-> ''"Traveling north, traveling north to find you\\
Train wheels beating, the wind in my eyes\\
Don't even know what I'll say when I find you\\
Call out your name, love, don't be surprised"''
-->--Vashti Bunyan, "Train Song"

Songs about trains, from the prosaic to the grand to the [[AfterlifeExpress otherworldly]].

Many of the classic examples include some sort of vocal or instrumental imitation of a train whistle, or (particularly in country music) the galloping snare drum that imitates the chugging of a train.

Website/{{Wikipedia}} has a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_train_songs list of train songs]].

Compare DancingOnABus. See also CarSong. Not to be confused with songs by the band Train.

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!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: Film ]]

* "Chattanooga Choo-Choo" from ''Film/SunValleySerenade''.
* "On the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe" from ''Film/TheHarveyGirls''.
* "Night Train to Mundo Fine" from ''Film/RedZoneCuba'', [[DoItYourselfThemeTune sung]] by none other than Creator/JohnCarradine.
* "Casey Junior" from Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Dumbo}}''. It's about the train that hauls the circus around.
* In ''Film/{{Crossroads}}'', blues legend Willie Brown instructs his protégé, Eugene "Lightning Boy" Martone that nobody will take him seriously as a blues guitarist until he can "make the song of a fast train to nowhere, chugging along the tracks, come outta your guitar". The old man constantly rags on the younger for his 'train song" being far too smooth. It isn't until the end, when Martone has finally felt true heartbreak, that he gets it right.
* "This Train is Bound for Glory" (see below) gave Woody Guthrie the title for his autobiography ''Bound for Glory'', and thus gave a title to the 1976 film about Guthrie, ''Film/BoundForGlory''. David Carradine, as Guthrie, I sings the song.
* "3:10 to Yuma", about the titular train from ''Film/ThreeTenToYuma1957''.
* The beat to ''Film/EightMile''[='=]s titular song is the chugging of the wheels of the commuter train the protagonist rides every day to work.
* In ConcertFilm ''Film/TheLastWaltz'', Music/TheBand and Paul Butterfield join to perform old blues song "Mystery Train", in which a man laments that a train is taking his loved one away.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Literature ]]

* Creator/RudyardKipling's "[[Literature/PointNoughtNoughtSeven .007]]" features a train song sung by the trains themselves - it is a badge of honour for the fastest express locomotives.
-->With a michnai - ghignai - shtingal! Yah! Yah! Yah!\\
Ein - zwei - drei - Mutter! Yah! Yah! Yah!\\
She climb upon der shteeple,\\
Und she frighten all der people.\\
Singin' michnai - ghignai - shtingal! Yah! Yah!

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Live Action TV ]]

* In the ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'' [[Recap/MysteryScienceTheater3000S05E09TheGirlInLoversLane episode]] ''Film/TheGirlInLoversLane'', Joel Robinson and the 'Bots each wrote songs about trains. As is usually the case, Joel & Tom's songs were normal, but Crow's was disturbing.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Theatre ]]

* "The Enchanted Train" from ''Sitting Pretty''.
* "Train to Johannesburg" from ''Lost in the Stars''.
* "Leavin' for the Promise Lan'" from ''Theatre/PorgyAndBess''.
* "On the Twentieth Century" from ''On the Twentieth Century''.
* "Skimbleshanks, The Railway Cat" from ''Theatre/{{Cats}}''.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Web Animation ]]

* The ''WebAnimation/{{asdfmovie}}'' series has the "I Like Trains" [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHkKJfcBXcw asdfmovie]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uemIOtSvJDo song]], about the [[RailEnthusiast "I Like Trains" kid]].

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Web Comics ]]

* In ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'' the Corbettites have a daily train song that all passengers who don't pay for a private compartment must attend. As Agatha [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20140310 purchases a private compartment the song doesn't actually appear in the comic.]] (Given the Corbettites are a monastic order, it's implied the trainsong is religious, and is probably a pun on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plainsong plainsong]].)

