By Andrea Rizzo
Americaâs love affair with the road has been further fueled by the trucking profession and the songs written about it. Since the moment the first truck hit the pavement, truck drivers have become cowboys in a sense, conquering the open road one truck stop, cup of Joe, and air horn blow at a time. Trucking songs are a celebration of this adventure, and early country crooners like Dave Dudley, Buck Owens and Merle Haggard used the trucking blues as a calling cardâwhich is still infectious to the singers of today.
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The following songs represent an unofficial Top 10 list, covering the mid-50s to mid-90s. Although there have been scores of excellent trucking tunes over those decades and beyond, the ten were chosen on their classical merit. Whether it proclaimed the inventiveness of the C.B., or brought attention to the female perspective, these tunes have stood the test of time throughout movie scores, radio air plays, and perhaps the greatest complimentâperformances by other stars.
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1. âConvoy,â by C.W. McCall, (songwriter Bill Fries), 1975
This campy classic full of C.B. breaks and siren wails brought truck driving into pop culture. The story of unfolds as a series of truckers under the handles âRubber Duck,â âPig Penâ and âSod Busterâ form a clustered convoy of trucks and evade the policeâwhile utilizing great mid-70s style slang: âYeah them smokies âas thick as bugs on a bumper/They even had a bear-in-the-air/I sez callinâ all trucks, this hereâs âThe Duckâ/We about to go a huntinâ bear.â
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The ultra catchy chorus and triumphant finish helped seal the campy classic deal: ââCause we got a mighty convoy/Rockinâ through the night/Yeah, we got a mighty convoy/Ainât she a beautiful sight?/Come on and join our convoy/Ainât nothinâ gonna get in our way/We gonna roll this truckinâ convoy/âCross the U-S-A.â Not only did this top the charts in its day, but it was enough of an influence that director Sam Peckinpah released a film by the same name three years later.
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2. âTruck Drivinâ Man,â Terry Fell, 1954
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Going back to the mid-fifties, this bluegrass piece, complete with boogie-woogie piano, blazing harp and the weepy pedal steel, tells the simple story of a trucker stopping for coffee and a song: âPour me another cup of coffee/For it is the best in the land/Iâll put a nickel in the jukebox/And play âThe Truck Drivinâ Manâ.â This has been performed by tons of famous musicians over the decades including George Hamilton IV, Red Steagall, Glen Campbell, David Allan Coe, Commander Cody and many, many more.
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3. âSix Days on the Road,â Carl Montgomery and Earl Green, 1963
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One of the most eloquently written songs about the life of a trucker, âSix Days on the Roadâ covers the themes of boredom, desperation, longing and back again. Throughout the storytellerâs trials to stay awake and avoid the omnipresent police, the bottom line is that he misses his girl at home: âWell, it seems like a month, since I kissed my baby good-bye/I could have a lot of women, but Iâm not like some other guys/I could find one to hold me tight, but I could never believe that itâs right/Six days on the road and Iâm gonna make it home tonight.â Made famous by Dave Dudley, itâs been covered by Taj Mahal, Boxcar Willie, George Thorogood, and my personal favorite, The Flying Burrito Brothers.
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4. âLooking at the World Through a Windshield,â Jerry Chestnut and Mike Hoyer, 1967
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Like father like son. This number was written from the perspective of a little boy who missed his truck-driving father growing up, but now is one in the same. As an adult trucker, he finally understands his fatherâs wanderlust with, âNow Iâm looking at the world through a windshield/And see everything in a little bit different light/I got a sweet little thing Iâm wantinâ to see in Nashville/And Iâm down around Dallas and aârollinâ on fast tonight.â This has been made modern by The Sovines, Son Volt and Toby Walker.
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5. âPhantom 309,â Red Sovine, 1967
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This tune beautifully illustrates the power of urban folklore. A similar story has been told time and time again, through movies, stories and of course, songs. Relaying the eerie but heartwarming tale of Big Joe the trucker who lost his life when he saved the lives of children destined for a crash, Sovine weaves a ghostly tale of haunting done good. It seems that every year around the time of his death, Big Joe hits the pavement and brings weary travelers to his favorite stop: âBut, every now and then, some hikerâll come by/And like you, Big Joeâll give âem a ride/Here, have another cup and forget about the dime/Keep it as a souvenir, from Big Joe and Phantom 309!â This tale has found an active afterlife in the company of Boxcar Willie, Dave Dudley, and most recently, Tom Waits.
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6. âWhite Line Fever,â Merle Haggard, 1969
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Like most of Haggardâs offerings, this is a true workinâ manâs song. He describes the world of trucking as a sickness almostâalbeit something he doesnât want to be cured of anytime soon: âThe years keep flyinâ by like the highline poles/The wrinkles in my forehead show the miles Iâve put behind me/They continue to remind how fast Iâm growinâ old/Guess Iâll die with this fever in my soul.â This true road rager has been covered in a variety of styles by the likes of Mötorhead, The Flying Burrito Brothers and John Mayall.
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7. âTruck Stop Girl,â Lowell George and Bill Payne, 1970
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And what about the women on the road? A common theme throughout trucking songs, the female force is generally represented as either the woman who keeps house and is a distant object of affection or the cute waitress at the truck stop. This song represents the latter, and succinctly captures what a young and lonesome trucker may feel: âHe was the kind of man, do all he could/Above all he had integrity/But he was so young/And on a ten city run/In love with a truck stop girl.â Although originally performed by Little Feat and The Byrds back in the day, this tune was given a sexy and decidingly female facelift by Kelly Willis in 1996.
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8. âTruckinâ,â Grateful Dead, 1970
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Given the psychedelics and the, ahem, stimulants of the sixties and seventies, itâs hard to say if âTruckinââ is actually about truck driving. However, it is an enjoyable little ditty and slice of Americana, with callouts of cities all over the nation from Chicago to New York to New Orleans. This is another song where the goal is to get back home where the narrator belongs: âTruckinâ, Iâm a goinâ home/Whoa whoa baby, back where I belong/Back home, sit down and patch my bones, and get back truckinâ on/Hey now get back truckinâ home.â Again, âhomeâ may be more of a mental state than an actual place, but hey, this is a fun song to sing along with.
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9. âDrivinâ My Life Away,â Eddie Rabbitt, 1980
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During the seventies and eighties, country singer Eddie Rabbitt enjoyed his fair share of crossover success. This trucker tune was one of the genre-savvy songs that clocked onto the pop charts at number five and no doubt helped him win an American Music Award the following year. Rabbittâs infectious chorus of âOoh Iâm drivinâ my life away/looking for a better way, for me/Ooh Iâm drivinâ my life away/looking for a sunny day,â along with cleverly placed harmonies and catchy beats make this a hard song to get out of your head.
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10. âMama was a Rock (Daddy was a Rolling Stone),â BR5-49 and Kay Adams, 1996
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Singer Kay Adams presented a fresh female perspective as a young girl growing up to the realities of the trucking life. With honky-tonk vocalizing and a soaring pedal steel, Adams narrates: âSix days a week daddy drove a big rig burninâ up the open road/No matter what he hauled it was known by all Mama carried the heaviest load/Six hungry kids in a mobile home in a park outside of town/Can drive a woman semi crazy when she donât got her man around.â Her honest and biting lyrics remind us about the importance of keeping the home fires burning, and the woman (or man) that stands behind the truck driver.
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And finally, there are two honorary titles that seem to imply truckingâor certainly the love of the open roadâeven though itâs not the subject. The first, originally written and recorded by country star Roger Miller in 1965 is âKing of the Road.â Although the title is compelling, it is actually an ode to the nomadic way of life on the national train system. The other, âOn the Road Againâ is one of Willie Nelsonâs great contributions to songwriting. It was written for the âHoneysuckle Roseâ soundtrack, and records Nelsonâs love for tour. A tour bus counts as a truck, right?
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Now, breaker, breaker, 10-4, we gonna roll this musical convoy? Over and out!
Andrea Rizzo is a freelance writer in the Norfolk, Va. area. She specializes in music and entertainment writing, and currently contributes to Port Folio Weekly and Lifestyles. In addition, she regularly contributes to CareersinGear.com Magazine and CareersinGear.com, the leading sources for truck driving jobs and other trucking job search tools.