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Snuffysmith
1939 - 2008

Photo: Howard Bruensteiner Oh I'm believing, believing
Believing, that even when I'm gone
Maybe some lonesome picker will
Find some healing in this song


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 minorstrokes, 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 histime. 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 itseventual 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. Akind 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 youknow 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

http://www.chillywinds.com/
Snuffysmith
"Daydream Believer" Songwriter John Stewart Dies - 33 minutes ago
Singer-songwriter John Stewart, whose song credits include "Daydream Believer," died Saturday (Jan. 19) at a San Diego hospital after apparently suffering a ...CMT.com
Snuffysmith

'Daydream Believer' Songwriter Dies
The Associated Press - 10 hours ago
SAN DIEGO (AP) — John Stewart, who wrote the Monkees' hit "Daydream Believer" and became a well-known figure in the 1960s folk music revival as a member of ...
John Stewart, Former Kingston Trio member, Found Dead In SD Hotel
KGTV, 10News.com, CA - 1 hour ago
SAN DIEGO -- John Stewart, a singer-songwriter whose roots stretched back to the golden era of folk music through the California rock scene of the '60s and ...
Kingston Trio's Stewart dead at 68
United Press International - 2 hours ago
SAN DIEGO, Jan. 20 (UPI) -- Musician John Stewart, best known for his work with the Kingston Trio, died Saturday of an apparent massive stroke in San Diego ...
Snuffysmith
Songwriter JOHN STEWART has died. He was 68. The Kingston Trio star, who wrote seminal Monkees hit Daydream Believer, suffered a stroke and died on Saturday (19Jan08) at a San Diego hospital. Stewart's death was announced on The Kingston Trio's website, which stated, "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." He recorded 13 albums with The Kingston Trio, and later enjoyed solo success, going on to record more than 40 albums after the group split in 1967. Stewart is survived by his wife Buffy and children.
Snuffysmith

Early life
Stewart was the son of horse trainer, John S. Stewart, and his wife. He spent his childhood and adolescence growing up in southern California, living mostly in the cities of Pasadena and Pomona with his parents. He graduated from Pomona Catholic High School, which at the time was a coeducational school[1], in 1957. He demonstrated an early talent for music, learning the guitar and banjo, and composing his first song, "Shrunken Head Boogie," when he was just ten years old.




[edit] Musical evolution and career
Stewart's first venture into popular music was with a high school
garage band known as "Johnny Stewart and the Furies." Influenced by the reigning icons of the day, Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly, the Furies toured southern California colleges and coffee houses, releasing one single, "Rockin' Anna," which was a minor, regional hit.

Following the breakup of the Furies and a short period of time as a member of The Woodsmen, Stewart teamed up with Gil Robbins (father of actor Tim Robbins) and John Montgomery to form The Cumberland Three, a group patterned after and heavily-influenced by the increasingly popular Kingston Trio. The major accomplishment of The Cumberland Three was a two LP album set of Songs from the Civil War, with each album containing a compilation of songs from the Confederacy and the Union, respectively. In all, the Cumberland Three released three albums, after which Stewart left the group to join the Kingston Trio, replacing Trio founder Dave Guard, in 1961.




[edit] The Kingston Trio years
The Kingston Trio, one of the best-known and best-selling acts on the folk music scene, was enjoying a lucrative recording and touring contract with
Capitol Records, with ten albums under their collective belts, when Stewart joined them in 1961. They had emerged from the relatively crowded San Francisco folk music culture in 1957, using a mixture of calypso, pop, and folk styles, along with several forms of comedy, in their act. Relying on new arrangements of folk music classics as well as some original compositions, the Trio simultaneously earned their first gold record with "Tom Dooley," while launching a major revival in folk music that would lead to and influence the careers of Bob Dylan, Peter, Paul, & Mary, and John Denver, among others.

