Wind in the Wire

Wind in the Wire is the eighth studio album released by American country music artist Randy Travis. Released in 1993 on Warner Bros. Records, the album was made to accompany a television series also entitled Wind in the Wire.[1] Two of the album's singles — "Cowboy Boogie" and the title track — entered the Billboard country music charts, peaking at #46 and #65, respectively, making this the first album of Travis's career not to produce any Top 40 hits in the United States.[5] "Cowboy Boogie", however, was a #10 on the RPM Country Tracks charts in Canada.

Wind in the Wire
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 17, 1993
GenreWestern
Length28:46
LabelWarner Bros. Nashville
ProducerSteve Gibson
Randy Travis chronology
Greatest Hits, Volume 2
(1992)
Wind in the Wire
(1993)
This Is Me
(1994)
Singles from Wind in the Wire
  1. "Cowboy Boogie"
    Released: August 16, 1993
  2. "Wind in the Wire"
    Released: December 6, 1993
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Entertainment WeeklyC[2]
Los Angeles Times[3]
Robert Christgau[4]

In addition, this album is also one of three albums not to be produced by Travis' longtime record producer, Kyle Lehning.


Track listing

  1. "Down at the Old Corral" (Roger Brown, Luke Reed) – 3:17
  2. "Cowboy Boogie" (Robert Blythe) – 2:48
  3. "Blue Mesa" (Brown, Reed) – 2:59
  4. "Memories of Santa Fe" (Brown, Rick Peoples) – 3:18
  5. "Roamin' Wyomin'" (Brown, Reed) – 2:30
  6. "Wind in the Wire" (David Wilkie, Stewart MacDougall) – 3:29
  7. "The Old Chisholm Trail" (Traditional) – 3:06
  8. "Paniolo Country" (Marcus Shutte, Jr.) – 2:37
  9. "Hula Hands" (William D. Beasley, J.T. Adams, Jean Norris) – 2:12
  10. "Beyond the Reef" (Jack Pitman) – 2:30

Personnel

Chart performance

Chart (1993) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums 24
U.S. Billboard 200 121
Canadian RPM Country Albums 5
gollark: Also, *please* fix your indentation.
gollark: ... why?
gollark: And you can iterate over tables with `ipairs` instead of messing with the indices.
gollark: You can just use `#tbl` to get a table's length.
gollark: To make *what* work? What specifically is your aim here?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.