BOOTPRINTS
Sometimes my eyes get a little misty
When I think about our Wyoming cowboy being gone
“The King of Wyoming” as Mark Sissel wrote
Chris’ bigger than life presence celebrated in song
It has been three years and counting
We have all “cowboyed up” some
Most of the time we are doing okay
But some days are a real son-of-a-gun
Chris’ bootprints are big ones to follow
He loved his family, his music, and his part of the West
We can learn a lesson from how he lived
In the course we choose, give it our best
Rest in peace, King of Wyoming
We are holding the banner high and true
There are plenty of Posse members out here
All of us better from having known Chris LeDoux
........... Alice Gore

July 14th 2007
Hey Everybody
The new WU CD is coming together better than we
had expected.
We all had an outstanding time in the studio, and man was it great
to finally get down to making this music. Ned threw in a something special
on this record. At the end of the 2nd day at the studio, Ned took an
acoustic guitar and sat down at a mic and sang one of his Dad's songs.
Raw and clean, straight from the heart. It's a great closer for this
album.
Keep checking the website and we'll let you know
how to get a copy.
Our CD release will be August 17th at the Dee Event Center in Ogden,
Utah
|at a show put on by our great friends at KSOP.
C ya soon
-Mark
WU Fans!!!!!
Join the WU fan club and enter to win a WU CD + T-shirt.
All fan club members are eligible for the prizes. Applications are available
on www. westernunderground.com.
On the application, please write "what do you most want to hear
from WU"?
Then send it in to us with your membership dues .If you are already
a
member, then just send us an email..............
Each e-mail or response goes into "this old hat". Twelve winners
will be
drawn by
our director of gaming, Colt Fair, and those winners will
receive a new WU CD and T-shirt.
Chances are good folks, its still a budding
young fan club, so
join now to enter.
Please note the Fan Club Page
will be used to post poems or articles written
about Chris.
COWBOY UP
It has been two long and lonely years
Since our Wyoming Cowboy made his final ride
Our hearts still bear that heavy loss
And our tears we cannot hide
Thank you, Chris, for the memories
All the great music you left behind
So far, your "Cowboy Up" attitud
We just cannot seem to find
Maybe that will come much later
When our grief is past and gone
Maybe we can "Cowboy Up"
And do it with your Western songs
So keep those LeDouz CD's playing, friends
And listen with your heart and a smile
The LeDoux Posse will "Cowboy Up"
It is just going to take awhile
Alice Gore © 2007

"CHING" OETTEL - Photographer
A letter
from Fan Club member - Alice Gore
I was there the last time you played Ogden
I remember the lines on your face
I knew it was'nt the years that caused 'em
Just the miles of makin' your way
I know theres no way I could repay
the debt I feel I owe
For the advice and lessons you taught
a young man so many years ago
If I make it through this life
and succeed with all I try
can be-friend all I meet
live by the code 'till Im riddin' on high
be a model as a father and a husband
to love as honest as the wind through the trees
I'd still fall short in your footprint
I'd still only be half the man you lived to be
But Im gonna live today, like today's my last
and sing as loud as I can
stay true to myself, just like you said
and do the best I can, just like my friend
The rodeo man.
Chris, you're still missed very much.
Stake a claim for me pard, Ill see you
again someday.-Ron
LISTEN TO THIS!!!
Here is a great telephone
conversation between Chris and John Nutting, an Austrailian DJ from
Saturday Night Country. Interview from 1993.
(click on "telephone conversation" for the MP3 file)
The Ride
(a Chris LeDoux Tribute)
I remember bein' about 5 or so,
He'd sing to me with a heart of gold.
My eyes lit up like the "Western Sky",
I knew this man was an amazing guy.
Daddy got jealous 'cause I wouldn't leave
his lap,
Chris knew, and he grinned as he gave my back a slight tap.
I left his knee with a feeling of calm,
Not knowing this mans legend would soon be so strong.
The years had passed and as I grew older,
I never forgot this man like a boulder.
He was so strong and so proud,
Plain as day, to the crowd.
