Rock Island Line (song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
"Rock Island Line"
Song first recorded by John Lomax
Recorded 1934
Genre Blues, Folk, Skiffle, Country
Length 2-4 minutes
Label Asch Recordings
Writer Kelly Pace

"Rock Island Line" is an American blues/folk song first recorded by John Lomax in 1934 as sung by inmates in an Arkansas State Prison, and later popularized by Lead Belly.[1] Many versions have been recorded by other artists, most significantly the world-wide hit version in the mid-1950s by Lonnie Donegan. The song is ostensibly about the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad.

The chorus to the old song reads:

The Rock Island Line is a mighty good road
The Rock Island Line is the road to ride
The Rock Island Line is a mighty good road
If you want to ride you gotta ride it like you find it
Get your ticket at the station for the Rock Island Line

The verses tell a humorous story about a train operator who smuggled pig iron through a toll gate by claiming all he had on board was livestock.

Contents

[edit] History

  • In 1964, "The Penguin Book Of American Folk Songs", compiled and edited, and with notes, by Alan Lomax, was published in Britain; it was subsequently reprinted in 1966 and 1968. On page 128 it includes the song "Rock Island Line" with the following footnote: "John A. Lomax recorded this song at the Cumins State Prison farm, Gould, Arkansas, in 1934 from its convict composer, Kelly Pace. The Negro singer, Lead Belly, heard it, rearranged it in his own style, and made commercial phonograph recordings of it in the forties. One of these recordings was studied and imitated phrase by phrase, by a young English singer of American folk songs [referring to Lonnie Donegan], who subsequently recorded it for an English company. The record sold in the hundreds of thousands in the U.S. and England, and this Arkansas Negro convict song, as adapted by Leadbelly, was published as a personal copyright, words and music, by someone whose contact with the Rock Island Line was entirely through the grooves of a phonograph record."

However, analysis of the card catalog at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, where the Lomaxes' recordings reside, reveals that John A. Lomax first recorded the song the previous month, at another prison in Little Rock, Arkansas. (The Little Rock recording is dated September 1934, and the recording from Gould is dated October 1934.) This makes Alan Lomax's theory that Pace was the original composer of the song unlikely.

According to Harry Lewman Music,

Lead Belly and John and Alan Lomax supposedly first heard it from [a] prison work gang during their travels in 1934/35. It was sung a cappella. Huddie sang and performed this song, finally settling on a format where he portrayed, in song, a train engineer asking the depot agent to let his train start out on the main line.[2]


  • Lonnie Donegan's recording, released as a single in late 1955, signalled the start of the UK "skiffle" craze. Donegan "did nothing to credit Lead Belly as the author, even though he simply copied Huddie's entire arrangement".[2] This recording only featured Donegan, Chris Barber on double bass and washboard player (Beryl Bryden), but as it was part of a Chris Barber's Jazz Band session for Decca Records, Donegan received no royalties from Decca for record sales, beyond his original session fee. However, over the years, indeed until his death, Donegan received considerable music publishing royalties from "Rock Island" simply by claiming the British copyright on an unregistered song which was considered to be in the Public Domain. This led to the peculiar situation that any cover of "Rock Island Line" released on record in Britain from 1956 showed the song composition credited to Lonnie Donegan. Throughout his life, Donegan was fond of telling the story about how he only got a fixed fee from Decca Records for recording "Rock Island Line" (the stated sum varied between £3 and £10), despite it selling over one million copies world-wide, but he never told the story how he benefited greatly from music publishing royalties, a fact which considerably annoyed the likes of Alan Lomax and Pete Seeger in the USA.

[edit] Versions

"Rock Island Line" has been recorded by:

[edit] 1930s – 40s

  • John Lomax recorded "Rock Island Line" sung by prisoners in Arkansas in 1939. It is included in the recordings made during his 1939 Southern States Recording Trip.[5]

[edit] 1950s

Recorded for the small British Jazz label Tempo (which was subsequently acquired by Decca) under the name "The George Melly Trio", and featuring Johnny Parker on piano and Norman Dodsworth on drums (both members of Mick Mulligan's Magnolia Jazz Band with whom Melly was the singer). Although lyrically similar, Melly's version of "Rock Island Line" is very different to any version by Leadbelly, or indeed any other version.
In July 1954, Donegan recorded this fast-tempoed version of "Rock Island Line", with Chris Barber's Jazz Band, featuring "John Henry" on the B-side. It was the first debut record to go gold in Britain, and reached the top ten in the United States.
Bobby Darin's debut single was a 1956 recording of "Rock Island Line", with 'rhythm accompaniment directed by Jack Pleis', featuring "Timber" (written by Darin, Don Kirshner and George M. Shaw) on the B-side. It was released on the Decca Records label. For his first television performance (on Stage Show), he sang this song with the lyrics written on the palms of his hands as there were no cue cards provided for him.
Recorded for Coral, an early American cover version following the success of Lonnie Donegan's record in the US charts. Whilst on tour in Britain in 1956, Cornell and Donegan met, with the result that Cornell's manager became Donegan's American representative.
This was a typical Freberg "send up" of Lonnie Donegan's "Rock Island Line", following the latter's chart success in the USA. Issued on Capitol, it was the B-side to Freberg's parody of Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel", which became an American chart hit.
  • Milt Okun - America's Best Loved Folk Songs - Baton BL1203 (1957)
Recorded in 1957, released posthumously.

[edit] 1960s

[edit] 1970s

  • Harry Belafonte on the LP 11-7701 which was later released on the CDs "All Time Greatest Hits Vol. 3" (07863-59771-2) and "36 All-Time Greatest Hits" (1130-15250-2).
  • Johnny Cash - single on the album Rock Island Line (1970) [4], see image
This single reached #93 (US Singles Chart), and #35 (US Country chart).
  • John Lennon - acoustic and unreleased version found on the bootleg, The Lost Lennon Tapes.

George Harrison and Paul Simon - acoustic version performed during rehearsal for November 20, 1976 episode of Saturday Night Live

[edit] 1980s

[edit] 1990s

On the album Poor Little Knitter on the Road - A Tribute to the Knitters.

[edit] 2000s

[edit] In popular culture

  • Lonnie Donegan's recording of "Rock Island Line" was featured in an advert for the Vauxhall Astra Twintop and Tigra in 2006 in the UK.
  • The 2005 computer game Civilization IV uses the lyric "I fooled you, I fooled you, I got pig iron, I got pig iron, I got all pig iron." when a player successfully gains the Railroad technology; the line is read by Leonard Nimoy.
  • There is a book written by Ricky Tomlinson called Reading My Arse!: Searching for the Rock Island Line.

[edit] Railroad associations

The song is based on the name of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, which operated an extensive network across the central states of the USA, Chicago to Omaha NE, Chicago to Texas, and reached Minneapolis MN, Memphis TN, and other points. Contrary to the song, although a minor route penetrated northern Louisiana, it did not reach New Orleans. Like a number of railroads based in Chicago with lengthy formal names, it was generally known by a shortened nickname, the "Rock Island", which name was painted on the locomotives and elsewhere. Rock Island is a small town on the Illinois shore of the Mississippi river, and the initial rail route connected it across the state to Chicago. The railroad's ambition, from its name, to reach the Pacific was never even remotely attained. The Rock Island was a rail pioneer from the 1850s, and was long known for carrying on through financial adversity challenging better-structured rival companies in its territory. It finally went out of business in 1980. Some of its former routes were purchased and are now run by other rail companies.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.csufresno.edu/folklore/ballads/FSWB102.html
  2. ^ a b c Harry Lewman Music - The Lead Belly Songbook
  3. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/album/treasury-of-library-of-congress-field-recordings-r318392.
  4. ^ The Leadbelly Web Discography
  5. ^ http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/S?ammem/lomaxbib:@field(SUBJ+@od1(Railroad+work+songs))
Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages