1 00:00:00,520 --> 00:00:03,688 American poet Ron Rash is quoted as saying, 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 3 00:00:03,730 --> 00:00:06,598 Appalachia is a region of contrasts, 4 00:00:06,640 --> 00:00:10,618 beauty and desolation, wealth and poverty, 5 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 6 00:00:10,660 --> 00:00:13,168 culture and isolation. 7 00:00:13,210 --> 00:00:15,658 It is a land that is both real and mythic, 8 00:00:15,700 --> 00:00:19,123 inspiring the imagination and challenging the soul. 9 00:00:19,960 --> 00:00:22,138 I have always felt this quote spoke to the heart 10 00:00:22,180 --> 00:00:23,848 of not just the mountains, 11 00:00:23,890 --> 00:00:26,638 but the creative people inside of them. 12 00:00:26,680 --> 00:00:28,408 While Eastern Kentucky gets a negative view 13 00:00:28,450 --> 00:00:29,788 from the national media, 14 00:00:29,830 --> 00:00:32,578 one cannot undermine the amount of musical talent 15 00:00:32,620 --> 00:00:35,128 that has come from these hills. 16 00:00:35,170 --> 00:00:37,048 From the high mountains to the foothills, 17 00:00:37,090 --> 00:00:39,628 Appalachia's produced so many prolific songwriters 18 00:00:39,670 --> 00:00:42,598 and musicians, one cannot view, travel through, 19 00:00:42,640 --> 00:00:44,428 or think of the hills of Appalachia 20 00:00:44,470 --> 00:00:46,468 without thinking of a song. 21 00:00:46,510 --> 00:00:50,038 I was always inspired by writers, travelers and singers 22 00:00:50,080 --> 00:00:51,718 for as long as I can remember. 23 00:00:51,760 --> 00:00:52,978 I still remember the first time 24 00:00:53,020 --> 00:00:55,048 I heard the song "Cowboy Boot Heel." 25 00:00:55,090 --> 00:00:56,668 The song was filled with such heart, 26 00:00:56,710 --> 00:00:59,428 and the singer was right out of a Western novel. 27 00:00:59,470 --> 00:01:01,678 This singer was known other than Rob McNurlin. 28 00:01:01,720 --> 00:01:02,878 For the past 30 years, 29 00:01:02,920 --> 00:01:04,978 Rob McNurlin and his Beatnik Cowboys 30 00:01:05,020 --> 00:01:07,318 have performed over 1000 shows, 31 00:01:07,360 --> 00:01:10,468 providing a backdrop in song to all those that listen. 32 00:01:10,510 --> 00:01:13,018 I first met Rob in the year 2004 33 00:01:13,060 --> 00:01:15,238 when Rob would play in the coffee shop I worked at 34 00:01:15,280 --> 00:01:16,648 in Morehead, Kentucky. 35 00:01:16,690 --> 00:01:19,198 Rob always had time to talk to me about harmonicas, 36 00:01:19,240 --> 00:01:20,938 Bob Dylan, Western poets, 37 00:01:20,980 --> 00:01:23,758 and of course great Western wear. 38 00:01:23,800 --> 00:01:25,348 His music spoke to others. 39 00:01:25,390 --> 00:01:26,518 I even had the chance to have 40 00:01:26,560 --> 00:01:29,278 Rob on my old TV show, "Art This." 41 00:01:29,320 --> 00:01:31,348 Rob's songs tugged on heartstrings 42 00:01:31,390 --> 00:01:34,168 and spoke to me as a fellow Appalachian. 43 00:01:34,210 --> 00:01:37,678 I have seen Rob perform less and less as I have grown older 44 00:01:37,720 --> 00:01:40,288 and have had less time to travel because of work. 45 00:01:40,330 --> 00:01:42,658 I was surprised in 2024 46 00:01:42,700 --> 00:01:45,058 when I saw a post on Rob's social media 47 00:01:45,100 --> 00:01:47,428 about Rob stepping away from playing music. 48 00:01:47,470 --> 00:01:49,198 I immediately reached out to Rob 49 00:01:49,240 --> 00:01:52,318 and asked him if I could tell his story in a film. 50 00:01:52,360 --> 00:01:54,538 So here we are, and this is my take. 51 00:01:54,580 --> 00:01:55,978 My name is Steven Middleton, 52 00:01:56,020 --> 00:01:58,408 and for the past 20 years I've been fortunate enough 53 00:01:58,450 --> 00:02:00,178 to make documentary films. 54 00:02:00,220 --> 00:02:01,378 Through highs and lows, 55 00:02:01,420 --> 00:02:04,078 I have told the story of people, places, 56 00:02:04,120 --> 00:02:06,870 and remarkably interesting things. 57 00:02:09,730 --> 00:02:12,058 This is a film about a poet, a songwriter, 58 00:02:12,100 --> 00:02:14,278 a trailblazer, a troubadour, 59 00:02:14,320 --> 00:02:16,543 and, most importantly, my friend. 60 00:02:18,970 --> 00:02:21,058 This is From the Cowboy's Boot Heel, 61 00:02:21,100 --> 00:02:23,863 the musical journey of Rob McNurlin. 62 00:02:25,836 --> 00:02:29,235 ♪ Early morning, almost gone ♪ 63 00:02:34,497 --> 00:02:39,497 ♪ The sad old pony I rode in on ♪ 64 00:02:43,654 --> 00:02:48,654 ♪ You know I told you I must go ♪ 65 00:02:51,297 --> 00:02:56,297 ♪ As my cowboy boot heel taps out the rhythm of my soul ♪ 66 00:03:04,489 --> 00:03:05,381 Then let's go ahead and do it. 67 00:03:05,423 --> 00:03:06,328 Okay. 68 00:03:06,370 --> 00:03:07,558 My name is Steven Middleton, 69 00:03:07,600 --> 00:03:10,858 and for the past 20 years I've produced documentary films. 70 00:03:10,900 --> 00:03:12,568 In 2004, I worked at a coffee shop, 71 00:03:12,610 --> 00:03:14,068 and in that coffee shop, I had a job 72 00:03:14,110 --> 00:03:17,638 of making drinks, food and running sound. 73 00:03:17,680 --> 00:03:19,858 And I worked with a lot of musicians running sound, 74 00:03:19,900 --> 00:03:23,698 some who weren't so kind to me, others who were very nice. 75 00:03:23,740 --> 00:03:25,228 And it was there that I met 76 00:03:25,270 --> 00:03:29,368 this very tall, very interesting, 77 00:03:29,410 --> 00:03:31,648 and very kind man named Rob McNurlin. 78 00:03:31,690 --> 00:03:35,248 He had a post about a year ago on his social media 79 00:03:35,290 --> 00:03:36,448 that he was gonna retire 80 00:03:36,490 --> 00:03:38,518 and he was hanging up the hat and the guitar. 81 00:03:38,560 --> 00:03:40,258 So I wrote him and asked him 82 00:03:40,300 --> 00:03:43,168 if I could produce this piece on his life and career. 83 00:03:43,210 --> 00:03:44,428 He said yes. 84 00:03:44,470 --> 00:03:47,788 So I hope this lets the audience, 85 00:03:47,830 --> 00:03:49,138 people, especially younger people, 86 00:03:49,180 --> 00:03:52,888 understand who Rob is and his music and his contributions, 87 00:03:52,930 --> 00:03:56,098 especially to all of the current people in the business, 88 00:03:56,140 --> 00:03:56,998 not only just Nashville 89 00:03:57,040 --> 00:03:59,608 but all over the U.S. that Rob inspired. 90 00:03:59,650 --> 00:04:00,925 But to understand Rob's music 91 00:04:00,967 --> 00:04:04,558 and his value and his worth in this field 92 00:04:04,600 --> 00:04:05,700 after all these years. 93 00:04:07,360 --> 00:04:11,049 ] Now here's the cowboy himself, Rob McNurlin. 94 00:04:13,900 --> 00:04:15,178 Well, I grew up in West Bridge, 95 00:04:15,220 --> 00:04:17,275 right outside of Ashland here. 96 00:04:17,317 --> 00:04:19,858 And music was all my mom and dad's fault. 97 00:04:19,900 --> 00:04:21,658 They had the greatest record collection. 98 00:04:21,700 --> 00:04:24,388 Mom had a whole box of 45s from the '50's 99 00:04:24,430 --> 00:04:26,998 with Elvis and Chuck Berry and Little Richard, 100 00:04:27,040 --> 00:04:29,638 and especially those Sun Johnny Cash records. 101 00:04:29,680 --> 00:04:30,718 That's what really got me. 102 00:04:30,760 --> 00:04:34,678 And dad had Hank Williams albums and Tex Ritter, 103 00:04:34,720 --> 00:04:37,258 and they played 'em all the time. 104 00:04:37,300 --> 00:04:42,118 And dad got one of those big furniture stereos. 105 00:04:42,160 --> 00:04:43,288 And at night we would go to bed, 106 00:04:43,330 --> 00:04:46,348 and however many albums they would hold, five or six, 107 00:04:46,390 --> 00:04:48,808 and I remember going to sleep listening to Johnny Cash. 108 00:04:48,850 --> 00:04:52,498 And at Christmas of '69, I asked for a guitar. 109 00:04:52,540 --> 00:04:53,638 Started taking lessons. 110 00:04:53,680 --> 00:04:55,858 And it's so funny because for some reason 111 00:04:55,900 --> 00:04:57,838 I ended up with an electric guitar. 112 00:04:57,880 --> 00:04:58,678 Which was weird 113 00:04:58,720 --> 00:05:00,778 because Johnny Cash didn't play electric guitar. 114 00:05:00,820 --> 00:05:02,128 But, so when I started lessons, 115 00:05:02,170 --> 00:05:03,598 the teacher's like, what do you wanna learn? 116 00:05:03,640 --> 00:05:05,638 And I said, Johnny Cash. 117 00:05:05,680 --> 00:05:07,668 And so he was trying to teach me the Luther stuff. 118 00:05:09,220 --> 00:05:11,428 And after two or three lessons, I told him, I said, 119 00:05:11,470 --> 00:05:14,593 look, Johnny Cash is hitting all the strings at once. 120 00:05:15,570 --> 00:05:17,098 And he goes, oh, you wanna play chords? 121 00:05:17,140 --> 00:05:18,489 And I said, I don't know, 122 00:05:18,531 --> 00:05:20,608 I wanna play like Johnny Cash, you know? 123 00:05:20,650 --> 00:05:23,233 It was after high school that I really, 124 00:05:24,520 --> 00:05:25,588 probably during high school, 125 00:05:25,630 --> 00:05:26,488 me and some friends started playing. 126 00:05:26,530 --> 00:05:27,808 We never played out anywhere. 127 00:05:27,850 --> 00:05:29,008 We weren't good enough to play out. 128 00:05:29,050 --> 00:05:30,778 We weren't even really good enough to play in the basement. 129 00:05:30,820 --> 00:05:32,488 But we were having fun. 130 00:05:32,530 --> 00:05:33,988 And that's why it's called playing. 131 00:05:34,030 --> 00:05:36,028 And it was probably the early '90's 132 00:05:36,070 --> 00:05:38,218 before I really started playing a lot. 133 00:05:38,260 --> 00:05:42,358 And then in '93 is when I went, you know, full-time music. 134 00:05:42,400 --> 00:05:44,518 And that's what I was doing for a living. 135 00:05:44,560 --> 00:05:46,018 It was the Beatnik Cowboys. 136 00:05:46,060 --> 00:05:48,838 I just put out my first CD. 137 00:05:48,880 --> 00:05:52,453 And it was pretty much those guys. 138 00:05:54,490 --> 00:05:57,148 Darrell James played guitar and produced the CD. 139 00:05:57,190 --> 00:05:58,618 And later, he just wanted to play blues. 140 00:05:58,660 --> 00:06:00,508 Great blues musician. 141 00:06:00,550 --> 00:06:01,468 So when he left, 142 00:06:01,510 --> 00:06:03,868 Dave Prince moved from bass to guitar 143 00:06:03,910 --> 00:06:05,548 and John Gostovich took over bass. 144 00:06:05,590 --> 00:06:07,588 And that was the lineup 145 00:06:07,630 --> 00:06:10,228 for, gosh, probably 10 years maybe. 146 00:06:10,270 --> 00:06:12,031 Or close to it, anyway. 147 00:06:15,100 --> 00:06:17,728 There was a music store in Ashland, Kentucky 148 00:06:17,770 --> 00:06:19,138 called The Guitar Store. 149 00:06:19,180 --> 00:06:20,308 And I was going down there 150 00:06:20,350 --> 00:06:22,618 to try to find some cool instruments. 