fbpx
Wikipedia

Michael Martin Murphey

Michael Martin Murphey (born March 14, 1945) is an American singer-songwriter. He was one of the founding artists of progressive country.[3] A multiple Grammy nominee, Murphey has six gold albums, including Cowboy Songs, the first album of cowboy music to achieve gold status since Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs by Marty Robbins in 1959. He has recorded the hit singles "Wildfire", "Carolina in the Pines", "What's Forever For", "A Long Line of Love", "What She Wants", "Don't Count the Rainy Days", and "Maybe This Time". Murphey is also the author of New Mexico's state ballad, "The Land of Enchantment". Murphey has become a prominent musical voice for the Western horseman, rancher, and cowboy.[4]

Michael Martin Murphey
Murphey in 2017
Background information
Born (1945-03-14) March 14, 1945 (age 79)[1]
Dallas, Texas, U.S.
GenresProgressive country[2]
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, actor, composer, screen-writer
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar, banjo, piano, harmonica, mandolin
Years active1964–present
LabelsA&M, Epic, Liberty,
Warner Bros.,
Valley Entertainment,
Real West Productions,
Rural Rhythm,
Western Jubilee Recording,
Wildfire Productions
Spouse(s)Diana Vero (1967-1974), Caroline Hogue (1973-1978), Mary Maciukas (1980-2001), Karen McCoy (2003-2015)

Early life edit

Michael Martin Murphey was born on March 14, 1945, to Pink Lavary Murphey and Lois (née Corbett) Murphey, in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas, Texas, where he grew up. He has a brother, Mark, who is three years younger.[5] When he was 6 years old, he started riding horses on his grandfather's and uncle's ranches. Years later he would remember sleeping on his grandfather's porch under the stars, listening to the older man's stories and cowboy songs.

He enjoyed being around these men of the land as they went about their work. These experiences made a deep impression on the young boy.[6] During these early years, he developed a special love for cowboy songs and stories. He was also an avid reader, especially drawn to the books of Mark Twain and William Faulkner. As a youth, he enjoyed writing poetry and loved listening to his uncle's old 78 rpm records, particularly the music of country and folk artists such as Hank Williams, Bob Wills, and Woody Guthrie.

In junior high school he began performing as an amateur, and later as a camp counselor at a summer camp called Sky Ranch. At the age of 17, he took his first "professional" music job, playing western songs around a campfire at a Texas ranch. By the early 1960s, Murphey was playing the clubs in Dallas, performing country music, folk music, and rock music. He won over Texas audiences with his charm and talent, and soon formed a band that developed a significant following in the Dallas area.[4]

Songwriting success edit

After graduating from W. H. Adamson High School in Oak Cliff, Murphey studied Greek at the University of North Texas. As a member of the institution's Folk Music Club, he befriended Steven Fromholz, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Shiva's Headband fiddler Spencer Perskin and Armadillo World Headquarters co-founder Eddie Wilson. Murphey then moved to California, where he studied creative writing and majored in medieval history and literature at the University of California, Los Angeles. He signed a publishing contract with the Sparrow Music company, and soon he made a name for himself in the Los Angeles folk music scene. By 1964, he formed a musical group with an old Texas friend, Michael Nesmith, John London, and John Raines, under the name the Trinity River Boys.

Murphey's first big break came through his friend Michael Nesmith, who had become part of the popular television musical group, The Monkees. Nesmith asked Murphey to write them a song for the next Monkees album, and Murphey composed "What Am I Doing Hangin' Round". The album Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd. sold over five million copies.

Murphey formed the Lewis & Clarke Expedition with Boomer Castleman, and recorded one self-titled album for Colgems Records, the company that also released the Monkees' LPs. They had a modest hit with "I Feel Good (I Feel Bad)". Boomer Castleman went on to find success with his controversial song "Judy Mae" and as the writer and producer of the million selling novelty hit "Telephone Man" for singer Meri Wilson.

In 1968, Murphey moved to Wrightwood, a village in the San Gabriel Mountains adjacent to the Mojave Desert of California to work on his songwriting. Based on the success of his songs, he signed a contract with the Screen Gems company, the publishing arm of Columbia Pictures. Some of his songs were recorded by Flatt and Scruggs and Bobbie Gentry. Kenny Rogers and the First Edition recorded an entire album of Michael Murphey songs called The Ballad of Calico, about a Mojave Desert ghost town.[4]

Murphey wrote some additional songs for The Monkees, but he grew disillusioned with the poor financial rewards and the Southern California music scene.

Austin years edit

In 1971, Murphey returned to Texas and played a pivotal role in launching the progressive country genre[3] with a unique sound that combined his country, rock, and folk influences. It was during this period that Murphey co-wrote "Geronimo's Cadillac" with the lyricist Charles John Quarto, a song about Native American rights that later became an unofficial anthem for the American Indian Movement in the early 1970s.

In 1971, Murphey was signed to A&M Records by Bob Johnston, who discovered him in a Dallas club, the Rubaiyat. Johnston had produced some of the country's most popular recording artists, including Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, and Simon and Garfunkel. In 1972, Johnston produced Murphey's first album Geronimo's Cadillac in Nashville, Tennessee. The sound of the album reflects Murphey's love of country, folk, and blues music. Murphey's early gospel influences are also evident throughout the album. The title track was released as a single, and reached the Top 40 on the US pop charts. In addition to the title track, the album included "Boy from the Country", "What Am I Doin' Hangin' Around?", and "Michael Angelo's Blues". Rolling Stone magazine proclaimed, "On the strength of his first album alone, Michael Murphey is the best new songwriter in the country."[7]

In 1973, Murphey followed up with the album Cosmic Cowboy Souvenir, which continued the urban cowboy theme of the first album. The album included "Cosmic Cowboy, Pt. 1", "Alleys of Austin", and "Rolling Hills".

Throughout this period, Murphey's band included Bob Livingston and Gary P. Nunn, the author of "London Homesick Blues". He performed a number of times at the Armadillo World Headquarters, and his photo was even used for the original cover of Jan Reid's book, The Improbable Rise of Redneck Rock.[8] But Michael Murphey's musical vision was expanding beyond the confines of the outlaw country sound and moving toward a much more ambitious musical tapestry.

"Wildfire" and the Epic years edit

In 1973, Murphey signed to Epic Records and released the album Michael Murphey that same year. Produced by Bob Johnston, the album included the orchestra anthem "Nobody's Gonna Tell Me How To Play My Music", and "Southwestern Pilgrimage".

In 1975, Murphey released his seminal album, Blue Sky – Night Thunder, also produced by Bob Johnston. The album generated two hit singles: "Carolina in the Pines" and his Platinum-certified signature song "Wildfire", a sentimental song about the ghosts of a woman and her horse. As a boy, he first heard from his grandfather the story of a ghost horse rescuing people in the desert. Years later, Murphey had a dream about this ghost horse and wrote the words and music the same day with songwriter Larry Cansler.