For this man was a husband, a father, and
guiding light,
An artist, a cowboy, he'd never cave without a fight.
I grew to realize Chris was the definition
of a good man,
This was the type I would want to help start my clan.
I met a man, who shared the same Chris
spirit,
And Chris had taught me, just go with it, don't fear it.
This man and I listen to Chris everyday,
We hope his tenderness, we can portray.
Intelligent man, I must admit,
Who else could coin the phrase "Just LeDoux It"?
The boys will keep livin' the "Copenhagen"
way
And the girls will keep learnin' "Some Things Never Change".
Now remember cowboy, "It Aint the
Years it's the Miles"
But during your time here you've conquered your trials.
His love and light will live on, that's
a fact,
But once and for all, rests this "Cowboys Hat".
© 2006 Brandee L. Warren
When I was a kid, I'd stand in front of
the mirror
And practice my Texas Grin,
I'd iron my Wranglers, and dip Copenhagen
Try'in to be like him,
As I got older, he was their through it all
His songs sang to me
In the good times,
and the falls
He was why I rode bulls,
and played practical Jokes,
He was why I've went hungry
to pay for rodeo's
He helped me grow up
and realize things in life
now my riggin's hung on the wall,
and I got me, a good wife
When I got word he passed on,
I put my hat over my face and weapt,
God broke the mold after he made him
Chris LeDoux was the best.
Yakima WA.
Here is an interview
with Garth at the
CMA concert of "Good
Ride Cowboy" Enjoy!
Thanks, Richie Brown
TRIBUTE
PICS
Tribute To CHRIS LeDOUX
Rodeo Scholarship
Fund
At CASPER COLLEGE
click and print
Chris was his name
Never affected by his fame
He rode them wild broncs
And he sang us them songs
He was a Champ in '76
And always gave us our LeDoux fix
He was a cowboy at heart
And always was true to the part
He roared on the stage
And always kept us turning the page
He sang us his songs
and we all sang along
He will truely be missed by us all
But all our cowboys must ride and eventually fall
God rest his soul
and God bless Chris LeDoux
Copyright 2005...Carrel Lack

The is "Rodeo Rose", the legendary
vehicle
Chris and Peggy used to use when he was rodeoing for a living.
American Cowboy
(The Legacy of Chris LeDoux)
I never got to meet him,
Although I always wished I could,
Now that he's gone,
We try and move on,
But its hard to accept the fact,
That he wont be back,
He was a role model to many,
A sharp dresser at that,
Although his style is dying,
Along with the cowboy hat,
I will continue to dress like him,
Proud to carry it on,
Western Pride shall never fade,
Always living, never gone,
He was a great American hero,
The last of a dying breed,
Wyoming will never forget him,
A true American, at that,
LeDoux will live on forever,
As the man with the white cowboy hat
Today his kind are rare,
Its a sad but true fact,
His legacy will live on,
"Under This Old Hat"
Now he's an "Airborne Cowboy"
At that big ranch in the sky,
We'll all get to meet him,
When its our turn to fly,
I still listen to his songs,
Almost every day,
Never forgetting his greatness,
Only wishing he could've stayed,
The man this poem is about,
Was a great and famous man,
To sum up his life is hard to do,
Trying the best I can,
His legacy shall live on forever,
Never fading out,
Remember the fame, and his name,
of this great American cowboy we call:
Chris LeDoux
By: Chapin C. Waite, 10/30/05

Saddle by:G.K. Fraker
PROGRAM FROM 1975

click on program for larger view

SHOW
US YOUR PHOTOS!!
Chris LeDoux – Remembering the Man behind the Stetson
By Lori S. Anton
More and more one cannot think of country music without thinking of Chris
LeDoux, especially in Wyoming. LeDoux can belt songs out with the best
of them, all the while expertly pumping fans into a frenzy. Audiences
become swept-up in LeDoux’s charm and charisma, and by the energy
he radiates from the stage as he gyrates and sways.
This was the opening paragraph of an article I wrote in early 2000, six
months before LeDoux was diagnosed with a rare liver disease. On March
9, 2005 countless fans mourned. Chris LeDoux was dead at the age of 56.
