Before it could exist, the father-son duet featuring a previously unreleased Chris LeDoux vocal track had to survive 21 years of inattention, a FedEx delivery and the spite of outdated technology.
Ned LeDoux, son of Wyoming rancher, rodeo cowboy and renowned country singer Chris LeDoux, released a father-son duet last week titled âOne Hand In The Rigginâ.â
Though the songâs been performed and recorded for more than 20 years, only a handful of people had ever heard Chris LeDoux sing it before its release last Wednesday.
The songâs lyricist Brenn Hill was an up-and-coming songwriter in the early 2000s when he made friends with Bruce Bouton, the head of the musiciansâ union and an A-list steel guitar player in Nashville, Hill told Cowboy State Daily.
âHe took me under his wing and was introducing me to people around town,â said Hill, of Bouton. Thatâs when Bouton had the idea: âHe wanted me to write a song for Chris LeDoux.â
Chris LeDoux had been recording an edgy breed of country his son now calls ârodeo rockâ since 1970. His rogue concert stage tactics and music both inspired major parts of the career of Garth Brooks, who is the no. 1-selling solo artist in U.S.
Hill had a little poem in his head that went âOne hand in the rigginâ, one hand on the wheel.â He pitched that to Bouton, who happened to have a melody in mind for it.
âThe song just fell out, kind of a magic moment,â Hill recalled.
Chris LeDoux recorded the song in Nashville in 2003. At that time, he was already battling the cancer that would later prove fatal, his son Ned told Cowboy State Daily on Friday.
But âOne Hand In The Rigginââ didnât make it onto Chris LeDouxâs album of that year, âHorsepower.â
â(There was) intense pressure to finish the record,â recalled Hill. âThey were in such a hurry to get that out,â and they werenât going to wait for the song.
At the time, Hill was heartbroken. He was still scrambling for funding, for renown, for a bit of independence in the tough music world and had to obey the forces that controlled the business.
Now heâs grateful and thrilled that it happened that way, he said.
Itâs Time To Sing
Chris LeDoux died of cancer in 2005, at the age of 56.
His son Ned, a drummer since age 6, had been drumming in Chrisâ band, the Western Underground. After his dadâs death, Ned started drumming for South Dakota-based band Dustin Evans and the Good Times.
He stayed in that role for 10 years.
One night roughly 12 years ago, the band members were hanging out and playing old songs. Dustin Evans got up to get a beer and handed Ned LeDoux his guitar.
âHere, why donât you play one of your dadâs songs,â said Evans, to the younger LeDoux.
âI said, âI know the words to all Dadâs songs â I just donât sing,â recalled LeDoux. But he was curious whether he could carry his dadâs melodies, and he gave it a shot.
It was infectious. Ned LeDoux started singing to friends, to his own empty basement and into the cheap motel rooms that housed him on the road.
He played his first solo gig in 2014.
âPeople say I sound like my dad,â said Ned LeDoux. âAnd thatâs probably the best compliment I could get.â
Because Of Cowboy Poetry
Ned LeDoux played at the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nevada, in early February of this year.
Brenn Hill, whom the younger LeDoux befriended after his dadâs death, watched from the audience.
After the set the two friends visited, and Hill floated the idea of resurrecting Chris LeDouxâs vocal track on âOne Hand In The Rigginââ â for a father-son duet.
âI almost couldnât wait for him to come off stage so I could tell him that idea,â said Hill.
LeDoux loved the idea. His team was amazed Hill still had the original vocal track.
But it was recorded in a format called âradar,â a fleeting format that was popular in the late 1990s and early 2000s but is obsolete now.
Hill couldnât simply make a copy of the original. He called up recording studios to see if they had the technology, and no one did.
So he popped the original disk into a FedEx box and sent it to Ned LeDouxâs manager Mark Sissel, and his producer Mac McAnally.
âI told the lady at FedEx, âThis canât get lost. This is really irreplaceable,ââ Hill recalled.
When Sissel sent a text saying the track arrived in Nashville, Hill exhaled a sigh of relief.
Crackling
Sissel was âall excitedâ about the track, which arrived in a box littered with notes about how it could not get lost. But when the men went to play it, the track crackled and sounded unusable, McAnally told Cowboy State Daily.
They didnât lose hope, but their hearts sank, he said.
âWe ran it across a couple technical tricks and got the data to transfer,â said McAnally. And they were surprised to find in the end that not only was the track usable, it was âoutstanding â a classic Chris LeDoux vocal.â
McAnally also recorded an electric guitar strain to lead the song. This differentiates it from many of the other, earlier versions, which feature a fiddle and a lighter, Texas-country sound.
The heavier instrumental edge is meant to match Chris LeDoux, said McAnally.
âI opened shows for him and saw what a force he was on stage,â he said. A world champion bareback rider, LeDouxâs country music style blended chilling rock balladry with genuine rodeo doggedness.
McAnally also had to separate the fatherâs voice from the sonâs voice. They sound so much alike, itâs difficult for listeners to tell who is singing where, so to help, McAnally placed their voices on different points of the stereo spectrum â so they could sing to each other.
Now, the producer is just grateful that he got to be part of the late artistâs last musical rodeo.
âWe are so blessed to have that (duet now),â said McAnally. âBecause Ned never acknowledged he could sing until years after Chris was gone.â
Ned could hear his dad while recording his own vocal portion, said McAnally. That translates to a sentiment that, the producer says, is audible on the final product.
âA duet across time between the father and the son is an amazing thing,â he said. âIt stands the hair up on my arms.â
Contact Clair McFarland at clair@cowboystatedaily.com

Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.