"Home
on the Range"
Connections and an "Our
Song"
By Doug Boilesen
This Friends of the Phonograph
story is about "Home on the Range." It's also another example
of how many connections exist for a song (or for that matter anything
since everything has connections).
First, a little history about "Home
on the Range" from Wikipedia.
"Home on the Range" is a classic
western folk song sometimes called the "unofficial anthem" of the
American West. [9][10]. Originating as a poem "in praise of
the prairie" by Dr. Brewster M. Higley of Smith County, Kansas
in 1872 music was later added by Brewster's friend Daniel E. Kelley.
[1]
In 1925 a sheet-music arrangement
found some popularity, and in 1927 Vernon
Dalhart recorded it for Brunswick
Records. California's radio cowboys picked it up from him, and
in 1930 Hollywood's first crooning western star, Ken Maynard, recorded
the song.
The most popular version of the
song was
recorded by Bing Crosby on September 27, 1933, with Lennie Hayton
and his orchestra for Brunswick Records[11] which appeared in the
various charts of the day.[12] This turned a little-known saddle
song into a most renowned western hymn. [1]
I listened to "Home on the Range"
when I was young, especially the version by Gene Autry, but I was
also a fan of Roy Rogers and there were two Home on the Range
records that I know I heard (i.e., "Roy
Rogers and the Sons of the Pioneers" and "Dale
Evans with the Ranch Hands and Mitch Miller's Orchestra.")
Wikipedia's "Home
on the Range" entry and its section "Modern
Usage" identify some artists who recorded this song and also
some references to how it has been used in film and popular culture.
Records by "Frank Sinatra...John Charles Thomas, Connie Francis,
Gene Autry, Burl Ives, Pete Seeger, Johnnie Ray, Slim Whitman, Steve
Lawrence and Tori Amos"; movies like the 1937 comedy The
Awful Truth where it's sung by Irene Dunne and Ralph Bellamy and
the 1948 film Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House where Cary
Grant and Myrna Loy sing a few lines; Willie Nelson, Neil Young, Porky
Pig, Bugs Bunny, Lisa Simpson, John
Denver and many others.
I've heard many versions through the
decades but it was on our family car trips with my wife and two sons
when my own performances of Home on the Range most frequently
took place. It usually began with me singing the song, unaccompanied.
There may have been some rolling of the eyes and perhaps even a few
discouraging words were heard, but in the end at least one of them
joined in on the refrains.
©King Features Syndicate,
Inc. 2006
Bizarro - Home on the
Range by Dan Piraro ©2021
Three other multi-generational family
connections to Home on the Range can also be noted.
The first connects with my mom and a
copy of Home on the Range sheet music that I discovered with
her name "Betty Ann" written on its cover page. I knew she
had taken piano lessons as a child and I remember some old sheet music
in our piano bench when I took piano lessons years later but I don't
remember ever playing this song.
©1935, Calumet Music
Co., Chicago, Ill.
The second connection was with my dad
and a program and menu made for the 1940 Cotesfield High School Junior
Senior Banquet where Dad went to school. The banquet had a cowboy
theme with "Lasso Spuds", "Ridem Cowboy Dessert"
and the "Home on the Range Trio" with "Axel"
on that program as the "R"-anger used to spell out ROUND
UP.
1940 Home on the Range
Junior Senior Banquet with "R-anger" Axel Boilesen
And the third connection, and most memorable,
was when our youngest son Matt was married and "Home on the Range"
was again heard, this time spontaneously performed at the wedding
reception by Matt's grandfather Andy, Matt and myself. It took me
back to our earlier car trips and showed how a song in one family
can have cross generational memories.
That wedding reception rendition is
why hearing Home on the Range now has its time travel trigger
for me making it an Our Song.
It was a heart-felt moment and pure fun.
Andy, Matt and Doug singing
Home on the Range, 2009 at Matt and Tara's Wedding Reception
Connections and relationships are fundamental
to Friends of the Phonograph memories and when I think of Home
on the Range I'm reminded of the line in the movie Interstellar
when Cooper says to his daughter Murph, "We're just here
to be memories for our kids."
"Home on the Range."
This is Our Song...Remember?
LISTEN
- Gene Autry singing Home on the Range
At Home on the Range!
postcard circa 1950s
Courtesy The New Yorker
and Charles Barsotti
WATCH Home
on the Range - ROCKY MOUNTAIN HOLIDAY WITH JOHN DENVER AND THE
MUPPETS, 1983
Credits from Wikipedia
(1) Here is a brief history of this poem/song
as written in Wikipedia via Kansapedia:
Higley's original words are similar
to those of the modern version of the song, but not identical; the
original did not contain the words "on the range".[5] The song was
eventually adopted by ranchers, cowboys, and other western settlers
and spread across the United States in various forms.[7] In 1925,
the song was arranged as sheet music by Texas composer David W. Guion
(1892–1981), who occasionally was credited as the composer.[8] The
song has since gone by a number of names, the most common being "Home
on the Range" and "Western Home".[9] It was officially adopted as
the state song of Kansas on June 30, 1947, and is commonly regarded
as the unofficial anthem of the American West.[9][10]
Cabin of Dr. Brewster Higley VI. Higley
built the cabin in 1875 and it is now The Home on the Range Cabin.
In 1973 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. For
more information read the January 29, 2015 blog by Lynda Beck Fenwick,
The Home on the Range in The
Leavenworth Times., Photo credit: Ammodramus
Dr. Brewster Higley VI
circa 1880's (courtesy Kansas
Historical Society)
The Round-Up", Illustration
from Edison Ad, The Edison Phonograph Monthly, May 1909
(5) Pulver, Florence (1946). "Re: Home
on the Range". The Rotarian. 68 (2): 2–3, 54. Dr. Spaeth accepted this
later Spaeth 1948, p. 205
(6) "Home on the Range". Kansas Historical
Society.
(7) Spaeth, Sigmund Gottfried (1948).
A History of Popular Music in America. New York: Random House. p. 205.
(8) "Kansas Historical Society: Home on
the Range History". Kansas Historical Society. April 2017.
(9) Silber, Irwin, ed. (1967). Songs of
the Great American West. New York: Macmillan. pp. 221–223. OCLC 1268417.
(10) Harris, Cecilia (2014). "A Symbolic
State: Home on the Range" (PDF). Kansas! Magazine. 2014 (Spring): 17–26,
page 19. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 August 2014.
(11) "A Bing Crosby Discography". BING
magazine. International Club Crosby. Retrieved April 18, 2017.
(12) Whitburn, Joel (1986). Pop Memories
1890-1954. Wisconsin: Record Research inc. p. 104. ISBN 0-89820-083-0.
|