Green Maned Lion
Engineer
My personal favourite is Arlo Guthrie's version of "City of New Orleans".
Eric - How 'bout - "I've Been Working on the Railroad, All the Live Long Day."Aloha
Almost feel ashamed as I can't think of a single tittle, and I work in the entertainment field. :huh:
Eric aka GG-1
Whose version? Arlo Gurthrie's version is good, but Steve Goodmans version is.... well, its definitely different and I think it sounds awful.1st City of New Orleans
2nd Johnny Cash "I Hear that Train A'Comin"... prob. not the exact title.
1st City of New Orleans
2nd Johnny Cash "I Hear that Train A'Comin"... prob. not the exact title.
And, "Hey Porter" also by Johnny Cash1st City of New Orleans
2nd Johnny Cash "I Hear that Train A'Comin"... prob. not the exact title.
Folsom Prison Blues
My personal favourite is Arlo Guthrie's version of "City of New Orleans".
Surely someone else besides me likes Glenn Miller's Chattanooga Choo-Choo??!!
"Dinner in the diner, nothing could be finer......." naturally he was singing about china and white linen service of yore, but the fake flowers in the new Cross Country Cafe are a nice touch.........
I know I'll get slammed for reviving an old thread, but I just found this on You Tube and loved it. Alison Krauss singing "Steel Rails".
If you hear Cash sing a railroading song, even if it's already been popularized by someone else, the song sounds like it was written especially for Johnny.#1 is probably City of New Orleans. I like Arlo's version best, followed by Johnny Cash's version and Willie Nelson's version the least. I don't remember the other versions.
#2 (taking the easy track :lol: ) is just about any railroad song sung by Johnny Cash!
Boy those were the days when Freights Highballed @ 90 and Passenger Trains rolled @ 100!!!! Casey Jones isn't famous cause he had Slow Orders! :lol: Nice lyrics! Theres probably more good Train Songs than any other kind!! :wub:My favorite railroad song is "Great Big Rollin' Railroad," used as part of the Union Pacific's ad campaign in the 1970s and then in connection with the company's World's Fair exhibit in New Orleans. You can listen to the two versions here.
Working at a Wyoming newspaper at the time, I often spoke with UP's public relations people. One rep told me that the UP had found that although the TV campaign did generate visibility and business for the railroad, the major benefit was that it installed a sense of identity and cohesiveness among employees. During that phone call, he spoke favorably of Burlington Northern's "
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