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Marty Robbins - El Paso trilogy appreciation thread
Posted on 7/4/21 at 12:16 pm
Posted on 7/4/21 at 12:16 pm
YouTube - El Paso Trilogy
All three songs are amazing, but I just love in particular how the first two are telling the story from their different points of view and how their separate points of view converge toward the ends of their songs. Just great songwriting.
All three songs are amazing, but I just love in particular how the first two are telling the story from their different points of view and how their separate points of view converge toward the ends of their songs. Just great songwriting.

quote:
El Paso
The song is a first-person narrative told by a cowboy in El Paso, Texas, in the days of the Wild West. The singer recalls how he frequented "Rosa's Cantina", where he became smitten with a young Mexican dancer named Feleena. When the singer notices another cowboy sharing a drink with "wicked Feleena", out of jealousy he challenges the newcomer to a gunfight. The singer kills the newcomer, then flees. In the act of escaping, the singer commits the additional hanging offense of horse theft. Departing the town, the singer hides out in the "badlands of New Mexico."
The song then fast-forwards to an undisclosed time later - the lyrics at this point change from past to present tense - when the singer describes the yearning for Feleena that drives him to return, without regard for his own life, to El Paso. He states that his "love is stronger than [his] fear of death."[4] Upon arriving, the singer races for the cantina, but is chased and fatally wounded by a posse. Feleena rushes to his side, and he dies in her arms after "one little kiss".
quote:
Feleena (From El Paso)
In 1966, Robbins recorded "Feleena (From El Paso)", telling the life story of Feleena, the "Mexican girl" from "El Paso", in a third-person narrative. This track was over eight minutes long. Robbins wrote most of it in Phoenix, Arizona, but went to El Paso seeking inspiration for the conclusion.
Born in a desert shack in New Mexico during a thunderstorm, Feleena runs away from home at 17, living off her charms for a year in Santa Fe, New Mexico, before moving to the brighter lights of El Paso to become a paid dancer. After another year, the narrator of "El Paso" arrives, the first man she did not have contempt for. He spends six weeks romancing her and then, in a retelling of the key moment in the original song, beset by "insane jealousy", he shoots another man with whom she was flirting.
Her lover's return to El Paso comes only a day after his flight (the original song suggests a longer time frame before his return) and as she goes to run to him, the cowboy motions to her to stay out of the line of fire and is shot; immediately after his dying kiss, Feleena shoots herself with his gun. Their ghosts are heard to this day in the wind blowing around El Paso: "It's only the young cowboy showing Feleena the town".
quote:
El Paso City
In 1976 Robbins released another reworking, "El Paso City", in which the present-day singer is a passenger on a flight over El Paso, which reminds him of a song he had heard "long ago", proceeding to summarize the original "El Paso" story. "I don't recall who sang the song," he sings, but he feels a supernatural connection to the story: "Could it be that I could be the cowboy in this mystery...," he asks, suggesting a past life. This song reached No. 1 on the country charts. The arrangement includes riffs and themes from the previous two El Paso songs. Robbins wrote it while flying over El Paso in, he reported, the same amount of time it takes to sing—four minutes and 14 seconds. It was only the second time that ever happened to him; the first time was when he composed the original "El Paso" as fast as he could write it down. Robbins intended to do one more sequel, “The Mystery of Old El Paso", but he died in late 1982 before he could finish the final song.
This post was edited on 7/4/21 at 12:18 pm
Posted on 7/6/21 at 8:52 am to chinhoyang
quote:
I like "Big Iron".
I used to love "Big Iron"...but my Amazon Music defaults to play it whenever it opens...so every time I open the app, I have to pause it to find what I am looking for. I have literally hear the intro to Big Iron 20+ times per week.
Who am I kidding... I still love it. That being said, Devil Woman is probably my favorite Marty Robbins song.
Posted on 7/6/21 at 1:51 pm to When in Rome
Marty Robbins is one of my favorites, brilliant story teller.
Posted on 7/6/21 at 7:32 pm to When in Rome
I love these songs. I can basically have them on repeat
Posted on 7/7/21 at 10:05 am to When in Rome
From thirty thousand feet above the desert floor I see her there below
A city with a legend, the west Texas city of El Paso
That's good stuff.
A city with a legend, the west Texas city of El Paso
That's good stuff.
Posted on 7/8/21 at 9:39 am to FightinTigersDammit
Marty Robbins use to be a Nascar driver and won a race but admitted he cheated. He did so because he wanted to feel how it was winning a race.
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