Cowboy Songs and Other Frontier Ballads

John Avery Lomax is a towering figure in the field of early American musicology and folklore. Through intensive field work, Lomax built up the core body of work for the Library of Congress Archive. "Cowboy Songs and Other Frontier Ballads" is his collection that propelled him to the forefront of his field and ignited new interest in American folklore, inspiring many to continue research. For his contributions to the field of cowboy music, Locas was inducted into the Western Music Hall of Fame in 2010. Many of the verses here are accompanied by musical scores, and some may be more familiar in their musical form such as "A Home on the Range." A wide array of characters and life across the western United States is represented here.


By : John Lomax (1867 - 1948)

001 - Dedication



002 - Introduction



003 - Collector's Note



004 - The Dying Cowboy



005 - The Days of Forty-nine



006 - Joe Bowers



007 - The Cowboy's Dream



008 - The Cowboy's Life



009 - The Kansas Line



010 - The Cowman's Prayer



011 - The Miner's Song



012 - Jesse James



013 - Poor Lonesome Cowboy



014 - Buena Vista Battlefield



015 - Westward Ho



016 - A Home on the Range



017 - Texas Rangers



018 - The Mormon Bishop's Lament



019 - Dan Taylor



020 - When Work Is Done This Fall



021 - Sioux Indians



022 - The Old Chisholm Trail



023 - Jack Donahoo



024 - Utah Carroll



025 - The Bull-whacker



026 - The "Metis" Song of the Buffalo Hunters



027 - The U-S-U Range



028 - The Cowboy's Lament



029 - Love In Disguise



030 - Mustang Gray



031 - Young Companions



032 - Lackey Bill



033 - Whoopee Ti Yi Yo, Git Along Little Dogies



034 - I'm A Good Old Rebel



035 - The Cowboy



036 - Bill Peters, The Stage Driver



037 - Hard Times



038 - Cole Younger



039 - Mississippi Girls



040 - The Old Man Under the Hill



041 - Jerry, Go Ile That Car



042 - John Garner's Trail Herd



043 - The Old Scout's Lament



044 - The Lone Buffalo Hunter



045 - The Crooked Trail to Holbrook



046 - Only a Cowboy



047 - Fuller and Warren



048 - The Trail to Mexico



049 - The Horse Wrangler



050 - California Joe



051 - The Boston Burglar



052 - Sam Bass



053 - The Zebra Dun



054 - The Buffalo Skinners



055 - Macaffie's Confession



056 - Little Joe, The Wrangler



057 - Harry Bale



058 - Foreman Monroe



059 - The Dreary Black Hills



060 - A Mormon Song



061 - The Buffalo Hunters



062 - The Little Old Sod Shanty



063 - The Gol-darned Wheel



064 - Bonnie Black Bess



065 - The Last Longhorn



066 - A Prisoner for Life



067 - The Wars of Germany



068 - Freighting from Wilcox to Globe



069 - The Arizona Boys and Girls



070 - The Dying Ranger



071 - The Fair Fannie Moore



072 - Hell in Texas



073 - By Markentura's Flowery Marge



074 - The State of Arkansaw



075 - The Texas Cowboy



076 - The Dreary, Dreary Life



077 - Jim Farrow



078 - Young Charlottie



079 - The Skew-Ball Black



080 - The Rambling Cowboy



081 - The Cowboy at Church



082 - The U. S. A. Recruit



083 - The Cowgirl



084 - The Shanty Boy



085 - Root Hog or Die



086 - Sweet Betsy from Pike



087 - The Disheartened Ranger



088 - The Melancholy Cowboy



089 - Bob Stanford



090 - Charlie Rutlage



091 - The Range Riders



092 - Her White Bosom Bare



093 - Juan Murray



094 - Greer County



095 - Rosin the Bow



096 - The Great Round-Up



097 - The Jolly Cowboy



098 - The Convict



099 - Jack O' Diamonds



100 - The Cowboy's Meditation



101 - Billy Venero



102 - Dogie Song



103 - The Boozer



104 - Drinking Song



105 - A Fragment



106 - A Man Named Hods



107 - A Fragment



108 - The Lone Star Trail



109 - Way Down In Mexico



110 - Rattlesnake A Ranch Haying Song



111 - The Railroad Corral



112 - The Song of the "Metis" Trapper



113 - The Camp Fire Has Gone Out



114 - Night-Herding Song



115 - Tail Piece



116 - The Habit



117 - Old Paint



118 - Down South on the Rio Grande



119 - Silver Jack



120 - The Cowboy's Christmas Ball



121 - Pinto



122 - The Gal I Left Behind Me



123 - Billy The Kid



124 - The Hell-Bound Train



125 - The Old Scout's Lament



126 - The Deserted Adobe



127 - The Cowboy at Work



128 - Here's to the Ranger!



