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“I can’t ever remember ‘finding’ cowboy poetry, “
Waddie Mitchell says of the entertaining and enduring art of
storytelling. “It was always there. The cowboys sure never
called it poetry. I know I wouldn’t have liked it if they
would have. Seems like an oxymoron, don’t it!?”
From his earliest days on the remote Nevada
ranches where his father worked, Waddie was immersed in the
cowboy way of entertaining, the art of spinnin’ tales in rhyme
and meter that came to be called cowboy poetry, a Western
tradition that is as rich as the lifestyle that gave birth to
it. Within his stories, told in a voice that is timeless and
familiar, are the common bonds we all share, moments both grand
and commonplace, the humorous and the tragic, the life and death
struggles and triumphs that we each recognize. And yet, Waddie
presents his material with personal insights and the lessons
learned during his life spent as a buckaroo.
From his earliest days on the remote Nevada
ranches where his father worked, Waddie was immersed in the
cowboy way of entertaining, the art of spinnin’ tales in rhyme
and meter that came to be called cowboy poetry, a Western
tradition that is as rich as the lifestyle that gave birth to
it. Within his stories, told in a voice that is timeless and
familiar, are the common bonds we all share, moments both grand
and commonplace, the humorous and the tragic, the life and death
struggles and triumphs that we each recognize. And yet, Waddie
presents his material with personal insights and the lessons
learned during his life spent as a buckaroo.
“When my imagination first got let out of the
gate, it was from an old-time cowboy, with a story set to
rhyme,” he says in his second recording from Warner Western,
Lone Driftin’ Rider. By the age of 10, he was reciting poetry
himself; at 16, he quit school to follow his heart and went to
making his living as a cowboy.
“I’d never done anything else, never made
money without horses or cows until I started telling cowboy
poetry.” The father of five children, (“They’re all girls,
except four of them!”) his goal is to one day buy his own
ranch. “I’m hoping,” Waddie says, “for the opportunity to go
broke on a ranch by myself instead of helping somebody else do
it!”
There came a time though, which he relates in
his poem Where To Go, when he had to choose between being a
full-time cowboy (he managed a 36,000 acre ranch in Lee-Jiggs,
Nevada) and the art form that he loved so much. In 1984, he
helped organize the internationally recognized Elko Cowboy
Poetry Gathering and gave his first public performance.
Although Waddie didn’t think anyone would be interested, (he
thought it would be a pretty good party for the weekend) the
first Cowboy Poetry Gathering was set for a cold, snowy weekend
in January. This was one of the only times Waddie and his
fellow cowboys were free from ranch duties. More than 2,000
people showed up, and Waddie was off and running.
Since then he has performed internationally
for audiences from Los Angeles to New York, Zurich to Melbourne,
and all points in between. With television appearances ranging
from The Tonight Show (his neighbor took the first phoned
invitation, drove 40 miles to deliver the message to the
remotely based Waddie and returned with a “No Thanks” because it
was calving time and he’d never heard of Johnny Carson),
Larry King Live, Good Morning America, TNN, The History Channel,
PBS, and BBC, Waddie has also been featured in
People, Life, New York Times, USA Today, Fortune,
National Geographic, Wall Street Journal and the Official
Program for Super Bowl XXX, along with numerous other
appearances, performances, articles and books. In 1994, Waddie
founded the Working Ranch Cowboy Association with a mission of
creating scholarships and crisis funds for working cowboys and
their families. The well-recognized and highly respected WRCA
now sanctions 22 regional rodeos throughout the West with the
sold-out world championships held each November in Amarillo, TX.
His series of recordings for Warner Bros.
Records and more recently for the Western Jubilee Recording
Company have received critical acclaim. Waddie’s Western
Jubilee Recordings are: Waddie Mitchell Live featuring Don
Edwards as well as world class instrumentalists Rich O’Brien and
Norman Blake and recorded live at the Western Jubilee Warehouse
in Colorado Springs. A glowing review of Waddie Mitchell Live
appeared in People, which concludes with “Bottom Line:
Horse sense and humor from America’s Best Known Cowboy Poet.”
This was followed by Prairie Portrait which features Waddie
Mitchell, Don Edwards and the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra. In
April, 2001, the Oklahoma City based Cowboy Hall of Fame /
National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum presented Waddie with
the coveted Wrangler Award for his participation in the
Outstanding Traditional Western Album of the year.
The 2002 Cultural Olympiad commissioned Waddie
Mitchell to write a commemorative poem. His offering, That No
Quit Attitude, gained importance as the Salt Lake 2002 Olympic
Winter Games grew nearer. No Quit appeared in the Welcome To
Salt Lake film, in schools and libraries, on Delta Airlines, the
Olympic web site, at the Olympic Arts Festival, on Western
Jubilee’s CD single and many publications, including the
Official Souvenir Program of the 2002 Winter Games. Since, That
No Quit Attitude, also titles Waddie’s newest Western Jubilee
release that contains fourteen new original poems and thirteen
original ‘Waddie-isms’. 2003 found him on stage at Carnegie
Hall and producing Elko – A Cowboy’s Gathering. This Western
Jubilee double disc features 40 Artists and salutes the
gathering he co-founded 20 years prior. Along with a busy 2005
touring schedule, he was featured on TV, radio, print and
personal appearances as the Review Journal newspaper’s
official spokesperson for the 100 Year Celebration of Las Vegas,
NV.
The Reno Gazette-Journal published a
list from a panel of writers, historians and other notables, who
selected the Top 20 Artists, Authors and Entertainers To
Influence Nevada in the 20th Century. Sure enough
pards, there was Waddie! Waddie Mitchell has received the title
of Adjunct Professor from the University of Wyoming. This honor
was based on “Real world credentials which Waddie possesses in
wealth.”
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