Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Susanne (skw) Date: 13 Nov 03 - 05:24 PM Out on the Road (Loudon Wainwright III) and the antidote to all 'Poor Boy on the Road' songs, Poor Boy on the Road (Bob Gibson) |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Steve-o Date: 13 Nov 03 - 01:08 PM On the Bluegrass-style front, Herb Pedersen wrote a very good one called "Wait A Minute" that was made somewhat 'famous' by the Seldom Scene. One of the few "it's tough being on the road" songs I like. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: katlaughing Date: 12 Nov 03 - 11:01 PM Stewie, thanks. I remembered after I posted that, that he mentions Merle in the song!*bg* Appreciate the clarification. kat |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: freightdawg Date: 12 Nov 03 - 08:49 PM From what I have read in posts long ago, I gather that John Denver is not hugely popular with several members, but one of my all time favorites is "Back Home Again" which deals with being on the road, but more important, being back in a place where the heart stays. Also, I was just introduced to his "All Of My Memories" which sort of deals with the same theme, but is a little more melancholy. Being a mountain goat myself, I love the connection with coming home to something as solid as a mountain - whether it is a love or a homestead or a collection of memories or whatever. However, I must admit that "Leaving On a Jet Plane" leaves me on the tarmac. Much better to sing of coming home to something that to sing of leaving it. Freightdawg |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Celtaddict Date: 12 Nov 03 - 07:47 PM "Wild Birds" is by Jan Harmon. Gordon Bok recorded it on the BTM album "And So Will We Yet" from Folk Legacy, and it is covered on a thread I can't make a clicky to but can be found by putting "wild birds" into a forum search. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Celtaddict Date: 12 Nov 03 - 07:35 PM I love putting together "sets" of songs that have something in common, at least to me, and my musician-on-the-road compilation gets a lot of listening. Eric Bogle's "Somewhere in America" is a favorite. Gordon Bok singing "Wild Birds" is probably my personal #1. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Stewie Date: 12 Nov 03 - 06:16 PM Kat, according to the note to the Book Binder motorhome song, it was written by Tom Moore whom Book Binder met in Alaska and took on a motorhome trip. Book Binder must have had some input - probably the tune - as he shares the composition credit. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: katlaughing Date: 12 Nov 03 - 04:31 PM I love Roy book Binder's lighthearted "plan" to go on the road. He sings it on his Bookeroo! tape and I think he said it was written by Merle Haggard? It is "I'm Gonna Buy Myself A Motorhome." You can listen to a bit of it at Amazon, just click HERE. Speaking of our Maid Marion, she wrote one before going on her trip, American Pilgrim: clickety. She sang it for us Sunday last. Well done! |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: SueB Date: 12 Nov 03 - 12:25 PM I love road songs, Bee-dubya-ell, but then again I'm not a professional musician and I never get to go anywhere. The Tom Paxton song, Can't help but wonder where I'm bound, describes people like me in one of the verses - If you see me passin' by And you sit and you wonder why And you wish that you were a rambler too Nail your shoes to the kitchen floor Lace them up and bar the door And thank your stars for the roof that's over you That's me, sitting in the kitchen with a restless heart, listening to music from far away places, reading travel writers and holding the roof up over my children with both shoulders. What makes a good road song for me is a sense conveyed of freedom, adventure, experience, rootlessness, restlessness - with just the right touch of wistfulness and melancholy, some small sense of loss or regret, however slight. My list includes Guthrie's Hard Travellin', Little Feat's Willin', and 500 Miles. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Chris in Wheaton Date: 12 Nov 03 - 11:56 AM A really great song - "Gypsy" - by Hamilton Camp - may be on his re-released cd. Hamilton was "Bob" Camp when with Bob Gibson - hope he and his family are doing fine. Chris in Wheaton, IL |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: VIN Date: 12 Nov 03 - 11:12 AM Speaking of Alex Campbell, Bert Jansch does a nice version of 'Been On The Road' and Alex wrote another great song called 'My Old Gibson Guitar' e.g of the lyrics: Well I've worked all over this country An i've even worked in the bars But i like best to sing ye ma folk songs And play my old gibson guitar John Renbourne does a splendid job of 'National Seven' on one of his early LP's too and then there's Berties great vesion of 'Strollin Down The Highway'. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Sam L Date: 12 Nov 03 - 10:43 AM I can't agree about Bob Seeger's Turn The Page. The line about "You walk into a restaurant" makes me want to deflate the ponderous atmosphere with Dylan's "looking for the cook/told him I was the editor of a famous etiquete book/the waiter he was handsome he wore aq powder blue cape/I ordered some susette I said can you please make that crepe? The sweat rolls off yo' body like the music that you play? Bleah. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Sam L Date: 12 Nov 03 - 10:33 AM I very much like The Jolly Wagoner, and The Thirty Foot Trailer. They aren't about musicians, but if you hope others will relate to your experience, a generous way to start is to try relating it to other people's experiences somehow. If you're picking ragtime tunes to pay the bills, maybe you can relate to someone who's picking rags to pay the bills. So what if that's a blues song instead. All that said, I also like the Cowboy Junkies' 200 More Miles, which is straight up about travelling musicians. I was leading a writing workshop once that someone decided to derail into a Write What You Know symposium, merely because I was doing an observational exercise without any first-person commentary. Writing what you know makes sense as long as it isn't taken as an invitation to be a self-absorbed windbag. I think we write to discover what we know, which puts the reader and writer into a shared experience (or at least the illusion of it) rather than a tidy presentation. For better examples of books and stories, a lot of Nabokov's stuff is from the point of view of a writer--one he has invented for the purpose of making his boring personal concerns more striking and strange. Not everyone can cast their concerns in such disturbing tales as he does, or would want to, but I find it great fun. Borges went so far as to write fictional reviews of books nobody had actually written. What did Shakespeare know about being a maddened King with three daughters? He knew about the problem of proportion in representing things, so he wrote about that. I really believe it comes through somehow if the writing is a process of discovery for the writer, whether or not the names, situations, and props change much. Sorry--I'm still a little miffed about having my little workshop ambushed! |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Strupag Date: 12 Nov 03 - 04:54 AM I've been trying to get a hold of a song. I think it was composed by Archie Fisher and it says it all (in some cases) "The Band Broke Up When The Van Broke Down". I don't think that he ever recorded it but his sister Cilla Fisher used to sing it. Anyone know it! |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: open mike Date: 12 Nov 03 - 12:07 AM it this a thread about our Marion? |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: GUEST,reggie miles Date: 11 Nov 03 - 10:52 PM Writing what you know about doesn't necessarily mean that others will be able to relate to it. There are, however, so many things that we have all shared in common. I'd have to agree with Alaska Mike that, among the many thousands who travel far and wide across the planet each day for business or pleasure, there are longings to return home safely to their own homes and families, especially if you have to get around in a beast like mine. The '65 Newport Ragtop Blues Reggie Miles © 2003 Flyin' down the highway Loaded for a gig My radio is rappin' My ragtop is flappin' To pieces in the wind People stare but I don't care At my midlife Chrysler sled Yeah she's a long, low, lean Mean American machine And she loves to burn lead These one night stands are goin' nowhere But what's a poor boy got to lose? My radiator's got a leak I'm burnin' oil like a sheik I've got the '65 Newport ragtop blues Traffic is a jammin' In the gray overcast My 383 is puffin' smoke My odometer is broke I'm goin' nowhere fast The rain starts to fallin' My wiper's givin' up the ghost The steerin' pump is squeelin' I gotta bad feelin' She won't make the next post People say, "Don't play your life away Spinnin' yer wheels in those same ol' grooves