Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Chris LeDoux.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Chris LeDoux was an American country music singer-songwriter, bronze sculptor, and hall of fame rodeo champion. During his career, LeDoux recorded 36 albums, which have sold more than six million units in the United States as of January 2007. He was awarded two gold and one platinum album certifications from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), was nominated for a Grammy Award, and was honored with the Academy of Country Music Music Cliffie Stone Pioneer Award. LeDoux is also the only person to participate and also perform at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
I always was one who didn't take things for granted. But I think I do appreciate things more now. The small moments of joy that we find each day are so much more precious now than when I looked at them before.
I'm healed up and I feel great. After going through the fire, it's great to be out performing again.
The breeding programs for the bulls have improved significantly. The bulls are at a much higher caliber.
They were so good that you just had to sing the song to them once and they got it. It's amazing. Sometimes it didn't come out the way you wanted, but it was good.
I've had this song in a drawer for a long time, maybe seven or eight years. Every time I'd do an album, I'd take it out and listen to it, and always liked what it had to say. Plus when Garth came in and sang on it, that made it really special.
You'll probably get three horses and you have to draw a good buckin' horse. That's mighty tough.
You hope your buddies will win so you don't have to loan them any money.
I admire bull riders for their passion and the uniqueness each one of them has.
My best year I made $25,000. Of course, that was back in the '70s.
I had to give everything I had to one event if I wanted to excel.
My partner and I won the race, and I threw my hat into the air and bent to pick it up. Everyone started laughin' because I had split the back end of my pants out, and I wasn't wearing shorts.
Why not just do something a little more on the gentle side?
So it's probably eighty percent luck and twenty percent skill.
To me, Garth, he's kind of like my guardian angel. It's like every time I need some help, he's there.
This record is probably as easy as anything I've ever done.
Sometimes a hard day's work is easier than a lot of things you can meet in life.
I can remember sittin' in a cafe when I first started in rodeo, and waitin' until somebody got done so I could finish what they left.
If you're lucky enough to draw a good horse, you still have to ride him, then the next ones.
Sleepin' in the truck wasn't so bad. Shoot, I kind of liked that, myself.
When I come up with an idea about the way I feel, I can really state it strongly in a song.
In fact my son subscribes to Pro Bull Rider magazine.
Shoot, every time you get on an animal, you take your life in your hands.
You get to where you kind of like it, and It's a habit That's hard to break. I still find myself sittin' in a cafe, like a pizza parlor.
Mostly it would be those who rode in a particular even would hang out with those who rode in the same event.
And takin' a bath in the creek. That's the stuff that really made it worthwhile. Anybody can stay in a motel.
I don't know what makes a guy want to write songs and sing, but if you've got a message, you want to get it across. When I come up with an idea about the way I feel, I can really state it strongly in a song.
Tires were so bald on the truck that the air was showin' through, and I had to drive fifty miles an hour all the way out there, because the vibration was so bad.
Some guys work 125 to 130 rodeos a year. They're just goin' all the time.
I really didn't go that hard, although a couple of years I did. Some guys work 125 to 130 rodeos a year. they're just goin' all the time.
Sit tall in the saddle and hold your head up high. Keep your eyes fixed where the trail
meets the sky, and live like you ain't afraid to die. Don't be scared...just enjoy the ride.
But if they ever saw a sunrise on a mountain morning/Watched those cotton candy clouds roll by/They'd know why I live beneath these Western Skies.
I can remember sittin in a cafe when I first started in rodeo, and waitin until somebody got done so I could finish what they left.
I only won $250 all summer. And then I got crippled. I had a horse step on me while performing and it was messed up for a while.
When you get a little older, you think, I'd like to make a little money and stick it away or buy a place - or win the world championship.
If you're lucky enough to draw a good horse, you still have to ride him, then the next ones. So It's probably 80 percent luck and 20 percent skill.