
Bobby Bridger
A Ballad of the West
© 2001 Bobby Bridger (634479358692)
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Three epic tales of mystical grandeur about the American West; told in verse and set to original music; narrated by Slim Pickens and Bobby Bridger.
tracks
- 1 Seekers of the Fleece - Disc 1 - Opening Narration
- 2 Free My Spirit, 'fore My Spirit's Dead
- 3 Narration
- 4 Jedediah Strong Smith
- 5 Narration
- 6 I Had A Vision
- 7 Narration
- 8 The Crawl
- 9 Narration
- 10 Life Is A River
- 11 Narration
- 12 Rendezvous, 1832
- 13 Narration
- 14 People Carry On
- 15 Narration
- 16 Blackfoot
- 17 Narration
- 18 Free Me Like An Eagle Once Again
- 19 Narration
- 20 Free My Spirit Reprise
- 21 Pahaska - Disc 2 - Opening Narration
- 22 Rainbow Trail
- 23 Narration
- 24 The Scouts
- 25 Narration
- 26 Narration/Pony Express
- 27 Narration
- 28 One Perfect Moment
- 29 Narration
- 30 Narration
- 31 Destiny
- 32 Narration
- 33 Narration
- 34 Dime Novels
- 35 Pahaska - Disc 3 - Opening Narration
- 36 Magicians From Mythology
- 37 Narration
- 38 The Duel With Yellow Hand
- 39 Narration
- 40 The Wild West
- 41 Narration
- 42 Arrows of Light
- 43 Narration
- 44 Narration/Absaroka
- 45 Narration
- 46 Pahaska Had A Good Heart
- 47 Lakota - Disc 4 - Opening Narration
- 48 Lakota
- 49 Narration w/Flute
- 50 Red Cloud
- 51 Narration
- 52 Buffalo
- 53 Sundance
- 54 Narration
- 55 Permanent Change
- 56 Narration
- 57 Little Big Horn
- 58 Narration
- 59 Meadowlark
- 60 Narration
- 61 The Ghost Dance
- 62 Narration
- 63 Is the Darkness Only Searching For The Light?
- 64 Lakota Reprise
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notes
"A Ballad of the West" is a Four Disc Set featuring 32 original songs.
This collection is the first recorded presentation of Bridger's highly-acclaimed trilogy of historically-documented epic ballads interpreting real events in Western American history from the days of the Mountain Man and the Fur Trade Era of the 1820s, the life and times of William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody, and finally through the death of Lakota Holy Man, Black Elk, in 1950. Bridger has been performing "A Ballad of the West" around the globe for nearly four decades.
Inspired by John G. Neihardt's "A Cycle of the West," Bridger's "Ballad" is a three-part story told in Homeric verse and song about the Mountain Men, William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody, and the Lakota Sioux people. After debuting the one-man shows of "Seekers of the Fleece" and "Lakota" at Austin's Creek Theater in 1973, he took the act on the road, eventually finding a home at Yellowstone National Park and Cody, Wyoming, where he exclusively performed "A Ballad of the West" for nearly six years - as a one man show, and as a full theatrical performance. The Trans-Missouri region was the perfect mythological background: it is the mystically fertile landscape of the creation mythology of the Lakota, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Crow, Shoshone, Blackfeet, and Pawnee, as well as the mythology that created much of what we cherish today as a culture in the American West.
Part One: "Seekers of the Fleece": (Disc 1)
Seekers of the Fleece presents the life story of premiere American mountain man Jim Bridger and the Fur Trade Era. Beginning with Bridger's historic ascension of the Missouri River with the Ashley-Henry Expedition in 1822, "Seekers of the Fleece" musically dramatizes the adventures of the initial interactions between Europeans and Native Americans as well as the beginning of the Emigration Era and the Indian Wars Era.
Part Two: "Pahaska": (Discs 2 & 3)
"Pahaska" is the ballad of Buffalo Bill. Beginning with William F. Cody's birth in 1846 during the Emigration Era, "Pahaska" (Cody's Lakota name meaning 'long hair') chronicles Buffalo Bill's adventurous boyhood on the Great Plains, his career as a Pony Express rider, buffalo hunter, scout, and showman, and his rise to global celebrity with the creation of the Wild West.
Part Three: "Lakota":
"Lakota" begins with the meeting of Nebraska epic poet, John Neihardt, and the Lakota Holy Man, Black Elk, in South Dakota in 1931. A 'telling of a telling of a telling,' "Lakota" musically and dramatically presents Black Elk's recollections to Neihardt of the Indian Wars Era (1860 - 1890), Red Cloud and the Fetterman Massacre, the Battle of Little Big Horn, the deaths of Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull, Lakota travels with Buffalo Bill's Wild West, and the Massacre at Wounded Knee.
Even though completed in a 24 track studio, the first of these epic ballads, "Seekers of the Fleece," were recorded in a tipi in the Colorado Rockies in 1975 with Slim Pickens and Bridger's old Lost Gonzo Band pals John and Jim Inmon, Bob Livingston, Gary P. Nunn and Donnie Dolan. Slim's love of the mountain men brought him to volunteer his talents to narrate "Seekers of the Fleece" and Bridger cherishes the flavor of his unique voice telling Jim Bridger's story. The epic trilogy "A Ballad of the West" is now available in CD format, book format, and downloadable in PDF format (soon to be available in DVD format in 5.1 Dolby Surround Sound!).
Bobby Bridger is singer/songwriter/poet/actor/playwright/author and painter who for three decades has traveled the globe performing a trilogy of one man shows for audiences in America, Canada, Europe, Australia and Russia. He has recorded numerous albums on Monument, RCA and Golden Egg Records and has appeared twice on PBS's "Austin City Limits", on ABC's "Good Morning America", NPR, A &E, and C-Span. He is the composer of "Heal In The Wisdom", the official anthem of the internationally famous Kerrville Folk Festival for 25 years.
Bridger has been an artist-in-residence at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody, WY., the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford, CT., the John G. Neihardt Center in Bancroft, NE. and Yellowstone National Park. Bridger starred in Dale Wasserman's groundbreaking musical, "Shakespeare and The Indians" and was featured with David Carradine and Will Sampson in the drama "Black Elk Speaks." Full company productions of Bridger's "Seekers of the Fleece" ran for eight consecutive summer seasons in Wyoming. He is the author of the award-winning book, "Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing The Wild West," "A Ballad of the West," and has contributed essays to anthologies on western icons Frank Waters and John G. Neihardt as well as numerous magazine and newpaper features. Find out more about Bobby Bridger at his website, www.bobbybridger.com.