- Votes:
- Composer:
- Booker T. White
 
- See also:
Bukka White - Atlanta Special lyrics
Atlanta Special 6:03 Trk 20
 Bukka White (Booker T. Washington White)
 Recorded: 1963 Memphis, Tennessee
 Album: Parchman Farm Blues - Roots RTS 33055
 Transcriber: Awcantor@aol.com
 Note - spoken story with few lines sung
 w/other male vocalist & toward end comments)
Bukka begins:
 This is song Atlanta Special, here
 Runnin' all down through Georgia
 All down through the south
 An all through the Gulf of Mexico
 When I was a little boy
 I was startin' to catchin' this train
 And I never forget, I fifteen years old.
 I hear'd that train that mo'nin
 That 8:45 was hittin' that rail
 I had my mule goin' to the field
 To do some plowin' for my old grandfather.
 But when this train was comin' down the line
 She picked up wit' it.
(guitar - comin' down the line)
 I say, 'Whoa!'
 My mule stopped
 I 'cide to leave, I'd try the world
 I eased on out there
 And I caught the old freight train
 That went on down
 All down through Gulf of Mexico
 And ev'rywhere else.
 Oh, I got to thinkin' about Atlanta, Georgia.
 I say, 'I b'lieve I go back where my
 old grandmother live at.'
 Oh, one night I was sittin' down
 Boilin' some corn down on the railroad track.
 I thought about what my old grandmother
 told me years ago.
 Said son:
 'You got to reap what you sew.
 If you don't be a good boy, you gon'
 have bad luck.'
 I made me a record
 (they'll buys it)
 (This way Atlanta, Georgia)
This song:
 Sung:
 I'm sorry, sorry, sorry, left my home
 Mm-mm-mm
 Lord, Lord, Lord, Lord!
 When I fell back in Atlanta, Georgia
 Old lady lived, last name Miss Ester.
 She said, 'Son, I heard one of your records
 about Atlanta, Georgia.
 Said, 'Can you play it, now?'
 I reached back in my guitar case
 and pulled m'old raggedy guitar out.
 So glad to get back home
 I commenced to playin' this song for Aunt Ester.
 Sung:
 Lord, oh Lord, Lord, Lord!
 Mm-mm-mm
 So glad I headed back home
 Old lady starts at me, did I want anything to eat?
 I was sittin' there lookin' out toward the railroad
 track. I never will forget it, she brought me ham
 an egg, an toasted cheese an hot cup-a-coffee.
When that straight line ten mile a-goin' to
 I dropped my head an I dropped my food.
 I said, 'Now, I got to ride this train back'.
 She said, 'Son, what is wrong?'Bukka 
White - Atlanta Special - http://motolyrics.com/bukka-white/atlanta-special-lyrics.html
 I said, 'Well, Aunt Ester.'
 I said, 'Booker got to go.'
That train was turnin' tight that mo'nin.
(guitar- turnin' tight)
 Aunt Ester ask-ed
 'Would I know that train if I could hear it?'
 She said, 'You're too young, you don't
 know nothin' too much about hoboin'.
 I said, 'Well, I tell ya Aunt Ester, if I can
 hear the bell on this train I could tell you
 mo' about it.'
 When that train jumped to the fifteen mile
 curve, a bell will give you a toll like this:
(guitar- bell tolling)
 Made me thought about when my baby
 got sick n' she died. She's, they called me up.
 When she run in her fifteen mile curve
 She throw'd on the airbrake for la't ten mile.
(guitar - airbraking)
 So, Aunt E. stops me.
 She says, 'Where you was born at?'
I said, 'Atlanta, Georgia'
She said, 'That why you can play that ol' guitar, can't cha!'
 While we was talkin' she heard that train comin'
 into that fifteen mile curve.
 Two old ladies was on that train, cryin' an supperin'
 pullin' down the blind. A man give him a signal
 from the engine to the coach to slow down.
 You could hear him chokin' that train 'specially down
 comin' through Lou'siana like this:
(guitar - chokin' train)
 When the man throw'd that red light on
 Him sho' know it come, that fifteen mile curve.
 I ease on off back to the station
 I tol' Aunt E stop, thank her for her food.
 She said, 'Son, don't forget what your
 mother, now, used to told you
 Now, she said, Take life easy.'
 I jumped on out there and got in the blind.
 That train jumped on outta town.
 (I was steady jumpin' down)
 (Hauled through Georgia, Lou'siana)
 Right on down to a place he called
 Port Teht (?)
 (That's in Lou'siana)
 (They was stripin' sorghum
 and ev'rything I done got hauled there)
 I get off the freight train
 For a job aks the man for me
 Somethin' to eat
 He said, 'Can you strip sorgham?
 I said, I read about it, but I ain't never did it
 He said, 'If you eat anything, you gon' strip it!'
 I 'cided to do a little piece a-work for him
 He went in there an got me sorghum, molasses
 cornbread, toasted cheese, hot cup a-coffee.
 My train was in the yard
 The train blowed!
 When I hear that train blow, gettin' on
 I said I'm fixin' to stop t'strippin 'em.
(guitar to end)
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