At the time of his death, LeDoux had released 37 albums, boasting nearly
six million sales. Fans loved his sassy style of singing, one he described
as a combination of “Western soul, sagebrush blues, cowboy folk
and rodeo rock ‘n’ roll.”
Whether rubbing shoulders with other country greats like Garth Brooks,
Charlie Daniels, and Clint Black, or hitting the country circuit solo
with his Western Underground band, this 1976 world championship bareback
rider held his own in Nashville, and all from the threshold of his 500
acre east-central Wyoming ranch.
During a chance meeting with my husband, Jeff, in a lumber yard in Buffalo,
Wyoming, LeDoux agreed to an exclusive interview. He was purchasing tongue-and-groove
pine for a cabin he was building as a family getaway.
Jeff and I met with LeDoux and his attractive wife, Peggy, the following
week at the Country Inn, in Kaycee. What struck me immediately was how
unaffected LeDoux seemed by stardom. Not surprising, considering that
his uncomplicated country boy image was genuine, not one created by slick
publicity agents.
Amid the café’s breakfast time hustle and bustle and clatter
of dishes, we chatted about LeDoux’s early years.
Born October 2, 1948, in Biloxi, Mississippi, LeDoux was the eldest of
three children. During the early 60s, while living in Austin, Texas, he
became seriously interested in music and taught himself to play the harmonica.
Such tunes as “Old Suzanna,” and “Turkey and the Straw”
could be heard wafting down through the gnarled branches of an enormous
oak. An audience of leaves dancing in the breeze clapped their applause
as 12 year-old LeDoux sat cross-legged practicing, in the tree house he
built himself.
At age 15, while living in Cheyenne, LeDoux’s mother bought the
aspiring musician his first guitar.
“I really liked what I was hearing on the radio, and I just wanted
to play those songs,” remembers LeDoux.
Intrigued by such recording talents as Neil Sedaka and Chuck Berry, LeDoux’s
musical interests eventually settled on songs and artists with a distinct
country flavor.
It wasn’t long before LeDoux began dabbling at songwriting; Old
Cowboy Heroes, Rodeo Songs, and Wild and Wooly among the first. By 1972
LeDoux was recording albums under his own Lucky Man Music label. He sold
his tapes at rodeos from the back of his pickup to help pay the entry
fees.
By 1981 LeDoux had composed and recorded more than 50 songs and had sold
more than 250,000 albums and tapes.
In 1989 Garth Brooks immortalized LeDoux in the song that would become
his first hit, “Much Too Young (To Feel This Damn Old),” and
LeDoux’s career skyrocketed. After signing up with Capital Records
in 1991, LeDoux teamed up with Brooks in 1992 to record the Top 10 hit,
“Whatcha Gonna Do with a Cowboy.”
Sipping coffee from a plain porcelain cup kept replenished by an observant
waitress, LeDoux talked easily about his career, his family, and his life.
Anton: “Chris, you are part of the Nashville scene,
but you didn’t ‘buy into it all.’ You chose to stay
in Wyoming.”
LeDoux: “Yeah, well, when I first signed on with
Capital I asked Jimmy Bowen if I’d have to do that. You know…move
right down there in the middle of things. And he said, ‘No, you
can live anywhere you want.’
“He even said, ‘We can’t bring you down here and Nashville
you up! You’ve been living there (in Wyoming) too long.’ So,
it’s kind of nice to have that freedom to do what I do.”
Anton: “Was there ever a time when you were tempted
to leave Wyoming?”
LeDoux: “Yeah. There was one time I thought about
the possibility of moving to Nashville. That was back in the hungry years.
After Chris and Peggy were married, January 4, 1972, they hit the rodeo
circuit. There were times when they traveled from one city to another
with less than $15 in their pockets. LeDoux recalled other times when
he hung out at roadside diners, waiting for someone to finish eating so
he could salvage what was left on the plate.
LeDoux gave up rodeoing in 1980. “I was sittin’ there with
both knees taped and my elbow and collarbone,” recalled LeDoux,
“and I thought, ‘Daggone, what am I doin here?’”
