Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
Along the Navaho Trail was written by Dick Charles (pseudonym for Richard Charles Krieg) Larry Markes, and Edgar De Lange in 1945. This song served as the title song and leitmotif for the 1945 Roy Rodger’s film Along The Navaho Trail.
The song has been recorded by many artists, including:
Bing Cr...
Every day a lullabout evening
When the sunlights beginning to fail
I ride through the slumbering shadows
Along the Navajo Trail
When it's night and crickets are calling
And coyotes are making a wail
I dream by a smouldering fire
Along the Navajo Trail
When the wind is strumming a sage-brushed guitar
And over yonder hill the moon is climbing
It always finds me whistling on a star
What do you know it's morning already
There's the dawning, so silver and pale
It's time to climb in my saddle
I want to ride the Navajo Trail
I love the lie and listen to all the music
When the wind is strumming a sage-brushed guitar
And over yonder hill the moon is climbing
It always finds me whistling on a star
What do you know it's morning already
There's the dawning, so silver and pale
It's time to climb in my saddle
I want to ride the Navajo Trail
With fellows like Maverick and Cheyenne
The Indians and their bow and arrows
The boys and guns and love to travel
Along the Navajo Trail
Along the Navajo Trail was written by Dick Charles & Eddie DeLange & Larry Markes.
Along the Navajo Trail was produced by Robert Blackwell.