In the summer of 1975, "Wildfire" became a chart-topping hit, reaching No. 2 in Cash Box and No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, as well as No. 1 on the Adult Contemporary charts, giving Murphey a new level of commercial success and exposure. It immediately sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc by the R.I.A.A. in July 1975.[9] It eventually surpassed two million in US sales and was awarded a platinum disc by the R.I.A.A. in September 2001. The song's harmonies were supplied by Jeff Hanna and Jimmy Ibbotson from the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and the piano introduction and ending coda played by jazz pianist Jac Murphy.[10] The introduction is based on a piece by the Russian classical composer Alexander Scriabin.

During the late 1970s, he recorded four albums: Swans Against the Sun (1975), Flowing Free Forever (1976), Lone Wolf (1978), and Peaks, Valleys, Honky Tonks & Alleys (1979). The album Swans Against the Sun produced his first country hits "A Mansion on the Hill" and "Cherokee Fiddle", which also became a top ten hit for Johnny Lee. Murphey's friends, John Denver, Willie Nelson, Charlie Daniels, and Steve Weisberg appeared on the album. In 1981, Murphey made his first film appearance in Hard Country, which he cowrote.[11]

To distinguish himself from actor Michael Murphy, the singer began using his middle name for film and music credits. To this day, he is known as Michael Martin Murphey.[12]

Mainstream success edit

In 1982, Murphey signed with Liberty Records and produced two original albums, Michael Martin Murphey and The Heart Never Lies, as well as a compilation of re-recorded versions of his A&M, Epic, and Liberty hits called The Best of Michael Martin Murphey.

In the early 1980s, Murphey had significant commercial success with hits like "Still Taking Chances", "Disenchanted", "Don't Count the Rainy Days", "Will It Be Love by Morning", "Radio Land", "Maybe This Time", and the number one hit "What's Forever For", written by Rafe Van Hoy, which also crossed over to number three at AC Radio and number 19 on the Billboard Hot 100 Pop Singles Chart. In 1983, Murphey was voted Best New Male Vocalist of the Year by the Academy of Country Music. In 1985, his rerecorded version of "Carolina in the Pines" reached the Top 10.

In 1985, Murphey signed a new recording contract with Warner Bros. Records and continued his streak of successful recordings. In 1986, he released the album Tonight We Ride, which included "Rollin' Nowhere", "Fiddlin' Man", and "Santa Fe Cantina". In 1987, he released the album Americana, which included "Once Upon a Time", "My Darling Wherever You Are", and another number one country hit with the song "A Long Line of Love". That same album produced the hit single "A Face in the Crowd" with Holly Dunn, which was nominated for a Grammy Award.

In 1988, Murphey released the album River of Time, which produced three hit singles that reached number three on the charts: Jesse Winchester's "I'm Going to Miss You, Girl", his own "From the Word Go", and "Talkin' to the Wrong Man", which featured his son Ryan. In 1989, Murphey closed out a successful decade of recording with the album Land of Enchantment, which contained "Never Givin' Up on Love", "Got to Pay the Fiddler", "Route 66", and "Land of Enchantment", which became New Mexico's state ballad.

Cowboy songs edit

Despite the impressive critical and commercial success he achieved throughout the 1980s, Murphey's authentic creativity began to gravitate towards the Western music that appealed to him as a child coming of age in Texas. As early as 1985, Murphey performed with the New Mexico Symphony in a show called A Night in the American West, which led to many subsequent performances with American and Canadian symphonies, including the National Symphony Orchestra of Washington, D.C. These western shows, and the songs he was writing and recording at the time, presaged a major change in Murphey's career.

In 1990, he released the album Cowboy Songs. The album contained Murphey's versions of old cowboy songs from the public domain such as "Tumbling Tumbleweeds", "The Old Chisholm Trail", the beautiful "Spanish is the Loving Tongue", the classic "The Streets of Laredo", and his tip of the hat to Roy Rogers, "Happy Trails". The album contained Murphey's own "Cowboy Logic".

Murphey was reluctant to promote the project, but he eventually released "Cowboy Logic" as a single and it quickly became a hit. Soon after, the album caught on and sold much better than expected. Cowboy Songs earned widespread praise from country and folk music critics, such as Jack Hurst from the Chicago Tribune who wrote, "[This is] not only one of the finest albums of [the] year but also one of the finest of the last decade. Its 22 riveting cuts represent a labor of not only love but also scholarship; it raises a cult musical genre to the level of mainstream art. Cowboy Songs went on to achieve Gold status, the first western album to do so since Marty Robbins' No. 1 Cowboy in 1980.

In 1991, Murphey followed up with two additional albums of cowboy songs. His innovative concept album, Cowboy Christmas: Cowboy Songs II, contained versions of traditional and original western Christmas songs, including "The Christmas Trail", "The Cowboy Christmas Ball", and "Two-Step 'Round the Christmas Tree". An accompanying video was later released of one of Murphey's Cowboy Christmas Ball concerts, which included many of these songs. Cowboy Songs III contained a mix of traditional and original cowboy songs, including a virtual duet with Marty Robbins, "Big Iron", which used an early Marty Robbins' vocal track.

Cowboy Songs and its follow-up albums were so successful that they inspired the formation of Warner Western, a new subsidiary label of Warner Bros. Records devoted to western music and cowboy poetry.[13] In 1992, Warner Western issued albums by Don Edwards, Waddie Mitchell, and the Sons of the San Joaquin. All three records were produced by Murphey.

In 1995, Murphey further demonstrated his musical ambitions with the concept album Sagebrush Symphony, recorded live with the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra, Herb Jeffries, and the Sons of the San Joaquin. In 1997, he released the album The Horse Legends, a musical tribute to this majestic animal. The album included several new Murphey songs, a new version of "Wildfire", and covers of some well-known songs, such as Dan Fogelberg's "Run for the Roses" and Gordon Lightfoot's "The Pony Man".

In 1998, Murphey left Warner Bros. Records and started his own record label, WestFest/Real West Productions. That year, he released Cowboy Songs Four, which contained both traditional and original cowboy songs, including "Utah Carroll", "Little Joe, the Wrangler", and Murphey's "Song from Lonesome Dove". In 1999, he released Acoustic Christmas Carols: Cowboy Christmas II, which included Murphey's quiet renditions of traditional Christmas songs, and featured his son Ryan and daughter Laura.

In 2001, Murphey released a compilation of some of his best-loved songs, Playing Favorites, which included rerecorded versions of such songs as "Carolina in the Pines", "Cherokee Fiddle", "Cowboy Logic", "What's Forever For", and "Wildfire". He followed this up in 2002 with Cowboy Classics: Playing Favorites II, which again included re-recorded versions of some of his best-loved cowboy songs. That same year, Murphey released Cowboy Christmas III, which contained a new original song "The Kill Pen", as well as original cowboy poetry written and recited by his daughter Karen. In 2004, Murphey released Live at Billy Bob's Texas, and in 2006, he released Heartland Cowboy: Cowboy Songs, Vol. 5.

