Tuesday, 29 July 2025

Randy Sparks born 29 July 1933

Lloyd Arrington Sparks (July 29, 1933 – February 11, 2024), known professionally as Randy Sparks, was an American musician, singer-songwriter, and founder of The New Christy Minstrels and The Back Porch Majority. 

Lloyd Arrington Sparks was born in Leavenworth, Kansas. He grew up in Oakland, California, and briefly attended the University of California Berkeley before dropping out to write songs. That got him drafted, although he ended up in the Navy, aboard the aircraft carrier Princeton. He won talent competitions, first aboard the Princeton and later Navy-wide which in turn got him some broader recognition when he appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show. After discharge from the Navy, he toured with Bob Hope and had some acting roles, including the lead in the 1960 crime thriller, “The Big Night.” 

He appeared on many of the variety shows that were a staple of the late Fifties and early Sixties television, playing mostly calypso music. He switched to folk music in 1959 because it was becoming more popular. But his two solo albums, “Randy Sparks” (1958) and “Walkin’ the Low Road” (1959), went nowhere although the title single from the album reached the Cashbox magazine top 60. 


                                 

In 1960, he formed a trio called "The Randy Sparks Three", and they released an album of the same name. The New Christy Minstrels began a year later when Sparks saw the possibility of putting together an ensemble of ten voices, big enough generate a major sound but retaining the basic texture of a folk trio. He combined his own trio with the Inn Group, which included a young Jerry Yester, and added four more members, including Dolan Ellis and also Art Podell, who had been part of the duo Art & Paul. The group name came from Christy's Minstrels, a 19th century performing institution founded by Edwin Pearce Christy (1815-1862). 

Under Sparks’ leadership, the New Christy Minstrels achieved commercial success. Their debut album, “Presenting the New Christy Minstrels” won the Grammy Award for best performance by a chorus and stayed on the Billboard chart for two years. The groups   success was in considerable part a result of Sparks’ relentless marketing of his folk group. He had connections from his earlier careers, and he used them, with the Minstrels appearing on 26 episodes of “The Andy Williams Show,” a popular variety series on NBC, and eight episodes of the folk-oriented ABC show “Hootenanny.” 

The folk music scene previously had been a coffee shop and college campus phenomenon; Sparks brought it to national television and much larger venues. That effort reached its apotheosis when the Minstrels got their own summer season TV show, “Ford Presents the New Christy Minstrels,” in 1964. 

At the same time, Sparks was cultivating another group, the Back Porch Majority, as a kind of smaller farm team for the New Christy Minstrels. The group became a force in its own right, cutting five albums and performing in 1964 for President Lyndon B. Johnson and Lady Bird Johnson. Sparks was also influential in helping boost the careers of Steve Martin, John Denver and Kenny Rogers, with Rogers playing double bass for the group in 1966. 

 Besides his work with the New Christy Minstrels, Sparks also wrote for other artists and was involved in various musical projects throughout his career. He was a significant figure in the music industry, particularly the folk music scene. The folk music scene waned as rock became king, leading even Bob Dylan to stun his fans by switching to an electric guitar at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival. Mr. Sparks, however, kept at his craft as the spotlight largely shifted away. In the mid-1960s, Sparks sold his interest in the New Christy Minstrels for $2.5 million and moved to rural Northern California. There, he began a 30-year collaboration with Burl Ives and opened a nightclub in Los Angeles called Ledbetter’s. 

After Ives died in 1995, Sparks bought back the Minstrels and for the next 25 years managed them and sometimes performed with them, mostly in local venues in Northern California.  At a concert in Lodi, Calif., in 2019, the 86-year-old Mr. Sparks was asked if he planned to stop touring. “Hell, no,” he replied. “I’m not retiring. I love being a songwriter. What a joy.” Sparks was living on his 168-acre ranch in Jenny Lind, Calif., northeast of San Francisco, until a few days before his death. 

Sparks died at an assisted-living facility in San Diego on February 11, 2024, at the age of 90. 

