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Wand'rin' Star Lyrics Paint Your Wagon

Wand'rin' Star Lyrics

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I was born under a wanderin’ star
I was born under a wanderin’ star

Wheels are made for rollin’
Mules are made to pack
I never seen a sight that didn’t look better looking back.

I was born under a wanderin’ star

Mud can make you prisoner
And the plains can bake you dry
Snow can burn your eyes
But only people make you cry
Home is made for comin’ from
For dreams of goin’ to
Which with any luck will never come true

I was born under a wanderin’ star
I was born under a wanderin’ star

Do I know where hell is?
Hell is in Hello
Heaven is good-bye forever
It’s time for me to go

I was born under a wanderin’ star
A wanderin’ wanderin’ star

Mud can make you prisoner
And the plains can bake you dry
Snow can burn your eyes
But only people make you cry
Home is made for comin’ from
For dreams of goin’ to
Which with any luck will never come true

I was born under a wanderin’ star
I was born under a wanderin’ star

When I get to heaven
Tie me to a tree
Or I’ll begin to roam
And soon you know where I will be

I was born under a wanderin’ star
A wanderin’ wanderin’ star

Song Overview

Wand'rin' Star lyrics by James Barton
James Barton leads the chorus of miners singing “Wand’rin’ Star” on the original Broadway cast recording.

Review and Highlights

Scene from Wand’rin’ Star by James Barton
“Wand’rin’ Star” as heard on the 1951 Broadway cast album.

“Wand’rin’ Star” is the grizzled soul of Paint Your Wagon. Sung by Ben Rumson, it moves with a slow-frontier gait: heavy on bass, low brass shadows, and a weary baritone line that never hurries. On the 1951 cast album James Barton shapes Ben as a man who trusts the road more than a roof, and the orchestra answers with spare, wind-bitten colors. The tune sounds simple; it isn’t. Loewe threads modal turns and sturdy stepwise motion that lodge in the ear like an old trail song.

Creation History

Lerner and Loewe wrote the number for the original 1951 Broadway production, with Franz Allers conducting and orchestrations led by Robert Russell Bennett. The show opened at the Shubert Theatre on November 12, 1951, and the cast album followed shortly after, with its first LP issue dated December 14, 1951. Barton carries the song in Act II as Ben admits he was “born under a wanderin’ star” and won’t settle even as the boomtown fades.

Song Meaning and Annotations

James Barton performing Wand’rin’ Star exposing meaning
Ben Rumson’s credo, set to Loewe’s dust-trail melody.

Plot

By late in the story, Rumson’s mining camp has thinned out and so has Ben’s patience for domesticity. He sizes up his life and chooses the only constant he trusts - motion. “Wand’rin’ Star” lands at that pivot. It’s not a recruitment anthem for the gold rush crowd; it’s a confession sung by the man who can’t quit the horizon, even while love and community tug at him to stay.

Song Meaning

The lyric strips the romance from restlessness. Lerner’s text defines freedom as compulsion: a self-diagnosis of someone wired to leave. Loewe’s melody leans on low range and long-held tones that feel like keeping a mule’s pace. The mood is stoic, almost prayerful. Context matters too - this is a frontier fable, where wandering looks heroic until it costs you people. The number holds that tension without resolving it.

Shot of Wand’rin’ Star by James Barton
Orchestral writing keeps to earth tones - a sonic West.
Style notes

Loewe writes in a hymn-like 4-bar architecture with unhurried harmonic rhythm. Brass chorales and basses suggest a wind-scoured plain; the chorus answers like a camp full of men who know the road’s cost. It starts resigned, turns almost tender on the promise of heaven, then settles back into dry-eyed acceptance.

Key Facts

  • Artist: James Barton with Paint Your Wagon Ensemble
  • Composer: Frederick Loewe
  • Lyricist: Alan Jay Lerner
  • Conductor: Franz Allers
  • Orchestrations: Robert Russell Bennett
  • Original Production: Opened November 12, 1951 - Shubert Theatre, Broadway
  • First LP release: December 14, 1951
  • Album: Paint Your Wagon - Original Broadway Cast Recording
  • Track length: ~2:33
  • Label history: Issued on RCA Victor LOC 1006 in the 1950s - later reissued by Masterworks Broadway
  • Language: English
  • Music style: Broadway ballad with folk-western hue

Questions and Answers

Where does “Wand’rin’ Star” sit in the show’s story?
Act II - Ben Rumson declares he cannot settle, even as Rumson dries up and family ties strain.
Who leads the song on the original cast album?
James Barton, who played Ben Rumson on Broadway.
Who conducted the original Broadway orchestra?
Franz Allers, a frequent Lerner and Loewe collaborator.
Was the number a hit in its own right?
Yes - the 1969 film version sung by Lee Marvin topped the UK singles chart for three weeks in March 1970 and hit number 1 in Ireland.
Any notable covers?
Plenty - from Lee Marvin’s film single to takes by Shane MacGowan and The Popes, Christopher Lee, and others across genres.

Awards and Chart Positions

UK: Lee Marvin’s film recording of “Wand’rin’ Star” reached number 1 on the Official Singles Chart and kept The Beatles’ “Let It Be” at number 2 during the week of March 8, 1970. It spent three weeks at the top and 17 weeks on the chart.

Ireland: Number 1 for two weeks in March 1970.

Australia: Peaked at number 10.

Additional Info

When Paramount adapted the musical for the 1969 film, Nelson Riddle handled the orchestration and Lee Marvin insisted on singing his own numbers. That unlikely vocal became a late-60s pop phenomenon, a reminder that a strong character performance can trump technical polish when the song and story fit like a glove.

Music video


Paint Your Wagon Lyrics: Song List

  1. I'm on My Way
  2. Rumson Town
  3. What's Goin' On Here?
  4. I Talk to the Trees
  5. They Call the Wind Maria
  6. I Still See Elisa
  7. How Can I Wait?
  8. In Between
  9. Whoop-Ti-Ay
  10. Carino Mio
  11. There's a Coach Comin' In
  12. Hand Me Down That Can o'Beans
  13. Another Autumn
  14. All for Him
  15. Wand'rin' Star

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