This Train

{{Short description|Traditional American gospel song}}

"This Train", also known as "This Train Is Bound for Glory", is a traditional African-American gospel song first recorded in 1922. Although its origins are unknown, the song was relatively popular during the 1920s as a religious tune, and it became a gospel hit in the late 1930s for singer-guitarist Sister Rosetta Tharpe.{{cite web | url = http://www.allmusic.com/artist/sister-rosetta-tharpe-p131146/biography | last = Ankeny | first = Jason | title = Sister Rosetta Tharpe: Biography | publisher = Allmusic | accessdate = 2012-03-26}} After switching from acoustic to electric guitar, Tharpe released a more secular version of the song in the early 1950s.

The song's popularity was also due in part to the influence of folklorists John A. Lomax Jr. and Alan Lomax, who discovered the song while making field recordings in the American South in the early 1930s and included it in folk song anthologies that were published in 1934 and 1960. These anthologies brought the song to the attention of an even broader audience during the folk music revival of the 1950s and 1960s.{{cite book | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=AY7St4-8x10C | author = Cohen, Norm | title = Long Steel Rail: The Railroad in American Folksong, 2nd Ed. | publisher = University of Illinois Press | location = Urbana | year = 2000 | pages = 629–632 | isbn = 0-252-06881-5 | accessdate = 2012-03-21}} Another song, called "The Crawdad Song", uses the same melody.

Early history

The earliest known example of "This Train" is a recording by Florida Normal and Industrial Institute Quartette from 1922, under the title "Dis Train".{{cite web|last1=Waltz|first1=Robert B.|title=This Train|url=http://www.fresnostate.edu/folklore/ballads/LoF255.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20150117155141/http://www.fresnostate.edu/folklore/ballads/LoF255.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 17, 2015|website=Fresno State Ballad Index|accessdate=January 12, 2015}} Another one of the earliest recordings of the song is the version made by Wood's Blind Jubilee Singers in August 1925 under the title "This Train Is Bound for Glory". Between 1926 and 1931, three other black religious groups recorded it. During a visit to the Parchman Farm state penitentiary in Mississippi in 1933, Smithsonian Institution musicologist John A. Lomax and his son Alan made a field recording of the song by black inmate Walter McDonald. The next year the song found its way into print for the first time in the Lomaxes' American Folk Songs and Ballads anthology and was subsequently included in Alan Lomax's 1960 anthology Folk Songs of North America.

In 1935, the first hillbilly recording of the song was released by Tennessee Ramblers as "Dis Train" in reference to the song's black roots. Then in the late 1930s, after becoming the first black artist to sign with a major label, gospel singer and guitarist Sister Rosetta Tharpe recorded "This Train" as a hit for Decca. Her later version of the song, released by Decca in the early 1950s, featured Tharpe on electric guitar.

In 1955, the song, with altered lyrics, became a popular single for blues singer-harmonica player Little Walter Jacobs as "My Babe". This secular adaptation has since become a rock standard recorded by many artists, including Dale Hawkins, Bo Diddley, Cliff Richard (three times), and the Remains.

Other recordings

Additional influences

The song provided the inspiration for the title of Woody Guthrie's autobiographical novel Bound for Glory. Guthrie also provided a version of this song referring to the fate of the dust bowl refugees who often had to illegally use freight trains to make their way west. The book was subsequently used as the basis for director Hal Ashby's 1976 film Bound for Glory on Guthrie's life, which starred David Carradine.

Sister Rosetta Tharpe's 1950s version of "This Train" was featured as a selection on Bob Dylan's XM Satellite Radio program Theme Time Radio Hour, during its first season in 2006–2007. The song, which was played on Show 46, "More Trains", was later released on The Best of Bob Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour, Volume 1 on the Chrome Dreams label.

In mid-1970s in the USSR, Dean Reed made a TV clip version of "This Train" as a "gospel" of a kind in praise to the BAM - a grand Soviet Trans-Siberian railroad that was being built in that period.Archived at [https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211210/qtaTaJHrYpY Ghostarchive]{{cbignore}} and the [https://web.archive.org/web/20200405155210/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtaTaJHrYpY Wayback Machine]{{cbignore}}: {{cite AV media| url = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtaTaJHrYpY| title = Dean Reed This Train | website=YouTube}}{{cbignore}}

See also

Notes

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References

  • {{cite book | last = Cohen | first = Norm | title = Long Steel Rail: The Railroad in American Folksong, 2nd Ed. | publisher = University of Illinois Press | location = Urbana | year = 2000 | isbn = 0-252-06881-5}}
  • {{cite book | last = Lomax | first = Alan | author-link = Alan Lomax | title = The Land Where the Blues Began | publisher = The New Press | location = New York, New York | year = 2002 | isbn = 1-56584-739-3 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/landwhereblues00loma }}

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Category:Gospel songs

Category:1925 songs

Category:Songs about trains

Category:Woody Guthrie songs

Category:Peter, Paul and Mary songs

Category:Bob Marley songs