High Sierras
Bob Nolan
Original copyright: Unknown
Photo by Robert Wagoner
The high Sierras call to me.
The wonderful days roll by.
The scented breeze, the whispering trees
‘Way up in the clear blue sky.
The high Sierras call to me.
I gotta go back there soon.
I left my heart among the pines along the trails
Up in the high Sierras.
Where the dawn breaks upon a wonder world
And wild creatures greet you with a “How do you do,
"Old friend? We’re glad to have you back again.
"And where have you been so long?”
The high Sierras call to me
And if they should call you, too,
You’ll leave your heart among the pines along the trails
Up in the high Sierras.
Where the dawn breaks upon a wonder world
And wild creatures greet you with a “How do you do?
"Old friend? We’re glad to have you back again.
"And where have you been so long?”
The high Sierras call to me
And if they should call you, too,
You’ll leave your heart among the pines along the trails
Up in the high Sierras.
ABOUT THIS SONG
Bob Nolan's daughter, Bobbie Mileusnich, discovered several 78 rpm demo recordings among her father's effects. Her son, Calin Coburn, rented equipment and transferred them to cassette tape. The demos were fragile and the needle damaged them further as they were played. Bob had made these recordings himself on his own home recording equipment, accompanying himself on his little Martin guitar with an occasional whistled phrase. Bobbie made copies of this cassette for many of the Bob Nolan aficionados in the Western Music Association.
The song was never recorded commercially until 1998 when Gene Davenport included it on his album Ghost Towns & Autumn Trails. When he originally recorded the song, Gene was unaware that a demo recording by Bob himself existed so he composed a melody for it.
SHEET MUSIC
We do not have any sheet music for this song.
Mileusnich found a lyric sheet in Bob's hand in addition to the homemade demo recording. Bob's High Sierras demo differed only from the written lyrics in that he repeated the second and third verses.
Photocopy of lyric sheet in Bob’s handwriting from Roberta Nolan Mileusnich.
RECORDINGS
“I had written a melody for the lyrics, had decided to do the bridge as a recitation, and had added four lines of poetry to fill out the recitation. Bobbie called me when they discovered the tape, but this was a couple of years or so after I had released my recording. She said not to worry, that she liked what I had done, and that she simply wanted to let me know of the discovery. A side note: When I heard Bob's tape, cold chills went up my spine a couple of times because in two or three places his melody and mine, though not the same, are strikingly similar.”
(Gene Davenport, August 17, 2009)