"Riders in the Sky" is a Cowboy / Western song written by Stanley Davis "Stan" Jones on 5 June 1948 while employed with the National Parks Service in Death Valley, California, during his time as technical adviser to John Ford in the filming of The Walking Hills. Burl Ives recorded the original version on 17 February 1949 on side one of Columbia Records 78rpm catalog number 38445. Later that year Vaughn Monroe (Billboard no. 1 hit), Bing Crosby, Peggy Lee, The Sons of The Pioneers, and Spike Jones also released covers of the song. Walter Brennan's recording was in 1964 on his album "Gunfight At The OK Corral." More than 50 other artists have recorded it since 1949, including Stan Freberg (1952), The Brothers Four (1961), Frankie Laine (1963), Marty Robbins (1964), Elvis Presley (1970), Johnny Cash (1979), Christopher Lee (1998), and Lance Guest (2010).
No, Walter Brennan did not write "Ghost Riders in the Sky." The song was written by Stan Jones in 1948. Walter Brennan was a popular actor in Hollywood, known for his performances in Western films.
Defeat of the Ghost Riders was written in 1997
nobody at all. (joel did not write this) we are plutonian brothers
When Walter Dean Myers was in the Military.
If you agree to write a book without putting your name on it and someone else takes the credit, that is ghost writing.
He discovered that he loved to write when he was 10
No, that was Sir Walter Scott
Mary Shelley wanted to write ghost stories that were real. She would visit places and then write about them.
put the paper on the ground and pray for one to appear and write a letter to you
Italic?
Walter Dean Myers wrote "Where Does the Day Go?" in 1969.
Yes with Walter Afanasieff
monster