US
World, Country and Folk
Stanley Davis Jones was an American songwriter, born June 5 in the southeastern Arizona town of Douglas in 1914. Writing almost entirely in the genre of Western music, he penned songs for several Western movies including "The Searchers" and "Rio Grande". Stan made his first appearance on screen, as a cavalry sergeant, a small part in the John Ford film "Rio Grande" (1950). In his brief career, Stan Jones wrote over two hundred songs. About one hundred were recorded, including "Song of the Trail," "Saddle Up." "Lilies Grow High," "Cowpoke," and the TV theme 'Cheyenne." He has seventy-four published songwriting credits on ASCAP. His most famous song was probably (Ghost) Riders in the Sky, written while he worked for the National Park Service in Death Valley, California. He formed two music companies during his lifetime: Stanley Music Company, and the later Stanley Mills Ranger Music Company, to publish songs for his last album. Stan released his first album in 1958, "Creakin' Leather", on the Disneyland label, later re-released as "Ghost Riders in the Sky" on the Buena Vista label. Stan Jones died in Los Angeles, at age 49, on December 13, 1963, and at his request, was buried in his hometown of Douglas, Arizona.
Title | Artist | Year | Type |
---|---|---|---|
Les meilleurs thèmes de western | Ennio Morricone, Elmer Bernstein, Dimitri Tiomkin, Stanley Davis Jones | 1978 | Compil. |
Creakin' Leather | Stanley Davis Jones | 1958 | Album |
Walt Disney Presents Songs Of The National Parks | Stanley Davis Jones And The Ranger Chorus | 1958 | Album |
This Was The West | Stanley Davis Jones And The Ranger Chorus | 1958 | Album |
Texas John Slaughter / The Nine Lives Of Elfego Baca | Stanley Davis Jones | Single |