He returned home, tossed his riggin’ down the cellar, and began
to focus on his music career full time.
LeDoux: “It (the music career) might have worked
earlier if I had moved down, but… (A shrug of the shoulders)
“And, thanks to Garth Brooks for mentioning me in his song, ‘cause
that really is the thing that seemed to start things off.”
Anton: “When you finally met Garth you must have
been pretty excited. Was he what you expected?”
LeDoux: “I guess I was a little apprehensive about
meeting him. You know, you hope someone you admire doesn’t turn
out to be…well…what would be a good word for an
_ _ _hole? (A sheepish grin and round of chuckles follow).
“Anyway, I was hoping he wouldn’t be one of those! And, yeah,
my fears were laid to rest once I met him. He was really a nice guy.
Anton: (Changing the subject) “Where did you and
Peggy meet?”
LeDoux: “I came here in ’67 after I graduated…I
think the first day I was here I met her. School was still going on. As
a senior in Cheyenne, I’d gotten out early.”
“Anyway, there was a bunch of kids walking back up to the high
school from the cafeteria. I was driving down the road, and here comes
this girl in a green dress.”
Anton: “You still remember what she was wearing?”
LeDoux: “I do…yeah.” (LeDoux’s
eyes crinkled at the corners and he bobbed his head up and down playfully.)
“They introduced me to her, you know…just kind of in passing,
and I thought, ‘Whew! What a pretty girl!’”
Anton: “You’ve been married going on 29
years now. The long separations must be hard. What keeps you going?”
LeDoux: Peg keeps me going…her and the kids. They
just accept me for what I am.
“You know, home is kind of a sanctuary to come back to. Peg is
the foundation to this whole deal. Her being there, putting up with me
being gone so much…not griping or complaining about it. You know…supporting
me. She makes my life easier.”
Anton: “On one of your tape jackets, I noticed
you gave special thanks to, ‘the man upstairs.’ Do you consider
yourself a Christian?”
LeDoux: “Yeah. I guess the older I get the more
I see the world changing, and values sort of going downhill. And you realize
that even if you’re just sort of a Christian…just take the
values that Christ laid out. You know…just follow ‘the golden
rules.’”
Anton: “Chris, you mentioned earlier that Garth’s
music came at a good time, because he had a message the world really needed
to hear.
“As a popular singing performer yourself, do you feel that privilege
also carries with it a responsibility to impart a positive message through
your songs?”
LeDoux: “Yeah, that’s right. You know, in
this business it would be real easy to just go nuts. There are so many
opportunities out there to get into every facet of craziness there is
in the world. None of that stuff out there is real.
“You know, it’s the ‘stuff’ like her, (a nod
toward Peggy) she’s real! And the family…they’re real.
Temptations are out there, but I’ve got a pretty strong foundation
under me.”
LeDoux’s foundation proved solid. Throughout a music career that
spanned more than three decades, LeDoux had kept his feet planted firmly
on the Wyoming soil of reality. He knew without reservation that all that
glittered was not gold.
A little over an hour later we were standing outside the café
in the parking lot shaking hands. The interview was over. LeDoux had been
gracious, and I had enjoyed every minute of our time together. As Jeff
and I turned to walk away, I glanced back over my shoulder. LeDoux and
his wife were back to, walking hand in hand toward their truck.
Six months after our interview, LeDoux was diagnosed with cholangitis,
a rare liver disease. With grace and grit that left fans in awe, LeDoux
underwent a liver transplant in October of 2000 and hit the concert circuit
again after just six months.
Late in 2004 LeDoux underwent radiation treatment for cancer of the bile
duct. Then on March 9, 2005, the country star breathed his last in a hospital
room at the Wyoming Medical Center in Casper, surrounded by family and
friends. He was cremated the next day, according to his wishes. Capitol
Records Nashville president and CEO Mike Dungan solemnly noted, “In
a world of ego’s and sound-a-likes, he was a unique artist and a
wonderful man.”