Murphey has championed Western cowboy culture and the wilderness. In 1986 he founded WestFest, an annual music festival held at Copper Mountain, Colorado that celebrates western art and culture. Molly Carpenter, writing in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, noted, "Murphey's love for the American West clearly comes through in his songs, painted with vivid images of the rugged mountains and vast deserts of southwest landscapes, all evidence of his travels from his native Texas to California's Mojave Desert, Colorado's Rockies and the wild diversity of New Mexico, his home for the past 10 years."[14]

During the 1990s, in a further effort to preserve the traditions of the West, Murphey led a group of performers—including cowboy poet Waddie Mitchell and western music historian and troubadour Don Edwards — in a series of improvisational concerts called Cowboy Logic, which toured throughout the United States, including such unlikely locations as New York City and Las Vegas. Waddy Mitchell is the co-founder of the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering. Murphey met Mitchell there in 1986, the first such event he had ever attended. He later described the transforming event as "a religious experience ... I'd been collecting cowboy music and performing it among my friends. But when I saw a lot of other guys like me and also women performing this music and enjoying each other's company, it was the most important thing that had happened to me in years in my musical life."[15]

On May 22, 2007, he made a rare appearance in New York City to perform "Wildfire" on the Late Show with David Letterman. The song had become one of Letterman's favorites and was included regularly on the show. That same month, Murphey organized and performed for John Wayne's 100th Birthday Celebration, with the approval of the John Wayne Family. Murphey was commended by the White House for his activities. Later that year, he released three DVDs detailing his love of the cowboy ways, life, and preservation of the American West traditions. The DVDs document his trail rides, cattle drives, and Cowboy Poetry gatherings. One of Murphey's Cowboy Christmas Ball concerts, recorded in Oklahoma City, was included as a fourth DVD in the combination CD/DVD set.

In December 2007, Murphey released "A Soldier's Christmas" based on a poem by Michael E. Marks, a soldier serving in Iraq. Marks sent the poem to Murphey, who was so moved by the poem he sought permission to set it to music, which he did. He started including the song in all his concerts, including his Cowboy Christmas Ball concerts, to long standing ovations after its performance, which prompted its release in December 2007.

Bluegrass years edit

 
Michael Martin Murphey at the Sportsman's Texaco in Lake City, Colorado, July 2, 2009

In February 2009, Murphey released Buckaroo Blue Grass, which marked a return to his bluegrass musical roots. Murphey's love of Bluegrass music dates back to when he sang lead vocals with the Earl Scruggs Band. Over the years, his songs have been recorded by Bluegrass artists such as Flatt and Scruggs, Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver, the Country Gentlemen, and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.

On Buckaroo Bluegrass, Murphey offers new versions of his famous Bluegrass songs, such as "Carolina in the Pines", "Fiddlin' Man", "Lost River", and "What Am I Doing Hanging Around". Murphey also includes new Bluegrass versions of several of his classics, such as "Boy from the Country", "Dancing in the Meadow", and "Healing Spring". The album includes two new songs, "Close to the Land", the theme song of the PBS documentary television series America's Heartland, and "Lone Cowboy", a song that reflects Murphey's experiences as a solo artist performing throughout the West at music festivals, cowboy gatherings, historical theaters, and trail rides. Michael's son, Ryan, produced the album, and added acoustic guitar and vocals.[16]

In February 2010, Murphey released a follow-up album, Buckaroo Blue Grass II – Riding Song, which follows the production approach of the first album.[17]

In May 2011, Murphey gave a benefit concert at the Prairie Rose Chuckwagon Supper near Benton, Kansas to help save the cabin where Brewster Higley wrote the song "Home on the Range", Kansas' state song. "He might have been living anywhere," Murphey noted, "but he was inspired by that place. This song gives focus to the heritage of the American West, to the prairie and its songs, poems and literature." Murphey made his first pilgrimage to the cabin prior to the concert, where he performed the song.[18]

 
Jonathan Edwards, Michael Martin Murphey, and Gary Roller at the Flying Monkey, Plymouth, NH, October 13, 2012

In June 2011, Murphey released Tall Grass & Cool Water, subtitled Cowboy Songs VI and Buckaroo Blue Grass III. The CD includes two classics from the Sons of the Pioneers, "Cool Water" and "Way Out There", as well as other Western classics such as "Texas Cowboy", "Santa Fe Trail", and "The James Gang Trilogy". Murphey closes out the album with a beautiful duet with Carin Mari, "Springtime in the Rockies".[19]

On September 4, 2011, Murphey performed at the wedding of long-time friend David Lauren and Lauren Bush, the niece of former President George W. Bush, at Ralph Lauren's Double RL Ranch near Ridgway, Colorado. The event was called "America's Royal Wedding". Murphey, who helped Ralph Lauren find the ranch they now call home, has been friends with the Lauren family for nearly 30 years. "I go there to write songs from time to time", Murphey noted, "It's the most spectacular ranch in the Rockies." At David Lauren's request, Murphey performed "Vanishing Breed" for the couple's first dance. Murphey wrote the song at a cabin on the Lauren ranch in the 1980s. Murphey and his Rio Grande Band played nearly six hours for the Lauren and Bush families.[20]

In January 2012, Tall Grass & Cool Water became the number 1 album on the Top 20 Western Music Albums Chart of the Western Music Association.[21]

In July 2013, Murphey released Red River Drifter, his first album of all new original songs in 20 years.[22] The album reached number three on the Billboard Top Bluegrass Albums chart.[23] He was named among the top 50 Greatest Country & Western singers by American Cowboy magazine.[24]

Legacy edit

Murphey has had a successful music career that has spanned four decades and included such musical genres as folk, country, rock, popular, western, and cowboy music. As a singer, songwriter, and producer, he has contributed some of the best-loved songs of his generation. His songs have been recorded by Johnny Cash, Kenny Rogers, John Denver, Cher, Lyle Lovett, Flatt and Scruggs, Claire Hamill, Hoyt Axton, Roger Miller, Bobbie Gentry, Michael Nesmith, and the Monkees. Murphey is the narrator of the short film Spirit of the Cowgirl at the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth, Texas

Murphey was so pivotal to the foundation of progressive country that one of the many names for the genre, "Cosmic Cowboy music", was taken from one of Murphey's songs.[3] Murphey played a major role in the resurrection of the cowboy song genre, recording and producing some of the most successful cowboy music of the past forty years. His album Cowboy Songs inspired a whole series of albums. For his accomplishments in the Western and Cowboy Music field, Murphey received five awards from the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, formerly known as the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City.

