This Train (band)
This Train | |
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Origin | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Genres | Christian rock, rock |
Years active | 1994–2000 |
Labels | Etcetera, Pamplin |
Past members |
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This Train was an American rock band founded by Mark Robertson in the 1990s known for its tongue-in-cheek, satirical lyrics and eclectic incorporation of American music (rock, punk, rockabilly, surf, pop, acoustic, country western, jazz, etc). The group's name is derived from the gospel song This Train.
Though Robertson had played bass in bands before (Altar Boys, A Ragamuffin Band, etc), This Train was the first band in which he was a lead vocalist and frontman. While This Train was a name Robertson used for personal demos for years, it became a live band with the addition of band members Jordan Richter on guitar, Beki Hemingway on vocals, and Chris Wicklas on drums, with Robertson doing lead vocals and bass guitar.
The band's debut album, Monstertruck (A Love Story) was released in 1994 and contained several songs which would appear in the two following albums. The next album You're Soaking in It was released in 1995, after which Beki and Chris left the band with "Cobra Joe" Curet becoming the group's drummer. Around this time the band relocated to Nashville, TN. The band was brought into the limelight through the urging of CCM musician Rich Mullins[1], who the three members of This Train were touring with (Robertson played bass in Mullins' Raggamuffin Band, Jordan ran the sound, and Cobra Joe was on the road crew). After becoming the opening band for Mullins' tours, the band gained popularity and was signed to Organic Records of Pamplin Music, who released their third album Mimes of the Old West in 1998, featuring prominent vocals from Ashley Cleveland and Rich Mullins months before he died. The album included several instrumental surf rock tracks as well as a cover of Hank Williams' "I Saw The Light" and The Louvin Brothers' "Great Atomic Power". The following year This Train released their final album The Emperor's New Band in 1999, which introduced a swing band on half the tracks.
Robertson has referred to This Train's sound as "cow punk".[2] In an interview he explained, "We're pretty huge rockabilly fans and then the '60s thing is surf guitar, which Jordan's a huge fan of. I'm more '50s and Jordan's more '60s, and somehow it seems to work. Rich Mullins always called us "Hillbilly Punk", which works for me. I don't know what it is, I just like it."[3]
Discography[edit]
- Monstertruck (A Love Story) (Etcetera, 1994)
- You're Soaking in It (Etcetera, 1995)
- Mimes of the Old West (Organic/Pamplin, 1998)
- The Emperor's New Band (Organic/Pamplin, 1999)
References[edit]
- ↑ "This Train Lyrics". lyrics.christiansunite.com. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
- ↑ "Interview: Mark Robertson – Bass Frontiers Magazine". www.bassfrontiersmag.com. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
- ↑ "This Train: The hillbilly punks behind "The Missing Link" - This Train". www.crossrhythms.co.uk. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
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