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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120823T190000
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DTSTAMP:20230131T033840Z
CREATED:20120816T190232Z
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UID:1986-1345748400-1675198800@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Don Edwards
DESCRIPTION:The best purveyor of cowboy music in America today.\n7:30 PM\, Thursday\, August 23\, 2012\nThe $15.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com. \nDon Edwards\nDon represents the best of what Great Basin Arts and Entertainment is all about. He is a truly great singer\, guitar player\, folklorist\, storyteller\, engaging entertainer\, and one of the finest gentlemen we have ever met. \nThis Grammy nominated singer-guitarist continues to build a legacy that enriches our vision of the American West. In tales of the day-to-day lives and emotions of those who have lived it\, his ballads paint a sweeping landscape of both mind and heart\, keeping alive the sights\, sounds and feelings of this most American contribution to culture and art. The quality of this cowboy balladeer’s music stems from the fact that he is so much more than a singer. Bobby Weaver of the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City\, summed up Edwards’ importance as “… the best purveyor of cowboy music in America today.” \nAn historian\, author\, and musicologist\, unusually well – versed in cowboy lore and musical traditions\, Don brings a rare complement of knowing and loving his craft. Mostly though\, there is the soul of a poet; a man who has never succumbed to the temptations of presenting a glamorized or romanticized version of the West. Edwards deals with bad weather\, petty motivations\, sadness\, nostalgia and longing\, as parts of the landscape like any other. \n \nThe son of a vaudeville magician\, Don was aware as a child of a vast cross-section of music from classical to jazz\, and blues to western-swing. Many of those influences enter his own music as they did the music of the West. Edwards was drawn to the cowboy life by the books of Will James and was presented the Will James Society’s “Big Enough Award” which is presented annually to someone who personifies the Western and Cowboy way of life and their achievements. He also loved the ‘B’ Westerns of the silver screen\, particularly those featuring “sure-‘nuff cowboys” like Tom Mix and Ken Maynard. He taught himself guitar at age ten\, and in 1961\, he got his first professional job as an actor/singer/stuntman at Six Flags Over Texas. In 1964\, Don released his first recording on REN Records of Dallas. \nDon became part owner of The White Elephant Saloon in the Fort Worth Stockyards where ballad hunter and historian\, John Lomax collected cowboy songs. Subsequently\, Esquire magazine named The White Elephant one of America’s 100 best bars. Edwards also began playing throughout Oklahoma and Texas\, and with the birth of the Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko\, Nevada\, he achieved widespread recognition. He has now entertained throughout the United States\, Canada\, Great Britain\, Ireland\, New Zealand\, Europe and the Far East. \nDon Edwards has two recorded anthologies of cowboy songs\, Guitars & Saddle Songs and Songs of the Cowboy\, included in the Folklore Archives of the Library of Congress. These anthologies have been re-recorded and expanded for Western Jubilee Recording Company as the 32-song double CD/cassette\, Saddle Songs. This project was awarded first place as the Best Folk/Traditional Album at the annual 1998 INDIE Awards Ceremony. National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City has awarded Edwards five prestigious Wrangler Awards for Outstanding Traditional Western Music. He has received multiple awards from the Western Music Association for Male Vocalist and Performer of the Year. Edwards\, along with co-presenter\, Waddie Mitchell\, was seen on the network-televised Academy of Country Music Awards and was the featured performer for the Los Angeles’ Golden Boot Awards. In April 2000\, Edwards was immortalized onto the Walk of Western Stars by the City of Santa Clarita\, CA. \nDon has presented seminars at Yale\, Rice\, Texas Christian and other universities. His recordings under the Warner Western label\, Goin’ Back to Texas\, Songs of the Trail \, The Bard & The Balladeer and West of Yesterday spawned a new audience for his craft. The summer of 1997 found Don Edwards in Livingston\, Montana portraying the role of Smokey in Robert Redford’s film The Horse Whisperer. In addition to his acting/singing role\, Don is featured on the MCA soundtrack. In May of 1998\, to coincide with The Horse Whisperer theater release\, Warner’s compiled and released The Best of Don Edwards while Western Jubilee offered Don’s My Hero Gene Autry recorded live at Mr. Autry’s 90th Birthday. His next two recordings for Western Jubilee resulted in two more visits to Oklahoma City\, both receiving the Outstanding Traditional Western Music Recording of the Year – A Prairie Portrait (April 2001) with Waddie Mitchell and the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra and Kin To The Wind\, Memories of Marty Robbins (April 2002). In the Fall of 2002\, Western Jubilee released an important special project: Don Edwards and Bluegrass icon\, Peter Rowan teamed up on High Lonesome Cowboy. This recording traces the roots of Western music from Appalachia to Abilene and includes legendary musicians\, Norman Blake and Tony Rice. High Lonesome Cowboy resulted in a Grammy nomination for 2002 – the first time Cowboy music has ever been nominated for this prestigious award. In 2003\, Western Jubilee offers Saddle Songs II – Last of the Troubadours\, 32 more Classic Cowboy Songs\, which was followed by Don’s newest book\, Saddle Songs – A Cowboy Songbag. 2005 found Don Edwards’ solo concert and personal appearance schedule the busiest to date. The Warner Herzog film production\, Grizzly Man was released featuring Don’s recording of Coyotes at the conclusion of the movie. In April 2007\, Don Edwards newest Western Jubilee recording Moonlight And Skies received the Wrangler Award (his sixth) for Outstanding Traditional Western Album of the Year from the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum. The album contains Coyotes along with 12 other little gems Don found along the trail. \nThe richness of Don’s voice coupled with an unforgettable stage presentation makes Don Edwards America’s number one Western singer and concert attraction. The accolades have been simply added bonuses for Edwards\, who sings what he does out of love and respect for the genre. Don’s career continues to blossom\, and luckily for all who care about it\, he has because of his sincere approach\, added much to the literature and music of the West\, passing on to the rest of us a rich legacy.
