“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.”

Introduction

You ever hear a train whistle in the distance and feel this ache you can’t quite explain? That’s where this song comes from—I Wonder Why Trains Make Me Lonesome. It’s not just about the sound cutting through the night; it’s about what it drags up with it. There’s something alive in that lonesome wail, something that tugs at your heart like an old friend you haven’t seen in years. I wanted to write a song that feels like sitting on a porch at dusk, watching those tracks stretch out into nowhere, wondering where they’re going and why they’re taking a piece of you with them.

This isn’t one of those big, loud anthems. It’s quieter, softer—like the way you’d whisper a secret to someone you trust. The melody sways like a slow train rocking down the line, and the words? They’re simple, but they dig deep. “I wonder why trains make me lonesome / When they roll on by my door / Is it the leaving or the longing / That keeps me coming back for more?” That’s the heartbeat of it—trying to figure out if it’s the goodbye or the pull of what could’ve been that leaves you staring out the window.

What makes it special, I think, is how it sneaks up on you. It’s not trying to impress; it’s just laying out a feeling we’ve all had, even if we didn’t know how to name it. Maybe it’s the way trains carry stories—freight cars rattling with the weight of someone else’s life, heading somewhere you’ll never know. Or maybe it’s the rhythm, that steady clack-clack-clack that feels like time slipping away. I wrote it thinking about my grandpa, who used to tell me how he’d hop trains as a kid, chasing something he could never catch. That’s in there too—the ghosts of the past riding along.

So, picture this: you’re listening, and the guitar hums low, maybe a little harmonica crying in the background, and it’s just you and that question—why does this sound hit so hard? It’s not about being sad, not really. It’s more like… bittersweet, you know? Like remembering a summer night that was perfect but gone too fast. I hope when you hear it, you feel that tug too. Maybe you’ll even wonder what it is about those trains that gets under your skin. What’s your story with them? I’d love to know

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