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Levi Taylor Moore

Hailing from the United States, Ride the Rails, the blistering debut single from Ken Woods and The Old Blue Gang, is a masterclass in storytelling through song. Drawing on deep wells of American musical tradition—from Bakersfield country to psychobilly and roots rock—the track rides forward with purpose, grit, and a profound sense of historical weight. Woods, better known in some circles as conductor and composer Kenneth Woods, brings his multifaceted musical background to bear with stunning effect. A guitarist of exceptional skill and fire, he channels his passion for American roots music into something both technically electrifying and emotionally potent. His band, The Old Blue Gang, shares his instincts for improvisation and sonic texture, resulting in a sound that’s urgent, lived-in, and fiercely alive.
At the heart of Ride the Rails is a harrowing true story: the violent, racially motivated expulsion of La Grande, Oregon’s Chinese community in 1893. The song captures this dark chapter of history not with somber restraint, but with the chaotic energy of a town in turmoil. A relentless train-beat rhythm powers the track forward like a locomotive at full throttle, while layers of ticktack guitars and a surging bass riff evoke the dust, tension, and disorder of the scene around the old La Grande station.
Woods’ guitar work is particularly striking—dozens of layered parts conjure everything from swirling prairie winds to the panic of forced flight. His solos, blistering and raw, serve as emotional apexes that tear through the track with searing intensity. They’re not just displays of technical prowess; they’re full-body screams of anger, sorrow, and resistance.


