Music, motion and memories: blues train combines fall scenery with vibrant tunes.

AuthorPounds, Nancy
PositionAlaska This Month

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Soulful, melodic strains of live music accompany the steady rhythmic swaying of the Alaska Railroad Corp. train as it treks along Turnagain Arm. Then the tour winds through autumn alpine meadows enroute to Resurrection Bay.

The Blues Train will journey Saturday, Sept. 22 from Anchorage to Seward, returning the following day. This is the third consecutive year for the event.

The event features the roundtrip train ride with a no-host bar, an overnight hotel stay and an outdoor barbecue meal. The cost is $209, which includes train and hotel fees, a few onboard drink tickets, the Seward barbecue dinner and music. The train leaves Anchorage at 1 p.m. Saturday, arriving in Seward at 5:30 p.m.

A 200-passenger train will have four single-level passenger cars and two bar cars, the Tikki Car and the Blues Van. The band, Rebel Blues, will perform continually. Blues Central, an Anchorage nightclub, will provide appetizers on the train. An onboard Alaska Railroad gift shop will feature Blues Train T-shirts.

Alaska Railroad employees brainstormed ideas for an initial Blues Train. Anchorage promoter Frank Dahl also envisioned a similar event several years ago. He was inspired by floating blues cruises in the Lower 48, but believed Alaska's weather might dictate an indoor train trip. Also, he's found many long-time Alaskans haven't ridden the Alaska rails, and such an event would draw first-time train riders, he thought. Dahl owns Blues Central and also organizes the annual outdoor music festival Blues on the Green. He presented the Blues Train idea to railroad officials, who helped organize the two subsequent successful events.

According to Dahl, Blues Train travelers enjoy the music-filled party amid remarkable scenery with someone else doing the driving.

"Rain or shine, it's just an exciting trip," Dahl said. "We've seen some magnificent wildlife, and the train slows down (for viewing)."

Last year the Blues Train carried 175 people, said Susie Kiger, Alaska Railroad's director of passenger sales and marketing.

"It's a very fun train,"...

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