Paul Zarzyski, the recipient of the 2005 Governor's Arts Award for Literature,
has been spurring the words wild across the open range of the page and calling
it Poetry for 35 years. In the early '70s, he heeded Horace Greeley's
"go west young man, go west" and received his Master of Fine Arts degree in
creative writing from The University of Montana, where he studied with Richard
Hugo. In the same breath, he took up a second "lucrative" vocation – bareback
bronc riding. He rode both the amateur and the ProRodeo circuits, hung his hooks
up in his late 30s, then cracked back out, after turning 40, for a couple more
years on the senior circuit or, as Paul prefers to call it, The Masters.
On the lee side of his rodeo roughstock years, these days he "makes his living"
(to borrow the title of a James Dickey essay) BARNSTORMING FOR POETRY.
Paul's been featured at the Elko, NV. National Cowboy Poetry Gathering for the
past 23 years, has toured Australia and England, and has performed at The
Library of Congress, The Kennedy Center, London's Festival Hall, and with the
Reno Philharmonic Orchestra, the Spokane Symphony, and the Cowboy Symphony of
Pigeon Forge, TN, The ProRodeo Hall of Fame, The Santa Clarita and Monterey
Cowboy Poetry and Music Festivals, and the Spirit of the West Cowboy Gathering
in Ellensburg, WA. He has also graced the stages of the National Book, Folk, and
Storytelling Festivals, and has appeared on Garrison Keillor's A Prairie
Home Companion, aired June 1999 from The Mother Lode Theatre in Butte,
Montana.
Paul and Wiley & the Wild West shared the
stage at the 2008 National Cowboy Poetry Gathering. Their performance brought
the Elko audience to their feet, cheering wildly for the duo's Spur Wild! show
that celebrated "all things horses." With such a declaration of enthusiasm, the
artists have now produced the Spur Wild! Tour
booked exclusively through Code of the West Entertainment.
With
little time to spare between performances, Paul – the master craftsman of words
– carves out time each day to write new poems and lyrics that stretch beyond
themes of cowboys, roughstock, and the ways of the West. His recent work
includes his collaboration with Wylie Gustafson on the HANG~N~RATTLE! CD,
produced by John Carter Cash, Cash Cabin Productions in Nashville, TN (2009),
and his two CDs, COLLISIONS OF RECKLESS LOVE and ROCK 'N" ROWEL (Open Path
Music, 2007), which received a celebratory review from William C. Reynolds, in
the October 2007 issue of Cowboys & Indians.
Paul's publications include WOLF TRACKS ON THE WELCOME MAT (OreanaBooks, 2003),
winner of The Spur Award from the Western Writers of America, BLUE-COLLAR LIGHT
(Red Wing Press, 1998) and ALL THIS WAY FOR THE SHORT RIDE (Museum of New Mexico
Press, 1996), which received The Western Heritage Award for Poetry from the
National Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City. Paul's catalogue also includes
two recordings – WORDS GROWING WILD (1998) and THE GLORIOUS COMMOTION OF IT ALL
(2004) – both produced by Jim Rooney in Nashville, offer poems with
accompaniment by Duane Eddy, John Hartford, Rich O'Brien, and other fine
musicians.
Paul also has collaborated on song lyrics with Ian Tyson, (Rodeo Road and
Jerry Ambler), Tom Russell (Bucking Horse Moon and All This
Way For The Short Ride), David Wilkie of Cowboy Celtic (Black Upon Tan
and Flying, Not Falling, In Love With You), Don Edwards (West
of the Round Corral), Wylie Gustafson (Saddle Broncs And Sagebrush
and Rodeo to the Bone), and Betsy Hagar (Hope Chest, The
Christmas Saguaro Soiree, Star Light Star Bright, and others).
Born and raised in Hurley Wisconsin, Paul has called Montana "home" since 1973.
Review Excerpts
Poet,
lyricist, and the "Yoda" of the West, Paul Zarzyski – translating cowboy lingo
into the idiom of Americana –casts a net over the infinity of words spinning in
the cosmos and captures the essence of love, laughter, true grit and the gusto
for life! Here's what Zarzyski contemporaries say about the "master" of words.