151 00:06:22,660 --> 00:06:24,148 And there was a guy down there, 152 00:06:24,190 --> 00:06:25,438 kind of a cowboy-looking dude. 153 00:06:25,480 --> 00:06:26,818 He was very tall. 154 00:06:26,860 --> 00:06:28,138 And he was off to one side, 155 00:06:28,180 --> 00:06:29,878 and he was playing a song by The Band. 156 00:06:29,920 --> 00:06:31,768 I think he was playing "The Weight." 157 00:06:31,810 --> 00:06:33,748 And, you know, people were just kind of listening to him, 158 00:06:33,790 --> 00:06:35,296 and maybe somebody grabbed a guitar. 159 00:06:35,338 --> 00:06:36,328 And I thought, you know, I know that song. 160 00:06:36,370 --> 00:06:38,308 So I grabbed a guitar and jammed with him. 161 00:06:38,350 --> 00:06:41,218 And that was the first time I ever met Rob. 162 00:06:41,260 --> 00:06:42,628 Well, he was super nice. 163 00:06:42,670 --> 00:06:43,918 He was just the nicest guy. 164 00:06:43,960 --> 00:06:44,878 You know, you meet people, 165 00:06:44,920 --> 00:06:46,078 and it's hard to get to know 'em 166 00:06:46,120 --> 00:06:47,098 or they're standoffish 167 00:06:47,140 --> 00:06:48,598 or they don't attempt to get to know you. 168 00:06:48,640 --> 00:06:50,818 But I felt like I'd known Rob for a long time 169 00:06:50,860 --> 00:06:51,928 from the first time I met him. 170 00:06:51,970 --> 00:06:53,878 And, you know, music was a good connection for us. 171 00:06:53,920 --> 00:06:55,903 But, still, he was just a nice guy. 172 00:06:56,920 --> 00:06:58,138 You know, it was really interesting. 173 00:06:58,180 --> 00:07:01,048 We had been playing together for probably a couple years. 174 00:07:01,090 --> 00:07:03,238 We had a pretty tight-run unit going. 175 00:07:03,280 --> 00:07:04,948 And the guy playing guitar at the time 176 00:07:04,990 --> 00:07:06,298 was a guy named Darrell Hall, 177 00:07:06,340 --> 00:07:08,518 and Darrell was also an engineer 178 00:07:08,560 --> 00:07:10,423 at the studio here in Louisa. 179 00:07:11,974 --> 00:07:12,765 So Darrell was like, 180 00:07:12,807 --> 00:07:14,758 hey, if you wanna come up after midnight, 181 00:07:14,800 --> 00:07:17,068 we can slip in, and we can record your record. 182 00:07:17,110 --> 00:07:18,718 It won't cost you anything. 183 00:07:18,760 --> 00:07:21,358 And so we were slipping in under the cover of darkness, 184 00:07:21,400 --> 00:07:23,458 and we would set our drums and stuff up 185 00:07:23,500 --> 00:07:24,718 and get everything sounding good, 186 00:07:24,760 --> 00:07:26,038 and just started playing. 187 00:07:26,080 --> 00:07:27,868 And most of the stuff on that first album, 188 00:07:27,910 --> 00:07:29,668 I mean, it was pretty much the second or third take 189 00:07:29,710 --> 00:07:31,588 'cause we didn't want to fool around too much. 190 00:07:31,630 --> 00:07:33,208 It was pretty much dead live too. 191 00:07:33,250 --> 00:07:36,223 So what you're hearing there is pretty much what went down. 192 00:07:38,350 --> 00:07:41,548 Dave had an old Volkswagen hippie van. 193 00:07:41,590 --> 00:07:43,168 One morning, after setting up all night 194 00:07:43,210 --> 00:07:45,238 at Dave Prince's house, just having fun, 195 00:07:45,280 --> 00:07:47,098 in the early morning hours, 196 00:07:47,140 --> 00:07:48,838 we decided we were taking the hippie van 197 00:07:48,880 --> 00:07:50,218 on tour to California. 198 00:07:50,260 --> 00:07:51,051 And we did. 199 00:07:51,093 --> 00:07:54,148 We booked shows for the way out and on the way back 200 00:07:54,190 --> 00:07:55,759 and had a blast. 201 00:07:57,100 --> 00:07:58,498 Well I gotta tell you, 202 00:07:58,540 --> 00:08:00,928 you know, Rob and I hung out a lot together. 203 00:08:00,970 --> 00:08:02,458 We'd just get together and ride around. 204 00:08:02,500 --> 00:08:03,928 And I had a Volkswagen van, 205 00:08:03,970 --> 00:08:06,178 which made me even more cool. 206 00:08:06,220 --> 00:08:07,258 And so we would get together 207 00:08:07,300 --> 00:08:09,178 and just cruise around in that van, listen to music. 208 00:08:09,220 --> 00:08:10,618 And he comes up to my house one morning, 209 00:08:10,660 --> 00:08:11,998 he said, man, I got an idea. 210 00:08:12,040 --> 00:08:14,698 He said, let's get in your hippie van 211 00:08:14,740 --> 00:08:18,088 and let's go do a tour out to California and back. 212 00:08:18,130 --> 00:08:20,878 And that was like getting the Apollo rocket 213 00:08:20,920 --> 00:08:22,318 and going to the other planets. 214 00:08:22,360 --> 00:08:23,638 I mean, it was so far away, 215 00:08:23,680 --> 00:08:25,768 and no one we knew that was playing music 216 00:08:25,810 --> 00:08:27,448 had ever tried anything like that. 217 00:08:27,490 --> 00:08:29,218 And, honestly, Rob just didn't know enough 218 00:08:29,260 --> 00:08:31,228 to know you can't do that. 219 00:08:31,270 --> 00:08:32,061 And it was great. 220 00:08:32,103 --> 00:08:33,328 So I said, well, let's do it. 221 00:08:33,370 --> 00:08:36,628 So I said, I rebuilt the motor in the van and got it ready. 222 00:08:36,670 --> 00:08:37,498 Had a couple months. 223 00:08:37,540 --> 00:08:38,788 And Rob got on the phone, 224 00:08:38,830 --> 00:08:40,558 'cause this is pre-internet, 225 00:08:40,600 --> 00:08:42,238 and booked the tour. 226 00:08:42,280 --> 00:08:44,848 And one night, we just all got in the van, 227 00:08:44,890 --> 00:08:46,288 and we put all of our equipment in it, 228 00:08:46,330 --> 00:08:48,607 and we headed west. 229 00:08:48,649 --> 00:08:51,927 ♪ Summer fanfare ♪ 230 00:08:51,969 --> 00:08:55,219 ♪ I'm looking through ♪ 231 00:08:58,971 --> 00:08:59,938 We wanna hear anything. 232 00:08:59,980 --> 00:09:01,430 Your favorite song. 233 00:09:01,472 --> 00:09:03,992 You like The Grateful Dead? - Yeah. 234 00:09:04,034 --> 00:09:05,898 No way. 235 00:09:05,940 --> 00:09:07,390 Do a Grateful Dead tune, Rob. 236 00:09:08,900 --> 00:09:11,443 ♪ I've been out in Amarillo ♪ 237 00:09:11,485 --> 00:09:14,270 ♪ Day by day now ♪ 238 00:09:14,312 --> 00:09:18,182 ♪ We didn't sleep until the sun go around ♪ 239 00:09:25,140 --> 00:09:25,931 Oh yeah. 240 00:09:25,973 --> 00:09:26,764 While we were out there, 241 00:09:26,806 --> 00:09:29,308 we visited Rambling Jack, hung out at his house some, 242 00:09:29,350 --> 00:09:33,433 and you know, just, it was all just living a dream. 243 00:09:34,870 --> 00:09:35,661 You know, we didn't have phones 244 00:09:35,703 --> 00:09:36,988 to tell us where the gigs were. 245 00:09:37,030 --> 00:09:38,188 We're just trying to find them. 246 00:09:38,230 --> 00:09:41,368 We didn't know how to do anything, but it worked. 247 00:09:41,410 --> 00:09:45,358 And it's just because Rob, just, why not? 248 00:09:45,400 --> 00:09:46,378 Why can't we do that? 249 00:09:46,420 --> 00:09:48,118 And that was his attitude with a lot of things. 250 00:09:48,160 --> 00:09:49,363 And it was great. 251 00:09:50,200 --> 00:09:51,898 We had one flat tire. 252 00:09:51,940 --> 00:09:53,611 I mean, the whole trip to California back 253 00:09:53,653 --> 00:09:56,938 in a '71 VW van with 10 million miles on it. 254 00:09:56,980 --> 00:09:59,908 We had a flat tire and you know, any tire can go flat. 255 00:09:59,950 --> 00:10:01,408 It wasn't the van's fault. 256 00:10:01,450 --> 00:10:03,088 And you know, I drove the whole way 257 00:10:03,130 --> 00:10:05,698 'cause I don't trust any of those hooligans to drive my van. 258 00:10:05,740 --> 00:10:07,648 And Rob was the copilot. 259 00:10:07,690 --> 00:10:08,878 And you know, we'd traveled 260 00:10:08,920 --> 00:10:10,888 like the first time we left Ashland 261 00:10:10,930 --> 00:10:12,928 and our first show was in Omaha, Nebraska. 262 00:10:12,970 --> 00:10:14,968 And we drove straight through 263 00:10:15,010 --> 00:10:17,368 and it felt like it was about 24 hours worth of driving. 264 00:10:17,410 --> 00:10:19,528 And we had to play as soon as we got there. 265 00:10:19,570 --> 00:10:21,448 And we didn't know up from down. 266 00:10:21,490 --> 00:10:25,168 But again, none of us knew enough to know not to do this. 267 00:10:25,210 --> 00:10:27,898 And Rob had a vision, Rob was always a step ahead. 268 00:10:27,940 --> 00:10:29,398 When you would talk to Rob, he's like, man, 269 00:10:29,440 --> 00:10:32,368 I'm gonna make a record and we're gonna make a video for it, 270 00:10:32,410 --> 00:10:33,448 and then we're gonna do this tour. 271 00:10:33,490 --> 00:10:34,918 And he would plan things out. 272 00:10:34,960 --> 00:10:37,458 And I never really met anyone who did that. 273 00:10:37,500 --> 00:10:39,868 You know, he did the first music video I'd ever seen 274 00:10:39,910 --> 00:10:42,748 and he made friends with a guy named Richard Friley. 275 00:10:42,790 --> 00:10:44,848 Rob goes, we'll get in to make his video. 276 00:10:44,890 --> 00:10:46,078 So he gets to know Friley 277 00:10:46,120 --> 00:10:48,238 and they put together a video for "Lotta Good Men." 278 00:10:48,280 --> 00:10:50,818 And you know, he used a lot of footage from us out West. 279 00:10:50,860 --> 00:10:51,808 Man, this is awesome. 280 00:10:51,850 --> 00:10:54,058 Rob has a legit music video 281 00:10:54,100 --> 00:10:55,650 and that's just the way Rob was 282 00:10:56,761 --> 00:10:59,758 Oh, I was just completely ate up with it. 283 00:10:59,800 --> 00:11:04,800 I played and wrote and thought about music 24 hours day. 284 00:11:06,700 --> 00:11:08,518 But Rob had really transitioned a lot 285 00:11:08,560 --> 00:11:10,078 because when we made the first album, 286 00:11:10,120 --> 00:11:12,025 we're a rock and roll band. 287 00:11:12,067 --> 00:11:15,238 And a lot of nights we just sounded like Neil Young 288 00:11:15,280 --> 00:11:17,008 and Rob was writing a lot of real powerful, 289 00:11:17,050 --> 00:11:19,528 just what I call rock and roll songs. 290 00:11:19,570 --> 00:11:23,338 But over time Rob transitions more into that Johnny Cash, 291 00:11:23,380 --> 00:11:25,485 you know, Tennessee Two thing. 292 00:11:25,527 --> 00:11:28,860 ♪ Your season's through ♪ 293 00:11:31,780 --> 00:11:33,268 I played acoustic, you put the paper 294 00:11:33,310 --> 00:11:36,208 and string so you can get that Johnny Cash quick, you know, 295 00:11:36,250 --> 00:11:39,118 and I understand for Rob, it's fewer moving parts. 296 00:11:39,160 --> 00:11:40,948 And when you're trying to keep a band together 297 00:11:40,990 --> 00:11:42,836 and get people to go play, 298 00:11:42,878 --> 00:11:44,368 the more people you have, the more problems you have. 299 00:11:44,410 --> 00:11:46,639 So he'd really part it down. 300 00:11:46,681 --> 00:11:48,277 ♪ Buffalo trail ♪ 301 00:11:48,319 --> 00:11:50,218 ♪ And also lose your day ♪ 302 00:11:50,260 --> 00:11:52,727 On the Rob McNurlin folkumentary. 