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The Nashville Ramblers Never Broke Up

Nashville Ramblers roll with garage-rock classic "Trains."
Nashville Ramblers roll with garage-rock classic "Trains."

Steven Van Zandt, guitarist for the E Street Band, has described the Nashville Ramblers’ song “The Trains” as “one of the most gorgeous instances of romantic yearning disguised as a pop song.” The local group’s tune is considered a garage-rock classic.

“In 1986, ‘Trains’ and one other Ramblers song appeared on an obscure U.K.-only compilation, but few people noticed,” says Mike Stax, whose Ugly Things Records is releasing the tune on vinyl this month. “Many discovered the song for the first time in 2005, when it was included on Rhino’s Children of Nuggets box set, but it’s never had a proper release before. The [Ugly Things] release is an attempt to rectify that.”

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Part of the song’s appeal stems from the ’60s-style recording. “Everyone that hears it seems to fall in love with it,” says Stax. “It’s that good.”

The Nashville Ramblers — Carl Rusk (vocals/guitar), Tom Ward (bass/vocals), and Ron Silva (drums/vocals) — are known from local garage bands such as the Crawdaddys, the Gravedigger Five, and Mystery Machine.

“I think there are many people outside of San Diego that know and love [the Ramblers],” says Rusk, who moved to New York City in 1986. “We played a festival in the south of Spain a few years ago, and there were about a thousand people there singing along. It was surprising. And disturbing, actually.”

The trio performs as the Nashville Ramblers once or twice a year. Their last San Diego gig was this past February at the Tower Bar. They will regroup this month for a January 21 release party at the Til-Two Club on El Cajon Boulevard. The band is currently compiling the Nashville Ramblers Story CD, which Rusk says “will include pretty much every recording that exists so far.”

“The thing about the Ramblers is that it is very much a living thing,” says Rusk. “We never broke up.”

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Nashville Ramblers roll with garage-rock classic "Trains."
Nashville Ramblers roll with garage-rock classic "Trains."

Steven Van Zandt, guitarist for the E Street Band, has described the Nashville Ramblers’ song “The Trains” as “one of the most gorgeous instances of romantic yearning disguised as a pop song.” The local group’s tune is considered a garage-rock classic.

“In 1986, ‘Trains’ and one other Ramblers song appeared on an obscure U.K.-only compilation, but few people noticed,” says Mike Stax, whose Ugly Things Records is releasing the tune on vinyl this month. “Many discovered the song for the first time in 2005, when it was included on Rhino’s Children of Nuggets box set, but it’s never had a proper release before. The [Ugly Things] release is an attempt to rectify that.”

Sponsored
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Part of the song’s appeal stems from the ’60s-style recording. “Everyone that hears it seems to fall in love with it,” says Stax. “It’s that good.”

The Nashville Ramblers — Carl Rusk (vocals/guitar), Tom Ward (bass/vocals), and Ron Silva (drums/vocals) — are known from local garage bands such as the Crawdaddys, the Gravedigger Five, and Mystery Machine.

“I think there are many people outside of San Diego that know and love [the Ramblers],” says Rusk, who moved to New York City in 1986. “We played a festival in the south of Spain a few years ago, and there were about a thousand people there singing along. It was surprising. And disturbing, actually.”

The trio performs as the Nashville Ramblers once or twice a year. Their last San Diego gig was this past February at the Tower Bar. They will regroup this month for a January 21 release party at the Til-Two Club on El Cajon Boulevard. The band is currently compiling the Nashville Ramblers Story CD, which Rusk says “will include pretty much every recording that exists so far.”

“The thing about the Ramblers is that it is very much a living thing,” says Rusk. “We never broke up.”

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