Red Steagall Explained

Red Steagall
Background:solo_singer
Birth Name:Russell Steagall
Birth Date:22 December 1938
Birth Place:Gainesville, Texas, United States
Origin:Sanford, Texas, United States
Instrument:Guitar
Genre:Country
Occupation:Singer-songwriter
Years Active:1968–present
Label:Warner WesternCapitol NashvilleDot


Russell "Red" Steagall (born December 22, 1938)[1] is an American actor, musician, poet, and stage performer, who focuses on American Western and country music genres.

Early life and day jobs

He was born in Gainesville, Texas, United States.[2] He became a bull rider at rodeos while he was still a teenager, but at the age of 15, he was stricken with polio.[2] He took up the guitar and the mandolin as physical therapy to recover the strength and dexterity of his arms and hands.[2] Based out of Amarillo, he formed a dance band, Russell Don & The Premiers making his first recordings (which were unreleased) at Norman Petty Studios in Clovis, New Mexico, in April 1961. Steagall entered a career in agricultural chemistry after graduating from West Texas State University with a degree in animal science and agronomy.[2] After five years spent as a soil analyst for Sand Mark Oil,[2] Steagall then spent eight years as a music industry executive in Hollywood, and has spent the last 40 years as a recording artist, songwriter, and television and motion picture personality. He currently maintains offices outside of Fort Worth, Texas, where he is involved in the production of motion pictures and television shows.

On December 28, 1974, Hee Haw season six, episode 16, Steagall saluted his hometown of Sanford, Texas, population 181.

Television and radio personality

Steagall made numerous appearances on syndicated television shows such as Hee Haw and Nashville on the Road. He also spent four years as host of the nationally televised National Finals Rodeo, was host of the Winston Pro Tour on ESPN for the 1985 season, and co-hosted the College National Finals Rodeo for the Freedom Sports Network from 1988 through 1991. He was also the host of Western Theater on America One Television.

Steagall currently hosts a one-hour syndicated radio show, Cowboy Corner, on 170 stations in 43 states. Cowboy Corner celebrates the lifestyle of the American West through the poems, songs, and stories of the American cowboy. In 2010, In the Bunkhouse with Red Steagall began airing on the RFD-TV network; as of 2017, Steagall now hosts Red Steagall is Somewhere West of Wall Street for the same channel. His down-home, friendly manner and considerable musical talents make him a favorite of rural America.

Motion pictures

Steagall had a major role in the motion picture Benji the Hunted, which was released in the summer of 1987. He also appeared in the motion pictures Dark Before Dawn and Abilene. He produced the motion picture Big Bad John, starring Jimmy Dean, Jack Elam, Ned Beatty, and Bo Hopkins, and directed by Burt Kennedy.

Steagall is a trustee of the Pro Rodeo Hall of Champions, honorary member of the Cowboy Artists of America, and former board chairman of the Academy of Country Music.

Musical and literary accomplishments

Along with Don Lanier, in 1966, Steagall co-wrote the song "Here We Go Again", most notably recorded by Ray Charles.[2]

In 1974, he discovered a then-unknown Reba McEntire and signed her to Mercury Records the following year.[2] He discovered her while she was performing the national anthem at the National Rodeo Finals competition in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.[2] Two years later, in October 1977, McEntire released her first album on Mercury Records, and though most of her Mercury albums were commercial failures, in 1984, she picked up with her big album, My Kind of Country.

In March 1993, Texas Christian University Press published Steagall's first book, entitled Ride for the Brand, a 168-page collection of poetry and songs embracing the Western lifestyle. The book is illustrated by Cowboy Artists of America members Bill Owen, Fred Fellows, Joe Beeler, and Howard Terpning.

In September 2003, Texas Tech University Press published Born to This Land, a joint effort between Steagall and Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Skeeter Hagler. The book contains Hagler's black-and-white studies of modern ranching, accompanied by Steagall's award-winning poetry. The Academy of Western Artists named Born to This Land' as recipient of the Will Rogers Award for best book of 2003.

Steagall has won the Wrangler Award for original music five times: 1993 (for his Warner Western album, Born to This Land), 1995 (for the Warner Western album, Faith and Values), 1997 (for his Warner Western album, Dear Mama, I'm a Cowboy), 1999 (for Love of the West). In fall 2002, Steagall released his 20th album, Wagon Tracks, which also won the Wrangler Award from the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum.

He released his new album Here We Go Again in August 2007. Here We Go Again features duets with Toby Keith, Reba McEntire, Charley Pride, Ray Benson, Neal McCoy, Larry Gatlin, and Charlie Daniels.

In May 2011, Bunkhouse Press released Steagall's CD Dreamin' of......When the Grass Was Still Deep, featuring eight songs and two poems.

Honors and awards

The Texas Legislature named Red Steagall the Official Cowboy Poet of Texas in April 1991. Steagall was an early participant in the American Cowboy Culture Association, which holds the annual National Cowboy Symposium and Celebration each September in Lubbock.[3]

Steagall is also the official Cowboy Poet Laureate of San Juan Capistrano, California.