303 00:11:54,523 --> 00:11:56,218 Mr. Nashville here. 304 00:11:56,260 --> 00:11:59,188 The next record didn't come along until 2000. 305 00:11:59,230 --> 00:12:00,673 I had a stockpile of songs. 306 00:12:01,540 --> 00:12:02,338 Getting ready to go back 307 00:12:02,380 --> 00:12:05,353 to Nashville, Tennessee, hang out with John Cash. 308 00:12:08,717 --> 00:12:11,728 We're gonna be with Johnny Cash on Grammy Day. 309 00:12:11,770 --> 00:12:14,533 John Carter Cash at the Cash Cabin Studio. 310 00:12:16,273 --> 00:12:17,458 Wave to the camera. - Hey. 311 00:12:17,500 --> 00:12:19,558 - That's John Carter. - The door kind of opened 312 00:12:19,600 --> 00:12:21,228 that I could go to, 313 00:12:21,270 --> 00:12:22,061 to the Cash Cabin. 314 00:12:22,103 --> 00:12:24,440 And I thought, well this is a once in a lifetime chance. 315 00:12:25,360 --> 00:12:26,883 All kinds of cool toys. 316 00:12:31,058 --> 00:12:32,518 You know and there's another example, it's like, 317 00:12:32,560 --> 00:12:35,428 well we're gonna go record at Johnny Cash's studio, 318 00:12:35,470 --> 00:12:36,838 so, you know, whatever, nobody goes 319 00:12:36,880 --> 00:12:39,838 and records at Johnny Cash's studio unless you're somebody. 320 00:12:39,880 --> 00:12:41,518 We drive down to Hendersonville 321 00:12:41,560 --> 00:12:43,318 and we're on Johnny Cash's property 322 00:12:43,360 --> 00:12:45,148 and there's Johnny Cash's car 323 00:12:45,190 --> 00:12:46,858 and we're going in his studio to record. 324 00:12:46,900 --> 00:12:49,228 And I'll tell you what, I was scared to death. 325 00:12:49,270 --> 00:12:51,778 It's one thing to slip in and record in Louisa, Kentucky, 326 00:12:51,820 --> 00:12:55,798 but now we're at Johnny Cash's house and we're gonna record. 327 00:12:55,840 --> 00:12:56,878 And you know, it said the same thing. 328 00:12:56,920 --> 00:13:00,628 We're playing live like John Carter, turn it on and say go. 329 00:13:00,670 --> 00:13:03,730 And man, I've never experienced anything like that. 330 00:13:05,991 --> 00:13:07,768 This is Dave Prince and our photographer John Flava 331 00:13:07,810 --> 00:13:09,898 walking down the road at Johnny Cash's cabin. 332 00:13:09,940 --> 00:13:10,947 Ain't this cool? 333 00:13:10,989 --> 00:13:13,168 We just cut a hit record that nobody will ever hear. 334 00:13:13,210 --> 00:13:14,533 Hear about this RC Cola? 335 00:13:16,510 --> 00:13:18,238 Johnny Cash's RC Cola 336 00:13:18,280 --> 00:13:21,418 direct from Johnny Cash's refrigerator, 337 00:13:21,460 --> 00:13:23,233 in Johnny Cash's cabin. 338 00:13:24,370 --> 00:13:25,948 On Johnny Cash's land 339 00:13:25,990 --> 00:13:29,818 in Hendersonville, Tennessee, United States of America. 340 00:13:29,860 --> 00:13:31,468 Oh yeah. 341 00:13:31,510 --> 00:13:34,209 I thought I was king of the world at that moment. 342 00:13:34,251 --> 00:13:37,318 Johnny Cash should be the fifth head on Mount Rushmore. 343 00:13:37,360 --> 00:13:39,373 Johnny Cash is the father of my country. 344 00:13:41,350 --> 00:13:42,800 Amen. 345 00:13:51,340 --> 00:13:52,288 They should have left it that way, 346 00:13:52,330 --> 00:13:53,728 then people that misspelled it 347 00:13:53,770 --> 00:13:55,918 can still get a hold of the record. 348 00:13:55,960 --> 00:13:58,127 Yeah, that's true. 349 00:13:59,164 --> 00:14:02,969 ♪ I'm working on a building for my Lord ♪ 350 00:14:03,011 --> 00:14:08,011 ♪ For my Lord ♪ 351 00:14:08,536 --> 00:14:12,369 ♪ I know I told you I must go ♪ 352 00:14:14,320 --> 00:14:15,645 Hillbilly music's country music. 353 00:14:15,687 --> 00:14:18,118 And I, you know, used to be growing up I thought hillbilly 354 00:14:18,160 --> 00:14:19,678 was a derogatory term, 355 00:14:19,720 --> 00:14:22,138 but it's not, you know, it's like Cajun 356 00:14:22,180 --> 00:14:26,005 or anything, you know, it's something to be looked up to 357 00:14:26,047 --> 00:14:27,373 and it's real music. 358 00:14:28,529 --> 00:14:31,859 ♪ Sometimes up and I'm sometimes down ♪ 359 00:14:31,901 --> 00:14:36,068 ♪ Coming forward to carry me home ♪ 360 00:14:38,219 --> 00:14:40,018 He just was part of your life all at once? 361 00:14:40,060 --> 00:14:41,475 Yeah. 362 00:14:41,517 --> 00:14:43,498 And it was like, I don't know, there's something 363 00:14:43,540 --> 00:14:46,198 that happened and then all of a sudden Rob's in my life 364 00:14:46,240 --> 00:14:51,240 and we hit it off pretty well 365 00:14:51,400 --> 00:14:53,293 being both from eastern Kentucky. 366 00:14:56,200 --> 00:14:59,848 He was so 367 00:14:59,890 --> 00:15:04,890 sweet of a guy and loved music 368 00:15:06,850 --> 00:15:09,628 as much as anybody I'd ever met. 369 00:15:09,670 --> 00:15:14,670 And we got to end up playing music a lot together 370 00:15:14,860 --> 00:15:16,243 in the coming years. 371 00:15:18,040 --> 00:15:21,433 He called me up, asked me if I wanted to play in prison, 372 00:15:22,560 --> 00:15:23,748 like, you know, 373 00:15:23,790 --> 00:15:26,640 at the time I was taking every gig I could get, you know, 374 00:15:27,513 --> 00:15:30,478 and the first gate opens up, like he talks to somebody, 375 00:15:30,520 --> 00:15:32,728 they buzz us through the first gate, we're in, 376 00:15:32,770 --> 00:15:34,618 the gate closes behind us, 377 00:15:34,660 --> 00:15:39,058 and then the next gate opens up 378 00:15:39,100 --> 00:15:41,098 and we're just driving through the prison 379 00:15:41,140 --> 00:15:43,168 like kind of yards at that point. 380 00:15:43,210 --> 00:15:44,278 And we get out 381 00:15:44,320 --> 00:15:47,188 and we are just in the middle of the general population 382 00:15:47,230 --> 00:15:50,638 of the prison and getting the PA out, 383 00:15:50,680 --> 00:15:51,928 setting everything up 384 00:15:51,970 --> 00:15:54,120 and people are coming up and talking to us. 385 00:15:55,078 --> 00:15:57,292 All this stuff is going on. 386 00:15:57,334 --> 00:15:58,167 It's like. 387 00:16:00,449 --> 00:16:04,915 ♪ Six inches of snow ♪ 388 00:16:04,957 --> 00:16:08,068 ♪ Two hours the cock will be crowing ♪ 389 00:16:08,110 --> 00:16:11,638 I hit a point where I'd stopped playing in my rock band. 390 00:16:11,680 --> 00:16:13,848 I was playing my wife Theresa's band called 391 00:16:13,890 --> 00:16:15,868 In the Mountain Jets and we were doing that, 392 00:16:15,910 --> 00:16:17,608 but I just wanted to do something. 393 00:16:17,650 --> 00:16:20,818 I just felt like I had something I needed to accomplish. 394 00:16:20,860 --> 00:16:22,405 So, you know, I told Rob one time, I said, you know, 395 00:16:22,447 --> 00:16:24,988 I'm probably not gonna play with you a whole lot anymore 396 00:16:25,030 --> 00:16:27,714 'cause I'm gonna try and get something going. 397 00:16:27,756 --> 00:16:29,161 And to not be doing that, 398 00:16:29,203 --> 00:16:30,058 and, you know, it was kind of tough 399 00:16:30,100 --> 00:16:33,508 'cause I was proud to be Rob's guitar player 400 00:16:33,550 --> 00:16:35,488 and I go back and listen to those records, like, man, 401 00:16:35,530 --> 00:16:36,538 that's me playing with Rob 402 00:16:36,580 --> 00:16:39,418 and I'm really proud of the work we did and I missed it. 403 00:16:39,460 --> 00:16:40,558 I miss playing with Rob, 404 00:16:40,600 --> 00:16:42,748 but I just really thought I needed to focus on trying 405 00:16:42,790 --> 00:16:44,331 to do something I wanted to do. 406 00:16:53,610 --> 00:16:56,758 In 2009, I moved to Nashville in the spring. 407 00:16:56,800 --> 00:16:59,638 Well, I was going through a bad spot myself, which is, 408 00:16:59,680 --> 00:17:01,258 we won't go into that detail, 409 00:17:01,300 --> 00:17:02,938 but that's why I moved to Nashville 410 00:17:02,980 --> 00:17:05,628 just to kind of get away from everything. 411 00:17:05,670 --> 00:17:08,458 And I was living with JT Cure for a couple of months 412 00:17:08,500 --> 00:17:10,558 and we really helped each other 413 00:17:10,600 --> 00:17:12,950 and it was just such an honor to be around him. 414 00:17:14,140 --> 00:17:17,053 It was good for him and good for me too. 415 00:17:18,187 --> 00:17:22,108 You know, it was fun having him around, getting up 416 00:17:22,150 --> 00:17:23,818 and, you know, going having some coffee 417 00:17:23,860 --> 00:17:27,418 and just, it's interesting 418 00:17:27,460 --> 00:17:32,278 to see him, you know, as to see that side of him 419 00:17:32,320 --> 00:17:36,508 because I had known him, he had always had the get up on, 420 00:17:36,550 --> 00:17:38,518 you know, he's always dressed to the nines, 421 00:17:38,560 --> 00:17:40,738 you know, shows up like he's in a show. 422 00:17:40,780 --> 00:17:44,458 But then seeing the Rob McNurlin as he's about to go to bed, 423 00:17:44,500 --> 00:17:47,491 you know, like just in his pajamas and stuff like that. 424 00:17:47,533 --> 00:17:49,768 It's an interesting perspective. 425 00:17:49,810 --> 00:17:52,318 And in the morning, you know, it's like crazy hair 426 00:17:52,360 --> 00:17:53,353 and you know? 427 00:17:56,290 --> 00:17:57,596 For a long time, 428 00:17:57,638 --> 00:17:59,404 and we played music all the time. 429 00:17:59,446 --> 00:18:01,366 I mean all the time. 430 00:18:01,408 --> 00:18:04,273 That's all we did, just played music. 431 00:18:04,315 --> 00:18:09,315 ♪ One little boy at the big Rodeo ♪ 432 00:18:09,383 --> 00:18:11,456 ♪ The props were all busted ♪ 433 00:18:11,498 --> 00:18:15,456 ♪ The lights dimmed low ♪ 434 00:18:15,498 --> 00:18:18,470 Live hillbillies. - Live on stage. 435 00:18:27,701 --> 00:18:28,648 Well, me, my dad and a good friend of ours, 436 00:18:28,690 --> 00:18:30,388 Gerald McCormick, went to almost every 437 00:18:30,430 --> 00:18:32,848 Marty Stuart TV show taping. 438 00:18:32,890 --> 00:18:36,268 And one day this guy came in 439 00:18:36,310 --> 00:18:38,698 and Rob kind of, you know, he always looks like stage ready, 440 00:18:38,740 --> 00:18:40,108 you know, and he walked in, 441 00:18:40,150 --> 00:18:41,848 we all kinda looked at him like, who's this guy? 442 00:18:41,890 --> 00:18:43,440 You know, we never had met him. 443 00:18:45,133 --> 00:18:47,731 And so a few minutes later Marty came through 444 00:18:47,773 --> 00:18:48,564 and Marty asked Rob said, hey, 445 00:18:48,606 --> 00:18:51,118 do you have a rhinestone coat in your van? 446 00:18:51,160 --> 00:18:52,497 You know? 447 00:18:52,539 --> 00:18:53,330 And he said, put it on. 448 00:18:53,372 --> 00:18:55,198 Said that'd look cool sitting in the audience, you know, 449 00:18:55,240 --> 00:18:56,990 so we thought that's kind of weird. 