I grew up in the late 50s and 60s listening to the country music
of that era. I stuck with country music through the 70s. I made it into the 80s
but, by the late 80s, country music as I knew and loved was headed in a
direction that, with a few exceptions, I wasn’t interested going. So I didn’t.
(Get off my lawn.)
The old west gunfighter and trail ballads, drinking songs, and
revenge songs had an influence on me that was, and still is, every bit as
strong as the impact Louis L’Amour’s books left with me. My lifelong interest,
perhaps fascination bordering on obsession, with everything old west—truth,
legends, and myths alike—have roots in those old cowboy and country songs.
I’m inviting you to read along with me this year as I post one or
two nostalgic-for-me country ballads on the first Wednesday of each month. I
will share a snippet of trivia about each song along with a YouTube video.
Each month, I will include a link back to the previous month’s
article as reference to those songs. The common thread that runs among the
songs I’ve chosen for this musical memory lane excursion is tragic
lost love.
January – Marty Robbins – El Paso and Feleena
February – Faron Young
– TheYellow Bandana
March – Willie Nelson and Ray Charles – Seven Spanish Angels
April – Marty Robbins – San Angelo
May – Billy Walker – Cross the Brazos at Waco
June – Billy Walker – Matamoros
This month’s song is Running
Gun by Marty Robbins.
Running Gun was written by Jim Glaser and Tompall Glaser. Marty Robbins recorded the song in April 1959
and released it in September 1959 on his album Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs.
Running Gun tells the story of a gun-for-hire outlaw who loses the draw against a bounty hunter’s gun. The ballad begins with
the outlaw thinking about Jeannie, the woman he loves and left behind until he reaches the safety of Old Mexico and can send for her to meet him. The
song ends with his dying thoughts of Jeannie, and his regret for causing
Jeannie to waste her life loving a running gun.
In my western romance novel, The Comanchero’s Bride, which,
by the way, was inspired by Marty Robbins’ song Meet Me Tonight in Laredo, I
wrote in a scene that is reminiscent of the confrontation between the ‘running
gun’ outlaw and the bounty hunter. Here is the scene from my novel. (500 words)
Excerpt from The Comanchero’s Bride:
At the livery, Mingo remained in the shadows where he could
see both ways along the street. Opening the wagon doors just wide enough to
allow him to pass through, he eased his way inside. Speaking in a low soothing
tone to his horses, he packed and saddled them under the moonlight coming in
from two windows. Opening half the double doors, he led the two riding horses
out the back, tied them to a corral rail, and returned for the packhorse.
He no more than reached the packhorse when a cold voice in
the shadows stopped him in his tracks.
“Don’t turn around, Valderas.”
Mingo froze. A few more steps and he would have been on the
off side of the packhorse, but where he was, he had no protection.
“I’ve got a good bead right between your shoulders. I know
about your fast draw and the price on your head. I’ve also heard stories about
your throwing knives, so keep your hands where I can see them.”
“You know me. But who are you? What do you want?” Mingo
didn’t care. He knew the challenge from the shadows was a bounty hunter. He
needed the man to talk so he could pinpoint his location.
“I came out of El Paso. A man named Jack added to the price
on your head—dead or alive—and some politician is offering a pretty penny on
top of that to bring in the woman you have with you. He wants her alive.”
From the sound of the man’s voice, he hadn’t moved and was
off to his right. Mingo fought the urge to whirl and fire, but shooting blindly
was not his way. He wouldn’t risk a wild shot that could injure a horse, and
gunfire would bring others into the fray. Shadows were both his enemy and ally,
depending upon how he used it.
“The way’s clear behind you, so back towards the open wagon
door, and keep your hands away from your body. When I heard the talk of a
Mexican man traveling with a white woman, and they were staying at the hotel, I
figured I’d hit pay dirt. I was just supposed to worry you into making a wrong
move. Never thought I’d be the one to catch you.
“I’m taking the woman to El Paso. You, I’m locking up in the
back room of the saloon for safe keeping…unless you give me an excuse to kill
you right now, which I’ve a yearning to do. I can’t miss at this range. It
wouldn’t do my reputation any damage to be the man who took down Mingo
Valderas.”
Now, he knew who he was up against. Earl Johns was vicious
and a killer, a back-shooting coward. Mingo inched backward, buying thinking
time.
“Where’s the woman, Valderas?”
“There is no wom—”
“She’s too close for your comfort.” Isabel’s voice cut
through the night.
The sound of a shotgun hammer pulling back was an angry,
lethal sound that made the hairs on Mingo’s arm prickle.
As a related diversion, you might enjoy this Reddit ‘fan theory’ thread about the songs Big Iron and Running Gun being the same story, but told from the opposing perspectives of Big Iron’s Texas Red and the Arizona Ranger. The fan theories are a stretch, but entertaining, nonetheless.
Until next time,
Kaye Spencer
Lasterday Stories
writing through history one romance upon a time
www.kayespencer.com