Roy Rogers

Album: Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (1973)
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  • Roy Rogers - the King of the Cowboys - with Trigger.

Comments: 7

  • Gino F from New JerseyI was about 9 when I first heard Roy Rogers. 1974, It immediately evoked in me the image of me and my Dad watching an old late night Western together. My dad at that point and had more than a few heart attacks and life had nothing real fun but he was up and around, and he knew his time was limited so he spent as much time with me as he could. The money was tight but we owned the house simple three bedroom row house, the TV works and yes the carpet was paid for my mother and my sister were asleep every other late in the house is off and I'd sit there on his lap and watch the old John Wayne movies or anything else that we could watch together. I lost my dad 2 years later. And The Duality of this song is that it reminds me of him and how he found contentment and simple things because life had gotten so hard and it wasn't his fault. And the fact that we spent those golden moments together. Thank you all and thank you Bernie for writing a song that is definitely been part of the soundtrack of my life. It's 50 years later I still didn't open my throat and tear in my eye but these days it's good memories
  • Vilstef from Dm, IaThe song is a search for contentment, with a bit of fantasy recalling a childhood hero. Nearly everyone who loves cowboys would give an eyetooth to go out on the trail with Roy and Trigger!
  • Max Meadows from Fort MyersI've always believed that the song's protagonist is an unemployed middle-aged family man who has retreated into the fantasy world after having no luck finding another job. Roy Rogers just happened to be the show he's glommed onto; millions have done the same with Star Trek, Star Wars, The Matrix, to name a few.
  • Mitch Bettinger from Englewood OhioEver since getting the Yellow Brick Road album for Christmas when it first came out and I was yet a very young man I have loved the song Roy Rogers. It immediately captures every aspect of my being throughout the entire song. Even today a half century later it still pops into my head every now and then and I catch myself singing it to myself until it escapes my mind again. Great song and metaphor.
  • Scotty from Cheyenne, WyLove this song...the image of quiet solace at the end of the day just causes me to take a deep breath and relax...any time. Thanks, Elton, Bernie.
  • Mike from Houston, TxFor those of us....(no matter what age or place of birth) who "love" the old westerns (meaning the kind where there is an obvious good guy..etc)...The images evoked in this song....are images of our own life. We might come home from a hard day...or not....but when we tune in Roy and Trigger...we are in for ..solace?.....rejuvination?.....The outside world which mostly stinks.....is for about an hour ....relegated to a back seat. We see how a good man....who lives with his own code of honor...a code his own, yet instantly recognizable to anyone...lives and deals with this old world...full of evil....But with his trusty friends.....his trusty horse...and his gal....comes out shining at the end of the story. Exactly what so many of us...would aspire to. The lyric images of setting the scene in our own space....for watching the story unfold....is ....accurate?....It feels right. And as the scenes float by in front our eyes....we get a transfusion......the dirty in us....is decreased while our goodness is replenished.
  • Ken from Louisville, KyBernie Taupin was, indeed, a big fan of American Western movies and TV shows as a kid. His family called him "The brown dirt cowboy". The nickname stuck, and Elton included it on one of his album titles ("Captain Fantastic and The Brown Dirt Cowboy").
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