When Dave Guard left the group to explore other musical directions, Stewart was selected by remaining members Nick Reynolds and Bob Shane as his successor, bringing with him his respected skills as a musician, composer, and performer. The trio of Reynolds, Shane, and Stewart would record a dozen albums together, taking the music of the Trio into new directions, including more original material, and performing covers of songs by relative newcomers Tom Paxton, Mason Williams, and Gordon Lightfoot.

The folk era began to wane and the music of groups such as the Beatles and the Rolling Stones dominated the charts, and the members of the Kingston Trio decided to disband the group in 1967.




[edit] Solo career, the post-Trio years
Stewart continued to write songs and record for Capitol, while touring as a solo act. It was during this time that he composed the hit, "
Daydream Believer" for The Monkees (later a hit for Anne Murray as well), and later toured with Robert F. Kennedy's ill-fated 1968 presidential campaign. He also met and married fellow folk singer Buffy Ford — with whom he remains today (2007) — and began recording a remarkable string of albums. These include his signature album, California Bloodlines, as well as Willard, Cannons in the Rain, and Wingless Angels.

Though usually successful with critics and a core group of fans, Stewart's albums were not considered commercial successes. He left Capitol after only two solo releases and was signed by Warner Bros. Records, with whom he also recorded just two albums before moving on to RCA Records, where he recorded three LPs (including a live performance album). Stewart followed his release from RCA with a contract at the Robert Stigwood organization, the same organization that serviced the recording contracts for the Bee Gees, as well as several other disco performers. It was at RSO Records that Stewart enjoyed his most commercially successful years as a solo artist. Teaming with Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham (of Buckingham-Nicks and, later, Fleetwood Mac), Stewart recorded and released Bombs Away Dream Babies, which included the #5 hit, "Gold," in 1979. Two other tracks from the album, "Midnight Wind" and "Lost Her in the Sun," would also hit the top 40. The follow-up album, Dream Babies Go Hollywood, proved to be a commercial disappointment, and shortly thereafter Stewart dropped from the pop charts, never to return as a performer.




[edit] Later years
Stewart's later and most significant success has been as a songwriter. Several of his songs have been recorded by a number of popular acts, including
Nanci Griffith, Rosanne Cash, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Joan Baez and others. He also continues to record new material, producing CDs on his own "Neon Dreams" label in between commercial releases. Many fans believe that these recordings are John's best and usually coincide with one of his tours. The most recent listing is The Day the River Sang in 2006.

Stewart also continues his passion for painting, doing art shows and covers for his recordings and books. He continues to be a prolific songwriter and tours the United States and Europe regularly. He currently resides in California with his wife, Buffy Ford Stewart. Stewart's brother Mike, who died in 2002, founded the folk-rock group We Five in the mid 1960s.

Over the last several years, Stewart has teamed up with former TKT member, Nick Reynolds, to offer The Kingston Trio fans the ultimate Trio Fantasy: performing for and with Stewart and Reynolds.

In 2005 and 2006 Bob Shane attended and performed a few songs with Stewart and Reynolds at the Trio Fantasy Camp, which is held annually in Scottsdale, Arizona.




[edit] References
  1. ^ Rosales, Luis. History of Damien High School, accessed 20 September 2007



[<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_Stewart_%28musician%29&action=edit&section=7" title="Edit section: External links">edit] External links
graham4anything
My favorite Monkees song

with the fable beginning that was open to interpretation

davy-What # is it
7a
Davy-What
SEVENA
davy-ok don't yell at me just cuz I'm short
Snuffysmith

The John Stewart/Nick Reynolds Trio Fantasy Camp 2007
August 16 - 18
Scottsdale Plaza, Scottsdale, AZ


Once again this year, John Stewart and Nick Reynolds are teaming up to offer fans the ultimate Trio Fantasy. If you have always wanted to get up on stage to sing and play with John and Nick, THIS IS YOUR BIG CHANCE! Sign up now for three days of fun at the fabulous Scottsdale Plaza Resort.



