NASHVILLE WASN’T SURE ANYONE STILL WANTED COWBOY SONGS. MARTY ROBBINS BET HIS CAREER ON THE OLD WEST ANYWAY. By the late 1950s, country music was changing. Love songs sold. Heartbreak songs climbed the charts. Nashville was learning how to smooth its edges for a wider audience. But Marty Robbins kept hearing hoofbeats. He loved the Old West — the gunfighters, the border towns, the lonely riders, the kind of stories that sounded half history and half dream. To some people, cowboy ballads probably felt like yesterday’s America. Too old. Too dusty. Too far from where radio was headed. Marty did not care. In 1959, he released Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs, an album full of outlaws, danger, doomed love, and desert skies. Then “El Paso” did what nobody could ignore. It crossed from country into pop, won a Grammy, and became one of the most cinematic songs country music ever produced. Marty Robbins did not bring the Old West back because it was safe. He brought it back because he knew some stories do not die. They just wait for the right voice to ride them home.
Nashville Wasn’t Sure Anyone Still Wanted Cowboy Songs. Marty Robbins Bet His Career on the Old West Anyway. By the…