Train

Greatly Appreciated

TRAIN (TRAIN KEPT A-ROLLIN’)
 
 
“Train Kept A-Rollin’”  (also known as “The Train Kept A-Rollin’” or simply “Train”) is a song first recorded by American jazz and rhythm and blues musician Tiny Bradshaw in 1951.  Originally performed in the style of a jump blues, it has been reworked into a “classic guitar riff song for the ages”.  Bradshaw borrowed lyrics from an earlier song and set them to an upbeat shuffle arrangement that inspired other musicians to perform and record it.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
Many people don’t realize that Led Zeppelin is a successor band to the Yardbirds.  After Keith Relf and Jim McCarty left the Yardbirds in mid-1968, lead guitarist Jimmy Page was about the only bandmember left.  He set about finding new musicians for his next band that was sometimes called the New Yardbirds.  When the four bandmembers in Led Zeppelin started played together, the first song they did was “Train Kept A-Rollin’”.  Jimmy Page recalls of that session (as quoted in Wikipedia):  “We did ‘Train’ . . .  It was there immediately.  It was so powerful that I don’t remember what we played after that.  For me it was just like, ‘Crikey!’  I mean, I’d had moments of elation with groups before, but nothing as intense as that.  It was like a thunderbolt, a lightning flash – boosh!  Everyone sort of went ‘Wow’.” 
 
Probably the best known version of the song is by Aerosmith; “Train Kept A-Rollin’” is included on their second album, Get Your Wings (1974), but the band’s connection with the song dates back much further than that.  As quoted in WikipediaJoe Perry recalls of this song:  “‘Train Kept A-Rollin’’ was the only song we had in common when we first got together.  Steven [Tyler]’s band had played Train, and Tom [Hamilton] and I played it in our band. . . .  It’s a blues song, if you follow its roots all the way back. . . .  I always thought if I could just play one song, it would be that one because of what it does to me.” 
 
(June 2015)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021