Since 1991, Steagall has hosted the annual Red Steagall Cowboy Gathering in the Stockyards National Historic District of Fort Worth. The event features a ranch rodeo, chuckwagon cookoff, children's poetry contest, Western swing dances, cowboy music and poetry, a trappings show, and horsemanship clinics.

In 1999, Steagall was inducted into the Texas Trail of Fame.[4]

In April 2003, Steagall was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, joining the likes of Will Rogers, Theodore Roosevelt, Charles Goodnight, and Charlie Russell.[5]

In January 2004, he received the Spirit of Texas Award and was inducted into the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame in Fort Worth.[6]

In April 2005, he was inducted to the Texas Rodeo Cowboy Hall of Fame in Belton, Texas.[7]

Red Steagall was named "2006 Poet Laureate of the State of Texas" at the Capital in Austin in the spring of 2005. Steagall is the first "cowboy" poet to be named the poet laureate of Texas.

In 2007, he was inducted into the National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum in Fort Worth, Texas.[8]

Red Steagall Institute of Western Art

In 2024, the National Ranching Heritage Center in Lubbock, Texas, announced the forthcoming location at the center of the Red Steagall Institute of Western Art, which will feature interactive classes and displays for the public to learn about Western culture. The Texas Tech System Board of Regents approved the NRHC's $28 million dollar expansion in May 2024. Jim Bret Campbell, executive director of the NRHC, said that the project comes after Steagall and his wife sought a location to donate his collection of Western songs, poetry, and various radio and television recordings of his programs.[9]

Discography

Albums

YearAlbumUS CountryLabel
1972Party Dolls and WineCapitol
1973Somewhere My Love42
If You've Got the Time, I've Got the Song
1974Finer Things in Life47
1976Lone Star Beer and Bob Wills Music27ABC/Dot
Texas Red36
1977For All Our Cowboy Friends
1978Hang On Feelin
1979It's Our LifeTractor
1982Cowboy FavoritesDelta
1986Red SteagallDot/MCA
1993Born to This LandWarner Western
1995Faith and Value
1996Cowboy CodeEagle
1997Dear Mama I'm a CowboyWarner Western
1999Love of the West
2002Wagon TracksShanachie
2006The Wind, the Wire and the RailWildcatter
2007Here We Go Again
2011Dreamin' of.....When The Grass Was Still DeepBunkhouse Press

Singles

YearSingleChart PositionsAlbum
US CountryCAN Country
1972"Party Dolls and Wine"31Party Dolls and Wine
"Somewhere, My Love"2265Somewhere My Love
1973"True Love"5180
"If You've Got the Time"41If You've Got the Time,
I've Got the Song
"The Fiddle Man"87
1974"This Just Ain't My Day (For Lettin' Darlin' Down)"93single only
"I Gave Up Good Mornin' Darling"54Finer Things in Life
"Finer Things in Life"52
"Someone Cares for You"1717
1975"She Worshipped Me"62single only
1976"Lone Star Beer and Bob Wills Music"11Lone Star Beer and Bob Wills Music
"Truck Drivin' Man"2910
"Rosie (Do You Wanna Talk It Over)"45Texas Red
1977"Her L-O-V-E's Gone"59
"I Left My Heart in San Francisco"53
"Freckles Brown"90For All Our Cowboy Friends
"The Devil Ain't a Lonely Woman's Friend"72Hang On Feelin
1978"Hang On Feelin'"63
"Bob's Got a Swing Band in Heaven"flip
1979"Good Time Charlie's Got the Blues"41singles only
1980"3 Chord Country Song"31
"Dim the Lights and Pour the Wine"49
"Hard Hat Days and Honky Tonk Nights"30

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Slatta, Richard W.. The mythical West: an encyclopedia of legend, lore, and popular culture. registration. August 5, 2011. 2001. ABC-CLIO. 978-1-57607-151-9. 331–.
  2. Book: The Guinness Who's Who of Country Music. Colin Larkin. Guinness Publishing. 1993. First. 0-85112-726-6. 392.
  3. Web site: National Cowboy Symposium & Celebration, Inc. (Lubbock, Texas). cowboy.org. September 5, 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130826204027/http://www.cowboy.org/About/History-And-Purpose. August 26, 2013.
  4. Web site: Red Steagall. Western Heritage from the Texas Trail of Fame. April 14, 2018. May 26, 2013.
  5. Web site: Hall of Great Westerners . National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum . August 21, 2021.
  6. Web site: Red Steagall. Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame Fort Worth Texas. March 8, 2020.
  7. Web site: Past Inductees . Texas Rodeo Cowboy Hall of Fame . March 28, 2020.
  8. Web site: Hall of Fame Inductees . National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum . June 3, 2023.
  9. Web site: National Ranching Heritage Center to expand with new Western art, interactive institute. Mateo Rosiles. Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. June 9, 2024. June 10, 2024.