[[quoteright:350: [[Series/ImpracticalJokers https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/drive_drive_drive.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:350: [[OverlyLongGag This went on for]] [[PunctuatedForEmphasis ELEVEN. HOURS.]]]]

-> '''Patrick:''' Road! Road! Road! Road!\\
'''Spongebob:''' When I'm on the road\\
I see stuff going by!\\
When I'm on the road\\
'''Patrick:''' I got a bug in my eye!
-->-- ''WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants'', "[[Recap/SpongebobSquarepantsS8E7ASquarePantsFamilyVacation A Squarepants Family Vacation]]"

Songs about cars, driving, open highways, speed, and so on. Very common from US based artists due to the heavy car culture in the States: teens can start driving at 14 in some states so driving is a common cultural touchstone from a younger age than elsewhere. A disproportionate amount of these songs take place either in the south if it's country, or California if it's any other genre due to the prevalence of highways over public transit systems.

Some people see road trips across the US in motorcycle or car as a coming-of-age milestone that's fondly remembered. Youthful road trips in the US aren't generally done because there's no mass-transit alternatives, but because of the freedom they represent to wander around alone on your own (non-)schedule rather than with a bunch of people on a train schedule. There's a popular romanticism to just driving wherever you want for your own pleasure, that is very distinct from day-to-day necessary transport from point A to B, at least in US culture. Most of these songs reflect this aspect of driving as pure recreation, and possibly some sort of wanderjahr-ish self-discovery.

Songs about the band or singer being on the road touring are a variation on this. The [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truck-driving_country Truck-driving country]] is a sub-trope usually pertaining to country music.

Counterpart trope to CarSong: that trope is about the love of cars or a car in particular, whereas this trope is about the love of driving, cruising, and occasionally speeding. See also WanderlustSong, which has some overlap--Wanderlust Song is about the need in general to get away, while Driving Song is about driving as an end in itself. See also RoadMovie, which is a similar trope in another medium. Compare TrainSong.

