As noted in the previous post, the week that turned January into February was a busy one. The morning after attending anniversary ceremonies at the site of the Massacre at Bear River, we packed up and headed to Elko, Nevada, for the
National Cowboy Poetry Gathering. Besides enjoying the poets and musicians from the audience, I was also gathering material for an upcoming feature story for
Saddlebag Dispatches
magazine. The story focuses on the wide variety of cowboy music on offer at the Gathering, “cowboy music” being defined as any damn song a cowboy likes. I had the opportunity to interview (or “sit down with,” in banal journalistic babble) several artists who write, compose, and/or perform music. That included
Jessie Veeder (pictured), a North Dakota rancher who sings about the life with a contemporary twist;
Andy Hedges, a songster who collects and sings old-time, traditional cowboy tunes;
Dave Stamey, widely recognized as one of the best Western songwriters and performers on stage today;
Geno Delafose and his French Rockin’ Boogie zydeco band from the Louisiana prairies; Denise Withnell of Canada’s
Cowboy Celtic band that pays homage to the even-more-ancient roots of many old cowboy songs; Wylie Gustafson of
Wylie and the Wild West—“wild” being the operative word; Montana poet, songwriter, and singer
DW Groethe; and honey-voiced horsewoman
Trinity Seely.And that’s not even counting the many other artists I had neither time nor space to feature. As you can imagine, the variety in the musical offerings at Elko, and everywhere else Western enthusiasts gather, is rich and varied—something and someone for every cowboy (whether cowboy in fact or in spirit) to enjoy.