450 00:18:57,886 --> 00:18:58,677 And so Rob went out 451 00:18:58,719 --> 00:18:59,510 and he came back in, had like a real 452 00:18:59,552 --> 00:19:01,075 Manuel coat on, you know? 453 00:19:01,117 --> 00:19:03,208 I said, wow, this guy must be somebody, you know? 454 00:19:03,250 --> 00:19:07,408 And so anyway, and Rob came to almost every taping too. 455 00:19:07,450 --> 00:19:09,298 He lived here then at that time. 456 00:19:09,340 --> 00:19:11,368 And so we just kind of got to be buddies 457 00:19:11,410 --> 00:19:13,408 hanging out at Marty Stuart TV tapings. 458 00:19:13,450 --> 00:19:16,408 And he pretty much came one of my very best friends, 459 00:19:16,450 --> 00:19:20,353 you know, so, and yeah, he actually, our last house, 460 00:19:21,190 --> 00:19:23,548 he actually recorded a couple albums in our basement, 461 00:19:23,590 --> 00:19:28,590 you know, and JT Cure and Kayton and Kenny Vaughn 462 00:19:29,170 --> 00:19:30,628 and those guys come over and played on it. 463 00:19:30,670 --> 00:19:32,698 And it was just, yeah, everything he does, 464 00:19:32,740 --> 00:19:34,753 he keeps it simple, but quality. 465 00:19:37,054 --> 00:19:40,468 So I'd had Manuel start making me some rhinestone outfits 466 00:19:40,510 --> 00:19:43,423 and I get invited to his birthday party, 467 00:19:44,323 --> 00:19:46,828 but there was Kayton kind of playing in the house band. 468 00:19:46,870 --> 00:19:49,747 I concocted the idea, well I'm gonna do a new record. 469 00:19:49,789 --> 00:19:51,538 I want Kayton play steel guitar on it. 470 00:19:51,580 --> 00:19:53,158 And Kayton's wife had passed away 471 00:19:53,200 --> 00:19:55,648 and Kayton told me, he said, where are you living down here? 472 00:19:55,690 --> 00:19:57,238 'Cause we were playing a lot of music together. 473 00:19:57,280 --> 00:19:58,648 But then, and I told him, he said, well, 474 00:19:58,690 --> 00:20:00,208 anytime he said, I got plenty of room. 475 00:20:00,250 --> 00:20:01,708 My wife passed away. 476 00:20:01,750 --> 00:20:03,600 And so I ended up living at Kayton's. 477 00:20:04,630 --> 00:20:07,018 He got into playing with Kayton Roberts. 478 00:20:07,060 --> 00:20:09,881 And then you joined in with them at that time, right? 479 00:20:09,923 --> 00:20:11,338 I did, yeah. 480 00:20:11,380 --> 00:20:13,378 Kenny was playing with us some. 481 00:20:13,420 --> 00:20:16,558 Chris Gruggs would be in and out with us. 482 00:20:16,600 --> 00:20:19,168 We've got these great photos of us playing down 483 00:20:19,210 --> 00:20:24,194 at Layla's all together. 484 00:20:24,236 --> 00:20:28,378 And it was awesome for me to get to meet Kayton 485 00:20:28,420 --> 00:20:33,028 and to have that experience, you know, 486 00:20:33,070 --> 00:20:37,663 as a musician, to get to play with somebody like that 487 00:20:39,670 --> 00:20:44,030 and a link to the history of the music that you love 488 00:20:44,890 --> 00:20:46,513 was really cool. 489 00:20:47,620 --> 00:20:50,593 And on top of that, he was just such an awesome guy, 490 00:20:52,450 --> 00:20:54,553 one of the funniest guys I'd ever met. 491 00:20:56,377 --> 00:20:58,318 And to travel with him 492 00:20:58,360 --> 00:21:01,423 because we traveled a little bit together. 493 00:21:02,963 --> 00:21:04,678 It was always a good time. 494 00:21:04,720 --> 00:21:06,513 Always looked forward to those shows. 495 00:21:09,880 --> 00:21:11,788 Rob had sort of moved into Kayton's house 496 00:21:11,830 --> 00:21:15,568 sort of as a roommate and musical co-conspirator, 497 00:21:15,610 --> 00:21:17,218 which I think was great for Kayton. 498 00:21:17,260 --> 00:21:19,708 You know, his wife, Iva Lee, and he 499 00:21:19,750 --> 00:21:21,600 had played music together for so long 500 00:21:23,223 --> 00:21:25,678 and one of my concerns for Kayton when she passed away 501 00:21:25,720 --> 00:21:29,758 was, you know, losing that musical connection. 502 00:21:29,800 --> 00:21:32,518 And it seemed that when that door kind of closed, 503 00:21:32,560 --> 00:21:35,248 this door opened up with Rob 504 00:21:35,290 --> 00:21:36,898 and Kayton hadn't really been on the road 505 00:21:36,940 --> 00:21:40,828 or toured since, you know, Hank Snow had passed away, 506 00:21:40,870 --> 00:21:43,813 which had been, you know, maybe 10 years at this point. 507 00:21:45,346 --> 00:21:48,118 And I feel that that friendship between Kayton 508 00:21:48,160 --> 00:21:53,160 and Rob McNurlin sort of gave Kayton a sort of second wind 509 00:21:54,310 --> 00:21:57,208 and a new chapter in his career. 510 00:21:57,250 --> 00:21:59,848 All of a sudden Kayton was out working the road 511 00:21:59,890 --> 00:22:01,690 and he was playing shows around town 512 00:22:02,685 --> 00:22:04,798 and it was, you know, usually him and Rob 513 00:22:04,840 --> 00:22:07,858 and early on JT Cure, Kentucky Boy who plays 514 00:22:07,900 --> 00:22:09,898 with Chris Stapleton on bass. 515 00:22:09,940 --> 00:22:12,688 And then a little later on it was Roger Carroll 516 00:22:12,730 --> 00:22:14,533 from Hank Snow's Rainbow Ranch Boys. 517 00:22:15,400 --> 00:22:18,403 So that was through Kayton that I got to know Rob. 518 00:22:19,570 --> 00:22:21,508 He taught me, I know the first time 519 00:22:21,550 --> 00:22:23,758 we actually sat not recording on my album, 520 00:22:23,800 --> 00:22:25,078 just sat down to Jam. 521 00:22:25,120 --> 00:22:26,968 I started playing some Hank Snow song 522 00:22:27,010 --> 00:22:28,768 and I didn't make it through half the verse. 523 00:22:28,810 --> 00:22:31,918 And he goes, now son, and real nice in a very kind way. 524 00:22:31,960 --> 00:22:33,960 He said, you're leaving out some chords. 525 00:22:34,900 --> 00:22:37,408 And I said, well, you're gonna have to teach 'em to me. 526 00:22:37,450 --> 00:22:38,758 And he just perked up. 527 00:22:38,800 --> 00:22:39,950 He just knew if I was willing 528 00:22:39,992 --> 00:22:42,568 to learn, you know, that was great. 529 00:22:42,610 --> 00:22:44,308 And he did, he taught me passing chords 530 00:22:44,350 --> 00:22:46,228 that I'd never even heard of or thought of. 531 00:22:46,270 --> 00:22:48,838 And I know I came back up here, 532 00:22:48,880 --> 00:22:52,168 they had a guitar show on this stage here, 533 00:22:52,210 --> 00:22:54,688 and I came back up for it 534 00:22:54,730 --> 00:22:56,188 and I was just sitting behind the booth 535 00:22:56,230 --> 00:22:59,818 and one of my friends, Richie Collins was sitting there 536 00:22:59,860 --> 00:23:02,095 with me and I was playing something and he looked at me 537 00:23:02,137 --> 00:23:03,718 and goes, wait a minute. 538 00:23:03,760 --> 00:23:05,578 He said, Rob McNurlin don't know those chords, 539 00:23:05,620 --> 00:23:07,468 what happened to Rob McNurlin? 540 00:23:07,510 --> 00:23:09,760 And I said, well, Kayton's teaching me a lot. 541 00:23:11,410 --> 00:23:13,375 They had a really special bond and just, 542 00:23:13,417 --> 00:23:15,208 and it was great for Kayton too, you know, 543 00:23:15,250 --> 00:23:17,758 after Hank died, Rob kind of kept him on the road 544 00:23:17,800 --> 00:23:20,458 and kept him going and kept him lively. 545 00:23:20,500 --> 00:23:23,998 You know, I think Kayton probably wouldn't have lived near 546 00:23:24,040 --> 00:23:27,088 as long as he did if he hadn't been out with Rob 547 00:23:27,130 --> 00:23:28,678 and Rob keeping him playing 548 00:23:28,720 --> 00:23:31,708 and keeping him in the music business, you know? 549 00:23:31,750 --> 00:23:33,971 And I think Rob was, you know, 550 00:23:34,013 --> 00:23:35,398 a really good friend to Kayton 551 00:23:35,440 --> 00:23:37,690 and really helped him out a lot, a whole lot. 552 00:23:38,803 --> 00:23:41,076 And Kayton knew that and Kayton appreciated it 553 00:23:41,118 --> 00:23:43,758 and so did Kayton's family, I think, you know, 554 00:23:43,800 --> 00:23:45,088 and they had a really special bond 555 00:23:45,130 --> 00:23:47,248 and they did a lot of great music together. 556 00:23:47,290 --> 00:23:49,228 And Rob even, I'm sure you've probably heard about, 557 00:23:49,270 --> 00:23:52,915 but he even produced a record on Kayton 558 00:23:52,957 --> 00:23:54,808 and I had Marty Stuart come in and play on it. 559 00:23:54,850 --> 00:23:57,838 And me and Marty got together and collaborated 560 00:23:57,880 --> 00:23:59,908 and I do some graphic design stuff 561 00:23:59,950 --> 00:24:01,468 and we did the cover for it 562 00:24:01,510 --> 00:24:03,178 and all the artwork for the CD and everything. 563 00:24:03,220 --> 00:24:05,728 And Marty took the pictures for the cover, you know, 564 00:24:05,770 --> 00:24:07,303 he's a great photographer too. 565 00:24:08,883 --> 00:24:10,408 And Rob really stepped up 566 00:24:10,450 --> 00:24:12,898 and just really took care of Kayton in the last few years 567 00:24:12,940 --> 00:24:15,928 with a lot of, you know, kept his legacy. 568 00:24:15,970 --> 00:24:18,028 Really helped with it, you know. 569 00:24:18,070 --> 00:24:19,468 Hello, this is Rob NcNurlin. 570 00:24:19,510 --> 00:24:22,348 Thanks for tuning into the Rob McNurlin Ranch Party. 571 00:24:22,390 --> 00:24:24,328 Just wanted to let you know that starting in November, 572 00:24:24,370 --> 00:24:26,278 we got some all new episodes, 573 00:24:26,320 --> 00:24:28,708 one even featuring the legendary folk singer 574 00:24:28,750 --> 00:24:30,268 Rambling Jack Elliot. 575 00:24:30,310 --> 00:24:31,918 Lot more surprises for you. 576 00:24:31,960 --> 00:24:34,558 Log into RobMcNurlin.com to learn more. 577 00:24:34,600 --> 00:24:35,433 Thanks again. 578 00:24:36,940 --> 00:24:40,078 Me and Richard stayed friends all the time 579 00:24:40,120 --> 00:24:42,770 and so we wanted to do a TV show 580 00:24:43,720 --> 00:24:45,800 and we made a couple of pilots 581 00:24:46,780 --> 00:24:51,020 and so we started trying to get some sponsors for some money 582 00:24:52,540 --> 00:24:56,638 and we did, Richard and also a guy named Brad Bearer 583 00:24:56,680 --> 00:24:59,068 helped film when Richard was out of town. 584 00:24:59,110 --> 00:25:02,621 And we put the TV show, you know, 585 00:25:02,663 --> 00:25:05,047 it was on three years, I think. 586 00:25:09,610 --> 00:25:11,608 From the Country Music Heritage Hall, 587 00:25:11,650 --> 00:25:12,958 It's a Highlands Museum 588 00:25:13,000 --> 00:25:15,958 and Discovery Center in Ashland, Kentucky 589 00:25:16,000 --> 00:25:19,858 on the Country Music Highway, Route 23. 