----
!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Alternative]]
* Music/{{Cake}}:
** "The Distance," which is mostly about racing.
** "Race Car Ya Yas" is a more sarcastic critique of obnoxious drivers:
-->The land of race car ya yas\\
The land where you can't change lanes\\
The land where [[CompensatingForSomething large fuzzy dice still hang proudly like testicles]] from rear view mirrors
* Eve 6: "Open Road Song" which has LampshadeHanging on this fact at the end of the chorus by saying "this is an open road song."
* Eraserheads: "Overdrive"
* Music/{{Incubus}}: "Drive"
* Melissa Etheridge: "You Can Sleep While I Drive" (also famously CoveredUp by Music/TrishaYearwood)
* Music/TheModernLovers: "Roadrunner," about a teen who is driving on the highway at night. Has lyrics about the love of the open road, of driving fast, of listening to music, of escaping loneliness, of maintaining your happiness and sanity any way you can.
* Music/PearlJam: "Rearviewmirror." The song is about using a car to escape a bad living situation.
* Music/PoetsOfTheFall
** "[[https://youtu.be/AzsiE44Lz_w?list=PLjACqN5i5sDVBPJGHevomO4YZd9wwVLkS Late Goodbye]]," the ThemeSong of ''VideoGame/MaxPayne2TheFallOfMaxPayne,'' is a melancholy country tune implying a never-ending SternChase
--->Lonely street signs, power lines, they keep on flashing, flashing by\\
And we keep driving into the night
** WanderlustSong "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=di7NMssrqsE Daze]]" is as much about the highs and lows of touring as it is driving itself, but the video makes a point of emphasizing the latter, as an absconder from a MasqueradeBall glories in driving her car.
--->Rolling down the freeway, master to the speed of light\\
Screaming up in the air, bursting through the night
* ''Music/TheyMightBeGiants'':
** "AKA Driver" is about a trucker trying to reach his destination, which is still "a full day's drive away", while fighting off sleep deprivation and delirium.
** "They Got Lost" is about the band trying to get to a radio station for a guest appearance but getting lost.
* "Car Crash" by Music/ThreeDaysGrace likens a passionate but doomed relationship to, well, a car crash.
-->All I see is shattered glass and\\
Red lights passing\\
My life flashing!\\
Headed for the same disaster\\
Faster and faster and faster
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Blues]]
* "(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66" is a blues standard covered by everyone from Music/ChuckBerry to Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}} to John Mayer.
* Music/SamanthaFish's "Highway's Holding Me Now" is about the pleasures of driving as an escape from a complicated relationship.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Country/Folk]]
* Music/CWMcCall: "Film/{{Convoy}}", which is all about a pack of truckers driving east across the U.S. (and in "Round the World with the Rubber Duck", they end up continuing on and circumnavigating the globe).
* Dave Dudley: "Six Days On the Road"
* Eddie Rabbitt: "Drivin' My Life Away"
* Florida Georgia Line feat. Nelly: "Cruise"
* Music/HavalinaRailCo's album ''America'' is a ConceptAlbum about a cross-country road trip, even though few of the songs are specifically about driving. The different songs correspond to different states of the USA, and the back cover has a map depicting the path of the road trip.
* Jerry Reed: "East Bound and Down" from ''Film/SmokeyAndTheBandit''.
* Music/JimCroce:
** "Speedball Tucker" (also about a long-distance truck driver)
** "Rapid Roy" (about a stock car racer)
** "I Got a Name": "Moving me down the highway" as a metaphor for life, also references scenes seen on a highway ("the pine trees lining the winding road"))
* Jimmie Dolan: "Hot Rod Race," which was also the song that "Hot Rod Lincoln" (below) was an AnswerSong to.
* Music/JohnDenver: "Take Me Home, Country Roads" is mostly about West Virginia, but it is also about the country road that is taking John Denver home.
* Johnny Bond: "Hot Rod Lincoln"
* Music/LeeAnnWomack: "A Little Past Little Rock"
* Music/MarenMorris's "My Church" combines this with RadioSong, describing driving while listening to music as a religious experience.
* Music/TracyChapman: The usual connotations are slowly subverted in "Fast Car." At the beginning of the song, the singer sees her boyfriend's fast car as a ticket to freedom and a better life, but by the end, after he's let her down, she tells him to "take your fast car and keep on driving." In the chorus she reminisces about the brief freedom she felt on the road with him:
-->So remember when we were driving\\
Driving in your car\\
Speed so fast it felt like I was drunk\\
City lights lay out before us\\
And your arm felt nice wrapped around my shoulder\\
And I had a feeling that I belonged\\
I had a feeling I could be someone
* Music/WillieNelson: "On the Road Again"
* Music/SlimDusty: A wide selection of his works are about trucking. In particular, "Lights on the Hill".
* Music/JayneDenham: "Queen of the Road", "Trucker Chicks", "Road Train Fever"
* "Boy Gets a Truck" by Music/JimmieAllen
* Julie Roberts: "Break Down Here," about driving away from a relationship in a dying car and hoping that she doesn't break down--[[DualMeaningChorus both literally and figuratively.]]
* Music/WoodyGuthrie: "Riding In My Car (The Car Song)".
* Rod Hart's "C.B. Savage", a spoof of "Convoy", features a convoy of truckers suddenly getting a transmission on their radios from a flaming gay man ("Seen any Smokey Bears? Or maybe some bare Smokeys?"). As the song winds down, the voice suddenly changes from gay to straight and officious as it belonged to a police officer who calls for his squad to shut down the convoy.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Doowop]]
* The Medallions: "Speedin'"
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Electronic]]
* Music/{{Kraftwerk}}: "Autobahn"
* Music/TheKLF's album ''Chill Out'' is a soundtrack to a late-night/early-morning drive along the US Gulf Coast. Some of the song titles reference locations along the way. [[{{Sampling}} Samples]] of radio broadcasts and railroad crossings appear throughout.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Funk]]
* War: "Low Rider"
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Metal]]
* Music/{{Annihilator}}: "Speed" most certainly counts
-->Acceleration I gotta, gotta go faster / Give me more speed\\
They say I'm crazy and I'm headed for disaster / Give me more speed
* Music/{{Anthrax}}: "Metal Thrashing Mad"
* Music/{{Ariya}}: "King of the Road (Korol Dorogi)"
* Music/AxelRudiPell: "Hot Wheels"
* Music/BlackLabelSociety: "Fire It Up" is more about living life to it fullest, including driving really fast. The band's biker-wear style creates the aesthetic associated with this trope.
* Music/{{Dio}}: "I Speed at Night"
* Music/IronMaiden: "Wildest Dreams," overlapping with WanderlustSong. "Running Free" also overlaps with WanderlustSong. This was based on Paul Di'Anno's experiences as a teenage skinhead.
* Music/JudasPriest: "Hell Bent for Leather," "Freewheel Burning," "Riding On The Wind," "Thunder Road," "Wheels of Fire," "Heading Out To The Highway" and "Turbo Lover," which uses racing as a pretty blatant metaphor for sex.
* Music/{{Manowar}} have a bunch of songs about riding motorcycles, including "Death Tone" and "Wheels of Fire".
* Music/{{Megadeth}}: "Moto Psycho," which uses the trope more negatively: it's about people who spends half their day on the road and the other half working or sleeping, as if in a human hamster wheel.
* Music/{{Metallica}}: "Fuel"
* Music/{{Motorhead}}: "Iron Horse (Born To Lose)," and "(We Are) The Road Crew," which is about being a roadie.
* Music/{{Rainbow}}: "Death Alley Driver"
* Music/RobZombie: "Two Lane Blacktop," which was used in ''VideoGame/NeedForSpeed: Underground''
* White Zombie: "Black Sunshine"
[[/folder]]

