Ian Tyson (born September 25, 1933) is a cowboy folk singer from Alberta, Canada who was born in Victoria, British Columbia.
He and his then-wife Sylvia Fricker constituted one of the most popular folk duos of the 1960s, Ian & Sylvia. Tyson gradually shifted to the cowboy way while still with Sylvia, accentuating the western life through song. Residing on a ranch in southern Alberta, Tyson tours all over the west.
¡Cuatro años de duro trabajo!Este mes de mayo cumplimos cuatro años al aire. Seguimos trabajando en la difusión de este maravilloso instrumento, ¡gracias por participar en nuestra historia!
GOODNIGHT LOVING TRAIL Time: 3/4 Tenor: D Bass: C - Bruce "Utah" Phillips, 1973, on: Starlight on the Rails - Record: Ian Tyson, "Ian Tyson" (1984), Key: D#
1 * 57 * Too old to wrangle or ride on the swing * * 1 * You beat the tri-angle and you curse every-thing * * 4 * (*) If dirt was a kingdom, then you'd be the king____
CHORUS: 1 57 1 4 (*) On the Goodnight Trail, on the Loving Trail____ 1 * 57 * Our old woman's lonesome to-night____ 1 57 1 4 (*) Your French Harp blows like a lone bawling calf____ 1 6m 2m 57 It's a wonder the wind don't tear off your skin * * 4 1 Get in there and blow out the light____
1 * 57 * With your snake oil and herbs and your liniments too * * 1 * You can do any-thing that a doctor can do * * 4 * (*) Ex-cept find a cure for your own goddamn stew____
1 * 57 * The cook-fire's gone out and the coffee's all gone * * 1 * The boys are all up and we're raising the dawn * * 4 * (*) You're still sitting there all lost in a song____
1 * 57 * I know that some-day that I'll be just the same * * 1 * Wearing an apron in-stead of a name * * 4 * (*) But no one can change it and no one's to blame____
'Cause the desert's a book writ in lizards and sage It's easy to look like an old torn-out page All faded and cracked with the colors of age
NOTES: - Goodnight-Loving Trail: named for Charles Goodnight & Oliver Loving - It ran from Texas to Denver, Colorado; then on to Cheyenne, Wyoming SYMBOLS: - Asterisk (*) = new measure, play same chord - Period (.) = 1/8 note rest at start of a measure - Underline(_) = sustain note into next measure