

Murphey got caught up in what people said about him rather than his music.

It is only on the pop tracks - such as the synthed-out "Renegade," the Steely Dan jazz-funk of "Nothing Is Your Own," the other mega-smash, "What's Forever For," the Eagles/ America-like crossover of "Still Takin' Chances," and the insipid "Don't Count the Rainy Days" that was written for the charts - that fall really short in terms of the cosmic cowboy vision. While the albums that embodied these songs may not have kept to the standard that these songs do, there was at least one track on each that stood out and is worthy of repeated listening by anyone interested in country music, such as the Murphey/ Willie Nelson duet on the stomping "Rhythm of the Road." "Dancing in the Meadow," "Cherokee Fiddle," "Texas Morning," a stunning live version of "Backslider's Wine," and "Take It as It Comes," with its whining pedal steel and slowed-down 4/4 tempo, embody the folky spirit of country with all of its contradiction - though Murphey is on the politically correct side of things. In essence, as this collection of Raven's proves, Murphey didn't completely lose his country heritage until after 1984. "Carolina in the Pines" is one of the most successful fusions of bluegrass, country, and American schlock pop ever accomplished - and the song is stunningly beautiful.

It gave Dan Fogelberg a career for a decade or so. And no one can ever argue - unless they're out of their damned minds - that "Wildfire" isn't an amazing pop single. Even "Wildfire" and "Carolina in the Pines" embody the seeker's vision, although it's more closely defined by an uncynical wonder and the willingness to let some of the recording studio in on the journey. The music from the early records is wild and untamed, full of experimentation and raw fire. It's as if Murphey were looking to become a cosmic cowboy rather than already seeing himself as the embodiment of the ghosts of mythical western figures he did later. The cuts from these albums - such as the title track from Geronimo, "Natchez Trace," "Alleys of Austin," "Cosmic Cowboy," "Boy From the Country," and "What Am I Doin' Hangin' Around?" - reflect an artist who is looking to widen his path, searching restlessly through the country, rock, and blues music he loves for a sound that embodies them all but stays true to the spirit of the West.

The tracks from his first three albums - Geronimo's Cadillac, Cosmic Cowboy Souvenir, and Blue Sky - Night Thunder, where the mega-smash "Wildfire" originally came from - are the most satisfying. This collection of Michael Murphey's work is from his earliest period, when he was hanging out with Jerry Jeff Walker's Lost Gonzo Band and issuing some of the most forward-thinking, philosophical, cosmic cowboy music of the outlaw era.
