Jethro Tull - Locomotive Breath Lyrics | SongMeanings (2024)

  • +11

    My Interpretation

    Some misunderstandings I see:Old Charlie is an old euphemism for the Devil.The song is about growing old and losing control of one's life, be it from drug abuse or from corporate de-personalization.Locomotive Breath can refer to drug abuse, but it is a reference to the de-personalization of the modern industrial society which treats people as parts of a machine.He is the all-time loser, who has tried and failed to earn the big promotions. "Old Charlie stole the handle" refers to his loss of control over his own life."Crawling down the corridor" is his struggle to keep going, though crushed by the weight of his failures, be they alcohol related or simply the weariness of age."The all time winner has got him by the balls" is a reference to the impersonal corporate management that keeps him locked into his position as a broken cog in the corporate machine, a position from which he can only escape by dying.He loses his family and friends in his downward spiral. Gideon's Bible is a reference to the motels he must live in, and when he "opens at page one" he is seeking some salvation from the train-wreck his life has become.The context of this song is the album Aqualung. In the late '60's and early '70's, rock albums were thematic modern operas. This was the age of Godspell, Hair, and Jesus Christ Superstar. The theme of the Aqualung album as a whole was the failures of the modern industrial society. Not the failures of the system, but the people within it, or falling out of it. (Cross-eyed Mary, the sexually abused teen, and Aqualung, the homeless alcoholic are examples of this.)Locomotive Breath is about the corporate worker who never measured up and wound up in a dead in job with a dead end life that consumed him.The central question of the album is, what part does God play in a de-personalized industrial society? The album asks the question, but gives no answer.

    brian333on March 21, 2013Link

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  • +5

    General Comment

    This is what was listed at Cup of Wonder, a great Tull fansite: * "'Locomotive Breath' is another song about dying, but it's not so serious as 'Slipstream'. It's an analogy of the unending train journey of life; you can't stop, you've got to stagger on. But it's not that serious. All of the songs have an element of humour, and sometimes pure silliness". * Ian Anderson in Disc and Music Echo, 20th March 1971 * This song is about modern man ("the all-time loser"), who can hardly keep up with the pace of life in our society ("locomotive breath"). He suffers from all kinds of desillusions, alienation and solitude, cannot get hold of his own life and in the end resorts to religion: "he picks up Gideons Bible, open at page one", in the hope to find a solution. The verseline "The train won't stop going, no way to slow down" symbolizes his/our life that goes on and on without a pause until we inevitably die. At this place in the bible one will find the book of Genesis in which is described how the universe, the world and all living beings on it were created. Roland Tarmo points out that "old Charlie" is a reference to Charles Darwin and his evolution theory, that offered a scientific alternative for the unconditional belief in creation as worded in Genesis, thus questioning the self-evidentness of this belief. In other words: he "stole the handle", that for centuries had defined men's position. I assume that "the all-time winner" refers to God. "Gideon" is the organisation that aims at spreading the Bible by having it placed in public buildings like hotels. * Jan Voorbij

    Taobethon December 16, 2004Link

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  • +2

    General Comment

    "He picked up Gideon’s Bible…I thank God he stole the handle and the train it won't stop going..." With the only means of slowing and stopping the train removed, Loser became willing to consider spirituality. So, Anderson thanks God for allowing the painful circ*mstances, the panic and terror and the urgency that moved him to open a bible to see if it held answers to his misery, just in time. Just before his time ran out…

