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The song's playful lyrics include onomatopoeia, with the "motorboat" sound [5] (an extended raspberry) imitating a car's engine. [6] Possibly the best known of Guthrie's many children's songs, [7] it remains a family and sing-along standard into the 21st century. [6] [7] "Riding in My Car" is included in the popular sing-along songbook Rise Up ...
The song is mentioned in a 2014 television advertisement for Twix Bites. The song was parodied by comedian and actor Jason Sudeikis as 1980s fake singer Ocean Billy in the "Worst of Soul Train" sketch on Saturday Night Live with the title "Get Out of My Car, Get into My Trunk". [48]
Dead Man's Curve (song) The Distance (Cake song) Don't Worry Baby; Drag City (song) Dragula (song) Drive (Client song) Drive (For Daddy Gene) Drive (The Cars song) Drive By (song) Drive My Car (song) Driving Home for Christmas; Driving in My Car
"Driving in My Car" is a song by Madness. It was released as a stand-alone single on 24 July 1982 and spent eight weeks on the UK Singles Chart, peaking at number four. It reached number 20 on the Australian Singles Chart. The B-side to the single was "Animal Farm", a mostly instrumental reworking of the song "Tomorrow's Dream" from the album 7.
Real Wheels, also known as There Goes A..., Live Action Video for Kids, and Dream Big, is a live-action series of children's educational videos for ages 3-8 that features a specified vehicle and the different jobs it has along with real people who work the job which requires the vehicle.
Song based on a real-life drunk driving crash [9] and the impact of a subsequent organ donation. "Lights on the Hill" Slim Dusty: 1973: The song describes a trucker driving at night with a heavy load being blinded by lights on the hill, hitting a pole, falling of the edge of a road and realising his impending death. "Limousine" Brand New: 2005
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.
A scene from the music video of "JCB", showing the boy and his father riding in a digger, Optimus Prime, and a dinosaur eating two stick figures. The song's animated music video was directed and animated by Laith Bahrani of MonkeeHub, with post-production handled by H3O Media and Adam "Cactus" B.