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College Concert

College Concert
Collegeconcert.jpg
Live album by The Kingston Trio
Released February 1962
Recorded December 6–7, 1961 at the Student Union Building, University of California, Los Angeles
Genre Folk
Label Capitol
Producer Voyle Gilmore
The Kingston Trio chronology
Something Special1962
Close-Up
(1961)Close-Up1961
College Concert
(1962)
Something Special
(1962)
Singles from College Concert
  1. "O Ken Karanga"/"Where Have All the Flowers Gone?"
    Released: 1962
  2. "Chilly Winds"/"Roddy McCorley"
    Released: 1962 (UK)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars

College Concert is the twelfth album by the American folk music group the Kingston Trio, released in 1962 (see 1962 in music). It was the group's third live release and the first live release with new member John Stewart. College Concert peaked at number three on the Billboard charts and was the largest-selling release by the Stewart-years Trio.

The Trio recorded "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" in a New York studio in December 1961 and claimed authorship, but they took their names off when Pete Seeger asked them to. The single, with "O Ken Karanga" as the A-side and "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" the B-side, reached #21 in the 1962 charts, as shown in the Billboard Hot 100. A single with "Chilly Winds" b/w "Roddy McCorley" was released in the UK. An additional single was released in the US in April consisting of "Scotch and Soda" b/w "Jane Jane Jane".

Producer Voyle Gilmore and engineer Pete Abbott recorded two performances at the University of California, Los Angeles and edited the best performances from each night. College Concert was the last performance with the Trio by long-time bassist David "Buck" Wheat.

The original liner notes are attributed to the Trio's opening act Ronnie Schell as "America's Slowest Rising Young Comedian".

Allmusic music critic Bruce Eder, while criticizing the thin bass sound, praised the album as "One of the best-selling LPs ever recorded by the Kingston Trio, College Concert is also the album by the trio that holds up best in the decades since... the overall quality of the performance, from the exquisitely arranged "500 Miles" to the rousing version of "Young Roddy M'Corley," was the album's most alluring overall feature."


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