The Kingston Trio - Tom Dooley - 1958 Here
: Despite proclaiming his innocence, Dula was hanged in Statesville, N.C., on May 1, 1868.
The 1958 release of "Tom Dooley" by The Kingston Trio was a pivotal moment in American music history, effectively launching the of the late 1950s and early 1960s. While the song is a catchy, banjo-driven hit, it is rooted in a dark, real-life murder that took place nearly a century earlier in North Carolina. The Real Story Behind the Ballad The Kingston Trio - Tom Dooley - 1958
The song is based on the 1866 murder of in Wilkes County, North Carolina. The man convicted of the crime was Tom Dula (pronounced "Dooley" in the local dialect), a Confederate veteran and farmhand. : Despite proclaiming his innocence, Dula was hanged
Released in 1958, "Tom Dooley" became a "mammoth hit" that reached No. 1 on the Billboard charts and sold over three million copies. The Real Story Behind the Ballad The song
: The Kingston Trio (Dave Guard, Bob Shane, and Nick Reynolds) were fresh out of college and stayed clear of radical politics. Bob Dylan later noted in his autobiography, Chronicles , that while their style was "polished and collegiate," he still "liked most of their stuff".
: The Kingston Trio’s version traded the graphic details of the original "love quadrangle" for "Appalachian atmospherics," turning a gritty tragedy into a polished pop-folk hit. Cultural and Commercial Impact