Stefanos Alexiou – Train Kept A Rollin

As my last cover song for 2013 I wanted to do a classic that has influenced and played by many other musicians but still not very well known to most audience. I found what I wanted to play in the 1951 jump blues by Tiny Bradshaw “Train Kept A Rollin”.

Stefanos Alexiou - Train Kept A Rollin

Stefanos Alexiou – Train Kept A Rollin

History & Credits

As mentioned above, Train Kept A Rollin was originally recorded in 1951 by Tiny Bradshaw and his band as a vibrant mid-tempo song with a boogie-woogie bass line and a shuffling drumbeat.

Then in 1956, Johnny Burnette and the Rock and Roll Trio recorded “The Train Kept A Rollin” using a rockabilly/rock and roll arrangement. The Trio’s version features guitar lines in what many historians consider to be the first recorded example of intentionally distorted guitar in rock music. (Reference: Gordon, Vince; Dijkema, Peter (2011). Rockabilly: The Twang Heard ‘Round the World: The Illustrated History)

In 1965 The Yardbirds recorded “The Train Kept A Rollin” during their first American tour. Their version is based on Johnny Burnette’s version, but incorporates instrumental breaks and different guitar parts. It opens with Jeff Beck simulating a train whistle on the guitar.
In 1966, the Yardbirds recorded a hard rock version with Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page on dual lead guitars to be used for their appearance in the 1966 film Blowup, but permission from the song publisher was not coming so singer Keith Relf wrote new lyrics to the band’s new arrangement and called it “Stroll On”.
After Jeff Beck’s departure from The Yardbirds, Jimmy Page kept playing all the guitar parts on the song.

In 1968, when the future members of Led Zeppelin rehearsed together for the first time, the first song they played was “Train Kept A Rollin”. According to John Paul Jones, the room exploded when they kicked it off and they knew they had something together as a band. The song was included in their early performances as the “New Yardbirds” and during Led Zeppelin’s 1968 and 1969 tours, usually being featured as their opening song and was included on several bootleg albums.

In 1974, Aerosmith brought “Train Kept A Rollin” into the hard rock mainstream. Steven Tyler, Joe Perry, and Tom Hamilton had performed the song prior to joining Aerosmith. Joe Perry has said that “Train Kept A Rollin” was the only song we had in common when we first got together.

The Johnny Burnette Rock and Roll Trio rendition of “Train Kept A Rollin” is included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s exhibit of the “500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll“. Beside the most notable version of the song mentioned above, other musicians that have performed the song during the last several decades include: Jeff Beck, Bon Jovi, Paul Burlison, Dread Zeppelin, Alex Chilton, Hanoi Rocks, Colin James and the Little Big Band, Imelda May, Metallica, Motörhead, The Nazz, Shakin’ Stevens and the Sunsets, Skid Row, Screaming Lord Sutch, Sugarloaf, Ten Years After, The Tragically Hip, and Twisted Sister.

My version of Train Kept A Rollin: video

My version is based on the Aerosmith’s hard rock version and is done on dual guitars, drums and a regular guitar plugged into a POG-2 pedal to emulate the bass.

Here’s the video of “Train Kept A Rollin” with me playing all instruments:

Stefanos Alexiou – The Rain Song

Here in San Diego we rarely see rain throughout the year so when we got some much needed rain during the past few days, it inspired me to mellow down and cover Led Zeppelin’s “The Rain Song”. Initially I thought to even add some cello in it but I wasn’t happy with the way it blended so I ended up playing just the guitar with added drums.

Stefanos Alexiou - The Rain Song

Stefanos Alexiou – The Rain Song

The making of The Rain Song

As I always do, I started by playing the guitar on it…

Stefanos Alexiou - The Rain Song (Guitar)

Stefanos Alexiou – The Rain Song (Guitar)

… Then I added some drums.

Stefanos Alexiou - The Rain Song (Drums)

Stefanos Alexiou – The Rain Song (Drums)

The Rain Song: Mix & video on YouTube

Finally both guitar and drums tacks were mixed, added some reverb on the snare drum and guitar and uploaded on YouTube early Sunday morning!

Hope you enjoy my version of The Rain Song…

Stefanos Alexiou – No Quarter

For a while now I’ve been wanted to do a cover video of Led Zeppelin’s “No Quarter” but I was holding up because of the known YT issues I’ve been having with their publisher. Last Friday I finally decided to do it by changing it quite a bit and here it is!

Stefanos Alexiou - No Quarter (cello bow solos added)

Stefanos Alexiou – No Quarter (cello bow solos added)

How it Started

Stefanos Alexiou - No Quarter (on piano Thanksgiving 2013)

Stefanos Alexiou – No Quarter (on piano Thanksgiving 2013)

On Thursday evening after Thanksgiving dinner with family and friends, I got the chance to play some piano and without realizing I was hitting the notes of “No Quarter”. Since I don’t really know how to play the piano, I was playing it very slow and a bit darker than normal. So I thought… here’s how to change it (avoiding the YT issues) and still make it sound close enough to the original…

The Making of No Quarter

Stefanos Alexiou - No Quarter (rhythm guitar - piano & distortion parts)

Stefanos Alexiou – No Quarter (rhythm guitar – piano & distortion parts)

As always, I started by playing the rhythm on the guitar. I played the piano parts and the distorted parts.

Stefanos Alexiou - No Quarter (drums)

Stefanos Alexiou – No Quarter (drums)

Then I did the drums… which by the way I think is the best drums I’ve done so far. 😉

Stefanos Alexiou - No Quarter (cello bow solos instead of vocals)

Stefanos Alexiou – No Quarter (cello bow solos instead of vocals)

After the rhythm guitar and drums, I wanted to make it a little spooky and at the same time keep it sound close to the original… So I used a cello bow and did the vocal parts on the guitar as little solos…

Stefanos Alexiou - No Quarter (clean guitar solo)

Stefanos Alexiou – No Quarter (clean guitar solo)

And of course a regular solo had to be somewhere there, so I played a guitar solo too! If I’m not mistaken this solo is also my first one playing it clean without any distortion or a fuzz.

The Mix of No Quarter and video to YouTube

After all 3 tracks (rhythm, drums & solos) where recorded and a video was make for each track, during the mixing we also decided to add some kind of rotating flange effect to the last distortion part to make it a little different from the other distorted parts.

And here’s the completed video that was uploaded on my Youtube channel yesterday!