I'm just usin' what I got because it's all I've got to use I got the '65 Newport ragtop blues People say, cut your hair and get a real job But then, who's gonna pay my dues? I just wave, so long, as I pass them by With the '65 Newport ragtop blues One of my favorite writers, my friend One-Man, has a great ability to capture a unique perspective. Soft Shoulders and Dangerous Curves © 1982 Robert 'One-Man' Johnson Chorus: Soft shoulders and dangerous curves Eatin' on my mind workin' at my nerves All those highway signs remind me of her Thinkin 'bout those soft shoulders and dangerous curves All alone and lonesome rollin' down the road Back home in Wisconsin, I know it's freezin' cold Here in Luzianna, my rig is runnin' right Lord I'd love to lay with her tonight Thinkin' 'bout those Chorus: Just passed a driver in a no passin' zone My mind so disconnected from these hours all alone If baby was here with me, she could set me straight Two more days, boys I can hardly wait Thinkin' 'bout those Chorus: Wipers slappin' almost nappin' tryin' to stay awake Think I better exit here and have a coffee break Flashin' yellow indicates a detour up ahead Wish I was home a-sleepin' in my bed Next to those Chorus: Lights are flashin' horns are honkin' like a stock car race In my mind my memory is fixed upon her face Traffic on this interstate about to make me cry A northbound sign's reflecting in my eye Chorus |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Amos Date: 11 Nov 03 - 09:58 PM Well, remember, if you will that when Paxton's Rambling Boy was on its way to becoming a best beloved American Road song, everyone still hitchhiked all over the country, pretty much safely. Especially those who thought road-songs were cool -- they were on the road not because they were down and out bums, but because they were wild-oats teenagers escaping from highschools. But the song was just about right. I thought Simon's Homeward Bound was pretentious and wussy and Woody-wannabe when I first heard it. I have grown to tolerate it, since, as with so much else. A |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: PapaWhiskey Date: 11 Nov 03 - 09:56 PM I was thinking 'One More Town' or maybe 'He Was a Friend of Mine', but it would be hard to top 'Stoney'. Good song, that. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Glen Reid Date: 11 Nov 03 - 09:54 PM I wrote a song years ago about "being on the road" It was from my own prospective, but written about my best friend, Blind Freddie McKenna. Blind from birth, Fred shared stories with me, of his early days in Canadian country music, eaking out a living as a single, "one man band" hitchhiking from town to town, singing his songs and paying his dues. Except in Canada, he was never that famous and sadly he died pennyless,but he was a true musical pioneer and wealthy beyond compare, in his short but colourful life. My old pal,Rick Fielding recorded it "That old Man's Song" on his Lifeline CD a few years ago. Needless to say,one of the best versions ever. Cheers,Glen |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Stewie Date: 11 Nov 03 - 08:56 PM For me, the best will always be 'Stoney' - Jerry Jeff's finest creation. I posted the lyrics here: Stoney --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: GUEST Date: 11 Nov 03 - 08:05 PM Joni Mitchells 'Refuge of the Roads'....? |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 11 Nov 03 - 04:34 PM All of us songwriter types eventually write the "wish I was home instead of on the road" song. That's the diffeence with the Alex Campbell song I posted, because that's not where it is at all. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: GUEST, GEST Date: 11 Nov 03 - 03:56 PM A real life on the road song, Ode To Trappers. I'd like to have some provenance on this one for my own database. :-) |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: GUEST, GEST Date: 11 Nov 03 - 03:43 PM From Newfoundland: Bob Porter's The Road Home. