Posted on Leave a comment

Erik Darling 8/2008

erik darling of the weaversAugust 2, 2008 – Erik Darling  (the Weavers) was born on September 25, 1933 in Baltimore, Maryland.

Darling actually spent his childhood in Canandaigua, NY, and by the time he was in his early twenties, he was a regular fixture in New York City’s Washington Square folk scene. A superb banjo player and perhaps an even better 12-string guitarist, and possessing a clear, warm, and expressive tenor singing voice, Darling was an expert at bringing out the best in the musicians around him. The Folksay Trio, recording an album in 1951 that included Darling’s arrangement of “Tom Dooley” became a huge hit.

He then formed the Tunetellers in the mid-’50s, and after a name change to the Tarriers, the group had a Top Ten hit with “The Banana Boat Song” (the song is also known as “Day-O” after its distinctive refrain and was subsequently an even bigger hit for Harry Belafonte) in 1956.

Originally inspired by folk group the Weavers in the early 1950s, Darling joined the group as Pete Seeger’s replacement in 1958 and stayed with the group for a little over four years.

He left the Weavers in 1962 to form the Rooftop Singers, who became his most popular group. Slyly updating and rearranging Gus Cannon’s “Walk Right In“, which Cannon’s Jug Stompers originally recorded in 1929, Darling and the Rooftop Singers took the new version to the top of the charts in 1963 as one of the biggest folk hits of the era.

In 1975, he released a solo album, “The Possible Dream” on Elektra. He returned to recording in the 1990s, cutting several albums , including one of Christmas songs.

Never one to seek the limelight, Darling continued to record and work in the folk and emerging Americana vein, even flirting with a kind of desert country sound with his group Border Town (which also included members Sid Hausman and Lynn Lucas), which released the solid Border Town at Midnight album in 1994.

Always an elegant singer and instrumentalist, Darling never lost his ability to rearrange traditional material into new forms that carried the past even as they were subtly updated to handle the present.

Darling died from lymphoma complications on August 3, 2008, in Chapel Hill, NC. He was 74.

 

Leave a Reply