Night Train (Jimmy Forrest composition)
"Night Train" | |
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Original single label[1] | |
Single by Jimmy Forrest | |
B-side | "Bolo Blues" |
Released | March 1, 1952[2] |
Format | 78 rpm record |
Recorded | November 27, 1951 |
Genre | Rhythm and blues |
Length | 2:50 |
Label | United (110) |
Songwriter(s) |
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"Night Train" is a twelve-bar blues instrumental standard first recorded by Jimmy Forrest in 1951.
Origins and development
"Night Train" has a long and complicated history. The piece's opening riff was first recorded in 1940 by a small group led by Duke Ellington sideman Johnny Hodges under the title "That's the Blues, Old Man". Ellington used the same riff as the opening and closing theme of a longer-form composition, "Happy-Go-Lucky Local", that was itself one of four parts of his Deep South Suite. Forrest was part of Ellington's band when it performed this composition, which has a long tenor saxophone break in the middle. After leaving Ellington, Forrest recorded "Night Train" on United Records and had a major rhythm & blues hit. While "Night Train" employs the same riff as the earlier recordings, it is used in a much earthier R&B setting. Forrest inserted his own solo over a stop-time rhythm not used in the Ellington composition. He put his own stamp on the tune, but its relation to the earlier composition is obvious.
Like Illinois Jacquet's solo on "Flying Home", Forrest's original saxophone solo on "Night Train" became a veritable part of the composition, and is usually recreated in cover versions by other performers. Buddy Morrow's trombone transcription of Forrest's solo from his big-band recording of the tune is similarly incorporated into many performances.
Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI) credits the composition to Jimmy Forrest and Oscar Washington.[3]
Lyrics
Several different sets of lyrics have been set to the tune of "Night Train". The earliest, written in 1952, are credited to Lewis P. Simpkins, the co-owner of United Records, and guitarist Oscar Washington.[4] They are a typical blues lament by man who regrets treating his woman badly now that she's left him. Douglas Wolk, who describes the original lyrics as "fairly awful", suggests that Simpkins co-wrote (or had Washington write) them as a deliberate throwaway in order to get part of the tune's songwriting credit; this entitled him to substantial share of "Night Train"'s royalties, even though it was most often performed as an instrumental without the lyrics.[5]
Eddie Jefferson recorded a version of "Night Train" with more optimistic lyrics about a woman returning to her man on the night train.
James Brown version
"Night Train" | ||||
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1964 UK re-release label | ||||
Single by James Brown | ||||
from the album James Brown Presents His Band | ||||
B-side | "Why Does Everything Happen to Me" | |||
Released | March 1962 | |||
Format | 45 rpm record | |||
Recorded | February 9, 1961, | |||
Studio | King, Cincinnati, Ohio | |||
Genre | Rhythm and blues | |||
Length | 3:35 | |||
Label | King (5614) | |||
Songwriter(s) |
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James Brown singles chronology | ||||
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James Brown recorded "Night Train" with his band in 1961. His performance replaced the original lyrics of the song with a shouted list of cities on his East Coast touring itinerary (and hosts to black radio stations he hoped would play his music) along with many repetitions of the song's name. (Brown would repeat this lyrical formula on "Mashed Potatoes U.S.A." and several other recordings.) He also played drums on the recording. Originally appearing as a track on the album James Brown Presents His Band and Five Other Great Artists, it received a single release in 1962 and became a hit, charting #5 R&B and #35 Pop.[6]
A live version of the tune was the closing number on Brown's 1963 album Live at the Apollo. Brown also performs "Night Train" along with his singing group the Famous Flames (Bobby Byrd, Bobby Bennett, and Lloyd Stallworth) on the 1964 motion picture/concert film The T.A.M.I. Show.
Brown's backing band the J.B.'s would later incorporate the main saxophone line of "Night Train" in their instrumental single "All Aboard The Soul Funky Train", released on the 1975 album Hustle with Speed.
Recordings
- Jimmy Forrest, 1951[7]
- Buddy Morrow, 1952[7]
- Louis Prima, The Wildest! (1957)
- Oscar Peterson, Night Train, 1962[7]
- James Brown, Live at the Apollo, 1963[7]
- Maynard Ferguson, The Blues Roar (1964 album)|side 1, track 2, 1964 />
- Harry James, Harry James Plays Green Onions & Other Great Hits (Dot, 1965)
- Wes Montgomery and Jimmy Smith, Jimmy & Wes: The Dynamic Duo (1966)
- Eddie Jefferson with Hamiet Bluiett, The Main Man, 1977[7]
- Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Live: Mardi Gras in Montreaux, 1986[7]
- World Saxophone Quartet, Rhythm and Blues, 1988[7]
- Lou Donaldson, Caracas (1995)
Appearances in film
- Forrest himself performs an extended version of "Night Train" with the Count Basie Orchestra in the 1979 film Last of the Blue Devils.
- "Night Train" is played by the band "Marvin Berry and The Starlighters" at the high school dance in Back to the Future. It is heard again in its sequel.
- "Night Train", by James Brown, is played in the bar fight scene in Rush Hour.
- "Night Train" is played during a club scene towards the end of Raging Bull.
- "Night Train" is featured on the soundtrack album to Quadrophenia (1979)
- "Night Train" is played at the beginning of the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Badda-Bing Badda-Bang".
- "Night Train", by James Brown, also features in the soundtrack of the Tom Hanks movie Apollo 13.
- "Night Train" is played by Bob Crane (drummer) and house bands at various clubs in Auto Focus.
- "Night Train" is played in the Happy Days episode "The Skin Game".
- "Night Train" is played around minute four of the Mr. Robot (TV Series) season 2 episode 11 titled "eps2.9_pyth0n-pt1.p7z"[8]
Other appearances
- "Night Train" plays an important part in Roddy Doyle's novel The Commitments.
- Martin Amis' 1997 novel Night Train is named after the song.
- Diana Krall performed a version on Spectacle with Elvis Costello
- On the Nancy Walker episode of the Muppet Show, Crazy Harry and some Whatnot soldiers perform a target practice sketch to the music of "Night Train". Because of Harry's destructive nature, he orders the Whatnots to shoot everything but the target with a cannon. Eventually, one Whatnot faints and the cannon blows a hole in the wall near Statler and Waldorf's box.
- The song serves as the eponymous opening and closing theme music to the weekly Night Train jazz and Big Band program hosted by Ted Grossman on Miami, Fla., radio station WLRN-FM since 1977.[9]
References
- ↑ Forrest's name is misspelled "Forest"
- ↑ Billboard Mar 1, 1952, Rhythm & Blues Record Releases page 31
- ↑ BMI Repertoire Search, "Night Train". Accessed 16 April 2012
- ↑ Marv Goldberg's R&B Notebooks - REGALS
- ↑ Wolk, Douglas. (2004). Live at the Apollo, 97. New York: Continuum Books.
- ↑ Wolk, Douglas. (2004). Live at the Apollo, 99. New York: Continuum.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Gioia, Ted (2012). The Jazz Standards. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 302. ISBN 978-0-19-993739-4.
- ↑ http://www.avclub.com/tvclub/reality-itself-debate-strangest-mr-robot-yet-242617
- ↑ Spangler, Nicholas (January 14, 2007). "DJ's 'Night Train' keeps rolling on". The Miami Herald. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
External links
- Song Review of the James Brown version from Allmusic