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Grateful Dead - Casey Jones
Grateful Dead - Casey Jones


Grateful Dead - Casey Jones Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

Album: Workingman's Dead
Released: 1970

Casey Jones Lyrics


Drivin' that train, high on cocaine
Casey Jones you better, watch your speed
Trouble ahead, trouble behind
And you know that notion just crossed my mind

This old engine, makes it on time
Leaves Central Station at a quarter to nine
Hits River Junction at seventeen to
At a quarter to ten you know it's travelin' again

Drivin' that train, high on cocaine
Casey Jones you better, watch your speed
Trouble ahead, trouble behind
And you know that notion just crossed my mind

Trouble ahead, The Lady in Red
Take my advice you'd be better off dead
Switchman sleepin', train hundred and two
is on the wrong track and headed for you

Drivin' that train, high on cocaine
Casey Jones you better, watch your speed
Trouble ahead, trouble behind
And you know that notion just crossed my mind

Trouble with you is the trouble with me
Got two good eyes but we still don't see
Come 'round the bend, you know it's the end
The fireman screams and the engine just gleams

Writer/s: JEROME J. GARCIA, ROBERT C. HUNTER
Publisher: Universal Music Publishing Group
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Casey Jones
  • "Casey Jones" is (very) loosely based on the real life happenings of the heroic engineer Casey Jones, who was the subject of the famous 1902 song "The Ballad Of Casey Jones." It was doubtful that Jones was high on cocaine when he took over the train, and although his life was ended when he was hit by a train traveling the wrong way, he sacrificed his life so those on board could be saved.
  • In the book Garcia: A Signpost to New Space, Jerry Garcia was asked if this song grates on him when he hears it. The Dead frontman replied: "Sometimes, but that's what it's supposed to do. It's got a split-second little delay, which sounds very mechanical, like a typewriter almost, on the vocal, which is like a little bit jangly, and the whole thing is, I always thought it's a pretty good musical picture of what cocaine is like. A little bit evil. And hard-edged. And also that sing-songy thing, because that's what it is, a sing-songy thing, a little melody that gets in your head."
  • Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter came up with the line "Drivin' that train, high on cocaine, Casey Jones you'd better watch your speed," which he wrote down and put in his pocket. He didn't think of it as part of a song until he looked at it later and decided to complete the lyrics.

    When they put the song together, Hunter looked for ways to omit the word "cocaine," which at the time was a controversial word for song lyrics (they had taken some heat for using "Goddamn" in "Uncle John's Band"). Hunter tried some other phrases - "whipping that chain," "lugging propane" - but couldn't find an acceptable substitute, so Casey Jones ended up high on cocaine as originally written.

  • Grateful Dead - New Speedway Boogie
    Grateful Dead - New Speedway Boogie


    Grateful Dead - New Speedway Boogie Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: Workingman's Dead
    Released: 1970

    New Speedway Boogie Lyrics


    Please don't dominate the rap, Jack,
    If you've got nothing new to say.
    If you please, don't back up the track
    This train's got to run today.

    I spent a little time on the mountain,
    I spent a little time on the hill,
    I heard some say "Better run away",
    Others say "Better stand still".

    Now I don't know, but I been told
    It's hard to run with the weight of gold,
    Other hand I have heard it said,
    It's just as hard with the weight of lead.

    Who can deny, who can deny,
    It's not just a change in style?
    One step done and another begun
    And I wonder how many miles.

    I spent a little time on the mountain,
    I spent a little time on the hill,
    I heard some say "Better run away",
    Others say "Better stand still".

    Now I don't know, but I been told
    It's hard to run with the weight of gold,
    Other hand I have heard it said,
    It's just as hard with the weight of lead.

    Things went down we don't understand,
    But I think in time we will.
    Now, I don't know, but I was told
    In the heat of the sun a man died of cold.

    Keep on coming or stand and wait,
    With the sun so dark and the hour so late.
    You can overlook the lack, Jack,
    Of any other highway to ride.

    It's got no signs or dividing lines
    And very few rules to guide.
    I spent a little time on the mountain,
    I spent a little time on the hill,
    I heard some say "Better run away",
    Others say "Better stand still".

    Now I don't know, but I been told
    It's hard to run with the weight of gold,
    Other hand I have heard it said,
    It's just as hard with the weight of lead.
    I saw things getting out of hand,
    I guess they always will.

    Now I don't know, but I been told
    If the horse don't pull you got to carry the load.
    I don't know whose back's that strong,
    Maybe find out before too long.

    One way or another, one way or another,
    One way or another, this darkness got to give.
    One way or another, one way or another,
    One way or another, this darkness got to give.
    One way or another, one way or another,
    One way or another, this darkness got to give.

    Writer/s: GARCIA, JEROME J. / HUNTER, ROBERT C.
    Publisher: Universal Music Publishing Group
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    New Speedway Boogie
  • This was written about the disaster at the Altamont Speedway concert in 1969 when the Rolling Stones hired the Hells Angels to work security. The lyric: "In the heat of the sun, a man died of cold" refers to Meridith Hunter, an audience member who was killed by the Hell's Angels. Garcia referred to the concert as "...a nice day in HELL." (thanks, Chris - San Francisco, CA)
  • According to Blair Jackson in Goin' Down The Road: A Grateful Dead Traveling Companion , Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter wrote this as a response to an indictment of the Altamont affair by Rock critic Ralph Gleason. Hence the lead-in lyrics, "Please don't dominate the rap Jack, if you've got nothing new to say." (thanks, Rich - Gurnee, IL)

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