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Come Along and Ride This Train
Disc 1
01. Come Along and Ride This Train
02. Loading Coal
03. Slow Rider
04. The Shifting Whispering Sands
05. Lumberjack
06. Dorraine of Ponchartrain
07. Going to Memphis
08. When Papa Played the Dobro
09. Boss Jack
10. Old Doc Brown
11. The Legend of John Henry's Hammer
12. Tell Him I'm Gone
13. Another Man Done Gone
14. Casey Jones
15. Nine Pound Hammer
16. Chain Gang
17. Busted
18. Waiting for a Train
19. Roughneck
20. Pick a Bale of Cotton
21. Cotton Pickin' Hands
Disc 2
01. Hiawatha's Vision
02. The Road To Kaintuck
03. Hammer and Nails
04. The Shifting Whispering Sands, Part 1
05. The Ballad of Boot Hill
06. I Ride an Old Paint
07. Hardin Wouldn't Run
08. Mr. Garfield
09. The Streets of Laredo
10. Johnny Reb
11. A Letter From Home
12. Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie
13. Mean as Hell
14. Sam Hall
15. 25 Minutes to Go
16. The Blizzard
17. Sweet Betsy From Pike
18. Green Grow the Lilacs
19. Rodeo Hand
20. Stampede
21. The Shifting Whispering Sands, Part 2
22. Remember the Alamo
23. Reflections
Disc 3
01. Intro - Big Foot
02. As Long as the Grass Shall Grow
03. Apache Tears
04. Custer
05. The Talking Leaves
06. The Ballad of Ira Hayes
07. Drums
08. White Girl
09. Old Apache Squaw
10. The Vanishing Race
11. Open Dialogue
12. Paul Revere
13. Begin West Movement
14. The Road to Kaintuck
15. To the Shining Mountains
16. The Battle of New Orleans
17. Southwestward
18. Remember the Alamo
19. Opening the West
20. Lorena
21. The Gettysburg Address
22. The West
23. Big Foot
24. Like a Young Colt
25. Mr. Garfield
26. A Proud Land
27. The Big Battle
28. On Wheels and Wings
29. Come Take a Trip on My Airship
30. Reaching for the Stars
31. These Are My People
Disc 4
01. From Sea to Shining Sea
02. The Whirl and the Suck
03. Call Daddy From the Mines
04. Frozen Four Hundred Pound Fair to Middlin' Cotton Picker
05. The Walls of a Prison
06. The Masterpiece
07. You and Tennessee
08. She Came From the Mountains
09. Another Song to Sing
10. The Flint Arrowhead
11. Cisco Clifton's Fillin' Station
12. Shrimpin' Sailin'
13. From Sea to Shining Sea
14. Hit the Road and Go
15. Dialogue #1
16. If It Wasn't for the Wabash River
17. Dialogue #2
18. Lady
19. Dialogue #3
20. After the Ball
21. Dialogue #4
22. No Earthly Good
23. Dialogue #5
24. A Wednesday Car
25. Dialogue #6
26. My Cowboys Last Ride
27. Dialogue #7
28. Calilou
29. Dialogue #8
30. Come Along and Ride This Train
There was an old stone-cutter
Who lived in a cabin on the mountain side
And the old stone-cutter knew it won't be long before he died
And all around his cabin were statues the man had made
Statues that the buyers said were all of a mediocre grade

With his calloused hands he lit a lamp
And laid down his head on his handmade table
And he softly whispered
"Lord I'm old and shaky and I'm hardly able
But give me strenght and wisdom
And give me a week at least
And I'll climb up to the top of this mountain
And chisel out a masterpiece"

The very next morning he felt new strenght
And he took his brand new hammer and the sharpest chisel
He began to climb the mountain
His old feet slipping in the freezing dizzle

When he finally reached the top
He shouted to a world that didn't hear
"I'll carve my masterpiece out of this marble boulder here"
So the hammer beat the chisel
And he hammered 'til an image grew
Then he stopped to look it over
To appraise his work when he was through

It was a boy carrying a crippled boy
And the old man said, "It isn't my masterpiece
I'll call it charity and then a masterpiece of mine will be"
So the hammer beat the chisel
'Til another image in a marbel grew
Then the wind began to blowing
And he sat and rested when he was through

It was the image of a mother holding her child
He said, "This is love as the world would know
But it isn't my masterpiece"
And he began again as it began to snow

The hammer beat the chisel
As the snow fell harder and the wind grew and grew
He fell to his knees holding a stone
And he threw down his hammer and his chisel too

He lay frozen face down in the snow
But one hand was held for the world to see
Cut in the marble was his masterpice
Three neatly carved letters: G O D