Annotation:Saddle Old Paint: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
''paid us five dollars in cash and we had nine hundred dollars worth of fun."'' | ''paid us five dollars in cash and we had nine hundred dollars worth of fun."'' | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
After the Oklahoma Cowboys broke up, Sanders continued to play on the radio in Detroit and Cleveland as Chief Redbird and His Tribe, and then in a variety of groups, including an act with his family. After a lifetime of performing | After the Oklahoma Cowboys broke up, Sanders continued to play on the radio in Detroit and Cleveland as Chief Redbird and His Tribe, and then in a variety of groups, including an act with his family. After a lifetime of performing with modest success, he died in 1978. | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
<br> | <br> |
Revision as of 06:04, 31 May 2018
__NOABC__
{{#lst:Saddle Old Paint|abc}}
I was playing them old tunes down at a television station, and the announcer said, "Chief, I bet you made a lot of money with that old fiddle." I said, "Well, quite a little bit." He said, "How much did you make on one setting?" So I said, "One setting, you mean? Well, let's see. It was me and my brother Sam, we was a-playin' for a country square dance, and we made nine hundred and five dollars apiece. "Nine hundred and five dollars apiece," he said, "That's a lot of money!" "Well, yeah, they paid us five dollars in cash and we had nine hundred dollars worth of fun."
After the Oklahoma Cowboys broke up, Sanders continued to play on the radio in Detroit and Cleveland as Chief Redbird and His Tribe, and then in a variety of groups, including an act with his family. After a lifetime of performing with modest success, he died in 1978.
There is a chapter on Chief Redbird in Craig Maki with Keith Cady's book Detroit Country Music: Mountaineers, Cowboys, and Rockablillies (2013, Chapt. 2, "Cherokee Boogie", pp. 15-27),
__NOTITLE__