590 00:25:19,900 --> 00:25:22,318 It's the Rob McNurlin Ranch Party 591 00:25:22,360 --> 00:25:26,203 starring Rob McNurlin and his Beatnik Cowboys, 592 00:25:27,040 --> 00:25:30,628 Kayton Roberts, Kenny Vaughan, JT Cure 593 00:25:30,670 --> 00:25:33,028 with Kim Johnson, Bobby Taylor, 594 00:25:33,070 --> 00:25:34,678 Andrew Dunlap, 595 00:25:34,720 --> 00:25:38,788 and Les Worley, plus today's special guest. 596 00:25:38,830 --> 00:25:41,338 I'm your announcer Chance Martin. 597 00:25:41,380 --> 00:25:45,793 And now here's the star of the show, Rob McNurlin. 598 00:25:52,263 --> 00:25:56,524 ♪ There's no rules on the road ♪ 599 00:25:56,566 --> 00:26:01,566 ♪ That's why the road rules ♪ 600 00:26:02,514 --> 00:26:06,557 ♪ Now there's rules on the road ♪ 601 00:26:06,599 --> 00:26:10,188 ♪ But the road can't be ruled ♪ 602 00:26:10,230 --> 00:26:11,430 But you know who else? 603 00:26:13,270 --> 00:26:14,278 It's so foreign 604 00:26:14,320 --> 00:26:17,143 of a thing to me to be like, 605 00:26:18,700 --> 00:26:23,700 I'm gonna make a TV show or I might have that idea, 606 00:26:24,340 --> 00:26:26,188 but nothing ever happens to it. 607 00:26:26,230 --> 00:26:30,838 He saw the whole thing through, he just did it all. 608 00:26:30,880 --> 00:26:33,917 And it was a really cool thing to be a part of 609 00:26:33,959 --> 00:26:36,178 and to see it, you know, 610 00:26:36,220 --> 00:26:38,863 and Kayton was involved with some of those, 611 00:26:40,060 --> 00:26:42,358 it's almost like he could see 612 00:26:42,400 --> 00:26:45,285 the whole thing from beginning to end. 613 00:26:45,327 --> 00:26:48,028 And from our perspective, we just kind of showed up 614 00:26:48,070 --> 00:26:49,675 and he's like, okay, let's play this song. 615 00:26:49,717 --> 00:26:51,043 And we'd play that. 616 00:26:51,910 --> 00:26:53,728 Good take, good take, yep. 617 00:26:53,770 --> 00:26:55,348 All right, then we'd play another song, 618 00:26:55,390 --> 00:26:57,388 then we'd maybe change clothes. 619 00:26:57,430 --> 00:27:01,918 And then he just knew all this stuff 620 00:27:01,960 --> 00:27:04,138 to make it work. 621 00:27:04,180 --> 00:27:07,768 But he is always in, you know, he was always making films 622 00:27:07,810 --> 00:27:11,848 and had an eye for that kind of thing too. 623 00:27:11,890 --> 00:27:13,228 Why is the phone ringing? 624 00:27:13,270 --> 00:27:14,979 I'm busy, I'm trying to do a show. 625 00:27:16,810 --> 00:27:19,063 Hello, Ranch Party, Rob speaking. 626 00:27:20,050 --> 00:27:21,628 Well, hey baby, how are you? 627 00:27:21,670 --> 00:27:23,398 What are you into today? 628 00:27:23,440 --> 00:27:25,258 Oh, well that's good, that's good. 629 00:27:25,300 --> 00:27:26,968 Yeah, we're having a good time down here 630 00:27:27,010 --> 00:27:28,705 playing a little bit of music. 631 00:27:28,747 --> 00:27:30,598 Oh, the show went fine last night. 632 00:27:30,640 --> 00:27:31,708 It went fine. 633 00:27:31,750 --> 00:27:33,628 While we were playing, this three-legged dog 634 00:27:33,670 --> 00:27:35,848 walked into the bar and said, I'm looking for the man 635 00:27:35,890 --> 00:27:37,359 who shot my paw. 636 00:27:39,663 --> 00:27:42,261 Yeah, I love you too, baby, I'll see you later. 637 00:27:44,140 --> 00:27:46,918 All right, welcome back to the Rob McNurlin Ranch Party. 638 00:27:46,960 --> 00:27:47,908 Thanks for tuning in 639 00:27:47,950 --> 00:27:50,878 and we have a very special guest today, Mr. Marty Stuart. 640 00:27:50,920 --> 00:27:52,018 Marty, thanks for being here. 641 00:27:52,060 --> 00:27:54,178 My pleasure, Rob, heard all about your show, 642 00:27:54,220 --> 00:27:55,936 cousin Kenny's been telling me about it. 643 00:27:55,978 --> 00:27:56,769 Well bless you, sir. 644 00:27:56,811 --> 00:27:58,224 I saw one of your DVDs 645 00:27:58,266 --> 00:27:59,524 and I had to get in on it. 646 00:27:59,566 --> 00:28:00,669 Well, I appreciate it. 647 00:28:00,711 --> 00:28:01,502 Thank you so much. - You stylized. 648 00:28:01,544 --> 00:28:03,133 Oh yeah, we're sparkling today. 649 00:28:12,131 --> 00:28:13,758 ♪ Then he went ♪ 650 00:28:24,400 --> 00:28:27,964 Yeah, we worked hard on those shows 651 00:28:28,006 --> 00:28:29,892 and I think they came out pretty good. 652 00:28:29,934 --> 00:28:30,725 You know, I really enjoyed it. 653 00:28:30,767 --> 00:28:32,758 It was me and Kayton and JT Cure 654 00:28:32,800 --> 00:28:34,258 and Rob, I think just the four of us. 655 00:28:34,300 --> 00:28:35,428 It was really fun. 656 00:28:35,470 --> 00:28:37,950 And he had some good guests on there, 657 00:28:37,992 --> 00:28:38,968 you know, he had Marty Stuart 658 00:28:39,010 --> 00:28:41,263 and Larry Cordle and all kinds of folks. 659 00:28:44,200 --> 00:28:46,258 Well, I was playing with Marty Stuart 660 00:28:46,300 --> 00:28:48,598 and His Fabulous Superlatives 661 00:28:48,640 --> 00:28:52,370 in some outdoor show in East Kentucky 662 00:28:53,320 --> 00:28:54,568 on a nice night. 663 00:28:54,610 --> 00:28:59,398 It was well attended, lots of hillbillies there. 664 00:28:59,440 --> 00:29:03,898 And he kind of appeared into my world there. 665 00:29:03,940 --> 00:29:07,416 And I remember, you know, I saw, you know, 666 00:29:07,458 --> 00:29:10,777 I saw this guy's cool, you know, just, he cuts a, you know, 667 00:29:11,860 --> 00:29:15,085 when he walks in to wherever you are, you know, 668 00:29:15,127 --> 00:29:15,918 you immediately notice him. 669 00:29:15,960 --> 00:29:17,398 'Cause you know, he's put together 670 00:29:17,440 --> 00:29:21,025 and he's has his own sort of aura about him, you know? 671 00:29:21,067 --> 00:29:22,498 And I thought, this cat's cool. 672 00:29:22,540 --> 00:29:26,098 And then Marty must have known him, I'm not sure, 673 00:29:26,140 --> 00:29:28,526 but Marty got him up on stage that night. 674 00:29:28,568 --> 00:29:29,401 Where are you Robert? 675 00:29:30,490 --> 00:29:31,573 Come on son. 676 00:29:35,170 --> 00:29:37,243 Got a fine looking cowboy suit on. 677 00:29:56,890 --> 00:29:59,405 They played a song by Rob called, 678 00:29:59,447 --> 00:30:02,188 "Is Your Name on the Rock and the Roll?" 679 00:30:02,230 --> 00:30:03,388 And they tore it up. 680 00:30:03,430 --> 00:30:05,965 Marty played the mandolin and Rob played his acoustic guitar 681 00:30:06,007 --> 00:30:09,178 and Rob sang and the audience went crazy, you know? 682 00:30:09,220 --> 00:30:12,628 And I was like, hm, this guy's different. 683 00:30:12,670 --> 00:30:15,613 And then, you know, the more I got to know him, you know, 684 00:30:17,710 --> 00:30:21,388 I realized that not only was he into old country music 685 00:30:21,430 --> 00:30:24,328 and bluegrass music and knew a lot about all that stuff, 686 00:30:24,370 --> 00:30:26,878 but he was also into Jerry Garcia and Bob Dylan. 687 00:30:26,920 --> 00:30:28,168 He knew a lot about that stuff. 688 00:30:28,210 --> 00:30:30,718 And I said, oh, all right, I can relate to this dude. 689 00:30:30,760 --> 00:30:32,008 I like him. 690 00:30:32,050 --> 00:30:34,033 And we've been friends ever since. 691 00:30:35,920 --> 00:30:38,758 I think it was JT Cure on bass 692 00:30:38,800 --> 00:30:41,308 and Kate and Robertson Seal 693 00:30:41,350 --> 00:30:44,695 and me on electric, Rob, 694 00:30:44,737 --> 00:30:47,263 and sometimes Chris Scruggs played with us, 695 00:30:48,340 --> 00:30:49,798 various instruments, I'm sure. 696 00:30:49,840 --> 00:30:53,218 And, you know, we played some shows 697 00:30:53,260 --> 00:30:58,168 and yeah, we've worked together in the studio. 698 00:30:58,210 --> 00:30:59,578 Has Rob been easy to work with? 699 00:30:59,620 --> 00:31:01,108 Oh, what do you think? 700 00:31:01,150 --> 00:31:02,818 Yeah, he's the easiest to work with. 701 00:31:02,860 --> 00:31:07,528 Well, you know, the thing about Rob is he knows his music. 702 00:31:07,570 --> 00:31:08,870 He has his style 703 00:31:10,152 --> 00:31:13,013 and when he steps up to the mic in the studio 704 00:31:13,055 --> 00:31:16,573 with his guitar and to sing, he's ready. 705 00:31:19,394 --> 00:31:20,185 There's no guesswork there. 706 00:31:20,227 --> 00:31:21,598 He's already ready to go. 707 00:31:21,640 --> 00:31:24,958 You hit the button and he lays his part down and it's done. 708 00:31:25,000 --> 00:31:27,538 And so it's pretty easy to work with him 709 00:31:27,580 --> 00:31:30,718 because he knows his style 710 00:31:30,760 --> 00:31:33,778 and he understands what, you know, his own music really well 711 00:31:33,820 --> 00:31:36,508 and it's fun and it's easy 712 00:31:36,550 --> 00:31:39,103 and it always sounds good because he's good. 713 00:31:41,590 --> 00:31:43,438 Yeah, Kenny played, 714 00:31:43,480 --> 00:31:47,818 he's played on my most recent three albums 715 00:31:47,860 --> 00:31:51,778 and he produced the two latest albums, 716 00:31:51,820 --> 00:31:52,858 he produced, played on 'em. 717 00:31:52,900 --> 00:31:54,538 And actually all of Marty's band played on 718 00:31:54,580 --> 00:31:56,188 the two most recent ones, you know, 719 00:31:56,230 --> 00:31:59,308 but that "Tent of the Wicked" I was just talking about, 720 00:31:59,350 --> 00:32:01,341 may be my best record. 721 00:32:01,383 --> 00:32:03,928 I mean, I really love the songs on there 722 00:32:03,970 --> 00:32:06,570 and the the musicianship on it is just unbelievable. 723 00:32:08,170 --> 00:32:09,388 I mean, I think it's human nature 724 00:32:09,430 --> 00:32:11,398 that if you played in a band 725 00:32:11,440 --> 00:32:13,858 and someone takes your place, you're gonna go look at him 726 00:32:13,900 --> 00:32:15,448 and go, well, how good's that guy? 727 00:32:15,490 --> 00:32:17,158 Well, I look over and it's Kenny Vaughan. 728 00:32:17,200 --> 00:32:19,618 It's like, well, that guy's pretty doggone good. 729 00:32:19,660 --> 00:32:21,148 I couldn't tune Kenny's guitar. 730 00:32:21,190 --> 00:32:23,158 He went to Nashville and again, 731 00:32:23,200 --> 00:32:26,008 his way of getting in with people. 732 00:32:26,050 --> 00:32:28,798 And all of a sudden he and Marty Stuart are best friends 733 00:32:28,840 --> 00:32:30,238 and he's got Kenny Vaughan 734 00:32:30,280 --> 00:32:32,488 and he's got JT Cure playing, 735 00:32:32,530 --> 00:32:34,978 which he knew JT from back in the Moorhead days. 736 00:32:35,020 --> 00:32:37,138 He'd known JT for a long time. 737 00:32:37,180 --> 00:32:38,668 But Rob had just continued 738 00:32:38,710 --> 00:32:40,948 to play with better and better people. 