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From "Stephen Thorn" <youngthorn@earthlink.net>
Subject RIP: Nick Reynolds of the Kingston Trio
Date Thu, 2 Oct 2008 20:35:12 -0700

[Part 1 text/plain iso-8859-1 (2.7 kilobytes)] (View Text in a separate window)

He'll forever be riding 'neath the streets of Boston.....

In addition to his immediate family, Nick is survived by his nephew, Joey 
Harris. Joey was a member of the Beat Farmers and had one powerpop LP on 
MCA, Joey Harris and The Speedsters.

Steve

Kingston Trio's Nick Reynolds, 75, dies in SD
1 hour ago

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Nick Reynolds, a founding member of the Kingston Trio who 
jump-started the revival folk scene of the late 1950s and paved the way for 
artists such as Bob Dylan and Joan Baez, has died. He was 75.

Reynolds had been hospitalized with acute respiratory disease and other 
illnesses, and died Wednesday in San Diego after his family took him off 
life support, said son Joshua Reynolds.

"Dad was so happy he turned people onto music in a way that people could 
really approach it, in a simple and honest way," Josh Reynolds told The 
Associated Press. "He was a very gracious and loving performer. He was a 
devoted family man."

The Kingston Trio's version of the 19th century folk song "Tom Dooley" 
landed the group a No. 1 spot on the charts in 1958, and launched the band's 
career.

Born on July 27, 1933, in San Diego, Nicholas Reynolds demonstrated an early 
love of music and did sing-alongs with his two sisters and their Navy 
captain-father, who taught him to play guitar.

He graduated from Coronado High School in 1951 and attended the University 
of Arizona and San Diego State University before attending Menlo College, a 
business school near Palo Alto. He graduated from Menlo in 1956.

It was during the mid-1950s that Nicholas Reynolds met Bob Shane, who 
introduced him to Stanford student Dave Guard. Guard and Shane knew each 
other from playing music in Guard's native Hawaii. The three formed the 
Kingston Trio.

In 1958, "Tom Dooley" earned Reynolds, Guard and Shane a trophy for best 
country and western performance at the first Grammys. The group, defined by 
tight harmonies and a clean-cut style, went on to win a Grammy the next year 
for best folk performance for its album "The Kingston Trio At Large."

Later member John Stewart joined the group in 1961, replacing Guard. Stewart 
died in January, also in San Diego.

After leaving the Kingston Trio in 1967, Reynolds moved to Oregon, where he 
stayed until the 1980s and took a break from music to raise his family, his 
son said.

Reynolds moved back to California in the mid-1980s and rejoined Stewart for 
one album. In 1991, Reynolds rejoined Shane in a reconstituted version of 
the Trio. He remained with the group until retiring in 2003, his son said.

Reynolds is survived by his wife Leslie, sons Joshua and John Pike Reynolds, 
daughters Annie Reynolds Moore and Jennifer Reynolds, and his two sisters.


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