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Western Animation ]]

* Parodied in ''WesternAnimation/{{Metalocalypse}}'', where every blues song has the word "train" in it somewhere.\\
\\
Curiously, all the songs were written around gruesome murders, but:
-->'''Swissgar:''' All theys sings about is trains?\\
'''Mashed Potato Johnson:''' Is there anything else really to talk about?
* The ''WesternAnimation/ChalkZone'' song "Midnight Train"

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Other Music ]]

* "Morning Train (9 to 5)" by Music/SheenaEaston.
* "Texas and Pacific" by Louis Jordan. Notably, many of Louis Jordan's songs, train-centric or not, used the distinctive "chugging" rhythm associated with this type of song, as did those of some other contemporary jazz musicians (like Louis Prima).
* "Downtown Train" from ''Music/RainDogs'', "Down There By the Train" from ''Orphans, Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards'' and (believe it or not) "Train Song" from ''Music/FranksWildYears'' by Music/TomWaits.
* Many spirituals; e.g., "The Gospel Train" and "This Train Is Bound for Glory".
* Folk blues song "Rock Island Line".
* "Take the 'A' Train", written by Billy Strayhorn for Music/DukeEllington's orchestra.
* "Wabash Cannonball"
* "Last Train to Clarksville" by Music/TheMonkees.
* "The One After 909" from ''Music/LetItBe'' by Music/TheBeatles.
* "Trans Europa Express" by Music/{{Kraftwerk}}.
* "Moskow Diskow" by Telex.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=03jwHrO7ubI "Casey Jones"]]
** Music/TheGratefulDead's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQF8CILMt8c "Casey Jones"]] which is quite different, but still involves a train.
*** The Grateful Dead other train songs in "Tons Of Steel" and "The Monkey and The Engineer".
** Creator/AllanSherman's SongParody "J.C. Cohen", which is about a conductor on a runaway subway train.
** Joe Hill's "Casey Jones", which is about Casey breaking a workers' strike. Then when he dies and goes to the Pearly Gates, he breaks a strike by the heavenly choir and the angels' union sends him to hell.
* "City of New Orleans" is a folk song written by Steve Goodman, describing a train ride from Chicago to New Orleans via the Illinois Central Railroad in bittersweet and nostalgic terms. Although written by Goodman, it was popularized by Music/ArloGuthrie.
* Gladys Knight & the Pips created two songs: "Midnight Train to Georgia" and "Friendship Train".
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTaim6jUio8 "Trem das Sete"]] (translates as something like "7 O'clock Train") by Raul Seixas.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBNUI6lUkrw "Morning Train"]] is actually the English adaptation of "Trem das Sete" by Raul Seixas.
* "Marrakesh Express" by [[Music/CrosbyStillsNashAndYoung Crosby, Stills & Nash]].
* "Rudy" by Music/{{Supertramp}} has stock train sounds, an announcer at a train station, and many references to trains.
* Music/{{Marillion}}'s "Fugazi" has a reference to "the liquid seize on the Piccadilly Line", referring to UsefulNotes/TheLondonUnderground as a "dank electric labyrinth".
* "Hit The Rails" by Music/{{Loudness}}
* "Crazy Train" by Music/OzzyOsbourne.
* "Peace Train" by Music/CatStevens.
* "Love Train" by The O'Jays.
* "Party Train" by the Gap Band.
* "Downtown Train" by Music/TomWaits. Later CoveredUp by Music/RodStewart.
* "Waiting for a Train" by Music/JimmieRodgers.
* "Orange Blossom Special," traditional bluegrass fiddle tune, although the version done by Music/JohnnyCash includes lyrics, and uses a harmonica and saxophone instead during the instrumental bridges.
* "I'm Movin' On," a mega-country music hit by Hank Snow from 1950 about a departing man who is leaving his unfaithful girlfriend by train: "''That big eight-wheeler rollin' down the track/Means your true-lovin' daddy ain't comin' back''."
* "She's Gone, Gone, Gone" by Lefty Frizzel, a country hit from 1965 where a young man bemoans the departure of his girlfriend by train. (A cover version by Glen Campbell, from 1989, replaces the train with an airplane as the departing girlfriend's mode of transportation.)
