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Lucky Number 13! - Cowboy Poetry in Taber
Review by: Karen Ingram
We woke to sunshine and blue skies, was this an omen for our 13th annual Cowboy Poetry and
Country Music Fest. Ted Sillito didn't make it back from Mexico in time to do his sets
but Bj Smith and Bud Stewart happily stepped in to complete the program.
Bob Westrop, our MC, had a flat tire on his way into town but made it in a mere fifteen
minutes late and the show went on. A group of Taber favorites, The Oilers, started the
show with their own brand of music,
playing some polkas and waltzes to set the tone and get the toes tapping. Dusty
Litchfield, a young man raised in the Purple Springs area, went on next with his own
original tunes. Tales of faded trails, prairie homes, small town fun and old guitars
were the themes for some of his songs. Kathie Friesen, our Vauxhall entertainer was up
next with her Patsy Kline sound and some new back up musicians. Alex, Arne & Friends
followed Kathie. This group grew from 2 to 6 in one year, Alex and Arne have been
attending area jam sessions and picked up some new members. Bud Stewart rounded out our
first set, without his lovely wife, Jill, this year as she had gotten sick the night
before. Bud, always a great entertainer, has been with us since the first Cowboy Poetry
in Taber and it would just not be the same without him.
Continuing on, without a break, we heard Larry Krause perform and he mentioned his new
CD to be out in June. Don't sweat the small stuff was the theme that stuck in my head
after his performance. He had also sang about, booze from the still and running from the
mounties. Rod Erickson, up from Idaho, sang about Skinny & Scrawny, two nearly dead
kittens that his wife once nursed back to health after he brought them home to her.
The cats apparently got in lots of trouble but after all Cats are just Cats! He even
gave us a lesson in yodelling if we could just watch his mouth. Bruce Rawling, one of
the Rawling Brothers, was up next and sang his heart out for us. My favorite song from
him was one about Photographs that he had written in memory of his father. Bj Smith
has to be one of my favorite Cowboy Poets with his tales of pink lace and shirt tails,
GPS and horses, backing up the RVs, goose bumps and long johns when it was 10 below and
snowing, balky horses and spraying where one pleases.
Listening to Jim Peace and the Dutch Creek Drifters sing their songs of country life
including such things as worn out trucks and drifters. Graham Allan and Mike Dygdart
rounded out the Dutch Creek Drifters. And then there was Bob Westrop, our MC who is
much more than that entertaining us while the musicians were being connected to the
sound system. My favorite comment from him was about "Apple pie without cheese is
like kisses without a squeeze". Door prizes, Raffles and Good Food made the day one to
remember.
I ask you, where can you get such a lineup of entertainment and spend the afternoon
and early evening for a mere ten dollars, while helping to keep the Taber Museum open
year round?
Karen Ingram - Manager
Taber Irrigation Impact Museum
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