Doug Macleod... THE NEW PANAMA LIMITED
http://www.doug-macleod.com/music.html
got to the very bottom of the list..you can listen to a 30 second clip of it...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EiRGJTMZyI
to watch him preform it...
csx engineer
Falcon48 wrote: locomutt wrote: Falcon48 wrote: Datafever wrote:What's your favorite train-related song?My favorites include Folsom Prison Blues by Johnny Cash, On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe as sung by Bing Crosby, and Chattanooga Choo-Choo as recorded by Glenn Miller.(1) Mother's Lying in a Box in the Baggage Coach Ahead (an awful piece, but it's got a great title)(2) Hey Engineer! (novelty tune spoofing all the songs about taking trains back to the South)(3) This Train Don't Carry No Gamblers (Turk Murphy novelty version)(4) Two-Nineteen Blues (only recording I know was by Jelly Roll Morton in a Library of Congress interview in 1941) (5) The Rock Island Line (1950's novelty version)(6) Charlie and the MTA (which is actually set to a much older railroad tune - it may be Wreck of the Old 97 but, off the top of my head, I'm not sure)(7) The Trolley Song (from Meet Me In St. Louis)(8) Shuffle Off to Buffalo (from 42nd Street) For number 6, are you referring to the Smother's Brothers song of the late 60s, early 70s? The Smothers Brothers may well have done #6 (they did lots of funny stuff) but it wasn't by them. It was originally done as a campaign song for a mayoral candidate in Boston about 1949 or so. That's the reason for the last chorus about fighting the fare increase by electing "George O'Brien" (he lost). It was then made famous by a group in the 1950's but offhand, I don't remember who they were.By the way, another interesting but obscure train piece is the "Great Crush Collision March". It's a piano piece (no words) written to commemorate a staged train wreck on the MKT in Texas in 1896 which didn't come out as planned (the boilers exploded and sent shrapnel into the crowd). The promoter was the aptly named William Crush, the railroad's General Passenger Agent, hence the title. The piece is noteworthy because it was written by ragtime composer Scott Joplin, and was one of his first published pieces (it may have been his first), predating his ragtime pieces.
locomutt wrote: Falcon48 wrote: Datafever wrote:What's your favorite train-related song?My favorites include Folsom Prison Blues by Johnny Cash, On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe as sung by Bing Crosby, and Chattanooga Choo-Choo as recorded by Glenn Miller.(1) Mother's Lying in a Box in the Baggage Coach Ahead (an awful piece, but it's got a great title)(2) Hey Engineer! (novelty tune spoofing all the songs about taking trains back to the South)(3) This Train Don't Carry No Gamblers (Turk Murphy novelty version)(4) Two-Nineteen Blues (only recording I know was by Jelly Roll Morton in a Library of Congress interview in 1941) (5) The Rock Island Line (1950's novelty version)(6) Charlie and the MTA (which is actually set to a much older railroad tune - it may be Wreck of the Old 97 but, off the top of my head, I'm not sure)(7) The Trolley Song (from Meet Me In St. Louis)(8) Shuffle Off to Buffalo (from 42nd Street) For number 6, are you referring to the Smother's Brothers song of the late 60s, early 70s?
Falcon48 wrote: Datafever wrote:What's your favorite train-related song?My favorites include Folsom Prison Blues by Johnny Cash, On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe as sung by Bing Crosby, and Chattanooga Choo-Choo as recorded by Glenn Miller.(1) Mother's Lying in a Box in the Baggage Coach Ahead (an awful piece, but it's got a great title)(2) Hey Engineer! (novelty tune spoofing all the songs about taking trains back to the South)(3) This Train Don't Carry No Gamblers (Turk Murphy novelty version)(4) Two-Nineteen Blues (only recording I know was by Jelly Roll Morton in a Library of Congress interview in 1941) (5) The Rock Island Line (1950's novelty version)(6) Charlie and the MTA (which is actually set to a much older railroad tune - it may be Wreck of the Old 97 but, off the top of my head, I'm not sure)(7) The Trolley Song (from Meet Me In St. Louis)(8) Shuffle Off to Buffalo (from 42nd Street)
Datafever wrote:What's your favorite train-related song?My favorites include Folsom Prison Blues by Johnny Cash, On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe as sung by Bing Crosby, and Chattanooga Choo-Choo as recorded by Glenn Miller.
