Carwardine Colony Album

The  is a 1981 studio album recorded for Carwardine Colony in, and the first of the Carwardine Colony albums.

Most of the album was recorded at Riverway Records' studio in. The backing band was the Carwardine Colony Orchestra, which was comprised of a mixture of members of the and  orchestras, as well as session musicians (including several singers that make up a SATB choir) flown in from,  and. The Carwardine Colony Song itself and its reprise were recorded at Masterfonics in Nashville in November 1979 with a different backing band that included members of the orchestra.

All the songs' lyrics were written by Ed Winter, Helene Touchard, Frank W. Carroll and Marv Simpleton (the latter two of which also arranged and composed the songs, respectively), except for the "Carwardine Colony Song", which was written solely by Simpleton and Carroll. Winter and Touchard produced all the songs except for the "Carwardine Colony Song" and it's reprise, which were produced by. Winter's company, Ed Winter Productions, went on to produce a large amount of music for Carwardine Parks up until the early-1990s.

The album went Double Platinum in 1987 for selling 2,000,000 copies, the same year it's sequel album More Songs About Carwardine Colony went Gold. The award went to Christopher R. Carwardine.

Tracklist

 * 1) "The Carwardine Colony Song" -
 * 2) "Carwardine Mines" - Andy Griffith
 * 3) "The Flying Turns" -
 * 4) "A Ladybug's Flight" -
 * 5) "Flash Forward" - Andy Griffith
 * 6) "Around the Carousel" - Tiny Tim
 * 7) "Carwardine Mover" - Sandy Duncan & Andy Griffith
 * 8) "Sky Whirl" - Tiny Tim
 * 9) "The Carwardine Colony Song (Reprise)" - Andy Griffith

Trivia

 * The Carwardine Colony Song was used to test out the mp3 function of Carwardine Forums when it (The function) was introduced in 2002.
 * The album was re-released on CD in the late 1990s.
 * The reprise of the Carwardine Colony song is more slow and (arguably) moving, as well as mostly instrumental, with Andy Griffith only singing towards the end (with just one singing of the song’s chorus); this reprise is played throughout the park as the last song played before the park closes for the night (or day, depending on conditions, etc.).