The three horses in this tune-white, red and black-represent the past, present and future. Northern England pop group uses metaphors, “through the rails, I spied your pony tail …” The color of the sun and his eyes were green.” Hard to catch? An elusive red-headed mare is “always alone, never with the herd”-one man’s yearning for a beautiful wild mare.Ī tribute to working draft horses, their “iron-clad feather-feet pounding the dust.” The new theme song for frustrated horse shoppers? “I said no, no, you’re not the one for me.”Īs much a Derby Day classic as My Old Kentucky Home Not what we’d recommend personally, but the guys say: “whiskey for my men, beer for my horses.” Liverpool pop group tells us: “Bring on the dancing horses/Wherever they may roam.” “She ran calling Wiiiiiiiiild -fire …” Dare you not to get this one stuck in your head. While horses drag Garth, the Stones can’t be budged. Who wouldn’t want to be the Boss’ hoss? “O’er the hills and through the trees/We’ll go ridin’ you and me.”Ĭountry great sings: “I know there are ponies that I cannot ride/There’s some of them left, they haven’t all died.” “She got a divorce and a chestnut horse.” It goes to show you can ride out heartbreak.Īnyone who’s ever taken a fall knows this one all too well. “Someday we’ll saddle up, and the two of us will ride away.” Like closing the barn door after the horse is already out, pulling back on the reins does no good when what you’re looking for-in this case lost love-is already gone.Įquestrian escapism at its finest, longing for the freedom to ride off into the sunset. Not really about horses, but cool nonetheless. “He’s got one trick to last a lifetime, but that’s all a pony needs.” Rock out in early ’70s with wild equines. “Appaloosa, runnin’ wild in the dead of the nightĪppaloosa, you’re the message of love and light.”
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