* "Mystery Train" by Music/ElvisPresley from ''Music/TheSunSessions''.
* "Long Black Train" by Josh Turner, a country gospel song where the title train is an analogy for Satan; hence, the song is a cautionary tale to not board said train, which leads only to trouble.
* "I'm a Train" by Albert Hammond.
* "Train Song" by Music/HavalinaRailCo.
* "Runaway Train" by Music/SoulAsylum
* "Runaway Train" by Rosanne Cash, a No. 1 country hit from 1988.
* "Blue Train (Of the Heartbreak Line)" by George Hamilton IV, a top 30 country hit in 1973.
* "Meksicon pikajuna" ("Mexico express") by numerous artists. Is about a train robbery with a [[BawdySong bawdy twist]] in the end.
* "Play a Train Song" by Todd Snider plays with this. Instead of being about a train, it's about an extraordinary man with a passion for life and train songs.
* Music/{{Vocaloid}} Rin's song "Makuragi," which is either AllJustADream or [[WildMassGuessing possibly alluding to]] a AfterlifeExpress.
* "Ghost Train" by {{Music/Gorillaz}}
* "Ghost Train" has to be the most overused title in music. A quick [=YouTube=] search will reveal an ever-increasing number of songs of that very title, verbatim (not to be confused with the defunct Gothabilly band Zombie Ghost Train), as a literal or metaphorical title:
** Music/TheStranglers, about the state the band was in when the abum ''Dreamtime'' was in production
** Filipino band Music/TheBoneyardCircus
** Music/SummerCamp
** "Bush Metal" band Music/BurntEarth
** Music/BillionBabies
** Country Gothic band Music/GraveyardTrain
** Music/{{Madness|Band}}
* "Locomotive" and "Ridin' With the Driver" by Music/{{Motorhead}}.
* "Princess of the Night" by Music/{{Saxon}}.
* "Auctioneer (Another Engine)" and "Driver 8" from R.E.M. Bonus points for the drums in "Auctioneer" sounding exactly like an oncoming train.
* "Last of the Steam Powered Trains" by Music/TheKinks - Ray's singing metaphorically about himself here.
* "Last Train to Trancentral" by Music/TheKLF. (Trancentral was Jim Cauty's home and the band's recording studio. Apparently it was not nearly as impressive as the song makes it out to be.)
* "Last Train to London" by Music/ElectricLightOrchestra.
* "Not Just A Train" by Music/SpiritOfTheWest
* "Train Train" by Blackfoot.
* "Die Eisenbahnballade" ("The Railroad Ballad") by German singer-songwriter Reinhard Mey, which manages to pack quite a bit of rail-centric history into its 11 minutes.
* "Train Kept A-Rollin'," originally by Tiny Bradshaw, later covered by Music/TheYardbirds, Music/LedZeppelin and Music/{{Aerosmith}}, among others.
* "Locomotive" by Music/GunsNRoses
* "Sucker Train Blues" by Music/VelvetRevolver
** Also, the video for "Dirty Little Thing" takes place on a train.
* Quite a number by Music/JohnnyCash, including "The Wreck of the Old 97", "Down there by the train" and "Like the 309".
* "TheGambler" by Kenny Rogers.
* "Locomotive" by Music/RunningWild.
* "Train To Bedlam" by Twilightning.
* "5:15" by Music/TheWho. The slow beginning of the song symbolizes the train at the station before departure, then picks up tempo with the train in motion, then slows down again near the end to symbolize it arriving at its destination.
* "Tren Al Sur" ("Train To The South") by the Chilean rock group Los Prisioneros.
* "Tren Del Cielo" ("Heaven's Train") by Soledad Pastorutti.
* "Long Train Runnin'" by Music/TheDoobieBrothers.
* "Homebound Train" by Music/BonJovi.
* "Locomotive Breath," "Journeyman," and "Raising Steam" by Music/JethroTull. The title of "Cheap Day Return" also refers to a railway ticket, and the song refers to being on the platform at Preston station.
* "Kundalini Express" and "Yin and Yang (The Flowerpot Man)" by Music/LoveAndRockets.
* "Train Of Consequences" by Music/{{Megadeth}}.
* "Runaway Train" by Music/EltonJohn and Music/EricClapton.
* "Just Like This Train" by Music/JoniMitchell.
* "Nighttime in the Switching Yard" by Music/WarrenZevon.
* "Been On A Train" and "Poverty Train" by Music/LauraNyro.
* ''[[Music/JohnnyCash Folsom Prison Blues]]'' - the train the prisoner keeps hearing is a symbol of freedom, movement, wealth... basically everything the prisoner doesn't have.
