"Mystery Train" | |
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Single by Little Junior's Blue Flames | |
B-side | "Love My Baby" |
Released | November 1953 |
Format | 10" 78 rpm & 7" 45 rpm record |
Recorded | September–October 1953 at Memphis Recording Service, Memphis, Tennessee |
Genre | Blues, electric blues, Memphis blues |
Length | 2:20 |
Label | Sun 192 |
Writer(s) | Junior Parker |
Producer(s) | Sam Phillips |
"Mystery Train" | |
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Single by Elvis Presley | |
A-side | "I Forgot to Remember to Forget" |
Released | August 1955 |
Format | 7" 45 rpm & 10" 78 rpm record |
Recorded | July 11, 1955 at Memphis Recording Service, Memphis, Tennessee |
Genre | Rockabilly |
Length | 2:24 |
Label | Sun 223 |
Writer(s) | Junior Parker, Sam Phillips |
"Mystery Train" is a song written and recorded by American blues musician Junior Parker in 1953.
Junior Parker (aka Herman Parker), billed as "Little Junior's Blue Flames", recorded the song, considered a blues standard, for producer/Sun Records owner Sam Phillips. The song was released on the Sun label. The song was written by Junior Parker, with a credit later given to Phillips.
One commentator noted "One of the mysteries about 'Mystery Train' was where the title came from; it was mentioned nowhere in the song". The song uses lyrics similar to those found in the traditional American folk music group Carter Family's "Worried Man Blues", itself based on an old Celtic ballad, and their biggest selling record of 1930:
Parker's lyrics include:
"Mystery Train" was the follow-up single to Junior Parker's 1953 number five Billboard R&B chart release "Feelin' Good" (Sun 187). Accompanying Parker (vocal) is his backup band the "Blue Flames", whose members at the time are believed to have included: Floyd Murphy (guitar), William Johnson (piano), Kenneth Banks (bass), John Bowers (drums), and Raymond Hill (tenor sax).
Elvis Presley's version of "Mystery Train" was first released on August 20, 1955 as the B-side of "I Forgot to Remember to Forget" (Sun 223). Presley's version would be ranked #77 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list in 2003. It was again produced by Sam Phillips at Sun Studios, and featured Presley on vocals and rhythm guitar, Scotty Moore on lead guitar, and Bill Black on bass. Moore used a country lead break, and toward the end of the record is an echo of the 1946 "Sixteen Tons" by Merle Travis. For Presley's version of "Mystery Train", Scotty Moore also borrowed the guitar riff from Junior Parker's "Love My Baby" (1953), played by Pat Hare.