(1) Mother's Lying in a Box in the Baggage Coach Ahead (an awful piece, but it's got a great title)
(2) Hey Engineer! (novelty tune spoofing all the songs about taking trains back to the South)
(3) This Train Don't Carry No Gamblers (Turk Murphy novelty version)
(4) Two-Nineteen Blues (only recording I know was by Jelly Roll Morton in a Library of Congress interview in 1941)
(5) The Rock Island Line (1950's novelty version)
(6) Charlie and the MTA (which is actually set to a much older railroad tune - it may be Wreck of the Old 97 but, off the top of my head, I'm not sure)
(7) The Trolley Song (from Meet Me In St. Louis)
(8) Shuffle Off to Buffalo (from 42nd Street)
For number 6, are you referring to the Smother's Brothers song of the late 60s, early 70s?
The Smothers Brothers may well have done #6 (they did lots of funny stuff) but it wasn't by them. It was originally done as a campaign song for a mayoral candidate in Boston about 1949 or so. That's the reason for the last chorus about fighting the fare increase by electing "George O'Brien" (he lost). It was then made famous by a group in the 1950's but offhand, I don't remember who they were.
By the way, another interesting but obscure train piece is the "Great Crush Collision March". It's a piano piece (no words) written to commemorate a staged train wreck on the MKT in Texas in 1896 which didn't come out as planned (the boilers exploded and sent shrapnel into the crowd). The promoter was the aptly named William Crush, the railroad's General Passenger Agent, hence the title. The piece is noteworthy because it was written by ragtime composer Scott Joplin, and was one of his first published pieces (it may have been his first), predating his ragtime pieces.
The 1950's group was the Kingston Trio, a folk group. The tune was from "The Ship that Never Returned", but parts of the melody are also in "The Wreck of Old 97". Good melodies can always be adapted.
Choo Choo Ch'boogie was recorded in the 40's by Louis Jordan, but I don't know if he was the originator. It was my Uncle Elmer's favorite song. He worked for the Wabash. He's also the man who made a railfan out of me, may he rest in peace.
Here's a couple of songs that don't have anything to do with trains other than one song has the word "train" in the title, and the other has a railroad related line in the lyrics.
The Farm - Groovy Train
Sisters of Mercy - Lucretia My Reflection (contains the line "once a railroad, now it's done")
The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down by The Band. Sounds like a group of civil war era musicians who somehow got their hands on electric instruments.
Also note the sound of the horns in their song The Unfaithful Servant. They come in right after the line, "I can hear the whistle blowing." It will transport you to another time.
CANADIANPACIFIC2816 wrote: Canadian Railroad Trilogy, Steel Rail Blues, The Watchman's Gone, all written by Gordon Lightfoot. CANADIANPACIFIC2816----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------"There was a time in this fair land when the railroad did not run, when the wild majestic mountains stood alone against the sun, long before the white man, and long before the wheel, when the green, dark forest was too silent to be real." Gordon Lightfoot
Canadian Railroad Trilogy, Steel Rail Blues, The Watchman's Gone, all written by Gordon Lightfoot.
CANADIANPACIFIC2816
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"There was a time in this fair land when the railroad did not run, when the wild majestic mountains stood alone against the sun, long before the white man, and long before the wheel, when the green, dark forest was too silent to be real." Gordon Lightfoot
Ditto to that!
Canadian Railroad Trilogy is not only my favorite railroad song, is is my favorite song, period.
Phil
In the late 90s, a teenage girl named Shannon Curfman released a song called "No Riders." She's no Backstreet Britney Agulera. It's a really good blues song and she plays guitar on it. Not sure who wrote it.
http://www.shannoncurfman.com/noriders.htm
Does "C'mon N Ride It (The Train)" by the Quad City DJ's qualify as a train song?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9vZ_akgmXU
Ted M.
got trains?™
See my photos at: http://tedmarshall.rrpicturearchives.net/
"The Day After Tomorrow Is Coming On A Train" (also called the Burlington Northern Song) is one of my favorites.
