| Riding the Midnight Train | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1986 | |||
| Recorded | Studio 19, Nashville, TN | |||
| Genre | Folk, country blues, bluegrass | |||
| Length | 39:07 | |||
| Label | Sugar Hill | |||
| Producer | Barry Poss | |||
| Doc Watson chronology | ||||
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Riding the Midnight Train is the title of a recording by American folk music artists Doc Watson and Merle Watson, released in 1986. It is the last album Merle Watson recorded before he was killed in a tractor accident.
At the Grammy Awards of 1987, Riding the Midnight Train won the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Folk Album.
Guests include Béla Fleck, Sam Bush and Mark O'Connor.
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating | 
| Allmusic | |
Track listing
- "I'm Going Back to the Old Home" (Carter Stanley) – 2:11
 - "Greenville Trestle High" (James Jett) – 3:25
 - "Highway of Sorrow" (Bill Monroe, Pete Pyle) – 2:48
 - "Fill My Way With Love" – 2:30
 - "We'll Meet Again Sweetheart" (Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs) – 2:48
 - "Riding That Midnight Train" (Carter Stanley) – 2:04
 - "Stone's Rag" (Traditional) – 3:20
 - "Ramshackle Shack" (Wade Mainer) – 3:18
 - "Midnight on the Stormy Deep" (Traditional) – 4:31
 - "Baby Blue Eyes" (Jim Eanes) – 3:39
 - "What Does the Deep Sea Say?" (Wade Mainer) – 3:31
 - "Let the Church Roll On" (A. P. Carter) – 2:55
 - "Sweet Heaven When I Die" (Claude Grant) – 2:07
 
Track 7 "Stone's Rag" omitted from Sugar Hill cassette tape SH-C-3752.
Personnel
- Doc Watson – guitar, vocals
 - Merle Watson – guitar, banjo
 - T. Michael Coleman – bass, harmony vocals
 - Sam Bush – mandolin
 - Béla Fleck – banjo
 - Mark O'Connor – fiddle
 - Alan O'Bryant – guitar, harmony vocals
 
Production notes
- Produced by Barry Poss
 - Engineered and remixed by Richard Adler
 - Photography by Will & Deni McIntyre
 - Remixing by Barry Poss, Richard Adler, T. Michael Coleman
 - Artwork by Raymond Simone
 
References
- ↑ Humphrey, Mark A. "Riding the Midnight Train > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved July 2, 2011.
 
External links
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