Hit the Road: 14 songs about driving

Certified hit “Born to Be Wild” by Steppenwolf got screen time in the film Easy Rider. Silver Screen Collection/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.

Countless songs address the freedom of driving. Among thousands of candidates, we’ll start by nominating two seemingly disparate numbers, both of which illustrate a great through line of American song—the liberating spirit of adventure and exploration that hitting the highway represented. “See the U.S.A. In Your Chevrolet” was made famous by Dinah Shore in 1950, though the jingle—written by Leo Corday and Leon Carr—was originally sung for the TV show Inside U.S.A. with Chevrolet by Peter Lind Hayes and Mary Healy. Later covered by Pat Boone and even the cast of Glee, after decades of service as a recurring Chevrolet jingle, its luster has by now largely worn off. Conversely, the status of the once-obscure garage rock classic “Roadrunner”—by Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers—continues its ascent to musical standard-dom, its popularity growing like the sprawling suburbia that its narrator simultaneously celebrates and seeks to escape.

And, of course, no discussion of the freedom that cars offer would be complete without “Born to Be Wild,” made famous by Steppenwolf and its appearance in the 1969 film Easy Rider, which is about two meaning-seeking, drug-dealing Californian rebels on an impromptu trip across the American Southwest and South on old Harley choppers. Amusingly, this all-American standard was written by a Canadian sessions musician, Mars Bonfire (real name Dennis Eugene McCrohan). He was broke and out of work and planted in Los Angeles when he penned the timeless anthem, a ditty that turned out—in the way these things do—to be just as useful for breathless corporate marketers as for nonconformists quitting their jobs and hitting the road.

Here are 14 more songs that celebrate the freedom of driving…

 

Bruce Springsteen
“THUNDER ROAD”

There were ghosts in the eyes of all the boys you sent away
They haunt this dusty beach road
In the skeleton frames of burned out Chevrolets

Somewhere in Maine, Stephen King is listening.

 

M.I.A.
“BAD GIRLS”

Cover me, cause I’m changing lanes

That’s not the purpose of driver aids and you know it, M.I.A! They’re meant to complement proper use of mirrors, not replace them completely.

 

Sonic Youth
“SHOOT”

Can I have the car keys? I wanna go for a ride
Can I have the car please? I’m going out for a while
Can I have the car now? I wanna drive all around
Can I have the car, dear? I’m gonna leave this town

This feels like the lyrical equivalent of Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom?

 

Iggy Pop
“THE PASSENGER”

He sees the sight of hollow sky
He sees the stars come out tonight
He sees the city’s ripped backsides
He sees the winding ocean drive
And everything was made for you and me
All of it was made for you and me
‘Cause it just belongs to you and me
So let’s take a ride and see what’s mine

Someone sure is selfish.

 

The Allman Brothers Band
“RAMBLIN’ MAN”

Leaving out of Nashville, Tennessee
They’re always having a good time down on the bayou, Lord
And Delta women think the world of me

Yes, but the JetBlue women can’t stand you.

 

Wilco
“PASSENGER SIDE”

Hey, wake up, your eyes weren’t open wide
For the last couple of miles you’ve been swerving from side to side
You’re gonna make me spill my beer
If you don’t learn how to steer

Team Wilco lasted exactly one stage before the FIA banned them from ever competing in the WRC again.

 

Foghat
“SLOW RIDE”

Slow ride
Take it easy
Slow ride
Take it easy
Slow ride
Take it easy
Slow ride
Take it easy
Slow ride
Take it easy

I hear you, man. Now tell it to all the bozos over on r/idiotsincars.

Pearl Harbor and the Explosions
“DRIVIN’”

(Drivin’)
Back on the streets when it feels so right
(Drivin’) Drivin’
(Drivin’)
It’s just tonight, I feel the only cure is drivin’
(Drivin’) Drivin’
(Drivin’)
I’ve got no time to think of how you feel
(Drivin’) Drivin’
(Drivin’)
Behind the wheel, so now I gotta drive it, drive it
(Drivin’) Drivin’

Contrary to popular belief, this is not a song about golf.

The Modern Lovers
“ROADRUNNER”

With the radio on
I’m in love with Massachusetts

With the radio off, however, I prefer South Dakota.

