[5] It spent 10 weeks on the Billboard Pop album charts in 1964, peaking at No.
[6] Jim (later Roger) McGuinn worked as an arranger and played guitar and banjo on the album.
He would later bring with him the acoustic arrangements of the Pete Seeger songs "Turn!
(To Everything There Is a Season)" and "The Bells of Rhymney", as well as the notion of performing and recording alternate, abstracted versions of Bob Dylan songs, when he went on to co-found the folk rock group the Byrds.
This 1960s folk album-related article is a stub.