[[folder:New Wave]]
* Music/DepecheMode: "Behind the Wheel"
* Creator/GraceJones has [[WordOfGod strongly insisted]] that "Pull Up to the Bumper" is about being in [[BigApplesauce New York traffic]] and not... [[IntercourseWithYou something else]].
* Tom Robinson Band One: "2-4-6-8 Motorway," about driving the UK lorries through the night.
* "Cars" by Music/GaryNuman was inspired by a RoadRage incident, and the alienation of cars like tanks in an urban enviroment.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Novelty]]
* Music/StoneSour: "Road Hogs" is a parody of biker lyrics.
* Music/WeirdAlYankovic:
** "She Drives Like Crazy" [[note]] parody of "She Drives Me Crazy" by Music/FineYoungCannibals [[/note]] tells of a girl who is known for [[DrivesLikeCrazy terrible driving]].
** "Truck Drivin' Song" is a parody of the genre, in which the deep-voiced protagonist drives a truck while wearing excessive amounts of feminine fashion accessories such as high heels, a feather boa, jewelry, and still-wet nail polish.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Pop]]
* The Playmates: "Beep Beep (The Little Nash Rambler)"
* Music/{{Roxette}}: "Joyride"
* Music/ArethaFranklin: "Freeway of Love"
* Woodkid's "Highway 27."
-->The highway, twenty-seven lines\\
Are drifting in my eyes\\
Now drive away and let it die
* Chris Rea: "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DrOAoNPdBb4 Driving Home for Christmas]]" overlaps with ChristmasSongs.
* "I Drove All Night", covered/sung by Music/RoyOrbinson, Music/CyndiLauper and Music/CelineDion, is about the singer driving all night to reach their lover for a night of passion.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Rap/Hip Hop]]
* Music/{{Atmosphere}}: "Aspiring Sociopath" is about a man who fantasizes about abandoning his crappy life and driving away from it all.
-->''He loves the drive more than he loves being alive, and this town doesn't even know his real name''
%%** "Free or Dead"
* Music/BeastieBoys: "No Sleep 'Til Brooklyn" doubles as both this and a RockStarSong; it features the Boys boasting about their careers as musicians while driving their tour bus from show to show.
* "Ridin" by Music/{{Chamillionaire}} and [[Music/BoneThugsNHarmony Krazie Bone]] is both a DrivingSong and an AntiPoliceSong protesting racial profiling.
* Music/ElP: "Drive" is about the freedom that comes from getting behind the wheel, any wheel.
-->''Don't have to be flashy, I'll use any old ride\\
Hop in the whip and peel away, stay alive''
* Creator/WillSmith: "Just Cruisin'" is a BoastfulRap about Smith's carreer and cool new car.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Rock]]
* Music/{{ACDC}}: "Highway to Hell" is more about drinking with your friends, but elements of the trope are still there.
* Music/AgainstMe: "High Preassure Low" is, according to singer Laura Jane Grace, about "an eight-ball of cocaine, an ounce of weed, and the open road"
* Airbourne: "Overdrive"
* The Alarm: "The Road". No connection to [[Literature/TheRoad the dystopian novel]].
* Music/AliceCooper: "Under My Wheels" adds a dose of BlackComedy to this trope, as it's about running someone over with your car.
* Music/TheAllmanBrothersBand: "Midnight Rider"
** "Jessica", though it has no lyrics, but was adopted as the theme song for the car show ''Series/TopGear''
* Music/{{America}}: "Ventura Highway"
* Music/BachmanTurnerOverdrive: "Roll On Down the Highway"
* Music/TheBeachBoys:
** "Little Deuce Coupe" is a street racing song, about a Ford Model B (a "deuce coupe") modified for racing, so that it can beat even a Thunderbird.
** "Don't Worry Baby" is also about street racing, but from a more romantic viewpoint.
* Music/TheBeatles' "Drive My Car."
* Blackfoot: "Highway Song"
* Music/BlueOysterCult: "Transmaniacon MC," "The Shadow of California," "Golden Age of Leather," and "Feel the Thunder."
* Music/BobSeger: "Get Out of Denver," "Turn the Page," and "Roll Me Away," which is about a motorcycle journey.
* [=BoDeans=]: "Texas Ride Song"
* Music/BonJovi: "Lost Highway" and "Wanted Dead or Alive," a tune about the band's life on the road yet [[MyHorseIsAMotorbike described as a cowboy's journey]].
* Music/BruceSpringsteen: "Music/BornToRun", "Thunder Road", "Pink Cadillac", "Racing in the Street"
* Music/BryanAdams: "Open Road"
* Canned Heat: "On the Road Again"
** And "Goin' Up the Country''
* Music/ChuckBerry: "Maybelline", "No Particular Place to Go"
* Music/{{Crush 40}}: "Watch Me Fly" is about racing, and the entire "Thrill of the Feel" album was released for Creator/{{Sega}}'s ''NASCAR Arcade''.
* Danko Jones' "Code of the Road", in which the singer talks about drifting from city to city living by, well, 'the code of the road'.
* Music/DeepPurple: "Highway Star"
* Diesel: "Sauselito Summer." The song recounts the hazards of driving to San Francisco through Sauselito in a "rambler," a 2-seat coupe with maintenance issues and horrible gas mileage.
* Music/DireStraits: "Heavy Fuel"
* The Doobie Brothers: "Rockin' Down the Highway"
* Music/TheDoors: "LA Woman"; "Riders on the Storm" contains a dark caution about picking up a certain hitchhiker.
* Music/{{Eagles}}: "Life in the Fastlane"
* Foreigner: "Rev on the Red Line"
* George Thorogood: "Gear Jammer"
* Gene Pitney: "24 Hours From Tulsa"
* Music/GoldenEarring: "Radar Love," commonly regarded as the best driving song in the rock genre.
* Music/TheGratefulDead: "Truckin'"
* Molly Hatchet: "Flirtin' with Disaster", "The Rambler"
* Music/JimiHendrix: "Crosstown Traffic", using driving in a traffic jam as a metaphor for trying to "get through" to a woman he's pursuing.
* Music/JanAndDean: "The Little Old Lady from Pasadena" is actually based on a then-common stereotype, wherein elderly white couples would move to Pasadena, California only for the man to die and leave his widow with a powerful sports car that she would never drive. Unlike the stereotype, the old lady in the song not only drove her "Super Stock Dodge," she was in fact an undefeated street racer.
* Music/JimmyBarnes: "Driving Wheels"
* Music/JimmyBuffett: Theme for ''Series/JohnnyBago''
* Music/{{KISS}}: "Detroit Rock City" is a darker take on this trope, as it ends with the protagonist getting in a deadly car wreck.
* [[Music/DireStraits Mark Knopfler]]'s "Border Reiver" is about driving a lorry (freight truck) of the same model name (produced by the Scottish company Albion, also mentioned) for a living in 1969.
* Music/PaulMcCartney and Music/{{Wings|Band}}: "Helen Wheels"
* Music/PearlHarborAndTheExplosions: "Drivin'" is a song all about the simple pleasures of driving with no particular destination in mind.
* Music/MeatLoaf: "Objects in the Rear View Mirror May Appear Closer Than They Are"
* Music/{{Rush|Band}}: "Red Barchetta" and "Ghost Rider," which is about hitting the road to escape from a personal tragedy, based on Neil Peart's personal experience. Overlaps with WanderlustSong.
* Sammy Hagar: "I Can't Drive 55" combines this with ProtestSong as he's protesting the since-repealed [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Maximum_Speed_Law National Maximum Speed Law]]. The song tells of how he got pulled over for speeding and then complains about how minding the speed limit hinders him.
* Slash feat. [[Music/PussycatDolls Nicole Scherzinger]] and Music/AliceCooper: "Baby Can't Drive"
* Steppenwolf: "Born to Be Wild," [[BadToTheBone a staple of every motorcycle movie ever]] (due to ''Film/EasyRider'').
* Tom Cochrane: "Life is a Highway"
* Music/TomPetty & The Heartbreakers: "Runnin' Down a Dream"
* Music/TheWho: "Going Mobile"
* Music/ZZTop's: "Arrested For Driving While Blind," which as the title suggests, is about getting arrested for drunk driving.
** "Gimme All Your Lovin'" and "Legs" aren't about cars or driving per se, but the music videos prominently feature the Eliminator Hot Rod as a co-star.
* Music/TheTriffids: "Wide Open Road"
* Music/TheBlessedOutlaws: "Built to Last", "Behind The Wheel"
* Music/{{Madness|Band}}: "Driving in my Car" (also has elements of TheAllegedCar)
[[/folder]]