Political views edit

Murphey has long been a champion of the western wilderness and wildlife, and has lent his support to various political causes associated with western culture and ideals. Early in his career, for example, he supported the Native American rights movement, which used his song, "Geronimo's Cadillac", as an anthem. In 1986, he founded an annual festival, WestFest, celebrating western art and culture in an effort to preserve the traditions of the West. He has been a long-time supporter of the conservation movement, attempting to find a middle ground between ranchers and activists on opposite sides of environmental issues.[25]

In the past decade, Murphey has focused his political energies on the issue of private property rights—especially in the western and southwestern United States. In 2006, he released "The Ballad of Kit Laney" in support of the New Mexico rancher's fight with the United States Forest Service over water rights. Laney was imprisoned for assault after standing up to federal agents who seized his ranch in 2004. Murphey helped form the Farmers' Freedom Agriculture Alliance and scheduled a benefit—The Farmers' Freedom Concert—to protest unfair land acquisitions across the western states.[25][26] Murphey's opposition to the political forces threatening the American family farmer and rancher transcends political party affiliation. "I can tell you," Murphey observed, "that politics—doesn't matter whether it's Democrats or Republicans—have been involved with big agribusiness for a long, long time."[27]

Honors and awards edit

  • 2023 Best Original Western Song "Blues for 66" Ryan Murphey and Michael Martin Murphey from the album Road Beyond the View
  • 2021 Texas Trail of Fame Induction into the Fort Worth Trail of Fame and placement of marker in from to Billy Bob's Texas
  • 2021 Lone Star Film Festival - Stephen Bruton Award Prestigious Lone StarFilm Festival honor for significant impact in film and TV by a musical artist
  • 2019 Wrangler Award Induction into the Cowboy Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Awards
  • 2009 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Bluegrass Album, for Buckaroo Blue Grass
  • 2009 Texas Country Music Hall of Fame
  • 2008 National Day of the Cowboy "Cowboy Keeper Award".
  • 2007 National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum Wrangler Award for Best Song, for "Long and Lonesome Road to Dalhart"
  • 2007 Texas Music Award for Best Song, for "Close the Land (America's Heartland)"
  • 2007 Letter of Commendation from the President of the United States, for Murphey's involvement producing John Wayne's 100th Birthday Celebration
  • 2004 Western Music Association Hall of Fame
  • 2000 The New Mexico Distinguished Public Service Lifetime Achievement Award
  • 1999 Academy of Western Artists Award for Best Album, for Cowboy Songs Four[28]
  • 1998 The Golden Smokey Award for Outstanding Service to the U.S. National Park Service
  • 1997 Will Rogers Cowboy Philosopher Award, Will Rogers Memorial Commission
  • 1982 Academy of Country Music Top New Male Vocalist
  • 1972 Rolling Stone Magazine Best New Singer-Songwriter in the Nation, for the album Geronimo's Cadillac
  • American Quarter Horse Association Lifetime Honorary Member
  • CMA Award Nominations (three times)
  • BMI Platinum Record, for the song "Wildfire"
  • BMI Gold Record, for the album Cowboy Songs, the first Gold album in Cowboy music since Marty Robbins
  • RIAA Certified Gold Records for "Blue Sky, Night Thunder" and "Cowboy Songs"
  • King of the Cowboys Award for Outstanding Contribution to Western Family Entertainment by the Cody Order of Scouts, State of Nebraska
  • Cody Order of Scouts, Nebraska
  • Nebraska Country Music Hall of Fame
  • Colorado Country Music Hall of Fame
  • Western Heritage Awards from the Cowboy Hall of Fame (six-time winner)
  • International Charley Russell Western Heritage Society Red Sash Award for Outstanding Service in Preservation of Western Heritage, 1999–2000

Discography edit

References edit

  1. ^ McCall, Michael; Rumble, John; Kingsbury, Paul (2012). The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Oxford University Press. p. 360. ISBN 978-0-19-992083-9. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
  2. ^ Moser, Margaret (August 12, 2011). "Michael Martin Murphey, Brad Dunn & Ellis Country, The Duqaines, Wheeler Brothers, Jubal's Lawyer, and T Jarod Bonta". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved July 24, 2023. a face on Austin's Mount Rushmore of progressive country, the now Colorado-based Murphey is a Western storyteller in the Marty Robbins fashion
  3. ^ a b c Patterson, Rob (September 1, 2013). "Q&A: MICHAEL MARTIN MURPHEY". Lone Star Magazine. Retrieved July 24, 2023. And beyond all of Murphey's above achievements, there is also the role he played in launching the Austin progressive country scene in the 1970s. So pivotal a role, in fact, that the Capital City's first local musical movement to have substantial national impact even took its nickname, "Cosmic Cowboy music," from a Murphey song.
  4. ^ a b c Eder, Bruce. "Michael Martin Murphey". Allmusic. Retrieved November 21, 2007.
  5. ^ "Pink Lavary Murphey profile". RootsWeb. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  6. ^ Robinson, Lana. "Michael Martin Murphey" in Texas Agriculture (September 2, 2005).
  7. ^ . Michael Martin Murphey Official Website. Archived from the original on November 8, 2011. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  8. ^ News reports at the time suggested that Murphey was upset that his image was used on the book's cover, and his photo was removed in subsequent editions.
  9. ^ Murrells, Joseph (1978). The Book of Golden Discs (2nd ed.). London, UK: Barrie and Jenkins Ltd. p. 361. ISBN 0-214-20512-6.
  10. ^ Profile January 13, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, westernjubilee.com; accessed March 14, 2017.
  11. ^ Erickson, Hal. "Hard Country". AllMovie. Retrieved November 28, 2013.
  12. ^ Michael Murphy the actor co-starred with Woody Allen in several films, including Annie Hall and Manhattan.
  13. ^ Sikes, O.J. "Michael Martin Murphey profile". Western Music. Archived from the original on April 16, 2013. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  14. ^ Carpenter, Molly. Richmond Times-Dispatch
  15. ^ Holden, Stephen. "Pop/Jazz; Cowboy Revue in the Sky At Rainbow and Stars" in The New York Times, May 22, 1992.
  16. ^ Tackett, Travis. "Michael Martin Murphey will release "Buckaroo Blue Grass" on Rural Rhythm". Bluegrass Journal. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  17. ^ Poet, J. "Buckaroo Blue Grass II – Riding Song". Allmusic. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  18. ^ Tanner, Beccy. "Michael Martin Murphey to help save historic cabin". The Wichita Eagle. Retrieved November 8, 2011.
  19. ^ Jurek, Thom. "Tall Grass & Cool Water". Allmusic. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  20. ^ "Michael Martin Murphey Special Musical Guest". Country Music News International. Retrieved September 21, 2011.
  21. ^ "#1 for Michael Martin Murphey's Tall Grass and Cool Water". Cybergrass. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
  22. ^ Jurek, Thom. "Red River Drifter". AllMusic.com. Retrieved November 26, 2013.
  23. ^ "Red River Drifter". Billboard. Retrieved November 26, 2013.
  24. ^ "50 Greatest Country & Western Singers". American Cowboy. Legends Issue: 12–14. 2013.
  25. ^ a b Johnson, Anne. "Michael Martin Murphey". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  26. ^ Woodka, Chris. "Murphey settles on spread in Beulah". Chieftain. Retrieved July 27, 2011.
  27. ^ McGee, David. "Murph Rides Again". The Bluegrass Special. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  28. ^ "Western Music Awards". Academy of Western Artists. Retrieved November 12, 2011.