The Trio Fantasy Camp is now in it's EIGHTH successful year. Campers enjoy three days of fun and music with John and Nick. On Thursday night, John and Nick discuss and play many of the great Trio songs with the Campers. The stories fly and this opening session goes on for hours.

On Friday, the Campers can form their own trios and practice songs to play that night in front of a live audience. Or they can join in the group sings and jam sessions. John and Nick are available throughout the day to discuss song choices, chords and performance with the Campers. On Friday night, all of the Camper perform in a variety of group sings and trios for our always enthusiastic audience. The night continues after the show with more discussion, songs and music at the resort bar and some of the private suites.

Saturday is the BIG DAY. On Saturday night, each Camper gets up on stage with John and Nick to sing and play a Trio song. Many past Campers have described this night as one of the greatest experiences of their lives. It just doesn't get any better than being part of a Trio with John and Nick. During the day, Campers practice their song and John and Nick are both available for advice and coaching. As an added bonus, John offers his terrific songwriting workshop for any interested Campers on Saturday afternoon.

And that's just the "scheduled" events. You also get your very own Trio stripped shirt and a video of your perfomance with John and Nick! Special surprises, great camaraderie, and interacting with John, Nick and the other Campers adds even more fun to an incredible weekend. Find out why some Campers are coming back for the seventh time!

And did we mention special surprises? How about surprise guests? You never know who will show up at Fantasy Camp. Over the past six Camps, the Campers have had visits from folk greats like Travis Edmondson, Henry Diltz, George Grove, Bobby Haworth, Bill Zorn and even Bob Shane himself who treated the Campers and audience at FCVI and FCVII to a live performance with Nick and John. While we can't promise who will drop by this year, we can promise you the most fun you've had since you first became a Trio fan.


Wait a minute! You say you can't play a guitar or sing?
IT DOESN'T MATTER!

Some of our happiest and most successful Campers couldn't play an instrument and only sing in the shower. They just got on stage anyway, sang with John and Nick and came away smiling ear to ear. If you have ever sung along to your favorite Trio song on the radio, you can be a Camper. The emphasis at this Fantasy Camp is fun, fun, and more fun.

The cost of the John Stewart/Nick Reynolds Trio Fantasy Camp is $2700. This price includes all Camp activities and three nights at the beautiful Scottsdale Plaza Resort. A $700 deposit is payable with your reservation for Trio Fantasy Camp VIII. An additional $1,000 is due by 6/1/2007 and the balance of $1,000 is due by 8/1/2007. Travel expenses and meals are not included. If you are interested in joining us, it's not too late. You can contact [email="%20ryboltcox@earthlink.net"]Paul Rybolt[/email] for more information or you can use the handy PayPal link right on this page to reserve your spot with your intial $700 payment.

Snuffysmith
WFMA JOHN STEWART TRIBUTE
BIRCHMERE MUSIC HALL
ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA
Snuffysmith
ROUTE 66 - 75th ANNIVERSARY
SELIGMAN, ARIZONA
THE IRON HORSE MUSIC HALL
NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETS
May 4-5, 2001 April 24, 2002
Snuffysmith
MULDOON'S IRISH PUB
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA
SWEETWATER
MILL VALLEY, CALIFORNIA
December 10, 2000 May 6, 1998
October 14, 1998
Snuffysmith
THE TURF INN
DALRY, SCOTLAND
THE WATERGATE THEATRE & CLEERE'S PUB
KILKENNEY, IRELAND
May 4, 5, & 6, 2000 April, 2000
Snuffysmith


THE KUUMBWA JAZZ CENTER
SANTA CRUZ, CALIFORNIA
THE CELEBRITY THEATER
PHOENIX, ARIZONA
April 17, 1999 December 31, 1999 February 5, 2000
graham4anything
Gold by John Stewart
When the lights go down in the California town
People are in for the evening
I jump into my car and I throw in my guitar
My heart beatin' time with my breathin'
Drivin' over Kanan, singin' to my soul
There's people out there turnin' music into gold

