Monday, 5 December 2022

Chad Mitchell born 5 December 1939


Chad Mitchell (born 5 December 1936), is best known as a founder member of The Chad Mitchell Trio, an American vocal group who performed traditional folk songs. 
Chad 2nd from right in University group

Chad Mitchell from Portland, Oregon, was a student at Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington, on a choral scholarship, when he met Mike Kobluk (born 1937), from British Columbia. Together with a third student, Mike Pugh, they formed a trio in 1958, a three-way partnership that was named the Chad Mitchell Trio because his name sounded best. The next year, with the folk music revival just taking off, they headed for New York City and secured a gig at the Blue Angel nightclub in Greenwich Village, initially for four weeks but soon extended for 12 weeks, billed with South African singer Miriam Makeba and comedian Shelley Berman. Both Makeba and the Chad Mitchell Trio were subsequently selected by Harry Belafonte to appear with him at the Carnegie Hall show that was recorded and released by RCA. 

Chad Mitchell. Joe Frazier and Mike Kobluk

The group was signed to Colpix Records in 1960 and released one album, The Chad Mitchell Trio Arrives, which passed by the public largely without notice. From that effort, the Chad Mitchell Trio did pick up musical advisor Milt Okun, who helped direct them to the songs best suited to their abilities and assisted in helping them avoid sounding too much like the Kingston Trio. 

Mike Pugh dropped out of the group soon after the release of that album and was replaced by baritone Joe Frazier (born 1939, Lebanon, Pennsylvania), who had classical voice training and had sung with the Robert Shaw Chorale and in the choruses of several Broadway shows. It was around this same time that the trio also added to its instrumental muscle in the person of Jim McGuinn, a guitarist who had begun to make a splash locally and from a stay as a support player with the Limeliters. McGuinn remained with the group until 1963 when he lit out for Los Angeles and eventual rock stardom as co-founder of the Byrds. 


                             

The trio was signed to Kapp Records, a division of MCA, in 1961. By that time, the folk music revival was in full swing, and the group found a very receptive and accommodating audience at the Brooklyn College concert that was recorded as Mighty Day on Campus. This live recording worked so well that Kapp Records and the trio decided that this was the best way in which to record the group, whose next album, At the Bitter End, was done the same way the following year from the legendary Greenwich Village club. 

By this time, the Chad Mitchell Trio were one of the most popular folk groups in a field that was rapidly filling up with male and mixed male/female vocal groups. Part of the secret of their success, both on-stage and on their albums, was that they presented a careful mix of topical songs and humour, and some of the latter, although also at times topical (their recording of "The John Birch Society" remains a very funny song, as well as the probable inspiration for Bob Dylan's formerly banned "Talking John Birch Society Blues"), was also sometimes just goofy. 

The first real problems for the Chad Mitchell Trio came up over Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind." Dylan was still virtually unknown when the trio had discovered the song in 1962. They were eager to record it, but their producer at Kapp didn't want them to do the song, either as a single, as they proposed, or even as a track on their forthcoming new album, The Chad Mitchell Trio in Action. The dispute blew up in the faces of all concerned when "Blowin' in the Wind," as recorded by Peter, Paul and Mary, became a number two single and suddenly established them as the best-known folk trio of the early '60s -- their accompanying album, and most of their subsequent records, routinely sold in the hundreds of thousands and millions, while the Chad Mitchell Trio were left in the shadows, part of a commercial backwater. The damage had been done, however, not only to the group's commercial fortunes, but also to its relationship with its producer and its label. 

A change in labels to Mercury Records during 1965 failed to settle matters, as the new people in charge of their recording career saw the era waning for folk trios, and wanted instead to push Chad Mitchell as a solo act. The disputes between Mitchell, Frazier, and Kobluk worsened, caused by the obvious advantage that Mitchell had in terms of name recognition, and a change in name to the Mitchell Trio didn't help very much. 