External links edit

  • Michael Martin Murphey's Official Website

Archival Materials edit

  • Michael Martin Murphey papers, 1982–2014, at Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University

michael, martin, murphey, born, march, 1945, american, singer, songwriter, founding, artists, progressive, country, multiple, grammy, nominee, murphey, gold, albums, including, cowboy, songs, first, album, cowboy, music, achieve, gold, status, since, gunfighte. Michael Martin Murphey born March 14 1945 is an American singer songwriter He was one of the founding artists of progressive country 3 A multiple Grammy nominee Murphey has six gold albums including Cowboy Songs the first album of cowboy music to achieve gold status since Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs by Marty Robbins in 1959 He has recorded the hit singles Wildfire Carolina in the Pines What s Forever For A Long Line of Love What She Wants Don t Count the Rainy Days and Maybe This Time Murphey is also the author of New Mexico s state ballad The Land of Enchantment Murphey has become a prominent musical voice for the Western horseman rancher and cowboy 4 Michael Martin MurpheyMurphey in 2017Background informationBorn 1945 03 14 March 14 1945 age 79 1 Dallas Texas U S GenresProgressive country 2 Occupation s Singer songwriter actor composer screen writerInstrument s Vocals guitar banjo piano harmonica mandolinYears active1964 presentLabelsA amp M Epic Liberty Warner Bros Valley Entertainment Real West Productions Rural Rhythm Western Jubilee Recording Wildfire ProductionsSpouse s Diana Vero 1967 1974 Caroline Hogue 1973 1978 Mary Maciukas 1980 2001 Karen McCoy 2003 2015 Contents 1 Early life 2 Songwriting success 3 Austin years 4 Wildfire and the Epic years 5 Mainstream success 6 Cowboy songs 7 Bluegrass years 8 Legacy 9 Political views 10 Honors and awards 11 Discography 12 References 13 External links 13 1 Archival MaterialsEarly life editMichael Martin Murphey was born on March 14 1945 to Pink Lavary Murphey and Lois nee Corbett Murphey in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas Texas where he grew up He has a brother Mark who is three years younger 5 When he was 6 years old he started riding horses on his grandfather s and uncle s ranches Years later he would remember sleeping on his grandfather s porch under the stars listening to the older man s stories and cowboy songs He enjoyed being around these men of the land as they went about their work These experiences made a deep impression on the young boy 6 During these early years he developed a special love for cowboy songs and stories He was also an avid reader especially drawn to the books of Mark Twain and William Faulkner As a youth he enjoyed writing poetry and loved listening to his uncle s old 78 rpm records particularly the music of country and folk artists such as Hank Williams Bob Wills and Woody Guthrie In junior high school he began performing as an amateur and later as a camp counselor at a summer camp called Sky Ranch At the age of 17 he took his first professional music job playing western songs around a campfire at a Texas ranch By the early 1960s Murphey was playing the clubs in Dallas performing country music folk music and rock music He won over Texas audiences with his charm and talent and soon formed a band that developed a significant following in the Dallas area 4 Songwriting success editThis section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Michael Martin Murphey news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message After graduating from W H Adamson High School in Oak Cliff Murphey studied Greek at the University of North Texas As a member of the institution s Folk Music Club he befriended Steven Fromholz Ray Wylie Hubbard Shiva s Headband fiddler Spencer Perskin and Armadillo World Headquarters co founder Eddie Wilson Murphey then moved to California where he studied creative writing and majored in medieval history and literature at the University of California Los Angeles He signed a publishing contract with the Sparrow Music company and soon he made a name for himself in the Los Angeles folk music scene By 1964 he formed a musical group with an old Texas friend Michael Nesmith John London and John Raines under the name the Trinity River Boys Murphey s first big break came through his friend Michael Nesmith who had become part of the popular television musical group The Monkees Nesmith asked Murphey to write them a song for the next Monkees album and Murphey composed What Am I Doing Hangin Round The album Pisces Aquarius Capricorn amp Jones Ltd sold over five million copies Murphey formed the Lewis amp Clarke Expedition with Boomer Castleman and recorded one self titled album for Colgems Records the company that also released the Monkees LPs They had a modest hit with I Feel Good I Feel Bad Boomer Castleman went on to find success with his controversial song Judy Mae and as the writer and producer of the million selling novelty hit Telephone Man for singer Meri Wilson In 1968 Murphey moved to Wrightwood a village in the San Gabriel Mountains adjacent to the Mojave Desert of California to work on his songwriting Based on the success of his songs he signed a contract with the Screen Gems company the publishing arm of Columbia Pictures Some of his songs were recorded by Flatt and Scruggs and Bobbie Gentry Kenny Rogers and the First Edition recorded an entire album of Michael Murphey songs called The Ballad of Calico about a Mojave Desert ghost town 4 Murphey wrote some additional songs for The Monkees but he grew disillusioned with the poor financial rewards and the Southern California music scene Austin years editIn 1971 Murphey returned to Texas and played a pivotal role in launching the progressive country genre 3 with a unique sound that combined his country rock and folk influences It was during this period that Murphey co wrote Geronimo s Cadillac with the lyricist Charles John Quarto a song about Native American rights that later became an unofficial anthem for the American Indian Movement in the early 1970s In 1971 Murphey was signed to A amp M Records by Bob Johnston who discovered him in a Dallas club the Rubaiyat Johnston had produced some of the country s most popular recording artists including Bob Dylan Johnny Cash and Simon and Garfunkel In 1972 Johnston produced Murphey s first album Geronimo s Cadillac in Nashville Tennessee The sound of the album reflects Murphey s love of country folk and blues music Murphey s early gospel influences are also evident throughout the album The title track was released as a single and reached the Top 40 on the US pop charts In addition to the title track the album included Boy from the Country What Am I Doin Hangin Around and Michael Angelo s Blues Rolling Stone magazine proclaimed On the strength of his first album alone Michael Murphey is the best new songwriter in the country 7 In 1973 Murphey followed up with the album Cosmic Cowboy Souvenir which continued the urban cowboy theme of the first album The album included Cosmic Cowboy Pt 1 Alleys of Austin and Rolling Hills Throughout this period Murphey s band included Bob Livingston and Gary P Nunn the author of London Homesick Blues He performed a number of times at the Armadillo World Headquarters and his photo was even used for the original cover of Jan Reid s book The Improbable Rise of Redneck Rock 8 But Michael Murphey s musical vision was expanding beyond the confines of the outlaw country sound and moving toward a much more ambitious musical tapestry Wildfire and the Epic years editIn 1973 Murphey signed to Epic Records and released the album Michael Murphey that same year Produced by Bob Johnston the album included the orchestra anthem Nobody s Gonna Tell Me How To Play My Music and Southwestern Pilgrimage In 1975 Murphey released his seminal album Blue Sky Night Thunder also produced by Bob Johnston The album generated two hit singles Carolina in the Pines and his Platinum certified signature