Dave posted this on TurnTable Talk on November 1, 2025. The subject was: to either pick a song about a spooky or scary person or event, or else just highlight a song that sounds that way to them..
I never thought I would ever post a trucker song, but here I am, posting a trucker song! It was one of the first singles I remember playing as a child. When I was a kid, this story scared me to death. There’s something about a good ghost story that never leaves you, especially when it’s told in a Southern drawl through the crackle of a CB radio. This Red Sovine song is one of those perfect country songs that is Americana, part Twilight Zone, and part 1960s country storytelling at its finest.
An eerie monologue about a hitchhiker picked up by a kind-hearted trucker named Big Joe. The kid hops out at a truck stop, orders a cup of coffee, and the waitress gives him the shocker: Big Joe died ten years ago, crashing his rig to save a school bus full of children. The twist lands like a punchline from beyond the grave. “Son, you just met Big Joe and the Phantom 309.” 4-year-old Max got goosebumps every time.
How this record was in my house when I was 4 is a mystery to me. My dad had Merle Haggard music, and my mom had Elvis albums, and my sister would never have this. Not one of them was into trucking songs…but there it was all the same. It was released in 1967… The song peaked at #9 on the Country Charts.
It inspired covers by artists from Tom Waits to the punkabilly of Mojo Nixon. Even Pee-wee’s Big Adventure tipped a hat to it when Pee-wee hitched a ride with “Large Marge.” That alone belongs in the Twilight Zone.
Phantom 309
I was out on the West Coast, tryin’ to make abuckAnd things didn’t work out, I was down on my luckGot tired a-roamin’ and bummin’ aroundSo I started thumbin’ back East, toward my home town.
Made a lot of miles, the first two daysAnd I figured I’d be home in week, if my luck held out this wayBut, the third night I got stranded, way out of townAt a cold, lonely crossroads, rain was pourin’ down.
I was hungry and freezin’, done caught a chillWhen the lights of a big semi topped the hill Lord, I sure was glad to hear them air brakes come onAnd I climbed in that cab, where I knew it’d be warm.
At the wheel sit a big man, he weighed about two-tenHe stuck out his hand and said with a grin“Big Joe’s the name”, I told him mineAnd he said: “The name of my rig is Phantom 309.”
I asked him why he called his rig such a nameHe said: “Son, this old Mack can put ’em all to shameThere ain’t a driver, or a rig, a-runnin’ any lineAin’t seen nothin’ but taillights from Phantom 309.”
Well, we rode and talked the better part of the nightWhen the lights of a truck stop came in sightHe said: “I’m sorry son, this is as far as you go‘Cause, I gotta make a turn, just on up the road.”
Well, he tossed me a dime as he pulled her in lowAnd said: “Have yourself a cup on old Big Joe.”When Joe and his rig roared out in the nightIn nothin’ flat, he was clean out of sight.
Well, I went inside and ordered me a cupTold the waiter Big Joe was settin’ me upAw!, you coulda heard a pin drop, it got deathly quietAnd the waiter’s face turned kinda white.
Well, did I say something wrong? I said with a halfway grinHe said: “Naw, this happens every now and thenEver’ driver in here knows Big JoeBut son, let me tell you what happened about ten years ago.
At the crossroads tonight, where you flagged him downThere was a bus load of kids, comin’ from townAnd they were right in the middle, when Big Joe topped the hillIt could have been slaughter, but he turned his wheel.
Well, Joe lost control, went into a skid And gave his life to save that bunch-a kidsAnd there at that crossroads, was the end of the lineFor Big Joe and Phantom 309
But, every now and then, some hiker’ll come byAnd like you, Big Joe’ll give ’em a rideHere, have another cup and forget about the dimeKeep it as a souvenir, from Big Joe and Phantom 309!”

A trucker song—what!?! It does sound like an episode of Twilight Zone!
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LOL…it does! In fact it would have made a great one. Good catch Dana as always!
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Can’t you just picture Rod Serling standing next to the highway, diner in the background, cigarette in hand…
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Yes I can…I’m thinking of the “Hiway Cafe” they had in “Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?” …it would have been a good one.
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Yes, I remember that one!
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Classic! A very cool and well written piece! 👍
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Thanks dude! Not my usual post but it’s fun to shake things up.
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Good song, Max. I heard it a lot while growing up since my parents listened to the local country radio stations every day. BTW, Large Marge was a great character in that movie. Also BTW, I mention Tom Waits in the story I posted today.
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Yea I heard it as well and it scared me to death…until I realized…Hey…Joe is a good guy/ghost. Large Marge…great name.
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Max, this song is certainly creepy enough, but that homage scene with Large Marge in Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure haunts me to this very day.😱
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I remember that! Hey Bruce…It’s a song I grew up on…not my usual kind of post but it’s fun.
I’ve had the flu for the past week or so…but I’m feeling better and I should be by your site this weekend…if our power is on…we could be getting a half inch of ice and 8 inches of snow…this weekend.
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It is more like a story than a song, but very enjoyable.
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Yea…not exactly what I usually post but I’m glad you like the story.
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This is really a gem and surprisingly it’s not that well known. Max you pulled music off the shelf as a child the way most of us might have taken a cookie. I could certainly see how this would stick with you!!
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Thanks Randy…this song scared me so much until I realized…wait…Joe is a good guy! How this record got into our house….I don’t know. Another novelty type song that stuck with me was Jim Stafford Wildwood Weed….”take a trip and never leave the farm.”
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