Time stops for that short moment when a great magician tells his tale. There are
fourteen poems on Collisions, fifteen on Rock 'n' Rowel, and
this is not just "spoken word." There is great textured musical backing on most
pieces. This is "Jazz-Blues-Folk-Americana-World-Word Music." Art-Rock and Roll.
Buy these records. Zarzo has won the Governor's Award in Montana as well as
numerous other awards, and has appeared on TV and NPR radio. But you don't need
to hear that sort of hype. Try this: He's a wop, ex- high school football player
out of Wisconsin, with a lit degree from Montana, who rode bareback broncs and
owns a massive collection of Western Ties. How more American can you get? This
man would never lie to you. That fact is a small revolution in itself. He will
entertain you. Then, when your heart is melting, he will tear it out, take a
chaw out of it and hand it back to you in a popcorn box. You'll leave the
theater changed. Smiling. Moved. Gracias, Saint Pablo.
Tom Russell (songwriter, singer, painter, essayist, film maker), Blood And
Candle Smoke
"Any reading of Zarzyski's complex rhymed and free verse, chocked to the brim,
bottom,
and edges with mind-racing, overlapping images, is going to tell you that this
is a cowboy
poet with a whole new approach to poetry."
Dale L. Walker, The Rocky Mountain News
"In the new poetry, the ballad line, if heard at all, is only one ingredient of
prosody. The
Montana poet and bronc-rider Paul Zarzyski's diction is as rich as his internal
rhymes and
alliteration are extravagant...."
Thomas West, The Washington Post, "Book World"
"If pit bulls were poets, they'd write like Paul Zarzyski. Tenacious, he shakes
the hell out
of personal experience and spits out bits of bone and flesh...."
Gennie Nord, The Missoulian
"Roughstock Sonnets is the best book on rodeo since the invention of horseback."
– William Kittredge, Author of Hole In The Sky
"In prose literature there are labels such as "Kafka-esque" and "Hemingway-esque."
In
cowboy poetry there is, or ought to be, "Zarzyski-esque." No other "-esque"
comes close." –
Jesse Mullins, American Cowboy magazine
"There are lots of good rodeo hands in this old world and a fair number of good
poets.
To find a man who is both is as rare as a wet summer in eastern Montana. Paul
Zarzyski
knows the jerk of the bareback riggin' and the surge and flow of classic
narrative poetry in
the Masefield tradition. He is a rare talent...."
Ian Tyson, Cowboy Song Writer and Singer
"Paul Zarzyski is a man of many hats--fisherman, bronc rider, son, worker,
lover. From
the white heat of his rodeo arenas to the calm lakes and clear streams of all
our lives, this
poet captures experience the way a bear goes after salmon--with confidence and
patience,
with intensity and purpose. But don't be fooled. The Make-Up Of Ice is a
celebration of
men and women, a moving chronicle of the human spirit. Zarzyski is a serious
poet whose
unique world becomes our world. It's a good clean ride."
James Welch, Author of Fools Crow
"Alive to all the senses, these richly textured poems pulse with a force that is
at once
muscular and tender, urgent and timeless. Paul Zarzyski listens to the heartbeat
of creation.
What he hears, in the rhythm of the land, the wonder and pain of human
experience, is the
'sweet music' of all our lives. Imbued with wisdom, wit, humanity, and grace,
Wolf Tracks on
the Welcome Mat is a moving paean to 'the glorious commotion of it all.'"
Anne Heath Widmark, Author of Between Earth & Sky, Poets of the Cowboy West
"Paul Zarzyski's poems will break your heart--and then turn right around and
mend it. He
looks pain squarely in the eye, takes its measure, and counters it with
tenderness and
wisdom, all in language that should be set to music. Books like this are the
reason poetry
exists."
Ed McClanahan, Author of The Natural Man
Code of the West Entertainment exclusively books Paul Zarzysk for
Performing Art Centers ▪ Symphonies ▪ Wineries (Breweries! Distilleries!) ▪
Corporate & Private Events ▪ University Performances, Classroom Workshops ▪
Benefits & Fundraisers ▪ Festivals & Gatherings ▪ Spur Wild! Tour w/ Wylie & the
Wild West