- City of New Orleans by Johnny Cash
- Tuesday's Gone (mentions a train many times) The Metallica cover is my personal favorite.
-Brandon
videomaker wrote: Have any of you guys ever heard of Jimmie Rogers? The Blue Yodeler? He was the first singin hobo ! Wrote many many songs about the railroad..Also Stonewall Jackson did a song called Smoke Along the Track..Danny
Glad to hear some of you younger fellows have heard of Jimmie Rodgers. His version of "Waiting for a Train" is a classic and I have it on a CD of country songs. He died of tuberculosis, and I read where he had to have a bed handy during his last recording session so he could lay down and catch his breath between songs. Sad story.
I like John Prine and Steve Goodman's version of City of New Orleans. After all, Steve wrote it.
Leadbelly's version of Rock Island Line. Bill Monroe's version of Orange Blossom Special is another of my favorites.
Lots of good RR songs. Some other songs with references to trains in them, such as "Blues in the Night." ("Hear that lonesome whistle, blowin' cross the trestle, woo-ee)
Here's one the wife suggested
Crazy Train By Ozzy
or Runaway Train by Soul Asylum
City of New Orleans - Arlo
Casey Jones - Grateful Dead
woof-woof
Falcon48 wrote: (2) Hey Engineer! (novelty tune spoofing all the songs about taking trains back to the South)
Which, of course, brings to mind Hey Porter, Johnny Cash's first hit record about taking a train back to the South, and a darned enjoyable one even to this day. Like it when it comes up in the iPod.
Being Crazy,keeps you from going "INSANE" !! "The light at the end of the tunnel,has been turned off due to budget cuts" NOT AFRAID A Vet., and PROUD OF IT!!
well there is a song by blackfoot called "train train".It really makes you think about how a train rolls down the line.
stay safe
Joe
Deshler Ohio-crossroads of the B&O Matt eats your fries.YUM! Clinton st viaduct undefeated against too tall trucks!!!(voted to be called the "Clinton St. can opener").
Here's a good one for you...
There's this singer/songwritter by the name of Todd Snider who does rock, country, folk, just about anything. He's also very funny. Anyway, he's playing a show at this dive bar in Kansas City called Knuckleheads and he starts talking about a song of his called The Train Song. It's about a deceased friend who always used to call him over and ask him to play some train songs. So, he starts playing the song and two seconds later there's a train horn. The bar, it turns out, it right up against some railroad tracks in KC. Mr. Snider keeps playing The Train Song as the horm blasts a few more times and then you can hear the train go by behind the bar. Kinda spooky if you ask me.
CC
My favorite Christmas toy train song: "Little Toy Trains" by Roger Miller, also recorded as "Old Toy Trains". If you ever recieved a toy train for Christmas as a child, this song has all the nostalgia you could ask for.
Little Toy Trains
Little toy trains, little toy tracksLittle toy drums, comin' from a sackCarried by a man dressed in white and redLittle boy, don't you think it's time you were in bedClose your eyes, listen to the skiesAll is calm, all is wellSoon you'll hear Kris Kringle and the jingle bellsBringin' little toy trains and little toy tracksLittle toy drums, comin' from a sackCarried by a man dressed in white and redLittle boy, don't you think it's time you were in bedSo, close your eyes and listen to the skiesAll is calm, all is wellSoon you'll hear Kris Kringle and the jingle bellsBringin' little toy trains and little toy tracksLittle toy drums, comin' from a sackCarried by a man dressed in white and redLittle boy, don't you think it's time you were in bedLittle boy, don't you think it's time you were in bed
Jimmie Rogers did work on the New Orleans & Northeastern as a brakeman and maybe other roads also. He moved to AZ and worked as a switchman for the SP for a short time. Trivia: Louis Armstrong played trumpet on one of his songs.Here is pic of only movie he was in.
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.