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Yet grant, o grant, this wish to me O bury me not on the lone prairie." "I've always wished to be laid when I died In a little churchyard on the green hillside By my father's grave, there let me be, O bury me not on the lone prairie." "I wish to lie where a mother's prayer And a sister's tear will mingle there. Where friends can come and weep o ...
Cowboy Songs is the sixteenth album by American singer-songwriter Michael Martin Murphey and his first album of cowboy ... "O Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" – 3:02
O Christmas Tree; O Come All Ye Faithful; O Little Town Of Bethlehem; Oh Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie; Oh Come, Angel Band; Oh Lonesome Me; Oh, What A Dream; Oh, What A Good Thing We Had; The Old Account Was Settled Long Ago; Old Apache Squaw (I'm Just An) Old Chunk Of Coal (But I'll Be A Diamond Someday) Old Doc Brown; Old Fashioned Tree ...
Lone Cowboy: Live & Solo is the twenty-ninth album by American singer-songwriter Michael Martin Murphey, his first solo album, and his third live album. The album was recorded live in October 2008 at the Western Jubilee Warehouse Theater in Colorado Springs , Colorado, and was released January 12, 2010.
Edwin Hubbell Chapin. Edwin Hubbell Chapin (December 29, 1814 – 1880) was an American preacher and editor of the Christian Leader.He was also a poet, responsible for the poem Burial at Sea, which was the origin of a famous folk song, Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie.
Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie is a 1941 American Western film directed by Ray Taylor and written by Sherman L. Lowe and Victor McLeod. The film stars Johnny Mack Brown, Fuzzy Knight, Nell O'Day, Kathryn Adams Doty, Harry Cording and Ernie Adams. The film was released on March 21, 1941, by Universal Pictures. [1] [2] [3]
"Take Me Back To Tulsa" - (Bob Wills/Tommy Duncan) "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" - (Trad. Arr. Moe Bandy) "Don't Fence Me In" - (Cole Porter) "Tumbling Tumbleweeds" - "San Antonio Rose" - (Bob Wills) "I'm An Old Cowhand" - (Johnny Mercer) "Oklahoma Hills" - (Woody Guthrie/Jack Guthrie) "Old Faithful" - (A. Holzman)
Carson Jay Robison was born in Oswego, Kansas, United States.His father was a champion fiddler; his mother played the piano and sang. Robison became a professional musician in the American Midwest at the age of 14, most notably as a backing musician for Victor Records's Wendell Hall on the early 1920s music hall circuit. [2]