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Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: GUEST,PHJim Date: 23 Sep 24 - 04:48 PM The Trains Never Stop In Kingston Prison - Roy Payne |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Metchosin Date: 17 Apr 00 - 12:36 PM Jerimiah, I made a couple of small errors in the lyrics. which I will try to correct later on, never checked the DT for this one, so it may be in there also. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Jeremiah McCaw Date: 17 Apr 00 - 11:56 AM Thank you, Rick for mentioning Canadian Pacific by Ray Griff. I've thought about trying that one myself. And thanks to Metchosin for posting the complete lyric. I first heard it on a George Hamilton IV album called Canadian Pacific - a very laid-back and somehow quite satisfying work. His lead guitarist on "Steel Rail Blues" was Gordon Lightfoot! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Willie-O Date: 12 Mar 00 - 10:41 AM Thanks for posting those...My original point is getting borne out...I guess it's something about rose-coloured glasses and the lyric power of nostalgia, cause there are way better train songs being written in the past few decades than either of the lyrics posted above. Gotta say I find the Hank Snow (Ray Griff) one pretty trite--all it is is a right-to-left (on the map) listing of provinces and stereotypical occupations therein, with a romantic sub-plot. A lot of better songs seem to focus on a particular train and delve into its significance...such as
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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Metchosin Date: 12 Mar 00 - 02:15 AM Rick, I noticed that you had Canadian Pacific as written by Ray Griff, you're probably correct, but the "Hank Snow Collection Album" doesn't credit him with the song.....Bad form. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Metchosin Date: 12 Mar 00 - 01:49 AM of course Hank had to make the "British" in British Columbia into a three syllable word in order to make it scan for him (Brit-ee-ush Co-lumb-ya). |
Subject: Lyr Add: CANADIAN PACIFIC (Hank Snow) From: Metchosin Date: 12 Mar 00 - 01:24 AM Sure there are Rick
Canadian Pacific
I rode your ocean liner to Newfoundland
Chorus:
The Atlantic disappeared on the horizon
I could feel the nearness of her warm sweet kisses
Chorus (repeat twice). Of course the CPR is now busy abandoning tracks and eliminating passenger rail service, and it probably is causing El Nino too…... just thought I'd keep up the Canadian tradition of blaming the CPR for everything. During the Depression if it didn't rain or your cow went dry the common cry was "G*d Damn the CPR". |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Rick Fielding Date: 12 Mar 00 - 12:49 AM Yoicks! I TOLD you there weren't many GOOD Canadian train songs. Did love ol' Wilf Carter though. Rick |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Metchosin Date: 12 Mar 00 - 12:34 AM I wonder how much the "good ol'CPR" payed Wilf to write that, he seems to be advertising a lot of hotels. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Metchosin Date: 12 Mar 00 - 12:18 AM There should be a *BG* after that statement. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Metchosin Date: 12 Mar 00 - 12:14 AM Pablo, you're right, it isn't. |
Subject: Lyr Add: THE FOUNDING OF THE FAMOUS C.P.R . From: Pablo Date: 11 Mar 00 - 11:40 PM THE FOUNDING OF THE FAMOUS CPR Trad., source Wilf Carter. In the valley of Ontario you started With heroic purpose crossing ranger's farm You pioneers of canada who sponsored You founders of the famous CPR. Such a record laid in steel of daring genius, At the dreams of those pioneers came true, And remember the Bow River valley, And what the CPR has done for you. When the purpose swept across the great dominion For confederation Vesey thought it best That all Canada must build and start a railroad That would link the oceans lying east and west. Back in 1881 when Stevens stated, "We must start this railroad west from Montreal, Push right on through the northern Rocky lakesides," He was backed up by each member, one and all. Oh, consider this tremendous undertaking As they struggled onward fighting sheer but slow And remember the Bow River valley And the daring builders 50 years ago. You have heard just how the forged right steady onward Out across each mighty wilderness and plain, Creeping slowly on through forests, farms and ranches, Fighting elements and Indians again. Now these great men battled cold and hard privation Grim with purpose and right noble was the test And old Crowfoot told those builders of the nation They would never reach Calgary in the west. Now you speed in travel o'er this great dominion You may bid all your friends fond adieu And remember east and west in all this nation, That the CPR will bring you safely through. Building onward o'er the great Canadian Rockies They who sailed her steamships now on seven seas, On through calagary and the Bow River valley Where Tom Wilson found the famous Lake Louise. Struggling on with ceaseless urge and persevering This gigantic symbol of a mighty test, Through the Frazier River valley's rocky canyons With Vancouver eager waiting in the west. When you travel through the great Canadian Rockies, You will find a mighty welcome near and far. And remember the world's best-travelled system That you're guest of, the famous CPR. On the CP round this world you travel safely. Hotels, money orders, telegrams and mails, Trusted bearers to the world's most farthest places And you'll stay right on their steamships and their rails. Oh, the hotels have become a famous system. The Palliser at Calgary is the best. And the Banff Spring Hotel up in the Rockies, And the Lake Louise, the finest in the west. Come and tarry in the shadow of the Rockies. The fame of Lake Louise goes near and far. And the great officials of this great railroad With three cheers for the famous CPR. |
Subject: The Founding of the Famous C.P.R. From: Pablo Date: 11 Mar 00 - 11:40 PM Here are the lyrics, and I hope it doesn't provoke any rabid anti-Canadian sentiment. Norman Blake recorded this in 1996 on Chattanooga Sugar Babe (shanachie 6027), and he credits the very Wilf Carter mentioned in the Long Steel Rails thread. I know it isn't as mesmerizing a piece of literature as Nottamun Town. Pablo |
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