Released: July 1, 1976

Songwriter: Dolly Parton

Producer: Fuzzy Owen Ken Nelson (Country)

[Verse 1]
Every time I hear the sound of a train
Coming down that railroad track
I get that faraway look in my eye
And I'd like to throw my hammer down
And take off to some distant town
And not even take the time to say goodbye

I've got to think about my babies
About my job and my old lady
And how much she'd miss me if I was gone
And I love them more than anything
But I got this feeling near by trains
And sometimes I wish I was on that train and gone

[Chorus]
That train keeps a-rolling down the track
Bringing my old memories back
Making hobo blood boil in my veins
Reviving my old love affair with trains

[Verse 2]
The nights ain't never long enough
My wife keeps saying "you get up
For you'll be late to work and miss your ride"
I grab my dinner bucket up
And jump on the back of your pickup truck
And I wonder if I'll jump that train tonight

And it wasn't long ago
That I was free to jump that train and ride
But I gave it up to be a family man
And I don't suppose I'll ever go
But when I hear that whistle blow
I think of my old love affair again

[Chorus]
That train keeps a-rolling down the track
Bringing my old memories back
Making hobo blood boil in my veins
Reviving my old love affair with trains

[Chorus]
That train keeps coming down the track
Bringing my old memories back
Making hobo blood boil in my veins
Reviving my old love affair with trains

Merle Haggard

Merle Ronald Haggard (6 April 1937 – 6 April 2016) was born in Oildale, California, little more than a railroad junction on the outskirts of Bakersfield. He became a singer-songwriter who is now a legend in country music. Often called the poet of the common man, he and his band helped create the “Bakersfield Sound”, characterized by electric guitar and vocal harmony. The style is honky tonk minimalist, with an immediate and honest sound that isn’t heard in the polished, Nashville recordings.

His parents moved from Oklahoma to California during the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl days, and he was born in a converted railroad boxcar into abject poverty. His father died in 1945 when Merle was still a child, and that started his long line of trouble with the law. He started with truancy and runaway, and advanced to burglary and jail breaks. He finally found himself in San Quentin prison in 1958, but that was a blessing in disguise. Haggard was in the prison yard when Johnny Cash performed there in 1959, and with encouragement from his prison friends, he taught himself to play guitar. When he got out in 1960 he went back to Bakersfield and started playing covers in road-houses. He worked his way up to performing in small clubs in Las Vegas, where he got to brush shoulders with nationally known artists like Buck Owens, and that led to him meeting Johnny Cash. Cash was impressed and advised Haggard to write his own songs. “He said I should write what I know”, Haggard said, and to address his past directly in his songs. “I was bull-headed about my career. I didn’t want to talk about being in prison, but Cash said I should talk about it. That way the tabloids wouldn’t be able to. I said I didn’t want to do that and he said, ‘It’s just owning up to it.‘” Haggard took the advice and it became part of his legend.

Just a few of the songs that he is known for are “Okie from Muskogee”, “Cherokee Maiden”, “Mama Tried”“Twinkle, Twinkle Lucky Star”, “That’s the Way Love Goes” and “It’s All Going to Pot”.