disease took its eventual toll. Indeed he had
stabilized in the time since Camp, and was able to bravely perform
several concert shows and do the studio work on his new album.
If there is a blessing in his passing, it is that he will
now be spared the true ravages of that awful disease. He will not
suffer the gradual personal mental reductions caused by Alzheimer's,
though he had already lost his ability to drive, owing to California
law. In fact, one of the new songs on the upcoming album is "I Can't
Drive Anymore," a typically honest and emotional personal reaction
to his situation.
Speaking personally, losing John creates a
hole in my soul. I had agonized for months over the Alzheimer's
prognosis. But after talking with many of his friends and family
yesterday, I can see that -- facing a debilitating future -- it was
-- and this is so hard to say --the right time for him to go. This
is what he would have wanted, in light of what he ultimately faced.
Johnny always drew a crowd, and there was a gathering of
friends at the hospital in San Diego over the past two days.
Starting with Nick Reynolds from John's Trio days and his wife
Leslie, John's entire family had been joined at his bedside by
longtime sidekick Dave "Dave" Batti, John Hoke, Chuck McDermott,
Greg Jorgenson, John's boyhood best friend George Yanok, who flew in
from Nashville upon hearing the news, and other family, friends, and
acquaintances. A kind of "Irish wake" was held throughout Friday and
into early Saturday, with the friends and old bandmates sharing many
of the limitless John Stewart stories.
No plans have been
announced yet for any memorial observations. I'll let you know
as soon as Buffy decides.
I'm so sorry to have to write this,
to have to tell you this. Outside my closest family members, John
was the brightest light of my life. This creates an emptiness that
can never be filled. If you are tempted to mourn to great lengths
today, as so many of us surely are, we have to remind ourselves of
what a gift he was for all of us. And how lucky we all were to have
had the opportunity to have shared in his amazing music and stage
artistry. We might, each of us, have missed him, you know.
But--lucky for us--we didn't.
He hated moping around, and
looked for the bright side, and laughter, in everything. He wouldn't
even allow me to be 'down' about having cancer. He even berated me
at one point about it. He had amazing drive, and a creative force
within him that was stunning in its intensity and breadth. And some
day his amazing personal songs will be discovered by a mass
audience, and the world at large, and he will receive the
wide-ranging accolades he was denied in his time.
Trust me.
Think about him today, listen to that incredible body of his work,
think about the electric personality we experienced in EVERY show he
did .. in the literally thousands and thousands of performances in
which he gave us everything he had, stretching from venues big and
small, from coast to coast, from 1957 to 2007.
You will smile
when you do; and eventually laugh when recalling the magic of his
art and personality. We will not see his like again, but we have
been so lucky to have shared him across the decades -- and found
each other through him, because of him. It does not feel like it,
but we are the lucky ones today. That will become evident in the
time to come.
Because, like you ... I loved him
too.
Tom DeLisle |
A happy 50th birthday
to the song "Hang Down Your Head Tom Dooley"
(Photo courtesy of Norm Gauch -
thanks, Norm!)
The
Kingston Trio At One Of Their Many Christmas Concerts This Year
~The Trio has had many
requests to release their Christmas concert onto CD, so they are going
to do just that. They recorded it live and will head
to Phoenix this month to finish it up...look for the
release in a month or so.
~Nick
Reynolds is getting hipper! Check out Nick's Hip Blog Page
We Lost A
Great Friend In 2007...
We are sad to announce
that Enrico Banducci, 85, died October 9th, 2007. Enrico was the
founder of the famous Hungry i nightclub in San Francisco and was a
pioneer in live show business.
He gave many people their
first boost in the business, including Mort Sahl, Bob Newhart, Bill
Cosby, Professor Irwin Corey, TheGateway Singers, Bud & Travis,
Woody Allen and of course The Kingston Trio.
He was a great man, a
wonderful character and an inspiration to us all.
Mike Solner, a Superior
Court Judge in Los Angeles, has written a screen play on the Hungry
i Nightclub, and we really hope it becomes a movie. The world should
be aware of Enrico's contributions to live entertainment.
|
On Sale
Now...
One of the Kingston
Trio ’s classic (and most requested) albums, the 1966 double LP Once
Upon a Time, recorded live at the Sahara Tahoe in Lake Tahoe,
Nevada!
Originally intended as
the Trio’s parting shot for their 1967 farewell tour, it remained
unreleased until it appeared in the summer of 1969 on the tiny
Tetragrammaton label, where it had the distinction of being the
group’s final chart climber.
The memorable center
spread collage, photos, and liner notes are faithfully reproduced.
Nick, Bob, and John used this concert setting to introduce some new
favorites, including Dylan’s One Too Many Mornings and
their tribute to the Weavers, Goodnight Irene, as well as
their classic hits Tom Dooley, M.T.A., Scotch and Soda, and
Where Have All the Flowers Gone?
The Trio also dusted
off some studio gems for live treatment, such as Getaway John,
The Tijuana Jail, and I’m Going Home. All 20 songs
from the original double album are included here on one
great-sounding CD.
