Thursday, 20 March 2025

Don Edwards born 20 March 1936

Don Edwards (March 20, 1936* – October 23, 2022) was an American cowboy singer, guitarist, and recording artist who specialized in Western music. Edwards released more than a dozen solo albums from 1980 through 2010, as well as a greatest hits collection. Two of his albums, Guitars & Saddle Songs and Songs of the Cowboy, are included in the Folklore Archives of the Library of Congress. 

Singer/songwriter Don Edwards has dedicated his musical career to recapturing and preserving the spirit of the Old West by recording old and new cowboy songs. Almost alone in his enthusiasm when he took up the cowboy genre, by the 1990s he reigned as the pre-eminent specialist in a field that began to attract many other musicians. Edwards was born and raised in Boonton, a New Jersey farming community. Inspired by the books of cowboy author Will James (such as The Lone Cowboy), he took up the guitar at age ten. He learned his first Western songs from the films of cowboy crooners Gene Autry and Tex Ritter, later discovering Jimmie Rodgers. At age 16, he left home to work in the oil fields and ranches of Texas and New Mexico in order to experience Western life and the landscape firsthand. 

Edwards made his professional debut in 1961 after he was hired as a singer, actor, and stuntman at the newly opened amusement park Six Flags Over Texas. He worked there for five years before moving to Nashville to seek a recording contract. Although the folk revival was in full swing, no one was much interested in Western music at the time. Edwards eventually recorded an album combining classic Western numbers with some of his own compositions on the independent Stop label. Some of the songs were played on the radio, but they never hit the charts, and Edwards returned to Texas and settled in the Fort Worth area. 

                      Here’s “Whoppi Ti Yi Yo” from above CD

                                   

In 1980, Larry Scott, a Los Angeles DJ, helped Edwards record the Happy Cowboy album, which featured backup musicians from Gene Autry's band and the Sons of the Pioneers. Edwards released the album on his own Sevenshoux label. A visit to the Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nevada in the early '80s inspired him to create a 24-song tribute to Jack Thorp, the cowboy musician who first began collecting traditional cowboy songs, on a cassette packaged with a book entitled Songs of the Cowboy. He then released a second book/cassette anthology, Guitars and Saddle Songs, and in 1990 released the album Desert Nights and Cowtown Blues. 

In 1992 Edwards signed with the new Warner Western label helmed by Michael Martin Murphey and released Songs of the Trail, a spare album of traditional songs that gave the dry, melancholy, sometimes-violent narratives of the cowboy a startling immediacy. Edwards gained exposure from his major-label association and became a fixture at clubs and events with any kind of Western theme throughout Texas and the Southwest. He followed up Songs of the Trail with Goin' Back to Texas (1993), an album containing new Western songs by some of the best writers in Nashville. Also in 1993 he appeared on Nanci Griffith's Grammy Award winning album Other Voices, Other Rooms on which he accompanied Griffith on a Michael Burton song entitled "Night Rider's Lament". 

The summer of 1997 found Don in Livingston, Montana portraying the role of "Smokey" in Robert Redford 's film The Horse Whisperer. Also that year Edwards moved to the folk-oriented Shanachie label and continued to dip into his vast song bag of traditional Western material with the double-CD Saddle Songs: Vols. 1 & 2 of 1997.Subsequent Shanachie releases saw Edwards branching out musically even as he stuck with Western songs. My Hero, Gene Autry: A Tribute (1998) was recorded at a live appearance honoring Autry on his 90th birthday, and two years later Edwards resurfaced with Prairie Portrait, a project recorded with cowboy poet Waddie Mitchell and the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra. 

Kin to the Wind, a tribute to Marty Robbins, was issued in early 2001. The 2002 project High Lonesome Cowboy teamed Edwards with folk-bluegrass singer Peter Rowan and several other acoustic music luminaries, putting a new twist on Edwards' cowboy material. A final Shanachie project, the double-disc Last of the Troubadours: Saddle Songs, Vol. 2, appeared in 2004, followed by Moonlight and Skies on Western Jubilee in 2006. In 2005, Edwards was inducted into the Western Music Association Hall of Fame.

 Don Edwards died on October 23, 2022 at the age of 86. 

(Edited from AllMusic & Wikipedia) (* other sources give 1939 as birth year)

 

4 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Don Edwards – Saddle Songs (1997 Shanachie)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/hbrc2xjn

1. Ballad Of Jack Thorp 3:29
2. Old Chisholm Trail 2:23
3. Whoppi Ti Yi Yo 2:38
4. Pecos River Quen 2:28
5. Cowboy Jack 3:07
6. Chopo 2:31
7. Zebra Dun 3:22
8. Patonio 3:18
9. Sam Bass 4:51
10. Streets Of Laredo 3:10
11. Night Herding Song 2:43
12. Little Joe The Wrangler 4:13
13. Little Joe The Wrangler's Sister Nell 4:19
14. Railroad Corral 2:50
15. The Pecos Stream 3:21
16. What's Become Of The Punchers 2:56
17. Minstrel Of The Range 2:22
18. The Long Road West 4:06
19. Miss Aledo 2:39
20. Ridin' 2:48
21. 'Longside The Santa Fe Train 2:55
22. Wanderin' Cowboy 1:59
23. The Strawberry Roan 4:33
24. The Glory Trail 2:56
25. I'd Like To Be In Texas 3:31
26. Doney Gal 4:50
27. Stompede/Masters Call 8:11
28. After The Round Up 4:40
29. Rounded Up In Glory 3:36
30. Philosophical Cowboy 2:49
31. The Old Cow Man 4:24

This two volume CD set was originally published as two book/tape sets, "Songs of the Cowboys" and "Guitars and Saddle Songs". This recording contains some selections previously unreleased. Even though the cover says 32 songs there are only 31 tracks.

For “Don Edwards – Last Of The Troubadours (Saddle Songs II) (2003 Shanachie)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/ZC8icNUj

1. Gone To Texas
2. The Habit
3. For Them That Lean To Lonesome
4. The Colorado Trail
5. Night Rider's Lament
6. By The Silvery Rio Grande (Featuring – Nancy & Norman Blake)
7. Diamond Joe
8. The Old Cowboy
9. Barbara Allen
10. Make Me A Cowboy Again For A Day
11. The Sierry Petes
12. The Mormon Cowboy
13. Fort Worth Jail (Featuring – Nancy & Norman Blake)
14. Red River Valley
15. Green Grow The Laurel
16. When The Work's All Done
17. Saddle Tramp
18. Lonely Wanderer
19. Following The Cow Trail
20. Chant Of The Night Songs
21. West Of The Round Corrall
22. Windy Hill
23. Cowhand's Last Role (Featuring – Nancy & Norman Blake)
24. The Cowboy's Home Sweet Home
25. Utah Carroll
26. Root Hog Or Die
27. The Rancher Feeds Us All
28. I Wanted To Die In The Desert ((Featuring – Nancy & Norman Blake)
29. The Dying Cowboy Of Rimrock Ranch
30. The Campfire Has Gone Out
31. Cowboy's Meditation
32. Here's Lookin' At You

Recorded in March and April of 2003 at Sevenshoux Ranch, Parker County, Texas
and Western Jubilee Warehouse in Colorado Springs, Colo.

iggy said...

Thanks Bob! Don was a fine part of the surprisingly good soundtrack to "Horse Whisperer". All good wishes to you and yours. Iggy

Berni said...

Thank you very much!

T.G. said...

The Music & Songs Of Don Edward, I'm listening since a long time, thanks a lot for that, he was a very nice and fine "Poet" and "Troubadour" in the world of music!