* ''Music/StationToStation'' by Music/DavidBowie. There's probably some religious symbolism about the Stations of the Cross too, but the song starts with locomotive sound effects.
* "Spanish Train" by Music/ChrisDeBurgh is about an AfterlifeExpress.
* "Blue Smoke" by Music/DollyParton is a BreakUpSong about leaving on a train. The chorus includes the onomatopoeic lines "clickety clickety clickety clack" and "choo-choo, choo-choo, woo woo woo".
* "Broken Train" by Music/{{Beck|Musician}}
* "Spice Train" by Music/ThomasDolby
* "Outside The Door" by Music/{{Can}} from "Monster Movie"
-->''Can you hear the train whistle... ?''
* "Last of the Steam-Powered Trains" by Music/TheKinks from ''Music/TheKinksAreTheVillageGreenPreservationSociety'' is a song about - and from the point of view of - a train preserved in a museum.
* "Freight Train Blues", covered by Music/BobDylan on ''[[Music/BobDylanAlbum Bob Dylan]]''.
* "Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You" by Music/BobDylan from ''Music/NashvilleSkyline'':
-->''I can hear that whistle blowin'\\
I see that stationmaster, too\\
If there's a poor boy on the street\\
Then let him have my seat\\
'Cause tonight I'll be staying here with you.\\
Throw my ticket out the window\\
Throw my suitcase out there too\\
Throw my troubles out the door\\
I don't need them any more\\
'Cause tonight I'll be staying here with you.''
* "Slow Train" from ''Music/SlowTrainComing'' by Dylan, where the train is to be understood as a metaphor for trouble coming up.
* "The Canadian Railroad Trilogy" and (less well known) "Steel Rail Blues" by Gordon Lightfoot.
* ''Deltics'', by Music/ChrisRea; there is even a photo of the prototype Deltic on the back of the album cover.
* Believe it or not, "Trains" by Music/PorcupineTree. Also "Deadwing" refers to looking from "the yellow windows of the last train", while TheIncident has a song called "The Yellow Windows of the Evening Train". Trains are a recurring theme in Porcupine Tree's work in general, mostly from StevenWilson spending his childhood a stone's throw from Hemel Hempstead train station.
* "Downbound Train" by Music/BruceSpringsteen (from ''Born in the USA''); it's a lament for a lost love, a woman who left a man after he lost his good-paying job at a lumber yard and had to start working at a car wash. While this is about feeling like you're on the train to hell, Bruce's anthem/hymn [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aBxJxYg3LuU "Land of Hope and Dreams"]] is a glorious takeoff on "Plenty of Room on the [[AfterlifeExpress Glory Train]]". The lyrics emphasize a Christian-like forgiveness of the sin, shame and loss often experienced by his working-class protagonists.
* "Trains" by Music/RyanAdams (from ''Jacksonville City Nights'') uses trains as a metaphor for the thoughts that keep the speaker up at night.
* The first verse of "The Engine Driver" by Music/TheDecemberists (from ''Picaresque'') is about, well, an engine driver--i.e. a train driver--"on a long run" who's pining for his woman.
* Music/JohnDenver's final album, ''All Aboard'', is a collection of songs about trains, including several songs listed above. It won him a [[DeadArtistsAreBetter posthumous]] MediaNotes/GrammyAward for Best Musical Album for Children.
* "Sonderzug nach Pankow" by German rock singer Udo Lindenberg, which uses the tune of "Chattanooga Choo-Choo". The title of the song translates as "Special Train to Pankow". Pankow is a suburb of Berlin which during the Communist era was the area preferred for residence by the Party elite - the song is a protest against the East German government's refusal to allow Lindenberg to play in East Berlin. It finally embarassed them so much that they agreed.
* "Midnight Special", a traditional blues song that was covered by Music/LeadBelly and Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival among others, is about a train that passes by a Texas penitentiary regularly at midnight, sung about in the chorus longingly from the point of view of an inmate (who also sings about the conditions of the prison).
