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Glenn Yarbrough

 
Artist: Glenn Yarbrough
Glenn Yarbrough

Group Members:

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Formal Connection With:

Alex Hassilev, The Limeliters, Lou Gottlieb
See Glenn Yarbrough Lyrics
  • Born: January 12, 1930, Milwaukee, WI
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Folk
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "The Lonely Things", "36 All-Time Greatest Hits", "Baby the Rain Must Fall/It's Gonna Be Fine
  • Representative Songs: "Baby, the Rain Must Fall", "The Honey Wind Blows", "San Francisco Bay Blues

Biography

Glenn Yarbrough's high, clear tenor has served him well throughout his long career as a singer (that's him singing "Things go better with Coke" on all those commercials), and although it has been many years since he placed a song on the pop charts, he continues to have a large and loyal fan base. He was born on January 12, 1930, in Milwaukee, WI, where he began singing at church functions as a child. His entry into the world of folk music came while he was a student at St. Johns College in Annapolis, MD, in 1951, where a late-night singing session with his roommate, Jac Holzman (who would later found Elektra Records -- Yarbrough would release a handful of records on the label) and a visiting Woody Guthrie would prove to be pivotal for Yarbrough. He bought a guitar the next day.

Following a stint in the Army as a radio operator (he served in Korea) and then a stay as a radio and television host in South Dakota, Yarbrough traveled to New York City in 1957, where he recorded an album, Come Sit by My Side, for New Traditions Records and began regularly playing the country's coffeehouse circuit. He eventually settled in Aspen, CO, where he purchased a local folk club called the Limelite. When Yarbrough hooked up with two other folksingers, banjo player Alex Hassilev and bassist Lou Gottlieb, the trio took the club's name, becoming the Limeliters. The group was massively successful and recorded several albums (as well as the aforementioned Coke commercial) before Yarbrough left the group in late 1963.

He recorded a solo album for RCA called Time to Move On, which yielded a number 12 pop hit in 1965, "Baby, the Rain Must Fall," and solidified Yarbrough' s solo career. He went on to record several albums for RCA, including a 1966 collaboration with pop poet Rod McKuen, The Lonely Things. By the early '70s Yarbrough had started his own label, Brass Dolphin, and he reunited with the Limeliters in 1973, remaining with the group this time until 1981. In the 1990s his albums were being issued by Folk Era Records, including a 1994 effort with his daughter Holly called Family Portrait. ~ Steve Leggett, All Music Guide
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Discography: Glenn Yarbrough
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All Time Favorites

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Come Sit by My Side

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Day the Tall Ships Came

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Chantyman

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Let the World Go By

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Bitter and the Sweet

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Time to Move On

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Christmas with Glenn Yarbrough

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Chicago Tapes: First Set

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Chicago Tapes: Second Set

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Wikipedia: Glenn Yarbrough
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Glenn Yarbrough

Background information
Birth name Glenn Yarbrough
Born January 12, 1930 (1930-01-12) (age 79)
Origin Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Occupations Singer-songwriter, musician
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1951 to Present
Website [1]

Glenn Yarbrough (born January 12, 1930) is an American folk singer. He was the lead singer with The Limeliters between 1959 and 1963, and had a prolific solo career, recording on various labels.

Contents

Biography

Glenn was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and attended St. John's College in Annapolis, Maryland.

In 1957 he was one of the first singers to record the traditional "The House of the Rising Sun" for Elektra Records. Among other career highlights, Yarbrough provided vocals for the Rankin/Bass animated versions of The Hobbit (1977) and The Return of the King (1980), singing songs such as "The Road Goes Ever On" and "Frodo of the Nine Fingers". He also sang the title song in the holiday classic, The Christmas That Almost Wasn't (1966). Glenn Yarbrough's major hit on single records was Elmer Bernstein's "Baby The Rain Must Fall" which reached #12 pop, #2 easy listening in 1965, and according to Chartmasters of Covington, Louisiana was one of the top 100 songs of 1965.

Yarborough recorded the theme tune from the 1965 film, Baby, The Rain Must Fall, which reached #12 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart that same year.

Glenn Yarbrough is also an accomplished sailor who has owned and lived aboard 3 different sailboats "Armorel" all teak and still in operation, "Jubilee" which Glenn helped build, taking 3 years, and the "Brass Dolphin" a Chinese junk design, and has "almost" sailed around the world.(Not 5 times) Everything but the Indian Ocean. (Source:Glen Yarbrough)

His unique style of singing is referenced in an episode of the animated series South Park titled The Death Camp of Tolerance

Discography

Solo Albums

  • 1951 Follow the Drinking Gourd/The Reaper's Ghost
  • 1957 Come Sit By My Side
  • 1957 Glenn Yarbrough a.k.a. Here We Go Baby
  • 1958 Marilyn Child and Glenn Yarbrough Sing Folk Songs
  • 1964 Time To Move On
  • 1964 One More Round
  • 1965 Come Share My Life
  • 1965 Baby The Rain Must Fall
  • 1965 It's Gonna Be Fine
  • 1966 The Lonely Things
  • 1966 Live at the Hungry i
  • 1967 For Emily Wherever I May Find Her
  • 1967 Honey and Wine
  • 1968 The Bitter and the Sweet
  • 1968 Let The World Go By
  • 1968 We Survived The Madness
  • 1968 Each of Us Alone
  • 1969 Somehow Someway
  • 1969 Glenn Yarbrough Sings the Rod McKuen Songbook
  • 1969 Yarbrough Country
  • 1970 Let Me Choose Life
  • 1970 Jubilee
  • 1970 The Best of Glenn Yarbrough
  • 1971 Bend Down and Touch me
  • 1971 Glenn Yarbrough and The Havenstock RIver Band
  • 1974 Kaleidoscope: Glenn Yarbrough Sings Rod McKuen
  • 1974 My Sweet Lady
  • 1977 The Hobbit: Original Soundtrack
  • 1977 Easy Now
  • 1978 Live at The Troubadour
  • 1981 Just a Little Love
  • 1983 Stay With Me
  • 1983 Most Loved Songs
  • 1985 Sentimental Favorites/Treasury of Love Songs
  • 1987 Love for Life
  • 1987 Divine Love
  • 1991 I Could Have Been a Sailor
  • 1992 Holiday Harbor
  • 1992 Christmas With Glenn Yarbrough
  • 1993 Dreamland
  • 1993 On My Butt (CD single)
  • 1994 I Think of You
  • 1994 Family Portrait -Holly and Glenn Yarbrough
  • 1994 Forgotten Carols
  • 1995 Chantyman
  • 1995 Live sat Harrah's Reno
  • 1996 Annie Get Your Gun with Holly Yarbrough
  • 2004 Old Fashioned Love Story
  • 2005 Heaven Help Us!
  • Recently found San Francisco set I and II

With The Limeliters

  • 1960 The Limeliters
  • 1960 Tonight: In Person
  • 1961 The Slightly Fabulous Limeliters
  • 1962 Sing Out!
  • 1962 Through Children's Eyes
  • 1962 Folk Matinee
  • 1962 Our Men in San Francisco
  • 1963 Makin' A Joyful Noise
  • 1963 Fourteen 14K Folk Songs
  • 1964 The Best of The Limeliters
  • 1964 The London Concert
  • 1968 Time To Gather Seeds
  • 1974 The Limeliters Reunion Volume One
  • 1974 The Limeliters Reunion Volume Two
  • 1976 Glenn Yarbrough and The Limeliters Chicago tape I (released early 2000's)
  • 1976 Glenn Yarbrough and The Limeliters Chicago tape II (released in the early 2000's)
  • 1977 Pure Gold
  • 1991 Joy Across The Land Glenn Yarbrough and The Limeliters
  • 1976 Recently Found- Glenn Yarbrough and
  • The Limeliters Chicago Tapes I and II

External links



 
 

 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Glenn Yarbrough" Read more

 

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