Mitchell left the group in 1965, to be replaced by a young John Denver, while the ensemble itself was rechristened the Mitchell Trio. Frazier left two years later, and Kobluk exited a year after that -- Denver kept a trio together with new members David Boise and Mike Johnson, under the name of Denver, Boise & Johnson, until his own solo career began in 1969 on RCA, courtesy of Milt Okun's efforts. 

In the years since, the original members of the classic Chad Mitchell Trio -- Mitchell, Frazier, and Kobluk -- have occasionally gotten back together to play for audiences who remember the best days of the early-'60s folk revival. On November 15th, 2014, The Chad Mitchell Trio performed their final concert of their 55 year career.

(Edited from AllMusic article by Bruce Elder)

4 comments:

Dusty said...

Hi Bob

You was looking after the 2 jasmine recordings here they are

https://mega.nz/file/dQRVSb7a#amuF5zRO5cn4L6RAXq7LgQbWPBbjLdFankwyJ8ousuk


Jascd 277 The Chad MITCHELL TRIO - LIVE

01. Mighty Day
02. Rum By Gum
03. The Whistling Gypsy
04. Super Skier
05. Dona Dona Dona
06. Whup Jamboree
07. Lizzie Borden
08. Tail Toddle
09. Johnnie
10. Puttin' On The Style
11. Hang On The Bell, Nellie
12. On My Journey
13. The John Birch Society
14. Hello Susan Brown
15. The Unfortunate Man
16. Blues Around My Head
17. James James Morrison Morrison
18. The Great Historical Bum (The Bragging Song)
19. Alberta
20. Golden Vanity
21. Moscow Nights
22. Come Along Home (Tom's Song)
23. You Can Tell The World
24. Last Night I Had The Strangest Dream
A cover f
B cover b


JASCD 1038 The CHAD MITCHELL TRIO - Arrives! In Action & More


01 Tina
02 Chevaliers
03 Walkin On The Green Grass
04 Sweet Mary jo
05 Pretty Saro
06 Sally Ann
07 Up On The Mountain
08 Paddy
09 I Do Adore Her
10 Paddy West
11 Gallows Tree
12 Hey Nanine
14 chad-mitchell-trio The Ballad of Herbie Spear
15 Devil Road
16 Vaichazkern
17 The Ballad Of Sigmund Freud
18 Leave Me If You Want To
19 Green Grow The Lilacs
20 The Story Of Alice (Part 1)
21 The Ides Of Texas & Don't Fence Me In
22 Alice Revisited
23 The Ballad Of The Greenland Whalers
24 Alice Sequel
25 Blowin' In The Wind
26 Adios Mi Corazon (Solo By Mike Kobluk)
27 Run Run Run
28 My Guitar
29 Me Voy Pa Bete (Solo By Joe Frazier)
30 One Day When I Was Lost (Easter Morn)



Dusty

boppinbob said...

Dusty to the rescue!. Thank you so much plus nice to know you read the blog which makes it even better.

For ”Chad Mitchell – Himself (1966/2005 Magic Garage Music)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/cPYU6

01. The Other Side of This Life
02. Brother, Can You Spare a Dime
03. Quiet Room
04. Half a Crown
05. Broadway Is a Tame Street
06. Violets of Dawn
07. She Was Too Good to Me
08. Dark as a Dungeon
09. Over the Rainbow
10. Marieka

Pete Cost said...

I also have At The Bitter End, Blowing In The Wind, Collection, Mighty Day On Campus, Reflecting and Singing Our Mind by the Chad Mitchell Trio and Chad, The Slightly Irreverent by Chad Mitchell, if anyone is interested.
Thanks again, Bob.

boppinbob said...


Hello Pete, First of all I like your photos! Any additional albums will be fine. Sometimes I scour the music blogs to see if there are any active links for the artist or groups I am trying to highlight, but I uually run out of internet time. There's so much to do in retirement and it seems I haven't enough hours in the day to fit all my activities in.
So any extras will be appreciated. Regards, Bob