There are lots of railroad songs. But I wasn't aware of any about model railroads--until now.
My local radio station played Model Railroad Town by Allison Brown this morning. The lyrics go like this:
Don’t you want to live in a model railroad
town?
Waving at the train as it circles around
Time has stopped on the hands of the station
clock
And the only thing that’s moving is the train
Somebody brought it home from the church rummage
sale
Took it down the basement connected all the
rails
Painted white clouds on a bright blue sky
And the sun shines like a 60 watt light
From the old stone church to the library
From the lumberyard to the candy store
The world is as big as the ping-pong table
And the train only ever takes me back to my own
front door
From the old stone church to the library
From the lumberyard to the candy store
The world is as big as the ping-pong table
And the train only ever takes me back to my own
front door
Don’t you want to live in a model railroad
town?
Waving at the train as it circles around
Time has stopped on the hands of the station
clock
And the only thing that’s moving is the train
The only thing that’s moving is the train
Listen to Brown sing the song here.
Brown is a singer/songwriter from London, Ontario.
As for the question posed by the song, yes, there are times when I would like to live in a model railroad town, a town where there is no crime, no poverty, no politics--and the trains run all the time.
And maybe you do, too.
And maybe you do, too.
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