I'll be home tonight
So I won't be worried long!
[NOTE: If you had asked the ten-year-old 2 or 3 lines to name his favorite record album, he would have said The Best of the Kingston Trio. To date, 2 or 3 lines has featured no fewer than five tracks from that album – I can’t think of an album that’s been featured on my wildly popular little blog more frequently. "A Worried Man" became the first Kingston Trio recording to achieve that distinction way back in April 2011.]
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The singer of "A Worried Man" is wrong – he'll have plenty to worry about when you get home tonight.
For one thing, Bobby's in his living room, holdin' hands with his gal Sue.
And Nicky's at his big front door, 'bout to come on through.
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This song brings to mind a foam beer "koozie" I saw at a convenience store in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, many years ago. (The Yankees used to hold spring training in Fort Lauderdale, which is why I was there.) It read as follows:
Definition of a worried man:
A wife, a mistress, a mortgage payment --
All one month overdue!
I regret that I did not buy that koozie. It would have completely captured the current zeitgeist -- both the breakdown of traditional family values and a troubled economy, n'est-ce pas?
(I did buy a different koozie. It read "Every man needs a wife -- you can't blame it all on the government." So the trip wasn't a total loss.)
You may be asking yourself, "KINGSTON TRIO???" I admit, this song is a bit of a departure from the usual fare on 2 or 3 lines. But I like to mix it up – be spontaneous – go with the flow – throw the occasional breaking ball to a right-handed hitter when the count is 3-2 and the bases are loaded.
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You may be asking yourself, "KINGSTON TRIO???" I admit, this song is a bit of a departure from the usual fare on 2 or 3 lines. But I like to mix it up – be spontaneous – go with the flow – throw the occasional breaking ball to a right-handed hitter when the count is 3-2 and the bases are loaded.
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When my parents bought a Magnovox console stereo in the early 1960s, they bought a lot of jazz records, which were of little interest to me. But I loved The Best of the Kingston Trio and Mitch Miller and the Gang's Sing Along With Mitch record.
The Mitch Miller album was a lot of fun to sing along with, and I still remember most of the songs on that LP. Here's an example of the charmingly archaic lyrics the album featured:
That's where my money goes
To buy my baby clothes
I buy her everything
To keep her in style (well, well, well!)
She wears silk underwear
I wear my last year's pair
Say boys, that's where my money goes!
(There may come a time when I forget my name and my childrens' names and every other important fact I know – but I will never forget those lyrics.)
The songs on the Kingston Trio record were a little more contemporary and interesting. Several of them were about criminals – like "Tom Dooley." (I think my junior high boys' chorus sang that song, along with "There Is Nothin' Like a Dame" from South Pacific.)
That's where my money goes
To buy my baby clothes
I buy her everything
To keep her in style (well, well, well!)
She wears silk underwear
I wear my last year's pair
Say boys, that's where my money goes!
(There may come a time when I forget my name and my childrens' names and every other important fact I know – but I will never forget those lyrics.)
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It's hard to believe just how popular the Kingston Trio was back in the day.
They released their first album in 1958 and it went to #1 on the Billboard album chart.
They released their first album in 1958 and it went to #1 on the Billboard album chart.
The Kingston Trio issued 18 more albums between 1959 and 1964 -- an average of three albums per year. Five of those albums went to #1, five were either #2 or #3 albums, and three others made the Billboard top 10. They had four albums in the top 10 simultaneously for five weeks in 1959! (That is positively Beatles-esque.)
Purists sneered at the Kingston Trio because they were so successful, accusing them of prostituting folk music. The group never claimed to be real folksingers, but they made folk songs wildly popular here and abroad.
Eventually, the Trio expanded its repertoire to include songs like "It Was a Very Good Year" (which later became a hit for Frank Sinatra) and "Scotch and Soda." They recorded music by young songwriters like Hoyt Axton and Rod McKuen – remember Rod McKuen? – and were one of the first American groups to perform a Jacques Brel song in English. Last but far from least, they popularized the famous anti-war ballad, "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?"
Today's featured song is one of their more light-hearted ones. It uses the chorus of the old folk song, "Worried Man Blues":
It takes a worried man to sing a worried song
It takes a worried man to sing a worried song
I'm worried now, but I won't be worried long
But "Worried Man Blues" -– which was recorded by the Carter Family, Woody Guthrie, and Ramblin' Jack Elliott, among others – is about a man who is in prison . . . not a man returning from a business trip to find his wife engaging in extramarital shenanigans.
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Click here to hear "Worried Man Blues" performed by the Stanley Brothers.
Click here to hear the Kingston Trio's very different take on that song.
Click here to buy that recording from Amazon.
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