    smiledownuponyoursonon May 14, 2009Link

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  • +2

    General Comment

    I learned a lot by reading many of you.This song started to have new meanings for me and also triggered me new thoughts.I first thought was of Waiting for Godot from Samuel Beckett and its overwhelming sensation that time never stops. And the issue of no solution neither with God or without God, nor winning or losing.And the handle is like Godot, something that could stop the suffering but never comes or was stolen, the same. An ilussion, even if it comes the suffering will not stop.At a universal level, all of us with different intensities, including the author of the song, feel somehow that way.It could be better or worse, with drugs, death, religion, modern life, old life or any addiction, winning or losing, with good or bad wife, victim or victimary. Whatever.The images are wonderful and so powerful.Silence howling: Haven't you ever hear it? A silence of no answers to the ultimate questions that hurts so much! These things that happen to believers and non-believers, to modern man and to the traditional man, to the winner and the loser.Catching angels as they fall: They are the falling angels like Satan or the falling angels of not believing or just falling angels. Cathching them for good or bad? Who knows?The all time winner could be God or a human winner but could also be inside oneself, the image of winner we all have in mind (and cannot stop having it) and that makes a slave of us to it throughout our life. We all have an all time loser and an all time winner inside. We always talk about "other things" when we write, but simultaneously we talk about ourselves at a different level of meaning.We all have children jumping at the stations, for god or bad, who knows?We all have woman and best friend in bed hurting us in our mind, whatever it means (like low self esteem in some cases, for example).I love the image of someone stealing the handle: God or Darwin or whoever is Charlie. But remember also that we (you who are reading this, myself, etc.) stole the handle and we have to face it. We are also responsible at some level.Very-very interesting: I googled "Old Charlie" and found "MTA" in Wikipedia. It talks about a song written in 1948 called Charlie in the MTA: "The lyrics are about a man named Charlie trapped on Boston's subway system, then known as the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA)... It has become so entrenched in Boston that the city's subway system named its electronic card-based fare collection system the "CharlieCard" as a tribute to this song...The song's lyrics tell of Charlie, a man who gets aboard an MTA subway car. Charlie CAN'T GET OFF the subway as he didn't bring enough money for the "EXIT FARES" that were established to collect an increased fare without upgrading existing fare collection equipment.When he got there the conductor told him,"One more nickel."Charlie could not get off that train.Did he ever return,No he never returnedAnd his fate is still unlearn'dHe may ride forever'neath the streets of BostonHe's the man who never returned.After the third line of the chorus, audiences familiar with the song often call out "Poor Old Charlie!" In the Kingston Trio recording, after the final chorus, the song's lead singer Nick Reynolds speaks the words: "Et tu, Charlie?", an echo of Julius Caesar's famous "Et tu, Brute?" ("You too, Brutus?")."(my comment: This sounds to me like that Charlie is at the same time a victim ("poor") and a victimary ("the one who killed". "That's all humanity" as is said in Waiting for Godot. Life moves and never returns for us, like Charlie)Interesting coincidences, or not! Hope you enjoy it as I did!

    trackon November 22, 2009Link

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  • +1

    General Comment

    This is a great song. The song is telling about a man who is a loser in a death spiral. He loses his wife and kids. As he rides this 'train' to his inevitable death, there is no way to slow down.

    Anomaly57on May 20, 2004Link

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  • +1

    General Comment

    I'm as suprised as Mojo, although I only have 15 years into Tull. I had assumed that the song was somehow describing a soldier going to his death. I find this belief structure interpretation much deeper and more true to the lyrics. I knew this site had to be good for something. :)

    onelokikittyon January 04, 2007Link

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  • +1

    General Comment

    Damn! When I first really heard this song I was on 55 mgs. of 2ci, and was tripping balls. Instead of saying no way to slow down, I thought he was saying you know it puts lord down. I thought and the train it wont stop going was saying something about a watchtower boy. In other words taking too much trip and ending up on a watchtower all the time. I figured this song was about a man who tripped too much and already had severe mental disturbances, such as depression and self-defeating personality. I was much more comfortable with that, but I still think it is one of the greatest songs ever made

    kesey42on September 21, 2013Link

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  • +1

    General Comment

    This song is about a man who is experiencing a spiral downward, "headlong into death". The imagery in the song revolves around the "fall", "catching angels as they fall", and the book of Genesis. Through a stream of consciousness reverie, we catch glimpses of the man's personal fall - "crawling down the corridor on his hands and knees", and his woman is in bed with his best friend. As he heads towards his death, - given the times, most likely drug induced - the silence (death) is howling. Locomotive breath may refer to the stench of death and the smell of a drug addict. "The piston scraping" and the spraying steam "on his brow" shows all coming to ruin. His way of living not only destroys himself, but also those with whom he comes in contact or to whom he's close - "children jumping from the train one by one."

    nightHawk47on May 01, 2012Link

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  • +1

    General Comment

    Ian Anderson said it's about overpopulation... so, there ya go.

    dethodethon October 13, 2022Link

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  • General Comment

    This is a great song. The song is telling about a man who is a loser in a death spiral. He loses his wife and kids. As he rides this 'train' to his inevitable death, there is no way to slow down.

    Anomaly57on May 20, 2004Link

    • No RepliesLog in to reply

Jethro Tull - Locomotive Breath Lyrics | SongMeanings (2024)

FAQs

What do the lyrics of Locomotive Breath mean? ›

Written as a comment on population growth, "Locomotive Breath" was meant to replicate the chugging rhythm of a train.

