Hello, I'm Johnny Cash. Hi I'm Willie Nelson. What do you want to do for us? An old cowpoke went riding out one dark and windy day, up on a ridge he rested as he went along his way. And all at once a mighty herd of red-eyed cows he saw, plowing through the cloudy sky, and up a cloudy draw. Their breaths were still on fire and their hooves were made of steel. Their horns were black and shiny and their hot breath he could feel. A bolt of fear went through him as they thundered through the skies. He saw the riders coming hard and he heard them horns go cry. Yippee-yi-yay, yippee-yi-oh. Ghost riders in the sky. As the riders passed on by him he heard one call his name, if you want to save your soul from hell or riding on our range, then cowboy change your ways today or with us you will ride. Trying to catch the devil's herd across these endless skies. Yippee-yi-yay, yippee-yi-oh. Ghost riders in the sky. Yippee-yi-yay, yippee-yi-oh. Their faces gone, their eyes were blurred, their shirts all soaked with sweat. He's riding hard to catch that herd, but he ain't caught him yet, cause they've got to ride forever on that range up in the sky, on horses snorting fire, as they ride on hear their cry. Yippee-yi-yay, yippee-yi-oh. Ghost riders in the sky. Ghost riders in the sky. Yippee-yi-yay, yippee-yi-oh. Thank you. Hey that's one, we've got- That's one, yeah. We did that on, we've done it on the Highwaymen show, working with Willie and Waylon and Chris and myself and- It's been a while since we did a Highwaymen tour. We're about due I think. Hard to find all four of us. We never could find Waylon. I love working with those criminals, I mean those guys, I enjoy it. You wrote a song that I did on a reggae album that I did, and you got a house over in Jamaica don't you? And you know a lot of those folks over there. So I did this song called Worried Man and did it on the reggae album, it really sounds good with those guys playing it. I haven't heard it, I'm anxious to hear it. Let me tell you how I wrote it, how I come to write it. You were there and you probably went through a little town called Falmouth on the North Shore between Montego Bay and Ocho Rios, and I was walking along the streets of Falmouth one day and this bum came up and he said, he recognized me, he said, Mr. Cash I'm a worried man, I'm a very worried man. I thought, man here's a new approach, I've never had this one before. I said, okay what are you worried about? He said, I've got a wife and nine picnics and no job and that makes me a worried man. So after I left him on the way back to our home I wrote this.