♫ Last Train To Clarksville ♫

I have been grumpy, depressed, and out of sorts for days now, so for tonight’s music selection I went looking for something fun … no other criteria … no need for a song of social conscience, a song about love or lost love … just something to make the toes tap and lift the spirits, if only for 2 minutes and 45 seconds.  This one, an oldie from my youth, came to mind and I settled on it, thinking of it as a fun song.  Little did I know the meaning behind the song 🙄

Released in 1966, this was written by Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, a songwriting team who came up with many songs for the Monkees. They also wrote songs for Chubby Checker and Jay & the Americans.

Boyce and Hart wrote this as a protest to the Vietnam War. They had to keep this quiet in order to get it recorded, but it is about a guy who gets drafted and goes to fight in the war. The train is taking him to an army base, and he knows he may die in Vietnam. At the end of the song he states, “I don’t know if I’m ever coming home.”  Says Hart …

“We were just looking for a name that sounded good. There’s a little town in Northern Arizona I used to go through in the summer on the way to Oak Creek Canyon called Clarksdale. We were throwing out names, and when we got to Clarksdale, we thought Clarksville sounded even better. We didn’t know it at the time, [but] there is an Air Force base near the town of Clarksville, Tennessee – which would have fit the bill fine for the story line. We couldn’t be too direct with The Monkees. We couldn’t really make a protest song out of it – we kind of snuck it in.”

Hart got the idea for the lyrics when he turned on the radio and heard the end of The Beatles “Paperback Writer.” He thought Paul McCartney was singing “Take the last train,” and decided to use the line when he found out McCartney was actually singing “Paperback Writer.” Hart knew that The Monkees TV series was pitched as a music/comedy series in the spirit of The Beatles movie A Hard Day’s Night, so he knew emulating The Beatles would be a winner. To do that, he made sure to put a distinctive guitar riff in this song, and wrote in the “Oh No-No-No, Oh No-No-No” lyrics as a response to the Beatles famous “Yeah Yeah Yeah.”

Session musicians played on the Monkees albums, usually some combination of Glen Campbell, Leon Russell, James Burton, David Gates, Carol Kaye, Jim Gordon and Hal Blaine. According to the liner notes on the 1994 reissue of the album, however, members of a group called the Candy Store Prophets did the instrumental backing on this track at a session that took place July 25, 1966 at RCA Victor Studios in Hollywood. The Candy Store Prophets were Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart’s band, and included Boyce on acoustic guitar, Gerry McGee on electric guitar, Larry Taylor on bass and Billy Lewis on drums. Additional musicians on this track were Wayne Erwin and Louie Shelton on guitar, and Gene Estes on percussion.

Released in 1966, this song charted at #1 in the U.S. and Canada, and #23 in the UK.

Last Train to Clarksville
The Monkees

Take the last train to Clarksville
And I’ll meet you at the station
You can be be here by four thirty
‘Cause I’ve made your reservation

Don’t be slow
Oh, no, no, no
Oh, no, no, no

‘Cause I’m leavin’ in the morning
And I must see you again
We’ll have one more night together
‘Til the morning brings my train

And I must go
Oh, no, no, no
Oh, no, no, no
And I don’t know
If I’m ever coming home

Take the last train to Clarksville
I’ll be waiting at the station
We’ll have time for coffee flavored kisses
And a bit of conversation

Oh, no, no, no
Oh, no, no, no

Take the last train to Clarksville
Now I must hang up the phone
I can’t hear you in this
Noisy railroad station, all alone

I’m feelin’ low
Oh, no, no, no
Oh, no, no, no
And I don’t know
If I’m ever coming home

Take the last train to Clarksville
And I’ll meet you at the station
You can be be here by four thirty
‘Cause I made your reservation

Don’t be slow
Oh, no, no, no
Oh, no, no, no
And I don’t know
If I’m ever coming home

Take the last train to Clarksville
Take the last train to Clarksville
Take the last train to Clarksville
Take the last train to Clarksville

Source: Musixmatch
Songwriters: Hart Bobby / Boyce Tommy
Last Train to Clarksville lyrics © Screen Gems-emi Music Inc.

34 thoughts on “♫ Last Train To Clarksville ♫

  1. What a coincidence, Mike Nesmith and Mickey Dolenz announced a Monkees farewell tour the other day. 😀 Even though there is only 2 of them left.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. I think I was supposed to be in the surly stages of being a teen way back then, but I ask , who could scowl with records like this popping up. Just an extra titbit of news. In the UK we have a very long running Soap called Coronation Street..It started in 1960. Davy Jones played the grandson of one of the great characters, Ena Sharples (my Aunt Vi, as she was a friend of my grandmother and great aunt). Peter Noone of Herman’s Hermits played the son of Len Fairclough.
    Cwtch

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    • {GASP} You??? A surly teen? Oh, for the life of me I cannot imagine you ever {choke, cough} being surly! Heh heh … just kidding sweetie. I’m glad you found this one to your liking. Yes, you and I have discussed Coronation Street before, and you told me about your Aunt Vi. Chris and I still watch it most nights, though we are about 2 months behind, because for a while the captioning wasn’t working. I didn’t know, though, that Peter Noone or Davy Jones had played in it! Chris and I have talked about maybe going back and watching some episodes from the early years of the series … perhaps it would be fun! Anyway … glad you enjoyed the music!
      Cwtch

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Still a toe-tapper.
    There was a lot of snobbery about the Monkees which was hard luck on Mike Nesmith and Peter Tork whereas Mickey Dolenz(Circus Boy!) and Davy Jones (Oliver) were showbiz kids and knew the score. That said the four were troupers in supplying a great deal of entertainment.
    When you compare this with the antics and in-fighting of the ‘professional’ bands who ‘played’ on their own records then The Monkees were OK and as genuine as any one else. (Except for ‘Cuddly Toy’- I hate that for its lyrics)

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  4. Did you hear it, Jill? The former guy’s Facebook account remains blocked. Was here the first message after lunch! So you don’t have to be angry anymore. 😉 Indeed a great song! Thank you, Jill! :-)) Michael

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