enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Car song - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Car_song

    A car song is a song with lyrics or musical themes pertaining to car travel. Though the earliest forms appeared in the 1900s, car songs emerged in full during the 1950s as part of rock and roll and car culture, but achieved their peak popularity in the West Coast of the United States during the 1960s with the emergence of hot rod rock as an outgrowth of the surf music scene.

  3. Hot Rod Race - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_Rod_Race

    "Hot Rod Race" is a Western swing song about a fictional automobile race in San Pedro, California, between a Ford and a Mercury. First recorded by Arkie Shibley , and released in November 1950, it broke the ground for a series of hot rod songs recorded for the car culture of the 1950s and 1960s. [ 1 ]

  4. Arkie Shibley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkie_Shibley

    Jesse Lee "Arkie" Shibley (September 21, 1915 – September 7, 1975), [1] was an American country singer who recorded the original version of "Hot Rod Race" in 1950.The record was important because "it introduced automobile racing into popular music and underscored the car's relevance to American culture, particularly youth culture."

  5. Hot Rod Lincoln - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_Rod_Lincoln

    "Hot Rod Lincoln" is a song by American singer-songwriter Charlie Ryan, first released in 1955. It was written as an answer song to Arkie Shibley 's 1950 hit " Hot Rod Race " (US #29). It describes a drive north on US Route 99 (predecessor to Interstate 5 ) from San Pedro, Los Angeles , and over " Grapevine Hill " which soon becomes a hot rod ...

  6. 409 (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/409_(song)

    "409" was inspired by Gary Usher's obsession with hot rods. [4] Its title refers to an automobile fitted with Chevrolet's 409-cubic-inch-displacement "big block" V-8 engine. [ 3 ] The song's narrator concludes with the description "My four speed , dual- quad , positraction four-oh-nine."

  7. Hot rod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_rod

    Hot rod music was largely a product of a number of surf music groups running out of ideas for new surfing songs and simultaneously shifting their lyrical focus toward hot rods. Hot rod music would prove to be the second phase in a progression known as the California Sound, which would mature into more complex topics as the decade passed. Hot ...

  8. Surf music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surf_music

    According to The Ultimate Hot Rod Dictionary, by Jeff Breitenstein: "While cars and, to a lesser degree, hot rods have been a relatively common and enduring theme in American popular music, the term hot rod music is most often associated with the unique 'California sound' music of the early to mid-1960s ... and was defined by its rich vocal ...

  9. The Rip Chords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rip_Chords

    The three unreleased songs were "Wiameah Bay", an instrumental by the Wrecking Crew, and two Rip Chords hot-rod songs ("Sting Ray" and "XKE") which had been in Columbia's vault since 1965. The fourth song was "Red Hot Roadster", originally scheduled for release as a single but instead appearing on the soundtrack of 1965's A Swingin' Summer . [ 41 ]