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Alaska Mike Date: 11 Nov 03 - 03:27 PM I tend to agree with you Bruce. All of us songwriter types eventually write the "wish I was home instead of on the road" song. Mine is called "Rainy Day Blues". But I think these songs have a ring of truth that anyone can identify with. Who among us, musician or not, has not found ourselves far from home and missing the ones we love. A couple I like that haven't been mentioned yet are Stan Rogers "Love Letter" and Eric Bogle's "Always Back to You". Best wishes, Mike |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: John Robinson (aka Cittern) Date: 11 Nov 03 - 02:54 PM I recommend "Life on the road" - how on topic is that? - by Howden Jones (http://www.howdenjones.co.uk/) In fact Paul Jones is amongst my top 10 song writers. All the best John Robinson http://www.JulieEllison.co.uk |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Clinton Hammond Date: 11 Nov 03 - 02:43 PM "Never Tire Of The Road" is one of my favs... "Night Drive" by Garnet Roges as well... Stan Rogers cover of Mary McCaslins "Down The Road" Stephen Fearings "The Life" James Keelaghans "Love What A Road" "Rocks On The Road" by Jethro Tull (A folk song, and they didn't even know it!) Anything that's not a "Gods I'm so lonely in this hotel room" kinda thing.... |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: voyager Date: 11 Nov 03 - 01:40 PM 2nd attempt - http://mp3.washingtonpost.com/bands/steve_key.shtml |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: voyager Date: 11 Nov 03 - 01:38 PM I recommend Steve Key's "Charles Kuralt" tune Scroll down page 1/2 way and find the 3Mb mp3 tune. voyager |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Wesley S Date: 11 Nov 03 - 01:32 PM Every time our group sings Tom Paxton's "Ramblin' Boy" I want to remind the audience that everyone in the band will be driving our minivans to our three bedroom homes at the end of the show. |
Subject: Lyr Add: BEEN ON THE ROAD SO LONG (Alex Campbell) From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 11 Nov 03 - 01:25 PM Here's Alex Campbell's "Been on the Road (so long)" I've been on the road, so long Been tired and broke, so long I've been to the south where the winds they were born Travelling the road of no return, so long I've seen what was war, so long The ruins and the scars, so long The mansions of mud, the wounds and the blood Seen the dying of all that was good, so long. Seen the world in the shadow, so long Is its mushrooming cloud, so long And the lies and the greed of the leaders of men Those cheats who will take us to war again, so long. Yet hope is in me, so long For it's love that I see, so long The courage and strength of the young men's smile The faith that's in a little child, so long I've travelled the road, so long Have been tired and broke, so long I've been to the south where the winds they were born Travelling the road of no return, so long. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Wolfgang Date: 11 Nov 03 - 12:33 PM "One more city one more town" (Colin Wilkie) Wolfgang |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Leadfingers Date: 11 Nov 03 - 12:29 PM Bert Jansch did a good job with the Hitch Hikers song 'National Seven' Hitching South across France to St Tropez. |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Larkin Date: 11 Nov 03 - 12:23 PM Lish Young Buy a broom and Richard Thompson's Beeswing do it for me ! Martin |
Subject: RE: 'Life On the Road' songs From: greg stephens Date: 11 Nov 03 - 12:01 PM "Been on the road" by Alex Campbell I always used to enjoy. Havent heard it for years( but I suppose you wouldnt expect to, it was quite personal to him as far as I remember) |
Subject: 'Life On the Road' songs From: Bee-dubya-ell Date: 11 Nov 03 - 11:58 AM As a general rule, I don't like "life on the road" songs. I think they're a bit pretentious. I know that writers are admonished to "write about what you know" and one thing that professional musicians know about is traveling from town to town making music. But does that mean that everybody has to write a song or two about the experience? It's like novelists who cast writers as main characters in their books. Again, it's the "write about what you know" thing and writers know about being writers. But Stephen King's "Misery" and John Irving's "A Widow for One Year" are the only two novels that I can recall reading where it worked well - where the protagonist couldn't have just as easily been something else. Anyway, of the "life on the road" songs with which I'm familiar, Simon & Garfunkle's "Homeward Bound" is the only one that I think is a great song. I can abide Willie Nelson's "On the Road Again", Waylon Jennings' "I Don't Think Hank Done 'Em This Way", Bob Seeger's "Turn the Page" and Jackson Browne's "Stay". Everything else just makes me want to take the songwriter aside and say, "Yeah, life on the road's tough. So go back to school and become a stockbroker." Any others? Bruce |
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