Who wrote the song Locomotive Breath? ›

Image of Who wrote the song Locomotive Breath?
Ian Scott Anderson MBE is a Scottish musician best known for his work as the singer, flautist, acoustic guitarist, primary songwriter, and sole continuous member of the rock band Jethro Tull.
Wikipedia

What is the meaning of Jethro Tull? ›

Our agent, who had studied History at college, came up with the name Jethro Tull (an eighteenth century English agricultural pioneer who invented the seed drill). That was the band name during the week in which London's famous Marquee Club offered us the Thursday night residency. So it stuck.

Who plays piano on Locomotive Breath? ›

In addition to his many distinctive contributions to the group's overall musical sound and stage personality, it is also notable that Evan composed the memorable piano introduction to Locomotive Breath, having achieved this task in studio while some of the other band members were out to lunch.

What is loco motive? ›

locomotive. / (ˌləʊkəˈməʊtɪv) / noun. Also called: locomotive engine a self-propelled engine driven by steam, electricity, or diesel power and used for drawing trains along railway tracks. (as modifier): a locomotive shed; a locomotive works.

Is there a flute in Locomotive Breath? ›

Yet from these disparate pieces emerged a capstone moment for Jethro Tull, this nasty, propulsive grumble — as un-liturgical as it was groovy. Oh, and with a best-ever (not that the list in rock is very long) solo on the flute.

What was Trains first song? ›

Train is the debut album from the American rock band Train, released in 1998. The album was self-produced for $25,000 and three singles from the album were released. The first single released, "Meet Virginia", peaked at No. 20 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Who originally did the song Train Train? ›

"Train, Train" was originally recorded in 1971 by Rick Medlocke's grandfather Shorty Medlocke and his daughter, as Shorty Medlock & Mickey with the Fla. Plow Hands, and was the B-side of their "If I Could Live It Over (I'd Be a Different Guy)" single.

What song is Love Train based on? ›

Background. During an interview with Vibe, Felton Pilate affirmed that he wrote a song called "Baby Please Come Home", which was the original version of "Love's Train", for the To the Max album.

Who was Jethro Tull and why was he important? ›

Jethro Tull was one of the most important inventors of the Industrial Revolution. He designed plowing and seeding contraptions that made farming a not-so strenuous task as before. His inventions revolutionized the agricultural business altogether. Tull was born in Basildon, Berkshire and baptized on March 30 1674.

Is Tull a word in Scrabble? ›

Tull is not a Scrabble word.

What language is Jethro? ›

Jethro is a male given name meaning "overflow". It is derived from the Hebrew word Yithrô.

Did Jean Stapleton play the piano? ›

I played piano. I did not aspire to a concert career, but I accompanied my mother at home. All through high school, my main interest was music.

Who was train original guitarist? ›

Train is a San Francisco pop rock band that formed in July 1994. The band originally consisted of lead vocalist/drummer Patrick Monahan and guitarist/bassist Rob Hotchkiss. Later, former Apostles members Jimmy Stafford and Charlie Colin playing guitar and bass, joined Train.

Does Jethro Tull play the flute? ›

Ian also plays ethnic flutes and whistles together with acoustic guitar and the mandolin family of instruments, providing the acoustic textures which has been an integral part of most of the Tull repertoire.

What is the meaning of the song Soul Sister by train? ›

This song is about a man who finds his soulmate and will never forget her. Train was depressed at the time, but he had fallen in love with the song at first glance. This song discusses the bonds that exist between siblings, either through sibling love or a strong relationship.

What is the meaning of slow train song? ›

What I can understand is the image of the “slow train coming up around the bend” as something profoundly American. It's a sign of power and moving on, an affirmation of “progress” and a liberation of the people who are on the train but really not getting that much out of it.

What is the meaning of the song Aqualung? ›

Jethro Tull vocalist and flute player Ian Anderson wrote the song and called it "a guilt-ridden song of confusion about how you deal with beggars, the homeless." Elaborating in the 40th anniversary reissue of the album, he said, "It's about our reaction, of guilt, distaste, awkwardness and confusion, all these things ...

Where did the song Love train come from? ›

"Love's Train" is a song by American R&B and funk band Con Funk Shun from their tenth studio album, To the Max (1982). The song was written by Michael Cooper and Felton C. Pilate II, and produced by Con Funk Shun. Cooper wrote the song to a music track created by Pilate, which had different lyrics.

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