Slow Train (Flanders and Swann song) explained

Slow Train
Cover:File:Flanders and Swann At the Drop of a Hat Broadway 2.JPG
Alt:Photo of Flanders and Swann singing at the piano
Caption:Writers Flanders and Swann
Type:song
Artist:Flanders and Swann
Written:1963
Genre:List song
Train song
Composer:Donald Swann
Lyricist:Michael Flanders

"Slow Train" is a song by British duo Flanders and Swann, written in July 1963.[1] It laments the closure of railway stations and lines brought about by the Beeching cuts in the 1960s, and also the passing of a way of life.

Lyrics

"Slow Train" takes the form of an elegiac list song of railway stations, which has been likened to a litany.[2] Its evocation of quiet, rural stations is highly romanticised and uses imagery such as the presence of a station cat or milk churns on a platform to express a "less hurried way of life" that is about to vanish:[3]

The strength of "Slow Train" is considered to lie in its list of "achingly bucolic" names of rural halts. The nostalgically poetic tone of Flanders's lyrics has been likened to Edward Thomas's 1914 poem "Adlestrop", which wistfully evokes a fleeting scene of Adlestrop railway station in Gloucestershire.[4]

Although most of the stations mentioned in Flanders's song were earmarked for closure under the Beeching cuts, a number of the stations were ultimately spared closure: Chester-le-Street, Formby, Ambergate, and Arram all remain open, and Gorton and Openshaw also survives, now called Gorton. Some stations referred to in the song have since been re-opened, notably Chorlton-cum-Hardy. It had closed in January 1967, but re-opened in July 2011 as Chorlton tram stop.

Selby and Goole were not threatened by Beeching, though the line ("from Selby to Goole") mentioned in the song was closed to passengers. The other line mentioned, "from St Erth to St Ives" in Cornwall stayed open.

Michael Flanders' song treats Formby Four Crosses and Armley Moor Arram as station names, but in both cases he combined two consecutive names from an alphabetical list of stations. Leon Berger, archivist of the estate of Donald Swann, said that Flanders had taken his list from one published in The Guardian, which was the source of some of the discrepancies between the names in the songs and the historic names of the stations.[5]

Other versions

In 2004, Canadian classical quartet Quartetto Gelato released a themed album called Quartetto Gelato Travels the Orient Express, celebrating the original journey of Orient Express and featuring music from London to Istanbul. The album begins with a rendition of "Slow Train", with the final lines changed to reflect the route of the Orient Express.

A version of "The Slow Train" by the King's Singers is on electronica duo Lemon Jelly's track "'76 aka The Slow Train", combined with a cover of the Albert Hammond song "I'm a Train" also performed by the King's Singers. A live version by Stackridge was included in its 2009 DVD 4x4.

Michael Williams' book On the Slow Train takes its name from the song. It celebrates twelve of the most beautiful and historic journeys in Britain that were saved from the Beeching cuts, including famous routes such as the Settle–Carlisle line and less well-known pleasures, such as the four-hour Preston–Carlisle route along the remote Cumbrian coastline.[6]

English folk singer-songwriter Frank Turner included a version of the song on his 2011 compilation album The Second Three Years.

List of stations referred to in the lyrics

Where appropriate, the correct name of the station is shown in brackets.

StationRailwayBetweenCoordinatesGrid referenceOpenedClosed

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The musical slow train . BBC Cambridgeshire . 6 June 2018 . en-gb . 3 October 2008.
  2. Book: Williams . Michael . On the Slow Train Again . 2011 . Random House . 9781409051244 . 5 June 2018 . en. 1.
  3. Book: Williams . Michael . On the Slow Train: Twelve Great British Railway Journeys . 2011 . Random House . 9781848092082 . 1 . 5 June 2018 . en.
  4. Book: Bray . Christopher . 1965: The Year Modern Britain was Born . 2014 . Simon and Schuster . 9780857202796 . 80 . 5 June 2018 . en.
  5. Web site: Littleton and Badsey Station (Revisited). 21 January 2003. 3 December 2009.
  6. News: So much pain in our love of the train . The Independent . Michael . Williams . London . 3 April 2010 . 6 July 2021.
  7. News: Re-opening rail line 'too costly' . . 9 September 2009. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091014011502/http://www.thisisleicestershire.co.uk/news/opening-rail-line-costly/article-1322613-detail/article.html . 14 October 2009 . dmy-all .