URL:https://gbae.org/event/don-edwards/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/porch-don.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121229T190000
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DTSTAMP:20230131T032008Z
CREATED:20121209T071929Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T032008Z
UID:2108-1356807600-1356814800@gbae.org
SUMMARY:Waddie Mitchell
DESCRIPTION:Buckaroo Poet\nWinner 2012 Nevada Heritage Award\n7:00 PM\, Saturday\, December 29\, 2012 \nThe $15.00 tickets are on sale now at the Martin Hotel\, Nature’s Corner\, and Global Coffee. You can also buy them online at themartinhotel.com.\n \n“I can’t ever remember ‘finding’ cowboy poetry\,” Waddie Mitchell says of the entertaining and enduring art of storytelling. “It was always there. The cowboys sure never called it poetry. I know I wouldn’t have liked it if they would have. Seems like an oxymoron\, don’t it!?” \nFrom his earliest days on the remote Nevada ranches where his father worked\, Waddie was immersed in the cowboy way of entertaining\, the art of spinnin’ tales in rhyme and meter that came to be called cowboy poetry\, a Western tradition that is as rich as the lifestyle that gave birth to it. Within his stories\, old in a voice that is timeless and familiar\, are the common bonds we all share\, moments both grand and commonplace\, the humorous and the tragic\, the life and death struggles and triumphs that we each recognize. And yet\, Waddie presents his material with personal insights and the lessons learned during his life spent as a buckaroo. \n“All the time I was growing up we had these old cowboys around\,” he says. “When you live in close proximity like that with the same folks month after month\, one of your duties is to entertain each other\, and I suppose that’s where the whole tradition of cowboy poetry started. You find that if you have a rhyme and a meter to start that story\, people will listen to it over and over again\,” Waddie states in his down-to-earth description of its beginnings. \n“When my imagination first got let out of the gate\, it was from an old-time cowboy\, with a story set to rhyme\,” he says in his second recording from Warner Western\, Lone Driftin’ Rider. By the age of 10\, he was reciting poetry himself; at 16\, he quit school to follow his heart and went to making his living as a\ncowboy.\nThere came a time though\, which he relates in his poem Where To Go\, when he had to choose between being a full-time cowboy (he managed a 36\,000 acre ranch in Lee-Jiggs\, Nevada) and the art form that he loved so much. In 1984\, he helped organize the internationally recognized Elko Cowboy Poetry Gathering and gave his first public performance. Although Waddie didn’t think anyone would be interested\, (he thought it would be a pretty good party for the weekend) the first Cowboy Poetry Gathering was set for a cold\, snowy weekend in January. This was one of the only times Waddie and his fellow cowboys were free from ranch duties. More than 2\,000 people showed up\, and Waddie was off and running. \nIn 2012 Waddie Mitchell received the prestigious Nevada Heritage Award from the Nevada Arts Council.  He continues hosting and performing at festivals\, private gatherings\, rodeos\, corporate events\, concert halls and an extraordinarily wide variety of functions. The Reno Gazette-Journal published a list from a panel of writers\, historians and other notables\, who selected the Top 20 Artists\, Authors and Entertainers To Influence Nevada in the 20th Century. Sure enough pards\, there was Waddie!
URL:https://gbae.org/event/waddie-mitchell/
LOCATION:Martin Hotel\, 94 W Railroad St\, Winnemucca\, NV\, 89445
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://gbae.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/Waddie_Barrel.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="GBAE.org":MAILTO:contact@gbae.org
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