* "Hot Rails to Hell" by Music/BlueOysterCult, about [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin a train bound for hell]].
* Australian folk song "On A Queensland Railway Line"
* "OrientExpress" by Music/JeanMichelJarre (from ''[[LiveAlbum The Concerts In China]]''; even though it's an {{Instrumental}} starting with a flight attendant announcing the landing in Shanghai, the video still features the classic luxury train)
** "Magnetic Fields 2" and "4" both end with samples of trains. By the way, most of what may sound like a train being shunted in "Magnetic Fields 4" is actually modified samples of a print head.
* "Es fährt ein Zug nach Nirgendwo" by Christian Anders
* "She Caught The Katy" by Taj Mahal references the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad ("The Katy") which still ran passenger trains in 1968.
* "My Trains" by Music/LemonDemon, although it's a little...out there.
* "Jim Crow Train" by Josh White is about putting an end to Jim Crow laws so the singer can ride on the titular vehicle.
* "Morningtown Ride" by Music/MalvinaReynolds.
* Burl Ives' "Two Little Trains" and "The Little Engine That Could", the latter a FilkSong of [[Literature/TheLittleEngineThatCould the children's story of the same name]].
* "Conversation on a Train" ("Razgovor v poyezde") by the Russian rock band Mashina Vremeni tells about two chance acquaintances on a train arguing over fatalism and self-determination, with one maintaining that humans can steer the course of their own lives, while the other likens human life to a train moving on tracks.
* "Train In The Distance", from Music/PaulSimon's album ''Hearts And Bones''.
* "M.T.A. (The Man who Never Returned) was a campaign song written in 1949 for then Boston Mayorial Candidate about a man named Charlie who becomes stranded on a train on the titular train line (Now known as the MBTA) for then mayorial candidate Walter A. O'Brian, who wanted to lower the fair prices as well as do away with the Byzantine exit fare. In the song, Charlie reaches his destination but is a nickle short and the conductor refuses to let him off the train, and the indignity of his wife having to go to the station every day to pass Charlie a sandwich through the window of the train. Naturally, the only way to save Charlie is to vote for O'Brian. Walter O'Brian got 1.2% of the vote, presumably because he forgot the area is not far from MIT and Harvard and between all the eggheads someone figured out if Charlie's wife could get him sandwiches daily, [[TakeAThirdOPtion she could easily get him the missing fare the same same way.]] In 2004, the MBTA got in on the joke and named their new tickets [[ActuallyPrettyFunny "CharlieCards."]]
* "I've Been Working On the Railroad" may or may not be this, as it doesn't specify what work the singer is doing, though it's implied that the worker is laying track rather than having anything to do with trains.
* "Mourningtown Ride" by Music/{{TISM}} is a list of stations in UsefulNotes/{{Melbourne}} you shouldn't get off the train at, who will mug you there, and what they'll take.
* "Choo Choo Train" by The Boxtops.
* "La estación" and "Viajar contigo" by Music/AlexUbago.
* "En el andén" by [[Music/TaxiBand Taxi]]
* Music/CWMcCall: [=McCall=] recorded two original songs about trains -- "The Silverton", about the Durango and Silverton Railroad, and ''Gallopin' Goose", about #5 in a series of seven railcars operated by the Rio Grande Southern Railroad from the 1930s to early 1950s. He also did a cover of Steve Goodman's "City of New Orleans", describing a train ride from Chicago to New Orleans on the "City of New Orleans", an overnight Amtrak passenger train operated by the Illinois Central Railroad.
* "Choo Choo Ch'Boogie," written by Vaughn Horton, Denver Darling, and Milt Gabler and originally recorded by Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five.
* "Valenta Scream" by the light-hearted neo-prog band Music/IAmTheManicWhale, which is a heartfelt but goofy tribute to the BR Class 43 High Speed Trains.

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