song Wildfire a sentimental song about the ghosts of a woman and her horse As a boy he first heard from his grandfather the story of a ghost horse rescuing people in the desert Years later Murphey had a dream about this ghost horse and wrote the words and music the same day with songwriter Larry Cansler In the summer of 1975 Wildfire became a chart topping hit reaching No 2 in Cash Box and No 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart as well as No 1 on the Adult Contemporary charts giving Murphey a new level of commercial success and exposure It immediately sold over one million copies and was awarded a gold disc by the R I A A in July 1975 9 It eventually surpassed two million in US sales and was awarded a platinum disc by the R I A A in September 2001 The song s harmonies were supplied by Jeff Hanna and Jimmy Ibbotson from the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and the piano introduction and ending coda played by jazz pianist Jac Murphy 10 The introduction is based on a piece by the Russian classical composer Alexander Scriabin During the late 1970s he recorded four albums Swans Against the Sun 1975 Flowing Free Forever 1976 Lone Wolf 1978 and Peaks Valleys Honky Tonks amp Alleys 1979 The album Swans Against the Sun produced his first country hits A Mansion on the Hill and Cherokee Fiddle which also became a top ten hit for Johnny Lee Murphey s friends John Denver Willie Nelson Charlie Daniels and Steve Weisberg appeared on the album In 1981 Murphey made his first film appearance in Hard Country which he cowrote 11 To distinguish himself from actor Michael Murphy the singer began using his middle name for film and music credits To this day he is known as Michael Martin Murphey 12 Mainstream success editThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Michael Martin Murphey news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message In 1982 Murphey signed with Liberty Records and produced two original albums Michael Martin Murphey and The Heart Never Lies as well as a compilation of re recorded versions of his A amp M Epic and Liberty hits called The Best of Michael Martin Murphey In the early 1980s Murphey had significant commercial success with hits like Still Taking Chances Disenchanted Don t Count the Rainy Days Will It Be Love by Morning Radio Land Maybe This Time and the number one hit What s Forever For written by Rafe Van Hoy which also crossed over to number three at AC Radio and number 19 on the Billboard Hot 100 Pop Singles Chart In 1983 Murphey was voted Best New Male Vocalist of the Year by the Academy of Country Music In 1985 his rerecorded version of Carolina in the Pines reached the Top 10 In 1985 Murphey signed a new recording contract with Warner Bros Records and continued his streak of successful recordings In 1986 he released the album Tonight We Ride which included Rollin Nowhere Fiddlin Man and Santa Fe Cantina In 1987 he released the album Americana which included Once Upon a Time My Darling Wherever You Are and another number one country hit with the song A Long Line of Love That same album produced the hit single A Face in the Crowd with Holly Dunn which was nominated for a Grammy Award In 1988 Murphey released the album River of Time which produced three hit singles that reached number three on the charts Jesse Winchester s I m Going to Miss You Girl his own From the Word Go and Talkin to the Wrong Man which featured his son Ryan In 1989 Murphey closed out a successful decade of recording with the album Land of Enchantment which contained Never Givin Up on Love Got to Pay the Fiddler Route 66 and Land of Enchantment which became New Mexico s state ballad Cowboy songs editThis section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Michael Martin Murphey news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Despite the impressive critical and commercial success he achieved throughout the 1980s Murphey s authentic creativity began to gravitate towards the Western music that appealed to him as a child coming of age in Texas As early as 1985 Murphey performed with the New Mexico Symphony in a show called A Night in the American West which led to many subsequent performances with American and Canadian symphonies including the National Symphony Orchestra of Washington D C These western shows and the songs he was writing and recording at the time presaged a major change in Murphey s career In 1990 he released the album Cowboy Songs The album contained Murphey s versions of old cowboy songs from the public domain such as Tumbling Tumbleweeds The Old Chisholm Trail the beautiful Spanish is the Loving Tongue the classic The Streets of Laredo and his tip of the hat to Roy Rogers Happy Trails The album contained Murphey s own Cowboy Logic Murphey was reluctant to promote the project but he eventually released Cowboy Logic as a single and it quickly became a hit Soon after the album caught on and sold much better than expected Cowboy Songs earned widespread praise from country and folk music critics such as Jack Hurst from the Chicago Tribune who wrote This is not only one of the finest albums of the year but also one of the finest of the last decade Its 22 riveting cuts represent a labor of not only love but also scholarship it raises a cult musical genre to the level of mainstream art Cowboy Songs went on to achieve Gold status the first western album to do so since Marty Robbins No 1 Cowboy in 1980 In 1991 Murphey followed up with two additional albums of cowboy songs His innovative concept album Cowboy Christmas Cowboy Songs II contained versions of traditional and original western Christmas songs including The Christmas Trail The Cowboy Christmas Ball and Two Step Round the Christmas Tree An accompanying video was later released of one of Murphey s Cowboy Christmas Ball concerts which included many of these songs Cowboy Songs III contained a mix of traditional and original cowboy songs including a virtual duet with Marty Robbins Big Iron which used an early Marty Robbins vocal track Cowboy Songs and its follow up albums were so successful that they inspired the formation of Warner Western a new subsidiary label of Warner Bros Records devoted to western music and cowboy poetry 13 In 1992 Warner Western issued albums by Don Edwards Waddie Mitchell and the Sons of the San Joaquin All three records were produced by Murphey In 1995 Murphey further demonstrated his musical ambitions with the concept album Sagebrush Symphony recorded live with the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra Herb Jeffries and the Sons of the San Joaquin In 1997 he released the album The Horse Legends a musical tribute to this majestic animal The album included several new Murphey songs a new version of Wildfire and covers of some well known songs such as Dan Fogelberg s Run for the Roses and Gordon Lightfoot s The Pony Man In 1998 Murphey left Warner Bros Records and started his own record label WestFest Real West Productions That year he released Cowboy Songs Four which contained both traditional and original cowboy songs including Utah Carroll Little Joe the Wrangler and Murphey s Song from Lonesome Dove In 1999 he released Acoustic Christmas Carols Cowboy Christmas II which included Murphey s quiet renditions of traditional Christmas songs and featured his son Ryan and daughter Laura In 2001 Murphey released a compilation of some of his best loved songs Playing Favorites which included rerecorded versions of such songs as Carolina in the Pines Cherokee Fiddle Cowboy Logic What s Forever For and Wildfire He followed this up in 2002 with Cowboy Classics Playing Favorites II which again included re recorded versions of some of his best loved cowboy songs That same year Murphey released Cowboy Christmas III which contained a new original song The Kill Pen as well as original cowboy poetry written and recited by his daughter Karen In 2004 Murphey released Live at Billy Bob s Texas and in 2006 he released Heartland Cowboy Cowboy Songs Vol 5 Murphey