7 songs about car crashes

James Dean was commemorated by The Beach Boys in their song “A Young Man Is Gone.” Hulton Archive/Stringer/Getty Images

We dedicated the May/June 2023 issue of Hagerty Drivers Club magazine to the deep connections between music and cars, including several fun lists featuring your favorite car songs. Come back often or click the Music & Cars tag to stay up to date on these stories as they roll out online. You can also jam with our custom Music & Cars playlist on Spotify, available here.

Hard-partying musicians are certainly well represented among the millions who’ve died in car crashes, but perhaps none of the songs written about such accidents has been as eerily prescient as Jan & Dean’s “Dead Man’s Curve.” A 1963 hit about a street drag race gone wrong, it echoed loudly in memory when, in 1966, band member Jan Berry drove his Corvette into the back of a parked truck not far from the dangerous corner whose legend he and partner Dean Torrence had helped to cement. Berry and the band’s career were never the same.

The pride of El Sobrante, California, Primus scored its first hit in 1991 with “Jerry Was a Race Car Driver.” Penned by the punk-funk band’s virtuoso bass-playing leader, Les Claypool, it concerns an “I’ll show them” type of guy who’s in over his head and meets his end driving an Oldsmobile 4-4-2 too fast after many too many beers.

Here are seven more hits about fender-benders—and worse.

Jan & Dean
“DEAD MAN’S CURVE”

Well, the last thing I remember, Doc, I started to swerveAnd then I saw the Jag slide into the curveI know I’ll never forget that horrible sightI guess I found out for myself that everyone was rightWon’t come back from Dead Man’s Curve

Sounds a lot like the automotive equivalent of “you’ll shoot your eye out!”

 

Ray Peterson
“TELL LAURA I LOVE HER”

He drove his car to the racing groundsHe was the youngest driver thereAnd the crowed roared as they started the race‘Round the track they drove at a deadly paceNo one knows what happened that dayHow his car overturned in flamesBut as they pulled him from the twisted wreckWith his dying breath, they heard him say . . .

” . . . I probably should have eased into this whole racing thing. Maybe some SCCA Solo, or just a high-performance driving experience to see if racing was right for me.”

 

Dave Edmunds
“CRAWLING FROM THE WRECKAGE”(Graham Parker cover)

Crawling from the wreckage, crawling from the wreckageBits of me are scattered in the trees and on the hedgesCrawling from the wreckage, crawling from the wreckageInto a brand new car

How’s about you crawl into that ambulance first? Then we can talk about a new car.

 

David Bowie
“ALWAYS CRASHING IN THE SAME CAR”

Every chance,Every chance that I takeI take it on the roadThose kilometers and the red lightsI was always looking left and rightOh, but I’m always crashingIn the same car

Maybe less looking left and right, and more eyes forward? Try that for a while.

 

Mark Dinning
“TEEN ANGEL”

Teen angel, teen angel, teen angel, oohThat fateful night the car was stalled upon the railroad trackI pulled you out and we were safe, but you went running back

PSA: Don’t tug on Superman’s cape. Don’t spit into the wind. Don’t mess with the Lone Ranger’s mask. And never, ever, crawl back into a car when a train is barreling down on it.

 

The Beach Boys
“A YOUNG MAN IS GONE” (about James Dean)

For this daring young starMet his death while in his carNo one knows the reason why

Obviously, The Beach Boys don’t read Wikipedia, because it says exactly why right there.

 

They Might Be Giants
“MINK CAR”

I got hit by a mink car
Hit by a mink car
Driven by a guitar
And the silver chauffeur says
That it’s all in your head

Or . . . it might be in that toad you just licked.

 

***

 

This article first appeared in Hagerty Drivers Club magazine. Click here to subscribe and join the club.

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Comments

    Roy Acuff, “Wreck on The Highway.”
    I saw whiskey and blood run together, but I didn’t hear nobody pray. Don’t write them like that anymore.

    The Beatles’ “A Day In The Life”. (“He blew his mind out in a car, he didn’t notice that the lights had changed”) I know it’s a stretch.

    Not really a stretch. It’s about the heir to the Guiness fortune, Tara Browne, crashing his Lotus Elan.

    So is Jimi Hendrix’s “….the traffics lights they turn blue tomorrow…” (The Wind Cries Mary), but a lovely line. But that’s alright, Steve. The Beatles and Hendrix were among those acts “too hip for the room.”
    Thanks, Herb. That’s right. ‘Twas a big story in England.

    That Smell – Lynyrd Skynyrd
    “Whiskey bottles, and brand new cars,
    Oak tree you’re in my way.”

    I don’t think the Beach Boys would have had access to Wikipedia back then! And as for the circumstamces surrounding the crash, we may know what happened but not why the events took place in the way they did.

    Growing up in So Cal during the sixties, I was a fan of the Beach Boys and Jan and Dean, along with the new 63 Corvette. After seeing graphic photos of the accident, It’s amazing Jan Berry survived, although sadly he was never the same.

    I’ve been to many Jan and Dean concerts after the accident. They put on a very good show. Sad, but inspiring the way Jan kept trying and Dean helped him and looked after him. Read “When We Get to Surf City” by Bob Greene.

    “Crawling from the Wreckage” is a great song, but it’s more about DWI than it’s about cars…

    “Last Kiss”….. J. Frank Wilson
    And, from John Hyatt: “….. we rolled that Camaro like a cowboy cigarette, out on the highway in a puddle of beer…”

    The Beach Boys used the tune and most of the arrangement of an old Hi-Lo’s chart of “Their Hearts Were Full of Spring” for the “Young Man Is Gone” cut. Nothing wrong with that, but I recalled the barbershop original after hearing the first line.

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