!!Non-Musical Examples

[[folder:Advertising]]
* Mazda co-opted the Capoeira song colloquially known as "Zoom Zoom" as their unofficial theme music and motto.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* ''Fanfic/TheBoltChronicles'': "The Car" concerns Penny and Bolt's joy at driving to and from the local diner while listening to music, as well as showing a flashback to Penny's first horrible experience behind the wheel. They listen to several examples of classic driving songs on their way back and forth between the diner, culminating with them singing/barking along to "Roadrunner" by Music/TheModernLovers.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action Film]]
* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6NQcO9KTBY Moving Right Along]]" from ''Film/TheMuppetMovie'', which Kermit and Fozzie sing as they head towards Hollywood and take many wrong turns.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* ''Series/BarneyAndFriends'' has "Riding in the Car".
* The theme song from ''Series/HardcastleAndMcCormick'', "Drive" by David Morgan, is a rather passionate take on driving in song form. First stanza:
-->''Slow motion man.''\\
''Iron and steel in the palm of your hand.''\\
''High flying heart.''\\
''Betting your life on the state of the art.''
* "I Like Trucking" from ''Series/NotTheNineOClockNews''
* Parodied in ''Series/{{The Office|UK}}'' with David Brent's song "Free Love Freeway".
* The Allman Brothers "Jessica", though wordless, for ''Series/TopGear''
* As shown above on ''Series/ImpracticalJokers'', this was Q's punishment for failing this episode, which involved him [[CoolAndUnusualPunishment being forced to drive to a number of far-away locales, all with a crowd of muppets singing a deliberately-obnoxious song on repeat]]... for ''[[OverlyLongGag eleven hours]]''.
-->''Drive, drive, drive, drive drive,''\\
''It feels so good (so good) to be alive (alive)!''\\
''Are we there yet? (No!) Are we there yet? (No!)''\\
''Well then it's one, two, three, four, five! Let's-''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* The WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants special "A [=SquarePants=] Family Vacation" had "The Road Song".
* "On the Open Road" from ''WesternAnimation/AGoofyMovie'', which starts as a SerendipitousSymphony Goofy improvises after Goofy and Max's radio/tape player breaks, and turns into a full-blown crowd song about how awesome driving cross-country is (with Max presenting the opposite viewpoint).
* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' have:
** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=id5ls-Z4lmU A Little Bit Of Home On The Road]]" for their rolling truck stop diner.
** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJuozjn-g58 Truck Drivin' Girl]]", about Candace getting driving lessons in the monster truck her brothers made.
** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbugHkuFsTg My Ride From Outer Space]]", as Ferb tricking out an alien spaceship and taking it for a test run.
** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WWwiKjCli94&t=20s Drusselstein Driving Test Waltz]]", as Doofenshmirtz retakes the driving test of his {{Cloudcuckooland}} country of origin.
* The WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends episode "Truckin' Odie" has the entire episode in song based on this trope.
[[/folder]]
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