

The music not only covers the early hot rod hits of the '50s and early '60s, but plucks worthy contenders from modern rockers like the Stray Cats, Dave Edmunds, the Ramones, David Lindley, Canned Heat, the Doobie Brothers, the Flying Burrito Brothers, Rod Stewart, Pure Prairie League, and roots rockers like Denny Freeman, John Hiatt, Deke Dickerson, and Tex Rubinowitz. It comes housed in a Revel Authentic Kit-sized box that also holds a bound booklet designed to look like the cover of Hot Rod magazine, an accompanying Mooneyes mini-catalog, window adhesive hot rod stickers, a set of fuzzy dice, and a Mooneyes bottle opener/key ring, with each of the four discs housed in a custom hot rod color package of its own. This is certainly one of Rhino's more elaborate box set offerings, no mere four-disc set of car songs, not by a long shot. Crawling from the Wreckage - Dave Edmunds Bring My Cadillac Back - Baker Knight & The Knightmares I Want a Lavendar Cadillac - Maurice King and His Wolverines Every Woman I Know - Billy "The Kid" Emerson Ride on Josephine - George Thorogood & the Destroyers Rockin' Down the Highway - The Doobie Brothers They arrested me and they put me in jail. I looked in my mirror a red light was blinkin' Now all of a sudden she started to knockin',Īnd down in the dips she started to rockin'.
#Hot rod lincoln song license
I said, "Look out, boys, I've got a license to fly!"Īnd that Caddy pulled over and let us by. We had flames comin' from out of the side. Knew I could catch him, I thought I could pass.ĭon't you know by then we'd be low on gas? My fenders was clickin' the guardrail posts. The lines on the road just look like dots." Now the boys all thought I'd lost my senseĪnd telephone poles looked like a picket fence. That's all there is and there ain't no more. My foot was blue, like lead to the floor. So I thought I'd make the Lincoln unwind. Now the fellas was ribbin' me for bein' behind, Passing cars like they was standing still.īy then the taillight was all you could see. The moon and the stars was shinin' bright. It's got safety tubes, but I ain't scared. With a four-barrel carb and a dual exhaust,

That Model A Vitimix makes it look like a pup. It's got a Lincoln motor and it's really souped up. When Fords and Lincolns was settin' the pace. Have you heard this story of the Hot Rod Race If you don't stop drivin' that Hot Rod Lincoln." Watch: New Singing Lesson Videos Can Make Anyone A Great Singer My pappy said, "Son, you're gonna' drive me to drinkin' Bond released a sequel in the same year called "X-15", set in 1997, about an air race in an X-15 plane. Another version of "Hot Rod Lincoln" was recorded by country musician Johnny Bond and released in 1960 through Republic Records, with Bond's lyrics changing the hot rod's engine from a V12 to a V8. Route 95 in Idaho) to the top of Lewiston Hill he incorporated elements from this race in his lyrics to "Hot Rod Lincoln", but changed the setting to Grapevine Hill (a long, nearly straight grade up Grapevine Canyon to Tejon Pass, near the town of Gorman, California) to fit it within the narrative of "Hot Rod Race". Ryan raced his hot rod against a Cadillac sedan driven by a friend in Lewiston, Idaho, driving up the Spiral Highway (former U. Ryan based the description of the eponymous car on his own hot rod, built from a 1948 12-cylinder Lincoln chassis shortened two feet, with a 1930 Ford Model A body fitted to it. A second version was released in 1959 through Four Star Records, credited to Charlie Ryan and the Timberline Riders.

Ryan's original rockabilly version of the song was released in 1955 through Souvenir Records under the artist name Charley Ryan and the Livingston Bros. "Hot Rod Lincoln" is sung from the perspective of this third driver, whose own hot rod is a Ford Model A body with a Lincoln V8, overdrive, a four-barrel carburetor, 4:11 gear ratio, and safety tubes. It was written as an answer song to Arkie Shibley's 1950 hit "Hot Rod Race" which describes a race in San Pedro, Los Angeles between two hot rod cars, a Ford and a Mercury, which stay neck-and-neck until both are overtaken by "a kid in a hopped-up Model A". "Hot Rod Lincoln" is a song by American singer-songwriter Charlie Ryan, first released in 1955.
