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The song was covered in the 1960s by the British beat group Downliners Sect. In 2019 a poor quality tape of the Beatles emerged purportedly recorded in November 1959 containing a fragment of them playing "Brand New Cadillac" on Jim McCartney's gramophone. The Hergs, a rock band from Adelaide, Australia, released a version entitled "Cadillac" in ...
The song's title comes from Cadillac Ranch in Amarillo, Texas. [5] [8] Cadillac Ranch is a sculpture showing ten Cadillac automobiles with their hoods buried in the ground. [5] Springsteen used Cadillac Ranch as a metaphor for his theme; that these once elite cars are now expendable. [8]
"Pink Cadillac" is a song by Bruce Springsteen released as the non-album B-side of "Dancing in the Dark" in 1984. The song received much airplay worldwide and appeared on the Billboard Top Tracks chart for 14 weeks, peaking at No. 27. [ 1 ]
"Geronimo's Cadillac" is the debut single by American country folk singer-songwriter Michael Martin Murphey, then billed as Michael Murphey. It was the title cut of his 1972 debut album which was an A&M Records release.
The song was covered by Chicago rock band Tub Ring for the 2001 Johnny Cash tribute album, Cash from Chaos. The psychobilly Cadillac from the "One Piece at a Time" video is at the Storytellers museum in Bon Aqua, Tennessee. This is a different car from the one made by Bruce Fitzpatrick.
"Geronimo's Cadillac" is a song by German pop duo Modern Talking from their fourth studio album, In the Middle of Nowhere (1986). It was released as the album's lead single on 6 October 1986 in Germany and other European territories.
The song was featured on the 2001 episode "Employee of the Month" of the show The Sopranos. The song was featured on the 2007 episode "Cadillac" of the satellite radio show Theme Time Radio Hour. The song's opening lyrics were referenced in the song "Was a Sunny Day" by Paul Simon, on his 1973 album, "There Goes Rhymin' Simon.
"Daddy Never Was the Cadillac Kind" is a song written by Dave Gibson and Bernie Nelson, and recorded by American country music band Confederate Railroad. It was released in 1994 as the lead-off single from their album Notorious. It peaked at number 9 the United States, [1] and number 7 in Canada. It is their last top ten in the United States.