The Post

Laying down tracks on the rail tracks

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Singer-songwriter­s and longtime friends Billy Bragg and Joe Henry hopped a train in Chicago last March and spent the next several days riding the rails on a 2728-mile (4390km) journey to Los Angeles.

They not only took in scenery across a great swath of the Midwest and Southwest, but they also recorded 13 songs referencin­g trains and the mystical quality railroad travel has held for generation­s of musicians. The result is Shine a Light: Field Recordings from the Great American Railroad, an album due out in late September that indeed was recorded aboard the train and at various stops along the way.

The album ‘‘grew directly out of friendship – Bill and I having been ‘brothers’ some 25 years now – and a desire to move these songs from a perception of shelved nostalgia back into the realm of common, useful and shared vocabulary,’’ Henry says.

Among their choices: Gordon Lightfoot’s Early Morning Rain (which the Canadian singersong­writer wrote while living in Los Angeles in the early 1960s), Jean Ritchie’s The L&N Don’t Stop Here Anymore, John Hartford’s Gentle On My Mind, Hank Williams’ Lonesome Whistle and traditiona­ls including The Midnight Special, In the Pines, The Rock Island Line and John Henry.

At various railway station stops, the duo took the opportunit­y to record different songs live, with just acoustic guitar accompanim­ent, often capturing the sonic ambience of the rooms they set up in. ‘‘With this project, we wanted to explore the transforma­tive power that the coming of the railroad had on the lives of ordinary people by taking these songs back to the places that inspired their creation,’’ Bragg says. ‘‘Travelling on the train and recording the songs as we went allowed us to both visit places that were important 125 years ago when the lines were laid, but to also explore the viability of the railroad as a means of transport in the 21st century.’’

For example, they stopped at an Amtrak Station in Alpine, Texas, to record Goebel Reeves’ song Hobo’s Lullaby, one of the most disarmingl­y endearing train songs ever written and one inextricab­ly linked with American folk music icon Woody Guthrie.

Bragg notes the special LA connection of that song, which ‘‘entered Woody’s repertoire when he was broadcasti­ng from Los Angeles on KFVD with ‘Lefty Lou’ (Crissman) in the late-30s and became one of his signature tunes’’. Los Angeles Times

 ??  ?? Billy Bragg and Joe Henry have teamed up for a new album inspired by train journeys.
Billy Bragg and Joe Henry have teamed up for a new album inspired by train journeys.

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