has championed Western cowboy culture and the wilderness In 1986 he founded WestFest an annual music festival held at Copper Mountain Colorado that celebrates western art and culture Molly Carpenter writing in the Richmond Times Dispatch noted Murphey s love for the American West clearly comes through in his songs painted with vivid images of the rugged mountains and vast deserts of southwest landscapes all evidence of his travels from his native Texas to California s Mojave Desert Colorado s Rockies and the wild diversity of New Mexico his home for the past 10 years 14 During the 1990s in a further effort to preserve the traditions of the West Murphey led a group of performers including cowboy poet Waddie Mitchell and western music historian and troubadour Don Edwards in a series of improvisational concerts called Cowboy Logic which toured throughout the United States including such unlikely locations as New York City and Las Vegas Waddy Mitchell is the co founder of the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering Murphey met Mitchell there in 1986 the first such event he had ever attended He later described the transforming event as a religious experience I d been collecting cowboy music and performing it among my friends But when I saw a lot of other guys like me and also women performing this music and enjoying each other s company it was the most important thing that had happened to me in years in my musical life 15 On May 22 2007 he made a rare appearance in New York City to perform Wildfire on the Late Show with David Letterman The song had become one of Letterman s favorites and was included regularly on the show That same month Murphey organized and performed for John Wayne s 100th Birthday Celebration with the approval of the John Wayne Family Murphey was commended by the White House for his activities Later that year he released three DVDs detailing his love of the cowboy ways life and preservation of the American West traditions The DVDs document his trail rides cattle drives and Cowboy Poetry gatherings One of Murphey s Cowboy Christmas Ball concerts recorded in Oklahoma City was included as a fourth DVD in the combination CD DVD set In December 2007 Murphey released A Soldier s Christmas based on a poem by Michael E Marks a soldier serving in Iraq Marks sent the poem to Murphey who was so moved by the poem he sought permission to set it to music which he did He started including the song in all his concerts including his Cowboy Christmas Ball concerts to long standing ovations after its performance which prompted its release in December 2007 Bluegrass years edit nbsp Michael Martin Murphey at the Sportsman s Texaco in Lake City Colorado July 2 2009 In February 2009 Murphey released Buckaroo Blue Grass which marked a return to his bluegrass musical roots Murphey s love of Bluegrass music dates back to when he sang lead vocals with the Earl Scruggs Band Over the years his songs have been recorded by Bluegrass artists such as Flatt and Scruggs Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver the Country Gentlemen and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band On Buckaroo Bluegrass Murphey offers new versions of his famous Bluegrass songs such as Carolina in the Pines Fiddlin Man Lost River and What Am I Doing Hanging Around Murphey also includes new Bluegrass versions of several of his classics such as Boy from the Country Dancing in the Meadow and Healing Spring The album includes two new songs Close to the Land the theme song of the PBS documentary television series America s Heartland and Lone Cowboy a song that reflects Murphey s experiences as a solo artist performing throughout the West at music festivals cowboy gatherings historical theaters and trail rides Michael s son Ryan produced the album and added acoustic guitar and vocals 16 In February 2010 Murphey released a follow up album Buckaroo Blue Grass II Riding Song which follows the production approach of the first album 17 In May 2011 Murphey gave a benefit concert at the Prairie Rose Chuckwagon Supper near Benton Kansas to help save the cabin where Brewster Higley wrote the song Home on the Range Kansas state song He might have been living anywhere Murphey noted but he was inspired by that place This song gives focus to the heritage of the American West to the prairie and its songs poems and literature Murphey made his first pilgrimage to the cabin prior to the concert where he performed the song 18 nbsp Jonathan Edwards Michael Martin Murphey and Gary Roller at the Flying Monkey Plymouth NH October 13 2012 In June 2011 Murphey released Tall Grass amp Cool Water subtitled Cowboy Songs VI and Buckaroo Blue Grass III The CD includes two classics from the Sons of the Pioneers Cool Water and Way Out There as well as other Western classics such as Texas Cowboy Santa Fe Trail and The James Gang Trilogy Murphey closes out the album with a beautiful duet with Carin Mari Springtime in the Rockies 19 On September 4 2011 Murphey performed at the wedding of long time friend David Lauren and Lauren Bush the niece of former President George W Bush at Ralph Lauren s Double RL Ranch near Ridgway Colorado The event was called America s Royal Wedding Murphey who helped Ralph Lauren find the ranch they now call home has been friends with the Lauren family for nearly 30 years I go there to write songs from time to time Murphey noted It s the most spectacular ranch in the Rockies At David Lauren s request Murphey performed Vanishing Breed for the couple s first dance Murphey wrote the song at a cabin on the Lauren ranch in the 1980s Murphey and his Rio Grande Band played nearly six hours for the Lauren and Bush families 20 In January 2012 Tall Grass amp Cool Water became the number 1 album on the Top 20 Western Music Albums Chart of the Western Music Association 21 In July 2013 Murphey released Red River Drifter his first album of all new original songs in 20 years 22 The album reached number three on the Billboard Top Bluegrass Albums chart 23 He was named among the top 50 Greatest Country amp Western singers by American Cowboy magazine 24 Legacy editThis biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Michael Martin Murphey news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Murphey has had a successful music career that has spanned four decades and included such musical genres as folk country rock popular western and cowboy music As a singer songwriter and producer he has contributed some of the best loved songs of his generation His songs have been recorded by Johnny Cash Kenny Rogers John Denver Cher Lyle Lovett Flatt and Scruggs Claire Hamill Hoyt Axton Roger Miller Bobbie Gentry Michael Nesmith and the Monkees Murphey is the narrator of the short film Spirit of the Cowgirl at the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth TexasMurphey was so pivotal to the foundation of progressive country that one of the many names for the genre Cosmic Cowboy music was taken from one of Murphey s songs 3 Murphey played a major role in the resurrection of the cowboy song genre recording and producing some of the most successful cowboy music of the past forty years His album Cowboy Songs inspired a whole series of albums For his accomplishments in the Western and Cowboy Music field Murphey received five awards from the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum formerly known as the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City Political views editMurphey has long been a champion of the western wilderness and wildlife and has lent his support to various political causes associated with western culture and ideals Early in his career for example he supported the Native American rights movement which used his song Geronimo s Cadillac as an anthem In 1986 he founded an annual festival WestFest celebrating western art and culture in an effort to preserve the traditions of the West He has been a long time supporter of the conservation movement attempting to find a middle ground