During a 2002 interview with Taylor Sophia Fogarty of American Western
Magazine, LeDoux was asked what he enjoyed most about life. Reflecting
on recent health complications, LeDoux had responded, “…Little
moments of joy. Like you feel just good enough to appreciate a sunrise
or any little thing...it’s kind of a spiritual thing that maybe
God puts in there that’s just joy, happiness…yeah, just hang
on to every little moment that comes along.”
While the rest of the world might best remember LeDoux’s dynamic
performances on stage, here in God’s country Chris LeDoux will always
be remembered as the man behind the Stetson.
Lori S. Anton is a freelance writer who resides in Emblem, Wyoming, with
her husband, Jeff. You can visit her online at www.writerswritenow.com
Thought you might enjoy my column from today in the
El Dorado (Ark.) News-Times.
Way back in the early 1980s I worked as a DJ/entertainer at a modern country
establishment in Scottsdale, Ariz., called Wrangler's. From the outside
it looked like a savings and loan or bank. Its stucco exterior fit perfectly
with the surrounding area. Inside it was filled with hundreds of pieces
of western art, from beautiful pictures to bronzes.
Wrangler's had three kinds of customers: those who were caught up in the
"Urban Cowboy" craze, those who were white collar by day and
cowboy by night, and the real cowboys. It was the latter group, the real
working cowboys, which I came to love. These were guys who were not ashamed
to come straight from the barns or horse arenas to the club. Many actually
had more "regular" jobs, but lived the cowboy lifestyle every
other waking moment. They owned their own ranches, horses, cattle and
such.
Often I'd hear the real cowboys request music from one of their heroes,
Chris LeDoux, a former rodeo star recording music from his ranch in Wyoming.
I had never heard of the guy. I promised one of the cowboys that if he'd
find me a phone number I'd call and get some of LeDoux's music. Sure enough
the cowboy came back about a week later with a phone number.
When I called, a woman answered the phone. I envisioned her in the kitchen,
perhaps getting lunch ready for some farm hands. I explained who I was
and that I wanted some Chris LeDoux records. She was thrilled. Turns out
it was Chris' mother. Within a week I had nearly a dozen albums in my
possession, some autographed by the man himself. I was thrilled the first
night I could play the lovely waltz "Night Rider's Lament" or
any of the other great LeDoux songs. I instantly became a fan of his honest,
direct, simple and beautiful western music. I was forever in the good
graces of the real cowboys at Wrangler's.
Albums such as "Paint Me Back Home in Wyoming," "Western
Tunesmith," "He Rides The Wild Horses," "Old Country
Heroes," "Thirty Dollar Cowboy," "Used to Want To
Be A Cowboy" and "Songs of Rodeo Life " became part of
the Wrangler's collection. The club closed as soon as it was no longer
a tax write-off for the owner, who reportedly owned a big percentage of
the oil wells in Oklahoma at the time.
Nobody outside real cowboys had ever heard of Chris LeDoux, though he
was a true superstar to many. In the late 1980s Garth Brooks mentioned
LeDoux ("a worn out tape of Chris LeDoux ...") in the song "Much
Too Young." The fat cats in Nashville soon began to pay attention:
this former rodeo star was huge among fans of the cowboy lifestyle.
Though LeDoux would record numerous albums with Nashville people, his
best work remained those early records. When he hit the stage performing
there were few rivals. Brooks has mentioned that his high-flying, high-energy
shows were a direct ripoff of what LeDoux had been doing for years.
So it was sad news when I heard that Chris LeDoux died of cancer on March
9 at age 56. LeDoux had battled health problems for decades, from bad
knees thanks to wild horses to needing a liver transplant. He came within
a month or so of dying back in the early 1990s before getting a transplant.
Brooks had offered part of his liver, but he wasn't the right match. That's
how much love and respect Brooks had for LeDoux.
"LeDoux had recorded 22 albums on his own when Garth Brooks mentioned
his name in the hit song, 'Much Too Young (To Feel This Damn Old)' in
1989," an official statement said. "Shortly thereafter, LeDoux
signed with Brooks' label, Capitol Nashville, where he recorded 15 albums
and sold nearly six million copies." If not for "Much Too Young,"
the world at large might never had known about LeDoux.
