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Listen With Mother, 1950s, railway music

(24 Posts)
jellybeanjean Mon 05-Oct-15 09:44:49

Does anyone remember the above and hearing an instrumental piece which replicated the noises a steam train made, i.e. chuffing, whistling, brakes squealing, squeaks, thuds, bangs? It wasn't Puffing Billy, neither was it Coronation Scot; in fact it didn't really have a tune. From memory, it was played by a string quartet, with possibly some woodwind as well. My brother and I remember it vividly but have never been able to find it again.

merlotgran Mon 05-Oct-15 10:14:42

Puffing Billy and Coronation Scot are the only ones I can think of, I'm afraid.

Greyduster Mon 05-Oct-15 12:20:49

Try a piece called "Little Train of the Countryman" by Villa Lobos.

Greyduster Mon 05-Oct-15 12:23:12

Not the Countryman, the Caipira!!!

wotanuisanceABC123 Mon 05-Oct-15 12:44:17

Do you remember "Larry the Lamb" on children's hour on the radio? I always thought he was quite annoying!!!

jellybeanjean Mon 05-Oct-15 12:51:11

A beautiful piece of music, but sadly not the one I'm thinking of! Thanks anyway, Greyduster x

Greyduster Mon 05-Oct-15 13:05:58

You have me thoroughly intrigued now, jellybeanjean!

Falconbird Tue 06-Oct-15 07:39:04

I can remember the piece of music in the OP and it's going round in my head but I can't think of the name. The Flying Scotsman comes to mind.

I also remember Larry the Lamb and his friend Dennis the Dachshund. I used to do an impersonation of them when I was about 8. There was a Mayor and an Inventor involved.

Does anyone remember a cat on the radio called Monty and his friend the dog whose name escapes me.?

12Michael Tue 06-Oct-15 07:44:50

Just found this A popular piece of light orchestral music celebrating this train was composed by Vivian Ellis. This was used as the theme tune for the BBC Radio programme, Paul Temple.[3]

mahima123 Tue 06-Oct-15 07:52:51

Message deleted by Gransnet for breaking our forum guidelines. Replies may also be deleted.

Nelliemoser Tue 06-Oct-15 08:02:00

Reported

Alea Tue 06-Oct-15 08:55:41

Hilarious!!grin (if I could understand a flippin' word!)

merlotgran Tue 06-Oct-15 09:02:49

Wasn't the Paul Temple theme Coronation Scot, Michael?

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 06-Oct-15 09:25:56

There is a link to the introductory music of Listen with Mother in this article here

I can't listen because my speakers have stopped working. It probably doesn't tell you the name of the musice. but it might help.

I was wondering about The Flying Scotsman, too.

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 06-Oct-15 09:28:27

Anyone remember the stries about the rather large lady who loved eating lots of cream buns? I so envied her!

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 06-Oct-15 09:29:12

stories ! hmm

Katek Tue 06-Oct-15 09:50:19

Percy Grainger wrote a piece about trains but it was for full orchestra.

feetlebaum Tue 06-Oct-15 10:35:37

@merlotgran - Coronation Scot was used as the sig tune for 'Paul Temple',
but it wasn't the first. Before it came something, I think Russian and ballet-ish. I thought 'Scheherezade', but I've been through it and couldn't find the piece!

Aha - thank you Google: It WAS from Sheherezade, the second part of the second movement (Rimsky-Korsakov)

www.youtube.com/watch?v=f03wesOMIOI

merlotgran Tue 06-Oct-15 12:29:40

I'd forgotten all about that, feetle. I was very young in Paul Temple days so most of it went over my head but I did wonder why he had a wife called Steve until it was explained it was her pen name.

Coronation Scot was a much requested record on Children's Favourites.

Greyduster Tue 06-Oct-15 13:51:17

Coronation Scot is one of my all time favourites - I said to someone the other day that I wanted to go out to it at my funeral "The train now leaving platform 3 is the Coronation Scot"! I have it on a Children's Favourites CD along with Puffing Billy, which is GS's favourite, and The Runaway Train went Down the Track which my dad used to sing to me.

Greyduster Tue 06-Oct-15 13:53:54

Does anyone remember Devils Gallop, which was the Dick Barton theme tune. Very exciting when you're little!

merlotgran Tue 06-Oct-15 14:14:10

www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-icHBIuLoM

This was used for Thomas the Tank Engine but I don't know when it was written so could have been used on LWM

Whofan88 Mon 25-Nov-24 20:13:56

Apologies for posting on a thread 9 years later but I’m an American doing research on British train music and was wondering if the piece could be Monday: Early morning train by Vivian Ellis

paddyann54 Mon 25-Nov-24 20:37:56

I don’t remember the programme but there’s an amazing piece of music by a South African artist Hugh Masakela called The Coal Train that has the huffing and the puffing and the screeching of brakes in it.Its a fantastic song and we were lucky to see him sing it in Edinburgh and have photos taken with him.A real highlight in my life as I love his music