Stewart's first venture into popular music was with a high school
garage band known as Johnny Stewart and the Furies. Influenced by the reigning icons of the day,
Elvis Presley and
Buddy Holly, the Furies toured southern California colleges and coffee houses, releasing one single in 1957, "Rockin' Anna," which was a minor regional hit. Following the breakup of the Furies and a short time as a member of the Woodsmen, Stewart teamed with
Gil Robbins (father of actor
Tim Robbins) and John Montgomery to form the Cumberland Three, a group patterned after and heavily influenced by the increasingly popular Kingston Trio. The major accomplishment of the Cumberland Three was a two-LP set of
Songs from the Civil War, with the albums containing a compilation of songs from the
Confederacy and the
Union, respectively. In all, the Cumberland Three released three albums after which Stewart left the group to join the Kingston Trio, replacing Trio founder
Dave Guard in 1961.
Kingston Trio years The
Kingston Trio had emerged from the relatively crowded San Francisco
folk music culture in 1957, using a mixture of
calypso, pop, and folk styles along with several forms of comedy in their act. Relying on new pop-oriented arrangements of folk music classics as well as some original compositions, the Trio earned their first
gold record with "
Tom Dooley" and thereby launched a major revival in folk music that led to and influenced the careers of
Bob Dylan,
Peter, Paul, & Mary, and
John Denver, among others. The group had become one of the best-known and best-selling acts on the folk music scene and were enjoying a lucrative recording and touring contract with
Capitol Records, having ten albums under their collective belts when Dave Guard departed the group in 1961 to explore other musical directions. Stewart was selected by the remaining members
Nick Reynolds and
Bob Shane as Guard's successor, bringing with him his respected skills as a musician, composer, and performer. Reynolds, Shane, and Stewart recorded a dozen albums together, taking the music of the Trio into new directions, including more original material, and performing songs by relative newcomers
Tom Paxton,
Mason Williams and
Gordon Lightfoot. The pop-folk era began to wane as the music of groups such as
the Beatles,
the Rolling Stones, and fellow Californians
the Beach Boys increasingly dominated the charts, and in 1967 the members of the Kingston Trio decided to disband.
Solo career, the post-Trio years Stewart continued to write songs and record for Capitol while touring as a solo act. It was during this time that he composed the hit "
Daydream Believer" for
the Monkees, He later toured with
Robert F. Kennedy's ill-fated 1968 presidential campaign and met and married in 1975 fellow folk singer
Buffy Ford Though usually successful with critics and a core group of fans, Stewart's albums were not considered commercial successes; he left Capitol after only two solo releases and was signed by
Warner Bros. Records, where he also recorded just two albums before moving on to
RCA Records, with whom he released three LPs, including a live performance album,
The Phoenix Concerts). Stewart followed his separation from RCA with a contract at the
Robert Stigwood Organisation (RSO), the same label that released recordings by Eric Clapton, the
Bee Gees, and several other
disco performers. It was at RSO Records that Stewart enjoyed his most commercially successful years as a solo artist. Teaming with
Stevie Nicks and
Lindsey Buckingham, both then in
Fleetwood Mac, Stewart recorded and released
Bombs Away Dream Babies, which reached #10 on
Billboard's principal album chart and included the #5 hit "
Gold" in 1979. The production team of CNN's 2019 film
Apollo 11 heard the song while listening to archival footage of the flight and included a blend of the astronaut's tape with the original studio recording of the tune in the soundtrack as the craft approached the Earth's atmosphere. In 2001, Stewart was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by the
World Folk Music Association. ==Personal life==