Stop This Train is the seventh track on John Mayers 2006 album "Continuum". Arguably one of his most emotionally raw songs, Mayer sings of his fears of impending mortality, growing older, and the never stopping march of life, comparing life to being on a train that you cannot stop. In the end, he finally accepts that he'll never be able to stop the train, and has to move on. It's notable that the guitar throughout the song is made to resemble the sound that a train makes, giving the listener the feeling that they too are on the moving train. As of August 2019, th… read more
Stop This Train is the seventh track on John Mayers 2006 album "Continuum". Arguably one of his most emotionally raw songs, Mayer sings of … read more
Stop This Train is the seventh track on John Mayers 2006 album "Continuum". Arguably one of his most emotionally raw songs, Mayer sings of his fears of impending mortality, gro… read more
John Clayton Mayer was born October 16, 1977, in Fairfield, Connecticut, USA, and started playing guitar at 13 after being inspired by a Stevie Ray Vaughan tape his neighbor gave him. In 1998 he moved to Atlanta, Georgia where he refined his skills and gained a following. In 2003, he won the Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for the 2002 single "Your Body Is a Wonderland" from the album Room for Squares. In February 2005, he was awarded the Song of the Year Grammy for his song Daughters, which he composed while in the shower, from the album Heavier Things. I… read more
John Clayton Mayer was born October 16, 1977, in Fairfield, Connecticut, USA, and started playing guitar at 13 after being inspired by a Stevie Ray Vaughan tape his neighbor gave him. In 19… read more
John Clayton Mayer was born October 16, 1977, in Fairfield, Connecticut, USA, and started playing guitar at 13 after being inspired by a Stevie Ray Vaughan tape his neighbor gave him. In 1998 he moved to Atlanta, Georgia where he refin… read more