Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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
Ward remarked. "I know why that car crashed and I didn't find it amusing anymore. I went through hell behind narcotic and alcohol addiction, and so things [like] 'I crashed my car, man', I take these things real serious now. It's not fun for me at all… I'm not saying that the song was glamorized, but I prefer not to glamorize it." [4]
"Last car to pass, here I go" — complete with musical imitations of cars zooming by. 'Ol' 55' (Tom Waits) More driving at dawn, this time leaving a lover's house.
The song's lyrics tell a story set in a future in which many classes of vehicles have been banned by a "Motor Law." The narrator's uncle has kept one of these now-illegal vehicles (the titular red Barchetta sports car) in pristine condition for roughly 50 years and is hiding it at his secret country home, which had been a farm before the Motor Law was enacted.
Cars and music jam together often, but it's not just Benzes, Cadillacs, and Bentleys getting name-dropped in tunes -- the all-electric Tesla is getting mentioned more and more by rappers, country ...
The song tells the story of a new police officer who reports on a fatal car crash involving a cab. It is revealed in the final line that one of the passengers was his sister, and he was the one who told her to “catch a cab”. "Sunday Driving" Jerry Lewis: 1951: Jerry crashes his car at the end of the song and says next time he'll take the ...
"Heartbeat City" is a song by American rock band the Cars from their fifth studio album of the same name (1984). It was released in September 1985 as the album's sixth and final single. It was released in September 1985 as the album's sixth and final single.
The following is a list of songs about cities. It is not exhaustive. Cities are a major topic for popular songs. [1] [2] Music journalist Nick Coleman said that apart from love, "pop is better on cities than anything else." [1] Popular music often treats cities positively, though sometimes they are portrayed as places of danger and temptation.