Artist

Erik Darling

Genre: Folk ,Folk Revival ,Folk-Pop ,Traditional Folk
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1954 - 2008
Listen on Coda
Erik Darling brought an understated elegance to his stylistic choices and a lucid approach to reworking age-old folk material, establishing the singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist as an understated force behind the scenes across many years in the folk world; although he never achieved widespread popular recognition, his impact remained quietly far-reaching. He entered the world on September 25, 1933, in Baltimore, MD, yet grew up in Canandaigua, NY, and by his early twenties had become a steady presence in New York City’s Washington Square folk circles. An outstanding banjoist and arguably even stronger on 12-string guitar, he also delivered vocals in a lucid, mellow, and emotive tenor that allowed him to draw peak performances from fellow players. In the mid-’50s he assembled the Tunetellers, who later became the Tarriers and scored a Top Ten single in 1956 with “The Banana Boat Song,” also known as “Day-O” for its memorable refrain; Harry Belafonte would later turn the number into a still larger success.

Darling subsequently stepped into the Weavers in place of Pete Seeger, remaining for slightly more than four years before departing in 1962 to launch the Rooftop Singers. With a deft modernization of Gus Cannon’s “Walk Right In”—first captured by Cannon’s Jug Stompers back in 1929—Darling and his new ensemble propelled the updated recording to the summit of the charts in 1963. Eschewing the spotlight, he persisted in documenting and performing within folk and the nascent Americana tradition, at one point exploring a desert-country flavor through Border Town alongside Sid Hausman and Lynn Lucas; the ensemble issued the sturdy album Border Town at Midnight in 1994. Retaining his refined touch as both vocalist and player, Darling maintained an aptitude for reshaping traditional songs into fresh configurations that preserved their historical essence while quietly adapting them to contemporary sensibilities. He passed away on August 3, 2008, in Chapel Hill, NC, following complications from lymphoma.