Well my buddy Jim Bass he's a-workin' pumpin gas
And he makes two fifty for an hour
He's got rythm in his hands as he's tappin' on the cans
Sings rock and roll in the shower
Drivin' over Kanan, singin' to my soul
There's people out there turnin' music into gold

Ah, the California girls are the greatest in the world
Each one's a song in the making
Singin' rock to me I can hear the melody
The story is there for the takin'
Drivin' over Kanan, singin' to my soul
There's people out there turnin' music into gold

Drivin' over Kanan, singin' to my soul
There's people out there turnin' music into gold

When the lights go down in the California town
People are in for the evening
I jump into my car and I throw in my guitar
My heart beatin' time with my breathin'
Drivin' over Kanan, singin' to my soul
There's people out there turnin' music into gold

Drivin' over Kanan, singin' to my soul
There's people out there turnin' music into gold
People out there turnin' music into gold
People out there turnin' music into gold

People out there turnin' music into gold, into gold
People out there turnin' music into gold, into gold
Snuffysmith


THE TURNING POINT
PIERMONT, NEW YORK
THE TIN ANGEL
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
April 7, 1999 April 8, 1999
graham4anything
From the All Music Guide- a nice little concise bio

From AMG Reviews

If ever there was an enigma in American music, John Stewart is it. How many people can claim to have been the last member of the Kingston Trio and become its frontman, to have been the official musician for the Robert Kennedy campaign, to write hits for the Monkees and Fleetwood Mac, to be admired by Johnny Cash, Merle Haggard, Kinky Friedman, Emmylou Harris, and the entire L.A. Jackson Eagles studio mafia? Just one: John Stewart, who continued to still kick them out, record after record, albeit on smaller labels than Capitol or AM. While there are plenty of reasons to seek out Stewart's Kingston Trio material, this anthology on Raven doesn't do so, partially because that material is so well documented elsewhere and in part because as a solo artist Stewart was his own enigma. Like the Byrds, the Mamas the Papas, the Grateful Dead, the Eagles, Jackson Browne, Warren Zevon, Jefferson Airplane, the Beach Boys, and Buffalo Springfield, Stewart embodied a particular tract of California's musical terrain and its mystique. In Stewart's music, like "California Bloodlines," "Razorback Woman," "Some Lonesome Picker," "Willard," and other songs, his folk met country and the expanding textures of pop; his stories entered the listener without force but left their mark nonetheless. "Daydream Believer" is Stewart's voice in a real folk song, kissed by the brightness of pop and graced with California's sunshine. From "Anna on a Memory" to "Chilly Winds," Stewart seemed unaffected by the changing times.

He was still looking under the surface for the places in memory and in emotions that make listeners experience things in common. Most of the material here is from the late '60s and early to mid-'70s, but as late as Fire in the Wind, Stewart may have been using updated production techniques but was still writing paeans to truckers. Only on the material from Bombs Away Dream Babies with its smash "Gold" and "Midnight Wind" do the sounds embrace the modern day -- yet even here the lyrics don't. With Fleetwood Mac kicking behind him (and turning his questions into the very things he was begging the answers to), Stewart is still looking at society with bemusement and a wonder that expresses disillusionment at why others don't notice the glory and the grace in people who work in gas stations. Raven has done a fantastic job of revealing how large the myth of Stewart is and how great his enigma remains with this 24-track anthology. For the curious, dubious, and faithful, this is a fine way to spend your hard-earned money.
- Thom Jurek, All Music Guide



Snuffysmith




John Stewart passed away on Saturday, January 19, 2008 after suffering a major stroke a day earlier. John will continue to live forever in our hearts through his music.

For the past 40 years, John Stewart has told the story of America in the Twentieth Century. Through his writing we have met many unique individuals ranging from little Ludi and E. A. Stuart to Angel Delgadillo. Each of these individuals becomes an Everyman and through their eyes we see the dreams and sometimes the frustrations of a country "trying desparately to remember itself". John's songs provide a looking glass into our national soul and it would not be surprising if, a hundred years from now, anyone studying the people of America will be directed to start with the songs of John Stewart.

