1977
Far Out West
Dance Tonight
All in the Journey
Cirle Rider
Alone Under the Stars
Romance with the    Range
Cowboy Trails
The Old Roan Horse
Banjos Broncs &    Buckaroos
Live at Tales From the    Tavern
Songs of Sweat and    Leather
Vannatta
Dark Rider
Remember Me
Ten Winters & Ten    Springs
Barrel Racing Angel
100 Years Too Late
My Roots Run Deep
Darn Hard to Tame
Trails Old & New
Beyond The Brand
Vedder Mountain    Memories II
All Over The Map
1880’s Cowboys
Dancing On The Wind
Cowboy Songs of the     Northern Rockies
River
Contenders Two
Tonic Water
Countryre Collections
Gunsmoke Whiskey     and Heather
Rhythm of the Ride
Spitzee Country
Ride a Wide Circle
Splicin' the Wire
Classic Country
Tim Hus
Ian Tyson
Jesse Fowler
30 Years of Stony Plain
Tried and True
Allen Christie
Cowboy Ways
Country Songs of the     Heart
One Last Horse
The Saloon Sessions
Hair in my Eyes Like a     Highland Steer
Christmas in the     Canyon
When Cowboys Dream
Fore the Coming of the     Wire
The Drifter
Caragana Wind
Out Where the Cowboys     Ride
Shades of the West
Open Range
Viva La Cowboy
Embers of Time
Last of the Troubadours
It's Time to Sing a Song
Magical Mystery Man
Songs of the Sage and     Saddle
Escovedo 101
Hooves of the Horses
Range & Romance
Time After Time
One Good reason
Keepin' it Country
Knockin' Down Fences
High Flyer
Swingin' Country Dance     Toons
Elsewhere
Church at the Wagon
Talk to Me
Modern Pain
The History of the     Cowgirl
The Call of the Far Away     Hills
To the Wood
Ghost Trains
The Eagle & the Snake
Save the Farm
Galaxy Cabaret
Some Kind of Fantasy

Music of the West

By Hugh McLennan

Oct - Nov 2006

Huskies & Husqvarnas

Tim Hus

Blue collar, redneck, rural Alberta roots

One of the great tracks here is Hurtin’ Albertan written by Corb Lund and Tim Hus. There’s an interesting twist though. On Corb’s version, he does the singing and Tim does the C.W. McColl-style CB commentary aid; in Tim’s version they switch roles. I can’t say which one is better. Saddle Bronc Ride features a great acoustic guitar bridge played by Allen Christie, and I had to replay the track just so I could hear it again.

Baxter Black has often described the romantic image of women wearing chaps, but Tim’s description of an Alberta gal driving a D9 Cat on a pipeline job is pure hardhat romance in the song Pipeline, and Danny Mack’s distinctive Canadian Cowboy is a natural for this collection. The arrangements for the most part feature a driving beat, big electric guitar sound and lots of rhythm.

Darn good listening, especially if you’re rolling down the open road. The track Train Robbers is my favourite. It’s pretty much acoustic and features Myron Szott’s Olde West fiddle, some great banjo from Craig Korth, supported by a flat-picking guitar and sweet dobro. Now when you get this collection, don’t shut it off at the end of track 12. Let it run, and you’ll hear Tim and an acoustic guitar with an amazing story about identity theft. Could there really be two Tim Hus’ in the world?

 
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