Did Arlo Guthrie sing the city of New Orleans?

Did Arlo Guthrie sing the city of New Orleans?

Songfacts®:

  • Arlo Guthrie is a prolific songwriter (and the son of maybe the more prolific songwriters), but he didn't write this one. "City Of New Orleans" was composed by the Chicago singer-songwriter Steve Goodman in 1970.

    Goodman wrote the lyrics on a sketch pad after his wife fell asleep on the Illinois Central train, where they were going to visit his wife's grandmother. Goodman wrote about what he saw looking out the windows of the train and playing cards in the club car. Everything in the song actually happened on the ride.

    After he returned home, Goodman heard that the train was scheduled to be decommissioned due to lack of passengers. He was encouraged to use this song to save the train, so he retouched the lyrics and released it on his first album in 1971.

  • Steve Goodman released his version as a single in 1972, but it was Arlo Guthrie's cover that same year that popularized the song and brought attention to rail lines that were vanishing across middle America. Many people who lived in rural areas relied on them to travel.

  • Steve Goodman died on September 20, 1984 at the age of 36 after a long battle with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. That same year, Willie Nelson covered this song and made it the title track of his album. Nelson's version was a #1 Country hit and won the Grammy Award for Best Country Song, which is a songwriting category and thus an honor bestowed posthumously to Goodman.

    Nelson was one of many high-profile fans of Goodman, who released 11 albums in his lifetime. Diagnosed with leukemia in 1969, Goodman underwent chemotherapy and his cancer stayed in remission for 13 years thanks to an unpleasant regimen of drugs and treatment. When his cancer returned, Goodman continued performing and stayed in high spirits. This song, written after he was diagnosed, is a great example of his positive outlook, demonstrating a mindfulness and vitality of someone who appreciates the time he has left.

  • Arlo is the son of legendary folk singer Woody Guthrie. This was Arlo's only chart hit, although he is well known for his Thanksgiving day classic, "Alice's Restaurant Massacree."

  • The jubilant chorus line, "Good morning America, how are ya?" became a cultural touchstone in the United States. When ABC launched a new morning show in 1975, they named it: Good Morning America.

  • Guthrie and Goodman's versions have slightly different lyrics:

    Goodman: "Passing towns that have no name."
    Guthrie: "Passing trains..."

    Goodman: "Sons of Pullman porters and the sons of engineers ride their father's magic carpet made of steam."
    Guthrie: "... made of steel."

    Goodman: "...the rhythm of the rails is all they dream"
    Guthrie: "...all they feel"
    >>

    Suggestion credit:
    Victor - Portland, OR

  • Goodman's version was recorded at Quadraphonic Sound Studios in Nashville, and produced by Kris Kristofferson and Norbert Putnam.

  • Goodman performed this song on the popular British variety show The Old Grey Whistle Test in 1972. Dolly Parton sang it in 1976 on her show Dolly, and the song has popped up in a few movies and TV shows, including B.J. and the Bear (1979), The A-Team (1985) and Texasville (1990 - Willie Nelson version.

  • The Doobie Brothers got on board the year after this was released with "Long Train Runnin'," which also mentions the Illinois Central:

    Well the Illinois Central
    And the Southern Central Freight...

Did Arlo Guthrie sing the city of New Orleans?
One of the great American songs of the late twentieth century is “City of New Orleans.” The song was originally written and recorded by Steve Goodman but made famous by Arlo Guthrie.

“City of New Orleans” was a top 20 hit for Guthrie in 1972, and numerous artists have performed and recorded “City of New Orleans.” While the song recounts the story of the Illinois Central Railroad’s City of New Orleans train, one might read a little more into the story by knowing more about the songwriter.

Steve Goodman and “City of New Orleans”

Goodman was born on July 25, 1948, and when he was in college, he was diagnosed with leukemia. While the disease was often in remission, Goodman always recognized he was living on borrowed time.

Goodman died at the young age of 34 on September 20, 1984. Knowing about his diagnosis, one may see more in the sadness of the song about the end of the life of a train.

The Real Train

The City of New Orleans itself was a train that the Illinois Central Railroad began operating in April 1947, a little more than a year from Goodman’s birth. The overnight train had the longest daytime regularly scheduled route in the country for a time.  The train went between New Orleans, Louisiana and Goodman’s birthplace and hometown, Chicago, Illinois.

In May 1971, though, Amtrak took over the City of New Orleans train.  The company converted it to a nighttime route, renaming it the Panama Limited.

Goodman reportedly came up with the idea for a song about the train while riding on a trip. But it is hard not to see some heartfelt connections between Goodman’s life and the train in his most famous song.

“Half way home, we’ll be there by morning,
Through the Mississippi darkness. . . .
This train’s got the disappearing railroad blues.”

Below is Goodman performing the song live in 1972.

Arlo Guthrie’s Version: Changed Lyrics

While Arlo Guthrie’s famous verion of the song follows Steve Goodman’s lyrics, there is one exception. Note in the video above, Goodman sings about “passing towns that have no name.” In Guthrie’s famous version, he sings about “passing trains that have no names.”

One commentator has explained that the difference between the two versions comes from Goodman’s knowledge of train travel.  Goodman would know that traveling on the train, one would go through many towns without seeing any signs. But perhaps Guthrie did not understand or he thought city listeners would not understand a train traveling through nameless towns.

In this video, a young Guthrie performs “City of New Orleans.”

“City of New Orleans” Today

Sometimes we all forget that we have a limited time on earth to make a difference, but Goodman’s leukemia diagnosis at a young age made him want to do as much with his life as he could. And his song about a train did make a difference.

After the song “City of New Orleans” became popular in the 1970s, Amtrak, hoping to capitalize on the song’s popularity, brought back the “City of New Orleans” train name in 1981. Thanks to Steve Goodman, you may still take a ride on the City of New Orleans today. And thanks to him, you may also sing along to one of the great American songs.

And that’s the story behind the song.

Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Did Arlo Guthrie wrote City of New Orleans?

    Steve GoodmanThe City of New Orleans / Composernull

    What is Arlo Guthrie's most famous song?

    Guthrie's best-known work is his debut piece, "Alice's Restaurant Massacree", a satirical talking blues song about 18 minutes in length that has since become a Thanksgiving anthem. His only top-40 hit was a cover of Steve Goodman's "City of New Orleans".

    When did the song City of New Orleans come out?

    1972The City of New Orleans / Releasednull

    What was one of Guthrie famous songs?

    Guthrie, best known for his iconic song “This Land Is Your Land,” has had as profound an influence as any musician in US, and perhaps world, history.