739 00:32:40,990 --> 00:32:44,518 I remember being in a building in Nashville, 740 00:32:44,560 --> 00:32:46,408 I looked out the window and there was this guy 741 00:32:46,450 --> 00:32:49,078 all by himself just walking down the street 742 00:32:49,120 --> 00:32:52,888 and he had on the most gorgeous coat, 743 00:32:52,930 --> 00:32:54,618 Porter Wagner would've been jealous of it. 744 00:32:54,660 --> 00:32:58,108 It was fully rhinestone, beautiful, just by himself. 745 00:32:58,150 --> 00:32:59,008 Who's that character? 746 00:32:59,050 --> 00:33:01,348 And then come to find out, it was Rob McNurlin. 747 00:33:01,390 --> 00:33:04,408 I remember we did an old Johnny Cash song, 748 00:33:04,450 --> 00:33:07,708 a song that John and Bob Dylan wrote called "Wanted Man" 749 00:33:07,750 --> 00:33:08,758 on Rob's TV show. 750 00:33:08,800 --> 00:33:10,183 So I love that performance. 751 00:33:11,974 --> 00:33:14,339 ♪ This next time go ahead ♪ 752 00:33:14,381 --> 00:33:16,645 ♪ Had all that I wanted ♪ 753 00:33:16,687 --> 00:33:19,062 ♪ Moved a lot of things I've had ♪ 754 00:33:19,104 --> 00:33:21,618 ♪ And a lot more than I needed ♪ 755 00:33:21,660 --> 00:33:24,723 ♪ Of some things that turned out bad ♪ 756 00:33:35,197 --> 00:33:36,658 And sometimes it was reruns, 757 00:33:36,700 --> 00:33:39,118 we didn't have three years worth of shows. 758 00:33:39,160 --> 00:33:43,018 But yeah, we had some, you know, great stuff. 759 00:33:43,060 --> 00:33:45,988 I mean, and there again, I was blessed with guests. 760 00:33:46,030 --> 00:33:48,140 I mean, Marty Stuart and Larry Cordle 761 00:33:49,952 --> 00:33:51,148 and John Carter Cash, 762 00:33:51,190 --> 00:33:53,518 just blessed with such great guests. 763 00:33:53,560 --> 00:33:54,478 And there's a whole list of 'em 764 00:33:54,520 --> 00:33:56,173 that I'm drawing blanks on now. 765 00:33:58,990 --> 00:34:01,117 So when I first reached out to you, 766 00:34:01,159 --> 00:34:02,998 you had a Facebook post 767 00:34:03,040 --> 00:34:05,653 that made me think you were retiring from music. 768 00:34:07,060 --> 00:34:10,198 Well, I probably wrote the post wrong, 769 00:34:10,240 --> 00:34:14,128 but just because of some family situation, 770 00:34:14,170 --> 00:34:15,500 my dad passed away 771 00:34:16,420 --> 00:34:18,238 and somebody needs to take care of the property 772 00:34:18,280 --> 00:34:19,918 'cause mom's in a rest home. 773 00:34:19,960 --> 00:34:22,678 And plus they were raising my great nephew. 774 00:34:22,720 --> 00:34:27,718 Now, you know, I could abandon all of that 775 00:34:27,760 --> 00:34:29,038 and go on the road playing music, 776 00:34:29,080 --> 00:34:31,498 but I wouldn't feel good about myself if I did that. 777 00:34:31,540 --> 00:34:35,608 So I'm gonna play music around here and occasionally travel, 778 00:34:35,650 --> 00:34:36,988 but I just can't like I used to. 779 00:34:37,030 --> 00:34:38,578 I can't be on the road for three or four weeks 780 00:34:38,620 --> 00:34:40,948 'cause I wanna be able to visit my mom 781 00:34:40,990 --> 00:34:43,618 as long as I can, help my little nephew with all he needs 782 00:34:43,660 --> 00:34:45,260 and take care of the home place. 783 00:34:46,331 --> 00:34:51,331 ♪ In the courtroom for the judge's gavel falls ♪ 784 00:34:52,069 --> 00:34:57,069 ♪ Defended the innocent and righted many wrongs ♪ 785 00:35:00,017 --> 00:35:05,017 ♪ But my books of law were traded for these songs ♪ 786 00:35:09,942 --> 00:35:14,942 ♪ I might've studied medicine and healed my fellow man ♪ 787 00:35:17,812 --> 00:35:20,890 ♪ Picked the lame and crippled up ♪ 788 00:35:20,932 --> 00:35:25,064 ♪ Helped make 'em stand ♪ 789 00:35:25,106 --> 00:35:30,106 ♪ Is there someone dying that should be standing strong ♪ 790 00:35:32,591 --> 00:35:37,591 ♪ 'Cause my healing powers were traded for a song ♪ 791 00:35:44,931 --> 00:35:47,767 ♪ Do you remember ♪ 792 00:35:52,510 --> 00:35:53,728 My dad worked in a Steel Mill 793 00:35:53,770 --> 00:35:55,318 and Johnny Cash sang, man, you know, 794 00:35:55,360 --> 00:35:57,898 to me they were like the same though. 795 00:35:57,940 --> 00:36:00,508 And so when I got into it, it was purely for music. 796 00:36:00,550 --> 00:36:02,578 And then of course I started trying to make money 797 00:36:02,620 --> 00:36:07,438 and things, and eventually you got the point, oh yeah, 798 00:36:07,480 --> 00:36:09,973 you wanna be a rock star, like everybody does. 799 00:36:11,307 --> 00:36:13,693 And then common sense kinda drifts in 800 00:36:13,735 --> 00:36:16,160 that not many people make it as a rock star 801 00:36:17,899 --> 00:36:19,588 and especially the kind of music that I picked 802 00:36:19,630 --> 00:36:22,858 because I can play it with a rock and roll band, 803 00:36:22,900 --> 00:36:23,998 I can play it with a country band, 804 00:36:24,040 --> 00:36:26,968 but I'm really a folk singer pretty much. 805 00:36:27,010 --> 00:36:28,828 And I realized that there wasn't 806 00:36:28,870 --> 00:36:31,378 that many rockstar folk singers. 807 00:36:31,420 --> 00:36:33,355 So I was just trying to make a living at it. 808 00:36:33,397 --> 00:36:35,301 And I did, I managed to do that. 809 00:36:35,343 --> 00:36:38,599 ♪ You ain't gold ♪ 810 00:36:38,641 --> 00:36:43,641 ♪ All you are girl is flesh and bone ♪ 811 00:36:45,212 --> 00:36:50,212 ♪ You're the best at these eyes have seen ♪ 812 00:36:50,650 --> 00:36:52,273 When I moved to Nashville, 813 00:36:53,740 --> 00:36:55,903 I never planned on moving back here, 814 00:36:56,800 --> 00:36:59,338 but circumstances brought me back here and this is home. 815 00:36:59,380 --> 00:37:02,488 No matter where I've ever went in the world, 816 00:37:02,530 --> 00:37:04,453 you know, this is still home. 817 00:37:13,592 --> 00:37:14,728 I never could distinguish, 818 00:37:14,770 --> 00:37:17,848 and I run into this a lot people, some people say, 819 00:37:17,890 --> 00:37:19,618 well you play secular music, you know, 820 00:37:19,660 --> 00:37:21,088 you don't play all gospel music 821 00:37:21,130 --> 00:37:25,618 and some people that, you know, some Christians 822 00:37:25,660 --> 00:37:27,448 that's not right to them. 823 00:37:27,490 --> 00:37:29,038 But I don't see the difference in it. 824 00:37:29,080 --> 00:37:31,468 You know, when I read the Bible, there's all kinds 825 00:37:31,510 --> 00:37:36,268 of stories about love, hate, murders, you know? 826 00:37:36,310 --> 00:37:37,678 Yes, the gospel is there 827 00:37:37,720 --> 00:37:39,118 and that's the main reason that's there. 828 00:37:39,160 --> 00:37:42,748 But life is in those too, just like in the songs, 829 00:37:42,790 --> 00:37:45,028 you know, those old folk songs have. 830 00:37:45,070 --> 00:37:48,178 So to me, I'm not saying they're all gospel songs to me, 831 00:37:48,220 --> 00:37:49,348 but all of it's important. 832 00:37:49,390 --> 00:37:51,178 It all just deals with life. 833 00:37:51,220 --> 00:37:54,053 ♪ Do you remember ♪ 834 00:37:57,480 --> 00:38:00,118 If anybody remembers it, it'll be amazing to me. 835 00:38:00,160 --> 00:38:02,038 It still amazes me if somebody shows up 836 00:38:02,080 --> 00:38:03,430 and knows one of the songs. 837 00:38:06,790 --> 00:38:08,788 The trick is, I mean, it's not gonna matter 838 00:38:08,830 --> 00:38:10,663 to us anyway, you know? 839 00:38:11,500 --> 00:38:14,338 I mean, I'm 60, I'll soon be 61. 840 00:38:14,380 --> 00:38:16,621 I had a long run, you know, I'm closer to the end 841 00:38:16,663 --> 00:38:18,505 than I am to the beginning, you know, 842 00:38:18,547 --> 00:38:21,688 but now I'm just a hillbilly on my way to heaven. 843 00:38:39,831 --> 00:38:41,637 ♪ I was born in the country ♪ 844 00:38:41,679 --> 00:38:46,679 ♪ Then I moved to town ♪ 845 00:38:46,894 --> 00:38:49,396 ♪ I was born in the country ♪ 846 00:38:49,438 --> 00:38:52,688 ♪ When I moved to town ♪ 847 00:38:53,800 --> 00:38:56,750 The first ever Rob McNurlin promo picture. 848 00:38:56,792 --> 00:39:00,868 ♪ Hillbillies hanging around ♪ 849 00:39:00,910 --> 00:39:03,463 It's us recording at the Cash Cabin Studio. 850 00:39:05,560 --> 00:39:09,400 It was February 14th of 2000. 851 00:39:10,453 --> 00:39:13,138 So whole big spread in off-label photos 852 00:39:13,180 --> 00:39:16,970 and okay, here's what, so I did the soundtrack 853 00:39:17,830 --> 00:39:20,998 to a movie about Bullfrogs in Kentucky. 854 00:39:21,040 --> 00:39:22,843 And so here's the promo for that. 855 00:39:25,384 --> 00:39:29,608 So I went to England with Dave Prince and his wife Luna. 856 00:39:29,650 --> 00:39:31,050 Here's the poster from that. 857 00:39:32,590 --> 00:39:33,538 The Blue Cat what? 858 00:39:33,580 --> 00:39:36,326 The Blue Cat Cafe, wherever that was. 859 00:39:38,862 --> 00:39:40,558 You know, you just think of the theme to Barney Miller 860 00:39:40,600 --> 00:39:42,764 or Sanford and Son or something. 861 00:39:48,280 --> 00:39:49,498 Hank Snow's toupee. 862 00:39:49,540 --> 00:39:50,788 What more can you say? 863 00:39:50,830 --> 00:39:53,398 You know, the reason I ended up 864 00:39:53,440 --> 00:39:55,948 with this when I was living in Nashville, 865 00:39:55,990 --> 00:40:00,418 I got wind that a lady who ran an antique shop 866 00:40:00,460 --> 00:40:01,675 had some Hank Snow stuff. 867 00:40:01,717 --> 00:40:04,348 And I said, well, do you have anything else Hank Snow? 868 00:40:04,390 --> 00:40:06,988 She looked at me really weird and said, I got a toupee. 869 00:40:07,030 --> 00:40:09,388 And I went, now you're talking. 870 00:40:09,430 --> 00:40:13,198 And so the toupee came in the original shipping box 871 00:40:13,240 --> 00:40:15,418 and it came with a box of the little stick on things, 872 00:40:15,460 --> 00:40:16,738 the little double sided things 873 00:40:16,780 --> 00:40:18,208 you stick 'em to your head with. 874 00:40:18,250 --> 00:40:22,078 But also in the box was this unsigned check 875 00:40:22,120 --> 00:40:24,563 and these keys and bullets. 876 00:40:26,833 --> 00:40:28,078 And there's a couple of famous stories 877 00:40:28,120 --> 00:40:30,448 about Hank Snow using his gun. 878 00:40:30,490 --> 00:40:32,240 You have to look those up yourself, 879 00:40:33,700 --> 00:40:36,448 well he tried to shoot his son one time too. 880 00:40:36,490 --> 00:40:39,418 But anyway, and so I got all that 881 00:40:39,460 --> 00:40:42,808 and since then, a good friend of mine, Doug Hudson, 882 00:40:42,850 --> 00:40:45,883 who ended up with all the paperwork from Hank's office, 883 00:40:46,720 --> 00:40:48,870 asked me, he said, you know what year he bought the toupee? 884 00:40:48,912 --> 00:40:50,155 And I said, yeah, it's got the mailing thing on it. 885 00:40:50,197 --> 00:40:55,108 And I gave, so he found me the return, you know, the check. 