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Our crack team of automotive experts locates the best car commercial music from VW, Mazda, Oldsmobile, Buick, and Plymouth ads ranging from the 1960s to the 2000s.
"Sports Car" received acclaim from music critics. George Griffiths of the Official Charts Company thought that "Sports Car" was a "stuttering, hip-hop influenced pop tune", characterized by "breathy melodies" as well as a prominent and addictive "spoken-word" chorus. Griffiths compared the song to tracks from In the Zone (2003) by Britney ...
The song combines country and hip-hop elements, [1] opening with acoustic guitar strums and audio samples of people talking in a bar. Dustin Lynch recounts a romantic encounter in the opening verse and sings in the melody of "Drift Away" during the chorus, [2] in which he describes his ideal environment to spend time with a "country girl": a six-pack, some Brooks & Dunn and a Chevrolet.
[7] [13] [25] The commercial has a documentary-like feel; it wasn't seen as visually groundbreaking but was described as "beautiful". [58] and "more subtle than the usual car ad." [10] It was an unusual strategy for a marketer to tout all its brands in one commercial and a new branding approach for an automaker. [3]
A scene from Chevy's new holiday commercial. (Chevrolet via YouTube) (Chevrolet via YouTube) Get your tissues out: Chevy’s new Christmas commercial is here, and it might make you weep.
The Epic Split was the sixth video in a series of commercials by Volvo Trucks called "Live Tests". Volvo Trucks has appointed the advertising agency before the launch of a major new series of trucks. Other commercials include "Hamster", "The Chase" and "The Hook". [7]
By the next morning, the video had received one million views; the number reached 8 million before the commercial aired on TV. [9] Considered by everyone connected with the ad to be the best version but "too long to play during the game", [ 2 ] the online version lasted sixty seconds, compared to thirty in the broadcast version, and the long ...
"Born of Fire", also known as "Imported from Detroit", [3] is the television commercial that introduced the Chrysler 200 to the public. The commercial ran for the first time during Super Bowl XLV, and, at two minutes long, it is one of the longest commercials ever shown during a Super Bowl.