Half of the early-'60s folk group
Ian & Sylvia,
Ian Tyson retreated from performing and recording after the duo disbanded in the mid-'70s to become a rancher in the foothills of Southern Alberta, Canada. He quietly returned to music-making in the 1980s, releasing a series of albums that focused on detailed songs about the concerns of the working cowboy.
Tyson was born in Victoria, British Columbia. As a child he was involved in rodeo, not music -- he didn't learn to play the guitar until he was recovering from rodeo-related injuries. In the late '50s, he began performing as a folk singer. In 1961, he met singer/songwriter
Sylvia Fricker and the two musicians began performing together; they also married three years later.
Ian & Sylvia and their band,
Great Speckled Bird, became popular on the folk scene and released their self-titled debut album in 1962. In 1963, they released
Four Strong Winds; the title track, written by
Tyson, became a folk standard.
Ian & Sylvia successfully recorded together through the mid-'70s. The duo also began hosting a television show, Nashville North, which became the Ian Tyson Show when the couple split up in the middle of the decade.
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