Also included are all 4
of John Stewart’s original comedy segments (move over, Jon
Stewart!), including the infamous Silicone Bust. Don’t be fooled by
inferior bootleg imitations: this is the first officially licensed
compact disc reissue of this timeless performance, the legendary
Kingston Trio’s Once Upon a Time!
But wait, there’s more!!! Also on sale now - Twice Upon a
Time, an 18-song CD culled from the same 1966 series of live
performances that produced the group’s legendary 1969 double album
Once Upon a Time.
Return with Nick
Reynolds, Bob Shane, and John Stewart to the Sahara Tahoe for some
memorable songs and very funny patter that wouldn’t fit on the
original release, including outstanding renditions of They Call
the Wind Maria, Little Maggie, The Merry Minuet, Reuben James, Hanna
Lee, Tom Paxton’s Where I’m Bound, and Stewart’s own
The Spinnin’ of the World and Hit and Run.
After some hilarious
false starts (including an exit by John), the Kingston Trio turns in
a fine version of Eric Andersen’s Thirsty Boots, as well as
some first-rate alternate live takes of Hard Travelin’,
Goodnight Irene, and When the Saints Go Marching In,
as well as Trio staples M.T.A., Tom Dooley, and a
giggle-free Greenback Dollar.
This CD also includes a
dynamic bonus video of the Trio performing Bob Dylan’s Tomorrow
Is a Long Time. The Kingston Trio’s Twice Upon a Time stands as
a more-than-fitting companion disc to Once Upon a Time, and helps us
remember why this group so greatly influenced a generation of
musicians, as well as a life-long legion of fans.
Both CDs are faithfully
reproduced with audio restoration magic and brilliant stereo effects
by Grammy-nominated producer Ron Furmanek.
These CDs available for
purchase at The Kingston Trio
Store! |
Event Photos For You To
Enjoy
The
Hungry i Exhibition in San Francisco View Photos Kingston
Trio 50 Year Hawaiian Cruise! View Photos
Trio
Fantasy Camp 8 August 16-18, 2007 View Photos
Videos For
You To Enjoy
Songs from Live From the Yuma
DVD Yuma Video Songs from the Java 5
nightclub DVD Java 5 VideoThe Kingston Trio: Live At The Santa
Monica Civic Auditorium
This CD features the
last known recordings by the Dave Guard-Nick Reynolds-Bob Shane
line-up, a concert recorded just three weeks before the folk
supergroup announced they were breaking up!
Captured live at the
Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in California on April 21,
1961, the group performs eight songs previously unheard on any of
their live recordings, plus, as an added treat, Pat Boone joins
them for "You're Gonna Miss Me!"
And the group joins Pat for
that very same song on a very special video from his April 1961 TV
special, which this enhanced CD presents for the first time since it
aired some 46 years ago.
Song List: Run
Molly Run, Bad Man's Blunder, Come All You Fair and Tender Ladies,
Bonnie Hielan' Laddie, Zombie Jamboree, Colorado Trail, You're Gonna
Miss Me (with special guest Pat Boone), Merry Minuet, Go
Where I Send Thee, Coplas, Guardo El Lobo, You Don't Knock,
Maria, and When The Saints Go Marching In.
Available now
at The Kingston Trio
Store |
Also new At The Kingston Trio
Store!
Custom
Kingston Trio guitar straps with The Kingston Trio embossed on the
leather oval!! These are the Trio's favorite straps
- lightweight and attractive with great stage presence. They come in
5 colors: Black, Navy, Bright Red, Dark Olive & Light Olive...
Purchase
The Kingston Trio's guitar straps at The Kingston Trio Store
The
Kingston Trio...The First 50 Years
Here's a brand
new CD that celebrates The Kingston Trio's 50th birthday! This
CD features 2 songs each from all 9 configurations of the
Kingston Trio over their 50 year history. Bob Shane wrote the
liner notes. As he puts it,"this CD is really
peachy!" |
|
Deering Banjos Celebrates the KT ’s 50th Anniversary! More Info
Keep up on the Trio's high jinks with Rick's
pics! By Rick Dougherty
"Were
It Not For Allan Shaw, A Trove Of Vintage Music Would be Dead And
Buried" A
very well-deserved and long overdue tribute to one of our dearest friends
Read Article
Travis Edmonson Documentary In The
Works
Bill McCune,
owner of McCune Television, is producing a Travis Edmonson
documentary, scheduled for release sometime in 2007. Bill is asking
fans all over the world to send any souvenirs they have, to add to
the “texture” of the documentary.
If you have
ticket stubs, playbills, photographs (Travis, Bud & Travis,
Travis w/ other celebrities, Travis with fans), ads, reviews,
anything, Bill would love to get a copy. He’ll accept originals, but
they can't be returned, so the best bet is to scan the
items.
Send the scanned items to Bonnie Brock:info@arizonafolk.net You can
also use this email address to ask Bonnie any questions. If you have
film clips, please tell us about those as well. It’s possible they
could be incorporated into the documentary. Thanks! Bonnie
| The Yuma concert taping was great fun!
Read the review!
( For the full story on the Yuma taping, visit the Kingston
Trio news archives)
Listen To George, Bill & Rick sing "Road To Freedom"
(now that's
harmony!)
|