Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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.
Cadillac Ranch (Bruce Springsteen song) Cadillac Tears; Calcutta (Taxi Taxi Taxi) Car 67; Car Song (Elastica song) The Car (song) La Carcacha; Cars (song) Cars with the Boom; Chasing Cars; Chevrolet (song) Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (song) Cop Car (Keith Urban song) Crash (Gwen Stefani song) Cruise (song)
This 1970s version of the Charlie Ryan song was recorded by an Ann Arbor band with a rockabilly sensibility, but the car that inspired the song wasn’t some figment. The Free Press has reported ...
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.
Tesla is one of the newer car brands out there, with its first car, the Roadster, arriving in 2008. Since then with the Model S, X, and now 3, it's become enough of a pop icon to be mentioned in ...
The song is dedicated to him, with the liner notes mentioning, "Dedicated to Johnathan Harris, boy racer to the end". When it came down to releasing the album's first single, Taylor was so fond of his song that he locked himself in a cupboard until it was agreed that it would be the b-side to the album's first single, "Bohemian Rhapsody". [4]
Personal flying vehicles defy simple classification, which may be part of their allure. There are STOLs and VTOLs, quadcopters, octocopters and hexacopters. Some are electric, some are gas-powered.
The song was released in 1994 as the third single from the album Bat Out of Hell II: Back into Hell and it reached number 38 on US's Billboard Hot 100, and number 26 in the UK Top 40. With its chart success, this song became the hit with the longest un- bracketed title at fifty-two characters as of 2007 [update] . [ 2 ]