The music is stark, using minor keys and a steady, hoof-beat rhythm. It feels less like MacArthur Park and more like a Johnny Cash murder ballad. For decades, Bass Reeves was forgotten by Hollywood. (That changed recently with the show Lawmen: Bass Reeves , but even that owes a debt to the oral tradition kept alive by artists like Webb).
Most people know Jim Webb as the genius behind iconic 60s anthems like “MacArthur Park” and “Wichita Lineman.” Most history buffs know Bass Reeves as the most prolific U.S. Marshal in American history. jim webb bass reeves
But what happens when the poet of the American highway turns his gaze to the hero of "Hell on the Border"? The music is stark, using minor keys and
Webb has always been obsessed with the lonely figures on the edge of society. His heroes are the "Wichita Lineman" (a utility worker) and the "Highwayman" (a ghost). Bass Reeves fits perfectly into that gallery: the lone man riding into the dark, armed with grit and a warrant. (That changed recently with the show Lawmen: Bass