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New
Christy Minstrels Reunion Photos Randy
Sparks & The Minstrels
The
New Christy Minstrels
They were
the brainchild of Randy Sparks, and they were almost literally
an overnight success. The formula was to bring together folk
music acts that were already successful and create a group of
8 to 10 who played a variety of instruments, and who all had
voices worthy of solo parts.
Dolan's
own career was going great, and when Randy Sparks approached
him about the New Christy Minstrels, he had to make a choice,
because Terry Gilkyson had also asked him to join a group that
was already well-established, the Easy Riders.
The decision
was tough, but the factor that broke the tie was that the Christies
were brand new. Dolan was up for the challenge of making a new
group successful.
Dolan
did help tremendously. He had the clean-cut handsome look, the
great 12-string guitar, the baritone voice, and the humor. The
comedian we know and love today certainly was there from the
beginning. Randy Sparks once proclaimed that "Dolan had
always been counted on to fire up the deadest of audiences."
Two
of his solo parts from the LP, "Tall Tales, Legends & Nonsense " illusrate the versatility of his voice: romantic (as in his solo on "Jimmy
Grove and Barbara Ellen" or raspy (as in his solo in "Hallelujah
I'm a Bum").
With the Christies, Dolan had quite a ride, and quite a grueling schedule.
He was living in Los Angeles, where most of their work was
done. Mornings, they'd be taping the Andy Williams Show and
many afternoons they would be in the recording studio (they
recorded 5 albums in just over a year). At night they'd play
at a local venue, usually the famous Troubadour. And on weekends,
they'd be on the road, going to Carnegie Hall or one of the
other major concert halls, or to the big university campuses.
Dolan was the first to leave the group. There were a lot of reasons: he
wanted to get back to Arizona and enjoy the people and the
land there, he wanted to spend more time with his family. But
most of all, Dolan Ellis always was and always will be a very
creative person, and he needed to be writing and singing his
own songs.
The Christies were at a major Reno casino, Harold's Club, in mid-1963.
Dolan had given his notice, and the time was up. He got on a
plane headed for Phoenix, thinking about the major choice he
had just made. He wrote the song "Springerville" (full
title is "Goin' Home to Springerville"), which
became the closing song for the play "Cowgirls." In
the play it has a poignant meaning, and in Dolan's life, it had
just as much meaning.
"Springerville" is
available on Dolan's "Cowgirls" CD, and is also,
appropriately, the final song of Act I of his "...after
the show (TM)" DVD. Appropriate because Act I is about
his early career, and Act II is about his Arizona music.
Thus ended an important chapter in Dolan Ellis' life, an exciting whirlwind
of activity and celebrity and national exposure. It's great for
Arizona that he made the choice he did. And Dolan will tell you that it was also
the right choice for him. Show
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