"The simple phrase 'a worn out tape of Chris LeDoux' in that famous
song of Brooks' gave the singing cowboy the boost he'd been needing, career-wise,
as far as LeDoux was concerned: 'As far as Garth helping my career, he
did tremendously. It's funny ... the first time I met him, he told me
the opposite. He says, 'Chris,' (laughs) 'You don't realize what using
your name in that song has done for my career,' but I know it helped me
way more than it did him. You see, we'd been doing this for probably 18
years when that song finally came out," the statement continued.
Mike Dungan, CEO and president of Capitol Nashville, added, "All
of us at Capitol Records and EMI Music are saddened at the passing of
Chris. "In a world of egos and soundalikes, he was a unique artist
and a wonderful man. We have always been proud to represent his music,
and honored to call him our friend. Our thoughts go out to his wife, Peggy,
and the LeDoux family."
Singer Darryl Worley added his thoughts, "I'm certainly saddened
by the fact that he's gone, and I know he's been having some health problems.
I spent a little time with Chris a couple different times. He was just
really full of energy and enthusiastic and a positive guy, and he's one
of the few people I know that can go out and sell four or five million
records without a record label, so I think his success and what he did
with country music speaks for itself. He doesn't really need anybody to
praise him, but we 're gonna miss him."
LeDoux was cremated on March 10, with a private memorial held in Wyoming.
"LeDoux was a world champion bronc rider who turned to music as a
second career. He sold his early work out of a trunk, along the harsh
and rowdy rodeo circuits. His songs captured the romance, the freedom,
the dirt and the hurt of rodeo, and drew fans who demanded tapes of his
songs," his official website said.
"A devoted husband and doting father, LeDoux spent his time off the
road with his family at their ranch in Kaycee, Wyo.," said Judy McDonough,
director of public relations at Capitol.
One newspaper writer said the world should have mourned his passing more.
"He died Wednesday, so little-known that this paper didn 't even
bother to note his passing under the 'Deaths Elsewhere,' headline.
"What a pity. Chris LeDoux, 56, was directly responsible for the
current popularity of country music, a surge that began in the mid-1980s.
"Wait, you say. That was Garth Brooks who did that, right? Garth
'Ropin' the Wind.' Garth being 'Shameless.' Garth driving the rain-swept
streets of 'Thunder Road.' "Brooks, whose colossal ego is exceeded
only by his talent, will tell you that Chris LeDoux made him the performer
who electrified audiences with rowdy, boisterous and all-out fun live
shows.
"Country radio DJ Jim Mantel, who handles the morning-drive microphone
at WGAR FM/99.5, knows Brooks and knew LeDoux. The day after LeDoux's
death because of complications from liver cancer, Mantel told of a little
conversation he 'd had with Brooks.
"Brooks' path to legend status included a night opening for LeDoux,
and that's the story Mantel told listeners on Thursday. The amiable extrack
star Brooks did his few minutes in the spotlight, ably pickin' and a-grinnin'
but as motionless as an East Texas mesquite tree.
"When it was over, Brooks planted himself in the wings, watched and
learned. "LeDoux rode the crowd the way he rode bareback broncs to
the 1976 Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association world championship. He
was all over the stage, dancing, acting up, having a wild-eyed blast while
singing some of the best-written songs in any genre.
"It was Brooks' epiphany. From that one show was born the Garth persona
who turned country music on its ear. The genre has never been the same.
"In this case, the student eclipsed the teacher. In some ways, that's
good. Love him or hate him, Brooks resuscitated country music. It is to
Brooks' credit that he never forgot the debt he owed LeDoux. When liver
cancer forced his mentor to undergo a transplant several years ago, Brooks
offered LeDoux half of his own liver.