John's recording career began in the 1950s with his own garage band, The Furies. He started writing contemporary folk music in the early 1960s and formed a group called The Cumberland Three. In 1961, John replaced Dave Guard as a member of the Kingston Trio. He brought a different feel to the Trio and his distinct voice and style added to a number of the Trio's hits such as "Where Have All the Flowers Gone" and "Greenback Dollar". In 1967, John left the Trio to pursue a career as a solo artist. His initial recording, "Signals Through the Glass" with Buffy Ford was followed by his landmark masterpiece, "California Bloodlines". Since then he has recorded over 40 albums, cassettes, and CDs. John is featured prominently in the new show "The Kingston Trio: Wherever We May Go" currently airing on Public Television station in the US. His most recent CD "The Day the River Sang" has just been released by Appleseed Records. John has written hit records for other recording artists like "Daydream Believer" by the Monkees and "Runaway Train" by Rosanne Cash. His own major hits include "Gold" (with Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham), "Midnight Wind", and "Lost Her in the Sun".

The purpose of the John Stewart Lyrics Database is to make all of John's writings available to his fans in a form that is easy to search and read. This database is comprehensive and there is a wealth of lyrical treasure here. It includes all of the songs that John has recorded in his solo career and all of the songs that he wrote during his days as a member of the Kingston Trio and the Cumberland Three. You will find the lyrics to all of the hit records and the favorites here as well as the words to some songs that John hasn't even recorded yet. Enjoy it all.

A Brand New Feature of the John Stewart Lyrics Database is the addition of Guitar Tabulature for many of the songs in the database. Currently about half of the songs have guitar tabs and more will be added. The guitar tabs are the result of the hard work of Art Faller, Charlie Woodward & Jan Hauenstein with some additional help from Ken Swaitek and others. So all of you fans who have requested this feature in the past now have a searchable resource at your disposal.

We also offer an Online Ordering system that allows you to order many of John's newer CDs and videos directly from John at Neon Dreams. If you would like to order any of these products simply click on the "Start Shopping" button below.



If you have any questions or comments about the John Stewart Lyrics Database,

please send an email to oldriley@strangerivers.com

This site was updated on 08/11/2006

All of the photographs of John Stewart featured on this site are © Howard Bruensteiner. All Rights Reserved.

Snuffysmith
I knew John Stewart when I was in college. I met him working on Robert Kennedy's campaign in California. He was a big supporter of the Kennedy clan and travelled with both John and Robert during their campaigns. He also dedicated an album to Neil Armstrong's walk upon the moon, and was one of the first musicians ever to grace the NASA halls. Over the years, I tried to make it to as many of his coffee house performances as I could when he came to play in whatever parts of the country I was then living. I find today's news very sad because of all of the wonderful fond memories I have those days. And his music was a major backdrop to the political campaigns. Cannons in the Rain was one of his albums that typified that era.
I last saw him in 1998 when he was performing in Mill Valley, California. I was planning to see him in April, in Pawling, New York.
Pegatha
QUOTE(Snuffysmith @ Jan 20 2008, 03:23 PM) *
I knew John Stewart when I was in college. I met him working on Robert Kennedy's campaign in California. He was a big supporter of the Kennedy clan and travelled with both John and Robert during their campaigns. He also dedicated an album to Neil Armstrong's walk upon the moon, and was one of the first musicians ever to grace the NASA halls. Over the years, I tried to make it to as many of his coffee house performances as I could when he came to play in whatever parts of the country I was then living. I find today's news very sad because of all of the wonderful fond memories I have those days. And his music was a major backdrop to the political campaigns. Cannons in the Rain was one of his albums that typified that era.
I last saw him in 1998 when he was performing in Mill Valley, California. I was planning to see him in April, in Pawling, New York.


Thanks for all the info, Snuff. I could tell it was personal for you. God, when Randy Newman goes, if he does before me, I will be a mess.

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