'60s songwriter Erik Darling dies at 74
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - August 7, 2008 Darling was perhaps best known for his hit "Walk Right In" and
for his arrangement of the iconic Southern true-crime ballad "Tom
Dooley," which inspired The Kingston Trio's recording of the song
that topped the charts in 1958. He was a member of the Tarriers,
known for its version of "The Banana Boat Song (Day-O)" - the
signature tune of Harry Belafonte.
Darling also replaced Seeger in the Weavers in the late 1950s, a
few years after the band was blacklisted for its political views.
Fred Hellerman, an original member of the group, said he learned
of his friend's death by e-mail earlier this week.
"He was immensely talented - immensely talented," Hellerman,
81, said Thursday in a telephone interview from his home in Weston,
Conn. "When he came into the Weavers to replace Pete Seeger, which
was a pretty tall order, he not only did that, but he brought so
much of his own talents to bear that it was overwhelming. It really
was."
Hellerman said Darling moved to Chapel Hill a couple of years
ago to be near Willard Svanoe, a fellow member of The Rooftop
Singers, the band with which he recorded "Walk Right In," a No. 1
hit for Vanguard Records in 1963.
In an e-mail posted on Darling's Web site, Svanoe said Darling
died early Aug. 3 in Chapel Hill.
The Weavers first burst on the scene in 1948 in Greenwich
Village and had their first national hit in 1950 with "Goodnight
Irene." But during the red scare of the 1950s, their politics came
under scrutiny and the group was brought in to testify before the
House Committee on Un-American Activities.
They soon found themselves blacklisted, and disbanded in 1953.
It wasn't until a Christmas 1955 concert at Carnegie Hall that they
re-emerged to rejoin the national folk music revival they'd helped
launch.
"He was an absolutely logical person to be brought in" after
Seeger's departure, Hellerman said. "Of the next generation of
Weavers, I mean he was so outstanding that it was hard then or even
now to imagine who else we could have brought in other than Erik."
Hellerman said he didn't learn until many years later that
Darling was uncomfortable with his band mates' leftist leanings.
Hellerman said they last spoke about a year ago, but he had
received a package from Darling in the mail a couple of weeks ago.
It was a copy of Darling's recently published memoir, "I'd Give My
Life - A Journey by Folk Music." Hellerman said he couldn't put it
down.
Hellerman said he had been meaning to write to Darling and tell
him how much he enjoyed the book.
"My big regret is that I didn't get to do it," he said. "I
did have the chance, but I didn't take advantage of it."
Funeral arrangements were handled by the Cremation Society of
the Carolinas in Raleigh.