129 - Muster Out the Ranger



130 - A Cow Camp on the Range



131 - Freckles. A Fragment



132 - Whose Old Cow?



133 - Old Time Cowboy



134 - Bucking Broncho



135 - The Pecos Queen



136 - Chopo



137 - Top Hand



138 - California Trail



139 - Bronc Peeler's Song



140 - A Deer Hunt



141 - Windy Bill



142 - Wild Rovers



143 - Life in a Half-Breed Shack



144 - The Road to Cook's Peak



145 - Araphoe, Or Buckskin Joe



146 - Rounded up in Glory



147 - The Drunkard's Hell



148 - Rambling Boy



149 - Brigham Young. I



150 - Brigham Young. II



151 - The Old Gray Mule



152 - The Fools of Forty-nine



153 - A Ripping Trip



154 - The Happy Miner



155 - The California Stage Company



156 - New National Anthem


It is now four or five years since my attention was called to the collection of native American ballads from the Southwest, already begun by Professor Lomax. At that time, he seemed hardly to appreciate their full value and importance. To my colleague, Professor G.L. Kittredge, probably the most eminent authority on folk-song in America, this value and importance appeared as indubitable as it appeared to me. We heartily joined in encouraging the work, as a real contribution both to literature and to learning. The present volume is the first published result of these efforts.

The value and importance of the work seems to me double. One phase of it is perhaps too highly special ever to be popular. Whoever has begun the inexhaustibly fascinating study of popular song and literature—of the nameless poetry which vigorously lives through the centuries—must be perplexed by the necessarily conjectural opinions concerning its origin and development held by various and disputing scholars. When songs were made in times and terms which for centuries have been not living facts but facts of remote history or tradition, it is impossible to be sure quite how they begun, and by quite what means they sifted through the centuries into the forms at last securely theirs, in the final rigidity of print. In this collection of American ballads, almost if not quite uniquely, it is possible to trace the precise manner in which songs and cycles of song—obviously analogous to those surviving from older and antique times—have come into being. The facts which are still available concerning the ballads of our own Southwest are such as should go far to prove, or to disprove, many of the theories advanced concerning the laws of literature as evinced in the ballads of the old world.

Such learned matter as this, however, is not so surely within my province, who have made no technical study of literary origins, as is the other consideration which made me feel, from my first knowledge of these ballads, that they are beyond dispute valuable and important. In the ballads of the old world, it is not historical or philological considerations which most readers care for. It is the wonderful, robust vividness of their artless yet supremely true utterance; it is the natural vigor of their surgent, unsophisticated human rhythm. It is the sense, derived one can hardly explain how, that here is expression straight from the heart of humanity; that here is something like the sturdy root from which the finer, though not always more lovely, flowers of polite literature have sprung. At times when we yearn for polite grace, ballads may seem rude; at times when polite grace seems tedious, sophisticated, corrupt, or mendacious, their very rudeness refreshes us with a new sense of brimming life. To compare the songs collected by Professor Lomax with the immortalities of olden time is doubtless like comparing the literature of America with that of all Europe together. Neither he nor any of us would pretend these verses to be of supreme power and beauty. None the less, they seem to me, and to many who have had a glimpse of them, sufficiently powerful, and near enough beauty, to give us some such wholesome and enduring pleasure as comes from work of this kind proved and acknowledged to be masterly.

What I mean may best be implied, perhaps, by a brief statement of fact. Four or five years ago, Professor Lomax, at my request, read some of these ballads to one of my classes at Harvard, then engaged in studying the literary history of America. From that hour to the present, the men who heard these verses, during the cheerless progress of a course of study, have constantly spoken of them and written of them, as of something sure to linger happily in memory. As such I commend them to all who care for the native poetry of America.

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