"But for the most part, the general public missed the LeDoux tugboat
hauling the Garth ocean liner into port. And that's too bad. LeDoux's
music, like the man himself, is some of the best to come down the pike
in a long, long time. "In the course of my career, I 've done three
or four interviews with LeDoux. Every conversation felt like two old friends
sitting at my grandma 's kitchen table at our family ranch in East Texas,
swapping lies, sipping sweet tea and listening to an impatient bull call
for his supper.
"It's memories like these that make me want to echo Brooks in his
live version of 'Much Too Young (to Feel This Damn Old)' A worn out tape
of Chris LeDoux, Lonely women and bad booze Seem to be the only friends
I 've left at all.
"And at the close of this stanza, Brooks yells out, 'God bless Chris
LeDoux.' "Say it again for me, Garth. Say it again."
(Roderick Harrington is weekend editor at the News-Times.)
The Measure Of A Man
(A Tribute To Chris LeDoux)
How do you measure the life of a man,
is it just by the height of success,
or is it, at last, the number of lives
his love and devotion have blessed.
At wild bronco riding he rose to the top,
world champion, a rodeo star,
then with a talent from heaven it seemed,
came fame from his voice and guitar.
From a life that was showered with honors,
his name became known 'cross the land,
but the title he wanted remembered,
was that of a "Family Man."
The years we are granted are unknown,
and sometimes are sadly but few,
so a man lives each day to the fullest,
while doin' the best he can do.
He decided the path he would follow,
and held to that choice throughout life:
the greatest reward beyond all of the fame,
the love of his children and wife.
His legacy we will remember with pride,
for he rose 'bout as high as you can,
but greater by far is the lesson he left,
well taught by a "Family Man."
How do you measure the life of a man,
is it just by the height of success,
or is it, at last, the number of lives
his love and devotion have blessed.
Rod Nichols
(c) 2005
Last American cowboy LeDoux dies
at 56
By CLAY MASTERS / Daily Nebraskan
March 11, 2005
The last American cowboy of country music died on March 9th. Chris LeDoux,
56, had been reportedly battling liver cancer.
In 2000, LeDoux was given a liver transplant at the University Nebraska
Medical Center and late last year was diagnosed with liver cancer.
LeDoux's tours made stops in Lincoln quite regularly for the Nebraska
State Fair -- his last performance here was last August.
LeDoux, was a world championship bareback bronco rider and wrote music
on the side. In the 1990s he got noticed for his music through the mention
of Garth Brooks' first single, "Much Too Young to Feel This Damn
Old."
With the departure of LeDoux from this world and the country music industry
we have now lost the last true cowboy singer/songwriter.
The country music industry has been lagging for a number of years now
and it's a unique thing when the country music artist writes his/her own
songs. Artists today in the country genre create albums chalked with watered
down filler music surrounding two or three songs that are billed to be
slapped on country radio.
For LeDoux, this was not the case. His albums were timeless and unlike
almost every other modern country entertainer that gets airplay today,
LeDoux's albums had originality from a voice that had lived the true American
cowboy life.
LeDoux tried to remain true to his country music roots and not sell out,
much like the older artists of the genre -- Kris Kristofferson, Johnny
Cash and Waylon Jennings.
His songs were what he lived and his words were simple.
I was in elementary school when I first discovered LeDoux and found myself
having total admiration for someone who completely changed careers and
was successful in doing so.
I have long since drifted away from modern country music due to the lag
discussed earlier. But LeDoux has always been the one artist I can still
pull out every once and a while and feel a connection with and take me
back to my younger years when I fantasized being a cowboy myself.
LeDoux will be missed greatly by more than just country music fans. He
will be missed by the people who believe in music and songwriting.
Please note the Fan Club
Page
will be used to post poems or articles written
about Chris.
LINKS
Triple
V Rodeo Co.
Casper
Star Tribune #1
Casper
Star Tribune #2
Casper
Star Tribune #3
Wyoming
News
Dustin
Evans
NetSpot
Capitol
Records
Cowboy.Com
CowboyDay.Com
Dean
Guitars
International
Fan Club Org
LeDoux
Country
Jan's
Cowgirl Site
King
Ropes & Saddlery
More
Chris Photos
Cottage
Studios
Behind
The Chutes
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