between ranchers and activists on opposite sides of environmental issues 25 In the past decade Murphey has focused his political energies on the issue of private property rights especially in the western and southwestern United States In 2006 he released The Ballad of Kit Laney in support of the New Mexico rancher s fight with the United States Forest Service over water rights Laney was imprisoned for assault after standing up to federal agents who seized his ranch in 2004 Murphey helped form the Farmers Freedom Agriculture Alliance and scheduled a benefit The Farmers Freedom Concert to protest unfair land acquisitions across the western states 25 26 Murphey s opposition to the political forces threatening the American family farmer and rancher transcends political party affiliation I can tell you Murphey observed that politics doesn t matter whether it s Democrats or Republicans have been involved with big agribusiness for a long long time 27 Honors and awards edit2023 Best Original Western Song Blues for 66 Ryan Murphey and Michael Martin Murphey from the album Road Beyond the View 2021 Texas Trail of Fame Induction into the Fort Worth Trail of Fame and placement of marker in from to Billy Bob s Texas 2021 Lone Star Film Festival Stephen Bruton Award Prestigious Lone StarFilm Festival honor for significant impact in film and TV by a musical artist 2019 Wrangler Award Induction into the Cowboy Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Awards 2009 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Bluegrass Album for Buckaroo Blue Grass 2009 Texas Country Music Hall of Fame 2008 National Day of the Cowboy Cowboy Keeper Award 2007 National Cowboy amp Western Heritage Museum Wrangler Award for Best Song for Long and Lonesome Road to Dalhart 2007 Texas Music Award for Best Song for Close the Land America s Heartland 2007 Letter of Commendation from the President of the United States for Murphey s involvement producing John Wayne s 100th Birthday Celebration 2004 Western Music Association Hall of Fame 2000 The New Mexico Distinguished Public Service Lifetime Achievement Award 1999 Academy of Western Artists Award for Best Album for Cowboy Songs Four 28 1998 The Golden Smokey Award for Outstanding Service to the U S National Park Service 1997 Will Rogers Cowboy Philosopher Award Will Rogers Memorial Commission 1982 Academy of Country Music Top New Male Vocalist 1972 Rolling Stone Magazine Best New Singer Songwriter in the Nation for the album Geronimo s Cadillac American Quarter Horse Association Lifetime Honorary Member CMA Award Nominations three times BMI Platinum Record for the song Wildfire BMI Gold Record for the album Cowboy Songs the first Gold album in Cowboy music since Marty Robbins RIAA Certified Gold Records for Blue Sky Night Thunder and Cowboy Songs King of the Cowboys Award for Outstanding Contribution to Western Family Entertainment by the Cody Order of Scouts State of Nebraska Cody Order of Scouts Nebraska Nebraska Country Music Hall of Fame Colorado Country Music Hall of Fame Western Heritage Awards from the Cowboy Hall of Fame six time winner International Charley Russell Western Heritage Society Red Sash Award for Outstanding Service in Preservation of Western Heritage 1999 2000Discography editMain article Michael Martin Murphey discography Geronimo s Cadillac 1972 Cosmic Cowboy Souvenir 1973 Michael Murphey 1974 Blue Sky Night Thunder 1975 Swans Against the Sun 1976 Flowing Free Forever 1976 Lone Wolf 1978 Peaks Valleys Honky Tonks amp Alleys 1979 Hard Country 1981 Michael Martin Murphey 1982 The Heart Never Lies 1983 Tonight We Ride 1986 Americana 1987 River of Time 1988 Land of Enchantment 1989 Cowboy Songs 1990 Cowboy Christmas Cowboy Songs II 1991 Cowboy Songs III 1993 Sagebrush Symphony 1995 The Horse Legends 1997 Cowboy Songs Four 1998 Acoustic Christmas Carols 1999 Playing Favorites 2001 Cowboy Classics Playing Favorites II 2002 Cowboy Christmas III 2002 Live at Billy Bob s Texas 2004 Heartland Cowboy Cowboy Songs Vol 5 2006 Buckaroo Blue Grass 2009 Lone Cowboy 2010 Buckaroo Blue Grass II 2010 Tall Grass amp Cool Water 2011 Campfire on the Road 2012 Red River Drifter 2013 High Stakes 2016 Austinology Alleys of Austin 2018 Featuring Willie Nelson Lyle Lovett Steve Earle and many others Cowboy Christmas Live Austin 2019 Recorded Live at the Paramount in Austin TX Road Beyond the View 2022 Ryan Murphey and Michael Martin Murphey releaseReferences edit McCall Michael Rumble John Kingsbury Paul 2012 The Encyclopedia of Country Music Oxford University Press p 360 ISBN 978 0 19 992083 9 Retrieved April 4 2020 Moser Margaret August 12 2011 Michael Martin Murphey Brad Dunn amp Ellis Country The Duqaines Wheeler Brothers Jubal s Lawyer and T Jarod Bonta The Austin Chronicle Retrieved July 24 2023 a face on Austin s Mount Rushmore of progressive country the now Colorado based Murphey is a Western storyteller in the Marty Robbins fashion a b c Patterson Rob September 1 2013 Q amp A MICHAEL MARTIN MURPHEY Lone Star Magazine Retrieved July 24 2023 And beyond all of Murphey s above achievements there is also the role he played in launching the Austin progressive country scene in the 1970s So pivotal a role in fact that the Capital City s first local musical movement to have substantial national impact even took its nickname Cosmic Cowboy music from a Murphey song a b c Eder Bruce Michael Martin Murphey Allmusic Retrieved November 21 2007 Pink Lavary Murphey profile RootsWeb Retrieved November 10 2011 Robinson Lana Michael Martin Murphey in Texas Agriculture September 2 2005 Michael Martin Murphey Bio Michael Martin Murphey Official Website Archived from the original on November 8 2011 Retrieved November 10 2011 News reports at the time suggested that Murphey was upset that his image was used on the book s cover and his photo was removed in subsequent editions Murrells Joseph 1978 The Book of Golden Discs 2nd ed London UK Barrie and Jenkins Ltd p 361 ISBN 0 214 20512 6 Profile Archived January 13 2016 at the Wayback Machine westernjubilee com accessed March 14 2017 Erickson Hal Hard Country AllMovie Retrieved November 28 2013 Michael Murphy the actor co starred with Woody Allen in several films including Annie Hall and Manhattan Sikes O J Michael Martin Murphey profile Western Music Archived from the original on April 16 2013 Retrieved November 10 2011 Carpenter Molly Richmond Times Dispatch Holden Stephen Pop Jazz Cowboy Revue in the Sky At Rainbow and Stars in The New York Times May 22 1992 Tackett Travis Michael Martin Murphey will release Buckaroo Blue Grass on Rural Rhythm Bluegrass Journal Retrieved November 10 2011 Poet J Buckaroo Blue Grass II Riding Song Allmusic Retrieved November 10 2011 Tanner Beccy Michael Martin Murphey to help save historic cabin The Wichita Eagle Retrieved November 8 2011 Jurek Thom Tall Grass amp Cool Water Allmusic Retrieved November 10 2011 Michael Martin Murphey Special Musical Guest Country Music News International Retrieved September 21 2011 1 for Michael Martin Murphey s Tall Grass and Cool Water Cybergrass Retrieved February 22 2012 Jurek Thom Red River Drifter AllMusic com Retrieved November 26 2013 Red River Drifter Billboard Retrieved November 26 2013 50 Greatest Country amp Western Singers American Cowboy Legends Issue 12 14 2013 a b Johnson Anne Michael Martin Murphey Encyclopedia com Retrieved November 10 2011 Woodka Chris Murphey settles on spread in Beulah Chieftain Retrieved July 27 2011 McGee David Murph Rides Again The Bluegrass Special Retrieved November 10 2011 Western Music Awards Academy of Western Artists Retrieved November 12 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Michael Martin Murphey Michael Martin Murphey s Official Website Archival Materials edit Michael Martin Murphey papers 1982 2014 at Southwest Collection Special Collections Library Texas Tech University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael Martin Murphey amp oldid 1210776600, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.