The Cars
“DRIVE”

Who’s gonna hold you down when you shake?
Who’s gonna come around when you break?

Such a subtle nod to the Plymouth K-car.

Chuck Berry
“NO PARTICULAR PLACE TO GO”

Ridin’ along in my calaboose
Still tryin’ to get her belt aloose
All the way home I held a grudge
But the safety belt it wouldn’t budge
Cruisin’ and playin’ the radio
With no particular place to go

And that, friends, is why we heed recall notices.

War
“LOW RIDER”

All my friends know the low rider

Yeah, but so does Karen from the neighborhood watch, and you just know she’s got 911 on speed dial.

Gary Numan
“CARS”

Here in my car
I feel safest of all
I can lock all my doors
It’s the only way to live
In cars

Is it, though?

The Breeders
“DRIVIN’ ON 9” (Ed’s Redeeming Qualities cover)

Drivin’ on 9
Drivin’ on 9
Drivin’ on 9

Also not a song about golf!

 

***

 

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

Check out the Hagerty Media homepage so you don’t miss a single story, or better yet, bookmark it. To get our best stories delivered right to your inbox, subscribe to our newsletters.

 

Click below for more about
Read next Up next: Why this year’s rain-soaked Le Mans felt different
Your daily pit stop for automotive news.

Sign up to receive our Daily Driver newsletter

Subject to Hagerty's Privacy Policy and Terms of Conditions

Thanks for signing up.

Comments

    Another good article here. I was reminded of a couple I had forgotten, and there were a few that I had not heard of. Have to say I was surprised that Golden Earring’s “Radar Love” was not here. Same goes for the Red Rocker’s “I can’t drive 55”. As always – I enjoyed the read. Also – I’m pretty sure Foghat was NOT talking about driving with “Slow Ride” – at least not with a car… Read or listen to the words again if you don’t know what I mean.

    Lots of recent articles about music, sings etc. Love it! You need to give a shout out to the band “Drivin n Cryin”. Great band, been around over 30 yrs, great name, lots of songs about driving. ie. “Broken Hearts and Auto Parts”, Ninety miles an hour in 30 mile zone, acceleration”, Detroit City”, “Hot Wheels”, etc.

    My fave car/driving song is absolutely Rush’s Red Barchetta! So much movement and adrenaline rush in this song!

    Born to be wild by steppenwolf
    Radar Love by Golden earring
    Little Red Corvette by Prince
    Red barchetta by Rush
    Drive my car by the Beatles
    I can’t drive 55 by Sammy Hagar

    The opening to their live show. Gets the crowd really going as it does to me when I drive and hear it!

    John Hiatt, “Detroit Made”, “Thunderbird”, “Drive South”, Haulin'”, Tenessee Plates” and “Cherry Red”. All Classics but largely unknown to the Top 40 crowd.

    Sniff and The Tears, “Driver’s Seat” Best One Hit Wonder Ever

    I can’t believe no one has mentioned Autobahn by Kraftwerke – the ultimate 100+ mph cruising music.

    Fan-Damn-Tastik! Just keeps building momentum like a gradual acceleration. Excellent with a good sound system and separation, hearing the music transfer from one side to the other as the car zooms through your head.

    A little off topic but try the ultimate truck driver song “Asphalt Outlaw Hero” by Lonnie Mack also released by Don Nix.

    Forget about your Hemis and your GTO’s
    I gotta mean machine, man she really goes

    Take it for a drive, it’s really a treat
    You gotta strap yourself into a bucket seat

    Let up off the clutch, kiss your ass goodbye
    It’s got a 427 that’ll make you die

    It’s a Hot Rod to Hell, Hot Rod to Hell

    I’m burning rubber all over this town
    I’m in high gear and I’m headed straight down

    It’s a Hot Rod to Hell, Hot Rod to Hell

    “Hot Rod to Hell”
    by Elvis Hitler (off their Disgraceland CD).

    Some good songs in the list, but I am shocked that “I Can’t Drive 55” and “Radar Love” didn’t make the cut. Yes, I know “Radar” doesn’t refer to speed radar, rather psychic radar, but still.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *