"The Cattle Call" is a song written and recorded in 1934 by American songwriter and musician Tex Owens.[4] The melody was adapted from Bruno Rudzinksi's 1928 recording "Pawel Walc".[5] It later became a signature song for Eddy Arnold. Members of the Western Writers of America chose it as one of the Top 100 Western songs of all time.[6]
Owens wrote the song in Kansas City while watching the snow fall. "Watching the snow, my sympathy went out to cattle everywhere, and I just wished I could call them all around me and break some corn over a wagon wheel and feed them. That's when the words 'cattle call' came to my mind. I picked up my guitar, and in thirty minutes I had wrote the music and four verses to the song," he said.[7] His August 28, 1934 recording was among the first for the newly formed Decca Record Company.[3] He recorded it again in 1936.
Eddy Arnold recorded "The Cattle Call" four times, at his first session in 1944, 1949, and in 1955 with Hugo Winterhalter's Chorus and Orchestra. The latter version spent 26 weeks on the country chart, peaking at number one for two weeks.[13] Arnold recorded a simpler arrangement in 1963 for the title track of a collection of cowboy and western songs.
The Eddy Arnold version of the song was heard in the 1997 movie Private Parts during the scene when Howard Stern, whose station "W4" in Detroit had just changed formats from rock to country, abruptly resigned on the air telling listeners he didn't understand the music. It was additionally featured in the film My Own Private Idaho. In 2023, it was included on the soundtrack of the film Asteroid City by Wes Anderson.