886 00:40:55,150 --> 00:40:56,758 And so I have it, it's downstairs, 887 00:40:56,800 --> 00:40:59,000 I have the check where he bought the toupee. 888 00:41:00,250 --> 00:41:04,310 Yeah, and even a little bit, kind of the odd part of 889 00:41:05,710 --> 00:41:08,232 history and leaning into that kinda stuff, 890 00:41:08,274 --> 00:41:11,698 stuff people don't really necessarily think about 891 00:41:11,740 --> 00:41:16,378 the whole case that he had made for the toupee lights up. 892 00:41:16,420 --> 00:41:18,268 And we played a show. 893 00:41:18,310 --> 00:41:19,678 I think the first time I saw that 894 00:41:19,720 --> 00:41:21,088 was when we played a show over 895 00:41:21,130 --> 00:41:23,728 at the American Legion here. 896 00:41:23,770 --> 00:41:27,403 And he brought it out and had it sitting on stage. 897 00:41:28,570 --> 00:41:31,108 But he does, he collects all these real cool 898 00:41:31,150 --> 00:41:32,428 weird memorabilia pieces 899 00:41:32,470 --> 00:41:34,078 and I could absolutely see him having 900 00:41:34,120 --> 00:41:36,250 a little traveling freak show. 901 00:41:45,393 --> 00:41:47,480 ♪ Got the hillbilly blues ♪ 902 00:41:47,522 --> 00:41:50,855 ♪ No cure can be found ♪ 903 00:41:53,080 --> 00:41:57,508 A great, he makes these big wooden Indians and bears 904 00:41:57,550 --> 00:42:01,644 and stuff, carves them, magnificent work. 905 00:42:01,686 --> 00:42:05,436 ♪ Hillbillies hanging around ♪ 906 00:42:24,966 --> 00:42:29,463 ♪ Gonna pick my guitar ♪ 907 00:42:29,505 --> 00:42:34,505 ♪ 'Til I break the strings ♪ 908 00:42:36,189 --> 00:42:39,261 ♪ Gonna pick my guitar ♪ 909 00:42:39,303 --> 00:42:42,821 Introduce one of your own, Rob McNurlin. 910 00:42:42,863 --> 00:42:45,718 And I don't remember when I first met Rob, 911 00:42:45,760 --> 00:42:46,708 it's been that long. 912 00:42:46,750 --> 00:42:49,948 I do know that when I started Wood Songs, 913 00:42:49,990 --> 00:42:54,418 Rob was the very first artist I brought on the show 914 00:42:54,460 --> 00:42:56,788 because, you know, we only had one station 915 00:42:56,830 --> 00:42:57,928 airing it at the time. 916 00:42:57,970 --> 00:42:59,038 And Rob was a friend. 917 00:42:59,080 --> 00:43:00,358 We were already friends at the time, 918 00:43:00,400 --> 00:43:02,818 and I was like, I want to try this, what do you think? 919 00:43:02,860 --> 00:43:05,908 And so he came on the very first broadcast of Wood Songs. 920 00:43:05,950 --> 00:43:08,668 Rob's music is sort of a tapestry of many things, 921 00:43:08,710 --> 00:43:12,268 all threaded through Appalachia in many ways. 922 00:43:12,310 --> 00:43:14,728 You know, he grew up in the Appalachian Mountains, 923 00:43:14,770 --> 00:43:17,998 but he was heavily influenced by the imagery 924 00:43:18,040 --> 00:43:21,041 of early Bob Dylan 925 00:43:21,083 --> 00:43:24,628 and the music of Johnny Cash, Woody Guthrie especially. 926 00:43:24,670 --> 00:43:27,958 And all of this, I think as many artists do, 927 00:43:28,000 --> 00:43:32,368 they allow that to gestate inside their musical heart 928 00:43:32,410 --> 00:43:35,341 until they come out with something original. 929 00:43:35,383 --> 00:43:38,938 And Rob was able to turn all that into something original. 930 00:43:38,980 --> 00:43:41,308 Couldn't forget the first time I met Rob McNurlin. 931 00:43:41,350 --> 00:43:45,238 So we had Rambling Jack Elliot was playing, 932 00:43:45,280 --> 00:43:47,218 and Rob drove Rambling Jack up. 933 00:43:47,260 --> 00:43:52,260 Now, you know, Jack had a horrible, horrible cold. 934 00:43:52,330 --> 00:43:53,773 Rob, of course being Rob, 935 00:43:54,700 --> 00:43:55,708 let me help out. 936 00:43:55,750 --> 00:43:56,923 And so he did the show. 937 00:43:57,760 --> 00:44:01,888 I'm not sure how Rob would characterize himself, 938 00:44:01,930 --> 00:44:04,018 but to me he represents a certain, you know, 939 00:44:04,060 --> 00:44:05,188 without putting a label on it, 940 00:44:05,230 --> 00:44:07,198 he certainly represents a certain tradition. 941 00:44:07,240 --> 00:44:11,683 And I think that as an artist, you know, he's a pure soul. 942 00:44:12,910 --> 00:44:15,568 There's never, just a pure soul. 943 00:44:15,610 --> 00:44:19,468 I mean, everything he does, you know it's real. 944 00:44:19,510 --> 00:44:23,038 And I think that honesty, I think honesty is an artist, 945 00:44:23,080 --> 00:44:25,588 is what I would describe him as. 946 00:44:25,630 --> 00:44:27,658 In a just world, 947 00:44:27,700 --> 00:44:29,713 Rob McNurlin would be a household name. 948 00:44:30,850 --> 00:44:34,378 I think, you know, in show business 949 00:44:34,420 --> 00:44:37,198 and probably I'd say in any business, you know, 950 00:44:37,240 --> 00:44:39,208 there's moments where, you know, 951 00:44:39,250 --> 00:44:41,038 it comes at you in waves. 952 00:44:41,080 --> 00:44:43,648 And maybe better put with music 953 00:44:43,690 --> 00:44:45,178 because of the the cultural connection 954 00:44:45,220 --> 00:44:47,169 that music has for our lives. 955 00:44:47,211 --> 00:44:50,210 It comes at us in eras, you know, Rob's career 956 00:44:52,300 --> 00:44:53,488 and who he plays for 957 00:44:53,530 --> 00:44:56,548 and then how he presents his music to an audience 958 00:44:56,590 --> 00:44:58,498 sort of evolve over time. 959 00:44:58,540 --> 00:44:59,728 You know, there was that moment 960 00:44:59,770 --> 00:45:01,798 when he was talking about retiring 961 00:45:01,840 --> 00:45:05,338 and then sort of almost denied making the claim, saying, 962 00:45:05,380 --> 00:45:08,008 well, what I meant was I was gonna scale back 963 00:45:08,050 --> 00:45:08,841 and reorganize. 964 00:45:08,883 --> 00:45:11,638 But sometimes you gotta do that to not be afraid 965 00:45:11,680 --> 00:45:12,868 to reinvent themselves. 966 00:45:12,910 --> 00:45:16,018 And sometimes you have to burn it all down to the ground 967 00:45:16,060 --> 00:45:18,163 and rise from the ashes like a phoenix. 968 00:45:19,510 --> 00:45:21,448 Well, you know, Rob has always, like I said, 969 00:45:21,490 --> 00:45:22,588 he's been one of my heroes. 970 00:45:22,630 --> 00:45:23,788 He was one of the first heroes 971 00:45:23,830 --> 00:45:25,648 that I had in the music business. 972 00:45:25,690 --> 00:45:27,448 Like I said, I remember watching him on TV 973 00:45:27,490 --> 00:45:29,938 from a really young age and thinking, man, 974 00:45:29,980 --> 00:45:33,148 that's gotta be the coolest job in the world. 975 00:45:33,190 --> 00:45:35,278 He's left a big influence on my life 976 00:45:35,320 --> 00:45:36,980 and my music in more ways 977 00:45:38,135 --> 00:45:39,598 than one could probably realize. 978 00:45:39,640 --> 00:45:42,508 Even outside of the music though, Rob McNurlin as a man, 979 00:45:42,550 --> 00:45:43,798 is a top shelf. 980 00:45:43,840 --> 00:45:45,478 You're not gonna find a better human being 981 00:45:45,520 --> 00:45:46,513 anywhere you look. 982 00:45:48,333 --> 00:45:51,193 And that spoke volumes to me even more than the music. 983 00:45:52,600 --> 00:45:54,268 Rob's legacy is gonna be huge. 984 00:45:54,310 --> 00:45:57,478 I mean, throughout this region of Appalachia, 985 00:45:57,520 --> 00:45:59,788 Eastern Kentucky, West Virginia, Southern Ohio, 986 00:45:59,830 --> 00:46:01,408 of course it's gonna be huge, 987 00:46:01,450 --> 00:46:04,528 but he's also been so much more in so many other places, 988 00:46:04,570 --> 00:46:07,378 you know, all across the United States, 989 00:46:07,420 --> 00:46:11,038 Rob McNurlin has toured, traveled and performed, 990 00:46:11,080 --> 00:46:13,378 bummed a meal here and there and kept going. 991 00:46:13,420 --> 00:46:14,253 You know? 992 00:46:15,220 --> 00:46:18,433 I remember calling Rob a cowboy poet, 993 00:46:20,710 --> 00:46:22,048 he just blew me away. 994 00:46:22,090 --> 00:46:26,743 There was something about his authenticity, 995 00:46:28,570 --> 00:46:32,758 the sound of his voice, the way that he played, 996 00:46:32,800 --> 00:46:36,013 the way that he told the stories that he played. 997 00:46:36,865 --> 00:46:41,038 It reminded me just like, you know, Jack Kerouac 998 00:46:41,080 --> 00:46:45,493 in a cowboy hat, and it was deep. 999 00:46:46,503 --> 00:46:50,668 It was just deep just like reading Kerouac. 1000 00:46:50,710 --> 00:46:52,408 But there is something, yeah, 1001 00:46:52,450 --> 00:46:54,883 when you're around him, pay attention. 1002 00:46:56,350 --> 00:47:00,763 Like, I feel like when you're around him, 1003 00:47:02,560 --> 00:47:03,403 you're chosen, 1004 00:47:05,110 --> 00:47:06,298 hear whatever he has to say. 1005 00:47:06,340 --> 00:47:07,690 That's just what I believe. 1006 00:47:08,680 --> 00:47:10,033 Retirement's a big word. 1007 00:47:11,530 --> 00:47:12,480 I don't believe it. 1008 00:47:13,450 --> 00:47:14,518 He'll be back. 1009 00:47:14,560 --> 00:47:17,758 Well, you know, you know, I've got 1010 00:47:17,800 --> 00:47:20,150 to know him fairly well over the years 1011 00:47:21,641 --> 00:47:26,038 and you know, he always took care of his mom and his dad 1012 00:47:26,080 --> 00:47:29,840 and, you know, still taking care of his dad's mules 1013 00:47:33,040 --> 00:47:36,388 and he's the father figure for his nephew 1014 00:47:36,430 --> 00:47:38,548 and he takes care of him. 1015 00:47:38,590 --> 00:47:41,413 And he's a good influence on his nephew, I do believe. 1016 00:47:42,505 --> 00:47:45,868 And, you know, he's just a standup character. 1017 00:47:45,910 --> 00:47:47,218 He's kind of a spiritual advisor 1018 00:47:47,260 --> 00:47:48,808 to a lot of people, honestly. 1019 00:47:48,850 --> 00:47:51,718 I mean, he can, I wouldn't say he's a preacher, 1020 00:47:51,760 --> 00:47:54,658 but he can lead a service at church 1021 00:47:54,700 --> 00:47:57,178 and everybody gets something out of it. 1022 00:47:57,220 --> 00:48:01,498 And even I've seen him in honky tonks, dive places, 1023 00:48:01,540 --> 00:48:03,988 whatever, and he'll get up and sing gospel songs 1024 00:48:04,030 --> 00:48:08,248 and when he does, it gets quiet, they all stop dancing, 1025 00:48:08,290 --> 00:48:10,520 they stop and, you could hear a pin drop 1026 00:48:11,404 --> 00:48:13,404 and you know, he touches people with it. 1027 00:48:15,260 --> 00:48:17,248 The thing I love about Rob, when I first came 1028 00:48:17,290 --> 00:48:21,988 to Nashville, if you sat down at the table 1029 00:48:22,030 --> 00:48:25,138 of the family of country music, it was important that you 1030 00:48:25,180 --> 00:48:27,298 at that time that you bring your culture with you, 1031 00:48:27,340 --> 00:48:30,178 wherever you come from, you had to bring who you were 1032 00:48:30,220 --> 00:48:33,058 to the table and add into the spice of country music. 