
Pop Wagner
Cinchin' Saddles and Pullin' Bridle Reins
© 2006 Pop Wagner
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Old time songs, poems and ballads about horses and the people who love them. You don't have to love horses to appreciate this timeless collection.
tracks
- 1 Hittin' the Trail Tonight
- 2 Drive Them Critters (to the Rail)
- 3 Roving Cowboy
- 4 Tennessee Stud
- 5 Stewball
- 6 Bravest Cowboy
- 7 Doney Gal
- 8 Choppo
- 9 Manito
- 10 Buddies in the Saddle
- 11 Platonia, Pride of the Plains
- 12 Tarry Not
- 13 Strawberry Roan
- 14 Old Paint
- 15 Palomino Pal of Mine
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notes
This recording is a tribute to horses and the people who love them. It is dedicated to Pop’s old saddle pal and folk singing buddy, Sean Blackburn.
You don’t have to love horses to appreciate the timeless songs, tunes, poems and tributes on the new Pop Wagner CD, Cinchin’ Saddles and Pullin’ Bridle Reins. Pop’s about as legendary a figure in Minnesota’s music scene as some of the songs he sings about horses and humans on the new disc. A regular at the annual Cowboy Poetry gatherings around the country, Pop’s also well known for his radio work. These days, he’s fresh from the set of the Robert Altman/Garrison Keillor film (loosely based on A Prairie Home Companion) shot in St. Paul last summer. On the set 15 of the 21 days of filming, Pop served as a long-standing extra who also taught actor John C. Reilly how to do rope tricks. Of course, PHC fans know Pop from way back; he’s appeared on the popular radio program countless times, singing the stuff that makes folkies folk: country blues, old-timey material, fiddle tunes, railroad songs, bluegrass and just about anything else from America’s rich roots-music tradition.
Pop’s self-penned songs are as long lasting as those he deftly interprets. The new record also displays historical musical portraits about horses of all kinds, from “Stewball” and “Tarry Not” to the “Tennessee Stud,” “Old Paint” and “Strawberry Roan.” Tunes about riding the trails and herding the dogies are mixed in with original works written for this disc, including one Pop wrote while working in residence with kids in Michigan, plus “Manito,” a poem about the beloved horse of his late friend and fellow folksinger, Sean Blackburn.
-Martin Keller