Product Details
Cowboy Songs

Cowboy Songs
From Warner Bros / Wea

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Track Listing

  1. Cowboy Logic
  2. I Ride an Old Paint/Whoopee Ti-Yi-Yo, Git Along Little Doggies
  3. Tumbling Tumbleweeds
  4. Tying Knots in the Devil's Tail
  5. Old Chisholm Trail
  6. Home on the Range
  7. What Am I Doing Here
  8. Wild Ripplin' Waters
  9. Yellow Rose of Texas
  10. Spanish Is the Lovin' Tongue
  11. Cowboy Pride
  12. Red River Valley
  13. Let the Cowboy Dance
  14. Jack of Diamonds
  15. Texas Rangers
  16. When the Work's All Done This Fall
  17. Streets of Laredo
  18. O Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie
  19. Where Do Cowboys Go When They Die/Reincarnation
  20. Goodbye Old Paint
  21. Happy Trails

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #4235 in Music
  • Brand: Warner Brothers
  • Released on: 1990-08-13
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .22 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
A "cosmic cowboy" in the country-rocking '70s, Michael Martin Murphey revived his career as a cowboy traditionalist with this 1990 release. Mixing campfire chestnuts such as "Home on the Range, "I Ride an Old Paint," and "Happy Trails" with contemporary hokum such as "Cowboy Logic," the album returned the western to the music formerly known as country and western, and its success inspired a series of sequels on the Warner Western label. Though nothing here is as cloying as 1975's "Wildfire" ballad, Murphey's biggest hit, this smooth stylist emphasizes the romance rather than the grittier realities of the cowboy's life. --Don McLeese


Customer Reviews

This album offers a real taste of cowboy music.5
This was the first Michael Martin Murphy album I purchased. The songs on this album cover a wide spectrum of cowboy songs, real Western music which is distinctly different from Country music. Some of the songs evoke real deep emotions, the kind that a cowboy would experience whether he was alone on the trail, riding a cattledrive or in a frontier town where anything could happen. The album contains a lot of favourites like Tumbling Tumbleweeds and Happy Trails. It has a few that have become favourites. There are a couple that will make you laugh like Cowboy Logic and especially Where Do Cowboys Go When They Die/Reincarnation. Murphy is accompanied by many well know artists and the album insert has a small writeup on each song revealing some very interesting information about the songs development and history. Murphy has a easy listening quality to his music and has given me reason to buy three of his other albums. Cowboy Songs III, Cowboy Songs IV and Sagebrush Symphony. I am currently looking for his Christmas album which is Cowboy Songs II. I've learned that there is a lot more to Michael Martin Murphy since I first heard Wildfire back in the 70's and I would recommend his music to anyone who appreciates the real music of the west.

A career defining album and reinvention5
Murphey has always been a cowboy...his second solo album was titled based on his classic song "Cosmic Cowboy." But early in his career his cosmic cowboy persona was a modernizing of the cowboy myth, a guy as he said could work cattle in the day and discuss philosophy in the night. This album was a return to his western roots, a tribute to the cowboy myth. And a very effective tribute it is. A mix of new songs celebrating the cowboy lifestyle and traditional cowboy songs, the album is very effective and is not only a highlight of Murphey's career but a good introduction to western songs. The booklet is almost scholarly in it's description of the history of the traditional songs. However, it is not dry, but a very entertaining and detailed filled stories behind the songs. Very highly recommended.

The revival of cowboy music began here5
Cowboy songs existed before country music and became popular with a wider public in the thirties and forties because of their use in western movies. Marty Robbins and others continued to record them, but they gradually faded into obscurity. With this album, Michael revived the old songs and renewed public interest in them.

The set opens with the brilliant Cowboy logic, a song about the way cowboys think and ends with Happy trails, a Roy Rogers classic. In between, there are many cowboy classics, including Tumbling tumbleweeds, The old Chisholm trail, Home on the range, Yellow rose of Texas, Red river valley, Streets of Laredo, Bury me not on the lone prairie and Goodbye old paint.

Michael contributes three of his own songs, What I am I doing here, Let the cowboy dance and Where do cowboys go when they die � all of a high quality. He also covers Cowboy pride, a song written by Ian Tyson, a Canadian singer who has also demonstrated his love of cowboy music by recording several albums of western songs.

If you already enjoy cowboy songs, you will love this. If you are new to the music, this is the best place to start. The two follow-up albums � Cowboy songs II (A Cowboy Christmas) and Cowboy songs III (another collection similar to this) maintain the standard, while another of Michael�s albums, Horse legends, may also interest you, though most of the songs are unconnected with cowboys. Cowboy music fans wishing to explore further should investigate Ian Tyson�s music.