1033 00:48:33,100 --> 00:48:36,088 It's pretty much a homogenized table these days. 1034 00:48:36,130 --> 00:48:39,088 The thing I love about Rob, he carries that square piece 1035 00:48:39,130 --> 00:48:41,488 of Kentucky with him everywhere he goes. 1036 00:48:41,530 --> 00:48:43,348 And you cannot go out 1037 00:48:43,390 --> 00:48:46,798 and become a folk hero for any amount of money. 1038 00:48:46,840 --> 00:48:48,328 You have to earn it, you have to live it. 1039 00:48:48,370 --> 00:48:50,938 And that's what you have to be every day 1040 00:48:50,980 --> 00:48:52,255 of your life to become that. 1041 00:48:52,297 --> 00:48:53,908 And when I think of Rob, I know 1042 00:48:53,950 --> 00:48:56,338 that in truth, he's a folk hero. 1043 00:48:56,380 --> 00:49:01,078 His music, his art, everything from his chainsaw art 1044 00:49:01,120 --> 00:49:03,088 to the songs he writes, to his performances, 1045 00:49:03,130 --> 00:49:05,848 to everything about the shows he stages 1046 00:49:05,890 --> 00:49:07,768 and the people he hangs out with, 1047 00:49:07,810 --> 00:49:09,613 you know, he's a folk hero. 1048 00:49:10,450 --> 00:49:11,998 He represents the best of Kentucky 1049 00:49:12,040 --> 00:49:13,790 and actually the best in all of us. 1050 00:49:16,330 --> 00:49:21,330 Rob was a big influence on all of us, 1051 00:49:21,460 --> 00:49:26,458 and me in particular in that it was, 1052 00:49:26,500 --> 00:49:30,388 he was influential as far as being a musician 1053 00:49:30,430 --> 00:49:34,378 and a songwriter and a performer. 1054 00:49:34,420 --> 00:49:38,818 But also he was influential for me as just being a man 1055 00:49:38,860 --> 00:49:42,379 and being a good person to, you know, you know, 1056 00:49:42,421 --> 00:49:47,421 call me for gigs when I didn't have a lot going on. 1057 00:49:49,477 --> 00:49:52,970 And he always has kept in touch with me 1058 00:49:54,124 --> 00:49:58,083 on playing and he'll still call me even though 1059 00:50:00,730 --> 00:50:01,978 he knows I can't play it. 1060 00:50:02,020 --> 00:50:04,033 He'll still call me on certain stuff. 1061 00:50:05,085 --> 00:50:06,763 And it's very sweet. 1062 00:50:07,840 --> 00:50:09,451 And Rob's not trying to play popular music. 1063 00:50:09,493 --> 00:50:11,638 He's just playing music he believes in. 1064 00:50:11,680 --> 00:50:14,128 And you know, and you limit your crowd when you do that. 1065 00:50:14,170 --> 00:50:16,678 But I think the satisfaction is much greater. 1066 00:50:16,720 --> 00:50:20,068 And I think Rob has played the music he wants to play 1067 00:50:20,110 --> 00:50:23,218 and he doesn't care what the consequence was of that. 1068 00:50:23,260 --> 00:50:26,428 And he struck, stuck to what he thought was true. 1069 00:50:26,470 --> 00:50:27,868 And again, I've been in cover bands 1070 00:50:27,910 --> 00:50:30,688 where you play other people's songs for four hours a night 1071 00:50:30,730 --> 00:50:32,488 and you might make X amount of dollars, 1072 00:50:32,530 --> 00:50:34,318 but if you go play for 60 minutes 1073 00:50:34,360 --> 00:50:36,238 and play songs that you help create, 1074 00:50:36,280 --> 00:50:37,858 that means a whole lot more and it doesn't matter 1075 00:50:37,900 --> 00:50:39,298 what the money pays. 1076 00:50:39,340 --> 00:50:41,248 And Rob always gave me that opportunity. 1077 00:50:41,290 --> 00:50:43,940 And again, he never told me what guitar parts to play 1078 00:50:45,588 --> 00:50:46,648 and it's just been a thrill. 1079 00:50:46,690 --> 00:50:48,868 And I learned a whole lot from Rob McNurlin 1080 00:50:48,910 --> 00:50:50,128 about not only music, 1081 00:50:50,170 --> 00:50:52,855 but just how to be a good person and free people around him. 1082 00:50:52,897 --> 00:50:54,447 And Rob does that all the time. 1083 00:50:58,780 --> 00:51:00,928 I'll go back, I'm very blessed person. 1084 00:51:00,970 --> 00:51:04,618 I sure I wanted the tour bus and the big tours 1085 00:51:04,660 --> 00:51:05,938 and Rich and famous and all that. 1086 00:51:05,980 --> 00:51:07,528 I didn't get that. 1087 00:51:07,570 --> 00:51:09,710 And now I have to think to myself 1088 00:51:11,050 --> 00:51:13,708 either that's not the hand that God dealt me 1089 00:51:13,750 --> 00:51:16,100 or he dealt me that hand and I played it wrong. 1090 00:51:16,977 --> 00:51:18,688 Now I don't know which that is. 1091 00:51:18,730 --> 00:51:21,058 I was always blessed with all of these people 1092 00:51:21,100 --> 00:51:22,500 that were willing to help me 1093 00:51:24,310 --> 00:51:26,853 and most of the time I didn't have any money to pay 'em. 1094 00:51:27,775 --> 00:51:31,913 But it just, so, I mean, if you count success by friends, 1095 00:51:31,955 --> 00:51:33,778 I'm the wealthiest person in the world. 1096 00:51:33,820 --> 00:51:35,608 And so I'm proud of the records I've done. 1097 00:51:35,650 --> 00:51:38,098 I'm proud of the friends I've made, 1098 00:51:38,140 --> 00:51:39,718 the shows I've played 1099 00:51:39,760 --> 00:51:41,188 and I have, as far as a legacy, 1100 00:51:41,230 --> 00:51:42,208 I don't know that I have one. 1101 00:51:42,250 --> 00:51:44,950 It it still surprises me when somebody knows who I am. 1102 00:51:50,370 --> 00:51:53,188 ♪ Come to mind in the misery ♪ 1103 00:51:53,230 --> 00:51:56,638 It is said that a person's integrity is measured 1104 00:51:56,680 --> 00:51:58,018 when no one is watching. 1105 00:51:58,060 --> 00:52:01,168 This has been true for the career of Rob McNurlin. 1106 00:52:01,210 --> 00:52:03,808 As the world keeps on spinning, time seems 1107 00:52:03,850 --> 00:52:06,208 to move at an even faster pace, 1108 00:52:06,250 --> 00:52:08,608 yet a few things remain the same. 1109 00:52:08,650 --> 00:52:11,248 Rob McNurlin and his music is more than just carefully 1110 00:52:11,290 --> 00:52:13,198 crafted verses and melodies. 1111 00:52:13,240 --> 00:52:15,508 We are left with the endearing spirit of a man 1112 00:52:15,550 --> 00:52:16,768 who carries his home 1113 00:52:16,810 --> 00:52:20,008 and everything he touches from the Cowboy's Boot Heel 1114 00:52:20,050 --> 00:52:23,038 where the rugged hills of East Kentucky meet the open plains 1115 00:52:23,080 --> 00:52:26,608 of the American West, Rob has woven a tapestry of tradition, 1116 00:52:26,650 --> 00:52:29,008 storytelling and timeless sound. 1117 00:52:29,050 --> 00:52:30,328 Rob's journey reminds us 1118 00:52:30,370 --> 00:52:33,178 that music is more than entertainment, it is connection. 1119 00:52:33,220 --> 00:52:35,548 It connects us to our roots, to the struggles 1120 00:52:35,590 --> 00:52:37,948 and triumphs of those who came before us. 1121 00:52:37,990 --> 00:52:40,798 And to the unbroken spirit of those who choose 1122 00:52:40,840 --> 00:52:42,268 to carry the torch forward. 1123 00:52:42,310 --> 00:52:44,638 His music is a bridge between worlds 1124 00:52:44,680 --> 00:52:47,308 blending the soul of Appalachia with the dust 1125 00:52:47,350 --> 00:52:49,678 and grit of cowboy trails, 1126 00:52:49,720 --> 00:52:54,568 proving that authenticity transcends borders. 1127 00:52:54,610 --> 00:52:57,058 In the entertainment world where your success is measured 1128 00:52:57,100 --> 00:53:00,148 by album sales, streams and billboard fame, 1129 00:53:00,190 --> 00:53:03,328 Rob McNurlin did not make the so-called big time. 1130 00:53:03,370 --> 00:53:05,548 What Rob did achieve was something far larger 1131 00:53:05,590 --> 00:53:07,918 and greater as he blazed his own trail, 1132 00:53:07,960 --> 00:53:10,888 made lifelong friends and has left an impression 1133 00:53:10,930 --> 00:53:12,448 on everyone. 1134 00:53:12,490 --> 00:53:15,238 The road Rob travels on has not always been easy, 1135 00:53:15,280 --> 00:53:16,948 but it is honest. 1136 00:53:16,990 --> 00:53:19,468 His songs are a testament to the power of staying true 1137 00:53:19,510 --> 00:53:22,618 to oneself, to honoring where you come from 1138 00:53:22,660 --> 00:53:24,958 while carving your own path. 1139 00:53:25,000 --> 00:53:26,068 As Rob has shown us, 1140 00:53:26,110 --> 00:53:29,818 the Cowboy's Boot Heel is not just a place, it is an idea, 1141 00:53:29,860 --> 00:53:32,998 a rhythm, a heartbeat that echoes in the hearts 1142 00:53:33,040 --> 00:53:35,938 of all who love and live by the music. 1143 00:53:35,980 --> 00:53:38,263 A career that has touched many lives continues 1144 00:53:38,305 --> 00:53:39,838 to form a new story. 1145 00:53:39,880 --> 00:53:43,498 And so as the sun dips below the Kentucky Hills, 1146 00:53:43,540 --> 00:53:46,408 we leave this story as we began, with a man, 1147 00:53:46,450 --> 00:53:48,298 a guitar and a song. 1148 00:53:48,340 --> 00:53:51,445 A song that reminds us of who we are, where we have been, 1149 00:53:51,487 --> 00:53:53,353 and the endless journey ahead. 1150 00:53:54,220 --> 00:53:57,658 Thank you Rob McNurlin for sharing your honesty, your music 1151 00:53:57,700 --> 00:53:59,068 and your journey. 1152 00:53:59,110 --> 00:54:00,320 May the music play on 1153 00:54:01,180 --> 00:54:04,093 and be tapped out by the rhythm of our souls. 1154 00:54:07,948 --> 00:54:10,778 ♪ Just what I find there ♪ 1155 00:54:10,820 --> 00:54:15,716 ♪ I don't know ♪ 1156 00:54:15,758 --> 00:54:20,758 ♪ Is my cowboy' boot heel taps the rhythm of my soul ♪ 1157 00:54:25,016 --> 00:54:27,124 ♪ May find danger ♪ 1158 00:54:27,166 --> 00:54:30,016 ♪ I may find strangers ♪ 1159 00:54:30,058 --> 00:54:34,064 ♪ Dressed as angels aware ♪ 1160 00:54:34,106 --> 00:54:36,210 ♪ I may find grief ♪ 1161 00:54:36,252 --> 00:54:38,231 ♪ I may find peace ♪ 1162 00:54:41,233 --> 00:54:42,066 Hello? 1163 00:54:43,966 --> 00:54:45,466 Yeah, this is Rob. 1164 00:54:47,027 --> 00:54:49,393 Yeah, I'd love to play the show if I got the date open. 1165 00:54:49,435 --> 00:54:50,562 Let me look here. 1166 00:54:54,548 --> 00:54:59,548 ♪ God will protect me as I sleep ♪ 1167 00:55:03,526 --> 00:55:08,526 ♪ My Indian blankets will keep me from the cold ♪ 1168 00:55:12,513 --> 00:55:15,068 ♪ As my cowboy boot heel ♪ 1169 00:55:15,110 --> 00:55:20,110 ♪ Taps out the rhythm of my soul. ♪ 1170 00:55:22,086 --> 00:55:27,086 ♪ Has it been a week or a day ♪ 1171 00:55:31,091 --> 00:55:33,827 ♪ Is this the trailer ♪ 1172 00:55:33,869 --> 00:55:38,869 ♪ Have I lost my way ♪ 1173 00:55:41,284 --> 00:55:46,284 ♪ Up ahead I see your ghost ♪ 1174 00:55:49,025 --> 00:55:51,393 ♪ As my cowboy boot heel ♪ 1175 00:55:51,435 --> 00:55:55,518 ♪ Taps out the rhythm of my soul ♪