I was not aware that cows gave cheese. I thought the people had to do that part… and I dislike thinking of how one would get the cheese out of the cow.
I also do not care to think too hard about cowboys keeping other cowboys happy out on the range. Playing the guitar is ONE thing, but…
The problem lies in differentiatin’ actual singing cowboys from country and western performers who just DRESSED like cowboys. Spade Cooley was a fine musician, but I’m not sure he knew which end of a cow you feed.
We tend to forget that other countries have had ranches, cattle, and even singing cowboys.
Anyone outside Australia remember Slim Dusty?
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Slim Dusty singing Waltzing Matilda at the Closing Ceremony of the 2000 Sydney Olympics? Absolutely I remember Slim Dusty. It was the highlight of that Olympics to me.
This is what I was talking about earlier. John Wayne, for all the Westerns he made, was never an actual cowboy. Most well known western actors weren’t.
Gene Autry may be the only actual cowboy, actor, and singer I can think of off the top of my head. We may need to expand our definition, here… can we also include actors whose horsemanship, ruggedness, and general image defined 'em as “cowboys?” Ken Curtis would qualify.
Actually, most of the people being mentioned in this thread were primarily actors, not cowboys.
And Ken Curtis was a singer long before Patty Duke became famous and long before he became an actor, though he wasn’t always a western singer. He replaced Frank Sinatra in Tommy Dorsey’s band for a short while in the early forties, but also has western music cred from having sung with The Sons of the Pioneers from 1949 to 1953. I’ll grant that he was never a cowboy but the OP didn’t seem intended to parse the definition beyond that of cowboy music to singers who were real life cowboys.
Your point seems valid. Generally from what I am seeing, most cowboys who hit it off in Hollywood seem to have done so as extras or stuntmen… or actual employees on movie ranches. And of those rare few who managed to grab star billing, Autry seems to be the only one who actually did any time as a cowboy (on his father’s ranch in Oklahoma) AND was known as a singer as well as an actor.
Well, as I noted earlier, Ian (as in Ian and Sylvia) Tyson WAS a Canadian cowboy in real life. His Stetson isn’t just prop, the way Roy Rogers’ was. Roy always admitted cheerfully that he was from Cincinnati, not from Out West. In fact, he used to joke that his childhood home was somewhere around 2nd base at the Reds’ old home, Riverfront Stadium.
Ian’s best known song, “Four Strong Winds,” is a semi-autobiographical song about a cowboy leaving a troubled love affair to head out to a ranch in Alberta (he still holds out some tiny hope his love may yet agree to join him there).