Guion (some sources show him as
David Wendel Fentress Guion) was born in
Ballinger, Texas, on December 15, 1892, to John I. and Armour Fentress Guion. Guion began to play the piano at an early age. He was intrigued by the cowboys, former cattle drivers, who worked on his father's ranch, and also by the spirituals that he heard whenever a family servant brought him to the services of an African-American church. As a young boy, he was sent by train each Saturday to
San Angelo, where he took piano lessons with
Charles Finger, who later became a prolific author and literary magazine editor. In the fall of 1907, he studied at the Whipple Academy in
Jacksonville, Illinois, after which he continued his studies in
Fort Worth at Polytechnic College (now
Texas Wesleyan University) under Wilbur MacDonald. After MacDonald's death in 1912, Guion went to
Vienna, where he studied at the
Imperial Academy of Music with
Leopold Godowsky until the spring of 1914. Returning to Texas, Guion taught piano at
Daniel Baker College (now
Howard Payne University) in Brownwood, and also turned his attention to composition. One of his first major successes, a virtuosic arrangement of "
Turkey in the Straw", was performed by many famous pianists, most notably
Percy Grainger. ==From pianist to cowboy-composer==