(Edited from Wikipedia, Wickersham’s Conscience, Washington Post & All Music)


1 comment:

boppinbob said...

A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday folk singer and for the loan of the digital album below.

For “The New Christy Minstrels – Their Golden Years (2020 Master Tape mp3 album)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/kEkXxgrJ

1. This Land Is Your Land
2. Deep Blue Sea "
3. Don't Cry Suzanne
4. The Cotton Pickers' Song
5. That Big Rock Candy Mountain
6. Oh! Shenando
7. Whistle
8. Railroad Bill "
9. Californio
10. I Know Where I'm Goin'
11. Springfield Fair
12. In The Pines
13. Wellinbrook Well
14. Nine Hundred Miles
15. Denver
16. (The Story Of) The Preacher And The Bear
17. Liza Lee
18. The Dying Convict
19. The Invalids
20. Fire
21. Louisiana Lou
22. You Know My Name
23. Golden Bells
24. Bits And Pieces
25. Historical Chatter On Capitol Punishment
26. Personal Account Of Something Unique In Animal Husbandry
27. Temperance And The Gutter Set
28. Country And Western Music Has A Message
29. Tip Toe Thru The Tulips With Me
30. Saints' Train "
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Here’s my contribution……

For “Randy Sparks – A Bundle of Sparks - Anthology- 6 albums” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/MXgZrTNB

Randy Sparks (1958 Verve)*
1. South Coast
2. Rainy Night
3. King Cotton
4. I Let Her Go
5. Greensleeves
6. Catfish Hole
7. For Awhile (Just For A Little While)
8. Thunder Road
9. Little Girl Blue
10. Streets Of Laredo
11. The Hangman
12. Every Time We Say Goodbye

Randy Sparks – Walking The Low Road (1959 Verve)*
1. Walkin' The Low Road
2. These Thousand Hills
3. I'll Fall In Love In The Spring
4. Birmingham Train
5. That Lucky Old Sun
6. A Girl Like You
7. Strange Are The Ways Of Love
8. Venus
9. Good Intentions
10. Donna
11. The Diary
12. Make Her Mine

The Randy Sparks Three (1961 MGM)*
1. Julianne
2. Three Jolly Coachmen
3. Pocket Full Of Blues
4. Oh! Sally Brown
5. Annie
6. Eh Wimoweh
7. Maria (One More Time)
8. Hi Jolly
9. That Cute Little Window
10. A Rovin' Gambler
11. The Mill Pond
12. Out Behind The Barn

The Back Porch Majority – Meet The Back Porch Majority (1965 Epic) (**)
1. Friends 2:26
2. Silver Dollar 2:25
3. Billy Don't Play The Banjo 2:30
4. Long Time Ago 2:20
5. Julianne 3:22
6. Ladies Auxiliary Barn Dance Saturday Night 2:08
7. Cotton Bale Levee 1:57
8. Lewis And Clark County Fair 2:41
9. The Far Side Of The Hill 3:21
10. Whistle Maggie 1:42
11. Hand-Me-Down Things 2:47
12. Ol' Dan Tucker 2:13

The Back Porch Majority – That's The Way It's Gonna Be (1966 Epic) (**)
1. That's The Way It's Gonna Be
2. Let's Get Together (Dino's Song)
3. The Road
4. Freedom Bird
5. Natural Man
6. The Bells
7. A Song Of Hope
8. Workin' Man
9. Sad Angels
10. Sante Fe Freeline
11. Black Tattered Rags
12. Golden Bells

Randy Sparks – Hazy Sunshine (1971 MGM)*
1. Hazy Sunshine
2. Welcome To California
3. That Gypsy Woman
4. And I Love You
5. Mountains Of Glass
6. A Song Of Hope
7. Whiskey
8. In The Hurricane's Eye
9. Highways Are Circles
10. Bremerton
11. Banner
12. Both Sides Of The Mountain

* available from the Internet Archive
** available from the usual streamers