Ghost Riders in the Sky — spooky cowboy classic was based on a real-life tragedy

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It was autumn 1889, and a trail boss named Sawyer was driving a thousand cattle up through Crosby County in Texas to the railheads in Kansas, when he and his cowboys stopped for the night atop a mesa. What happened next is disputed, but in the night, for whatever reason, the cattle stampeded, charging off the hill. Two cattlemen were killed, and around 700 animals died. The next year, another cattle drive stopped in the same place. Again, in the night, the cows stampeded. Again, men and beasts plunged to their death.

Thereafter, cowboys took a dim view of Crosby County. Whispers went round. It wasn’t storms or rustlers that spooked the cattle. It was shadowy riders driving them, appearing out of the night and causing chaos. Ghost riders who came from the sky, driven by demons.

For Texans, that’s the origin myth of one of the staples of American song: “(Ghost) Riders in the Sky: A Cowboy Legend”. Stan Jones had been a child in wild Arizona — his parents had been among the first settlers in Cochise County — though he was transplanted to Los Angeles in his youth, and went on to get a master’s in zoology from the University of California, Berkeley. He worked scores of jobs and wrote songs in his spare time. At 12 years old, he said, an old Native American told him the legend of the souls that leave their bodies and haunt the sky, as ghost riders, like the ones who had caused chaos in Texas.

When Jones wrote “Ghost Riders” in 1948, it was in a style called “western music” — “country and western” was an awkward portmanteau covering two very distinct genres. Country music has its roots in folk, while western music has the rhythms of horses trotting, its songs infused with yodels and cries. The rise of the Western movie and the romanticisation of the cowboy meant that through the 1930s and ’40s, western music was a staple of US pop culture.

Nearly 80 years on, Jones’s original version of “Ghost Riders” — recorded with the magnificently named Death Valley Rangers — sounds like a collection of clichés: the chugging rhythm, the refrains of “Yippie-yi-oo/Yippie-yi-yay”, the reverb and echo slathered all over the recording. It’s so studiedly cowboyish that you half expect it to turn into the Rawhide theme halfway through (indeed, Marty Wilde later rolled the two songs together into a medley).

The real winner, though, was Jones. In the wake of his song’s success, he befriended the film director John Ford, and became a dedicated writer of bespoke western music for Ford’s movies. He had created an artificial West in his best known song, and now he was paired with the greatest mythologiser of the cowboy world. Like the man who shot Liberty Valance, he had transcended facts and entered legend.

Let us know your memories of ‘Ghost Riders in the Sky’ in the comments section below

The paperback edition of ‘The Life of a Song: The stories behind 100 of the world’s best-loved songs’, edited by David Cheal and Jan Dalley, is published by Chambers

Music credits: NFM; Better Tomorrow; Warner; The Tyrone Berkeley Company; The Autry Foundation/Varese Sarabande; Elektra; Revega/Mute; Curb; Parlophone; MVE; K-tel; Sony; Fast Draw; Deltasonic

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