Wash., rancher, cutting horse owner and 2004 Yodeler of the Year perform his “biggest hit” many times.
The lead singer and guitarist of Wylie and the Wild West, is the voice behind the yodel heard in every Yahoo! commercial. His brief but distinctive “Ya-hoo-ooo-ooo” consistently echoes from coast to coast and around the world.
“It’s the only hit I’ve written so far,” he jokes
Gustafson will not say how well Yahoo! compensated him for an audio company logo heard everywhere from America to the Philippines and China. The one-time fee that allows Yahoo! to use up to 10 versions of him yodeling the same word did build a large horse arena at his ranch. It also helped him and his wife, Kimberley, purchase some good horses.
“The yodel has been very good to me,” Gustafson said. “It has allowed me to get into cutting at this level.”
“This level” includes buying and consistently winning with a talented big bay gelding, 6-year-old Irish Whiskey Sugar, that has helped Gustafson earn most of his $23,569 in career National Cutting Horse Association earnings over three years.
Wylie and his 15.2-hand partner won the British Columbia Cutting Horse Association’s 5/6-year-old Non-Pro event last September. They have placed near the top at many aged events. They finished third and won $3,944 during an October Non-Pro Classic at the Lammle’s Cutting Futurity in Calgary, Alberta, Can.
Spending time away from his job as a singer-songwriter and guitarist with a touring and recording act does not hurt his work, Wylie said. Wylie and the Wild West released its 10th album, “Hooves of the Horses,” in June. Another album is scheduled for release this month. More information about the music is available on his website, www.wylieww.com.
“I think you need an inspiration to write good music, whether it’s horses or the cowboy lifestyle or whatever you are writing about,” Wylie said. “I sing Western music and I think it is important that I live the Western lifestyle. If you listen to Hooves of the Horses, a lot of those songs were inspired by sitting on a horse.
Wylie and Kim have been married 15 years. They live on a 600-acre ranch and own 15 horses, plus 25 mother cows. They recently hired a trainer who will specialize in starting young horses. He will take on some outside horses, Wylie said.
Kimberley Gustafson, who has won $4,414 as a cutter according to NCHA statistics, said her husband bought his first big winner as a roping horse prospect four years ago. Wylie bought Irish Whiskey Sugar, a son of Paddy’s Irish Whiskey out of My Little Sugar Babe by Sons Doc O Sugar at a John Scott Ranch auction in Billings, Mont. Before following his wife into the cutting pen as her frequent turnback man, Wylie often competed as a team roper.
“I looked at the papers and I said, Oh, he could be more than just a rope horse,” Kimberley said. “I started him and that was about the last time I got to sit under him, except in the loping pen.”
A strong connection between Wylie and the big bay horse was soon undeniable. “That horse is really remarkable,” Kimberley said. “Wylie and the horse just clicked. It brought out Wylie’s competitive spirit and his love for the sport.”
With Irish Sugar Whiskey’s assistance, Wylie won the Washington Cutting Horse Association’s year-end Non-Pro Champion trophy belt buckle. He also won Open and Non-Pro champion’s buckles in the Blue Mountain Cutting Club.
“He’s not just a show horse, he can do the ranch work,” Wylie said of his undisputed favorite. “People were passing this horse up because he was too big to be a cutting horse,” Wylie said. “He stands about 15-2 hands now and he was probably 15 hands when I bought him as a yearling. He’s just been doing great.”
Kimberley won the Washington Cutting Horse Association’s 2004 buckle as its top $2,000 Limit Rider and the Blue Mountain Cutting Club’s year-end buckle as its top $10,000 Amateur rider. She grew up around cutting horses and she started competing on cutters while her husband roped.