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Last Of The Troubadours

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Download links and information about Last Of The Troubadours by Don Edwards. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 32 tracks with total duration of 01:53:17 minutes.

Artist: Don Edwards
Release date: 2004
Genre: Country, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 32
Duration: 01:53:17
Buy on iTunes $19.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Gone to Texas 2:38
2. The Habit 2:41
3. For Them That Lean To Lonesome 4:21
4. The Colorado Trail 3:17
5. Night Rider's Lament 4:11
6. By The Silvery Rio Grande 3:45
7. Diamond Joe 3:09
8. The Old Cowboy 3:00
9. Barbara Allen 6:44
10. Make Me A Cowboy Again For A Day 3:30
11. The Sierry Petes 3:00
12. The Mormon Cowboy 2:50
13. Fort Worth Jail 3:35
14. Red River Valley 4:26
15. Green Grow The Laurel 2:05
16. When the Work's All Done This Fall 3:45
17. Saddle Tramp 2:13
18. Lonely Wanderer 2:33
19. Following the Cow Trail 4:56
20. Chant of the Night Songs 3:41
21. West of the Round Corral 3:07
22. Windy Bill 2:28
23. Cowhand's Last Ride 2:53
24. The Cowboy's Home Sweet Home 5:09
25. Utah Carroll 3:41
26. Root Hog Or Die 2:29
27. The Rancher Feeds Us All 3:06
28. I Wanted to Die in the Desert 2:51
29. The Dying Cowboy Of Rimrock Ranch 3:01
30. The Campfire Has Gone Out 5:07
31. Cowboy's Meditation 3:47
32. Here's Lookin At You 5:18

Details

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Don Edwards does qualify as one of the last troubadours, so the name of his 2004 album is fitting. Sure, there are a number of singers specializing in Western folk songs, but there are too few to even call themselves a movement. More like a few folks who still believe in the beauty of the spare, simple ballad that was born out of the experience of cowpokes, gamblers, and bronco-busters on the open ranges of Wyoming, Nevada, and California. Unlike Edwards' 2001 effort, Kin to the Wind, Last of the Troubadours is a stripped-down recording, featuring mostly one man, one guitar, and one voice (four selections include guest appearances). Edwards has crammed two discs full of familiar classics like "Saddle Tramp," "Barbara Allen," and "Red River Valley." The joy of the collection is that the low-key approach to this material probably comes close to replicating the way it might have sounded around some campfire at the end of the 19th century. Only four pieces vary this formula by expanding the arrangements with Nancy and Norman Blake. Norman Blake's dobro adds a real nice touch to "Cowhand's Last Ride," while a mandolin spruces up "The Dying Cowboy of Rimrock Ranch." Last of the Troubadours is a generous and enjoyable album, and will be warmly welcomed by fans of Western fare. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford Jr., Rovi