Car Wheels On a Gravel Road

Album: Car Wheels on a Gravel Road (1998)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Lucinda Williams was born in Lake Charles, Louisiana, in 1953, into a family deeply rooted in the South. Her father, Miller Williams, was a noted poet and literature professor, and her mother, Lucille Fern Day, was an amateur pianist.

    Williams' early years were spent in a variety of locations, as her father's work took the family to various places in the Deep South. This nomadic lifestyle exposed Williams to a wide range of cultures and experiences that would later influence her songwriting. This song is a compilation of southern, rural imagery from her childhood.
  • "Car Wheels on a Gravel Road" is a southern gothic travelogue, humming with memory and loss. Williams sings of "cotton fields that stretch for miles," and "the telephone poles, trees, and wires fly on by" as she travels with her parents across the American South. She also captures the instability and forced transience (car wheels) as the narrative traverses from one Southern locale (the gravel road) to another.
  • Lucinda Williams recalled her father apologizing to her after a show at the Bluebird in Nashville. It was the first time he had heard "Car Wheels On a Gravel Road," and among the fields of cotton, smells of coffee, eggs and bacon, and sounds of Loretta and Hank, he identified the neglected child in the back seat as the young Lucinda: "Lookin' out the window. Little bit of dirt mixed with tears."

    "That was the most amazing moment," she told Uncut magazine. "But it was bittersweet. I didn't know why when I was writing it, it was this whole subconscious thing. I guess it's weird how you can take yourself by surprise by something you've written yourself? I thought I was writing in the third person, but actually I was writing in the first person."
  • "Car Wheels on a Gravel Road" is the title song from Lucinda Williams' 1998 album of the same name. A crunchy blend of country, rock and R&B, the song provides a lightning rod for the record's portrayal of Williams' experiences in the Deep South.
  • Car Wheels on a Gravel Road was met with widespread critical acclaim - The Village Voice hailed it as the best album of 1998 - and it clinched the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album in 1999. Today, the record is considered a landmark in Americana and alternative country music.
  • Beyond critical acclaim, Car Wheels on a Gravel Road found commercial success, maintaining a presence on the Billboard 200 for over five months. It achieved a significant milestone by becoming Williams' first album to attain Gold certification from the RIAA.
  • Williams wrote "Car Wheels on a Gravel Road" herself. She recorded it at Room and Board Studio, Nashville and Rumbo Studio, Canoga Park, California with producers Steve Earle and Ray Kennedy.
  • Williams played the acoustic guitar. The other musicians are:

    Gurf Morlix: electric guitar
    John Ciambotti: bass
    Donald Lindley: percussion, drums
    Buddy Miller: mandoguitar, harmony vocals

    Curious about what a mandoguitar is? It's an instrument featuring a compact mandolin-like body paired with a nylon-stringed guitar neck. This design gives the mandoguitar a versatile tone that can range from the bright, high-pitched sounds of the mandolin to the mellow, warm tones of a guitar.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Adam Young of Owl City

Adam Young of Owl CitySongwriter Interviews

Is Owl City on a quest for another hit like "Fireflies?" Adam answers that question and explains the influences behind many others.

Boz Scaggs

Boz ScaggsSongwriter Interviews

The "Lowdown" and "Lido Shuffle" singer makes a habit of playing with the best in the business.

Alice Cooper

Alice CooperFact or Fiction

How well do you know this shock-rock harbinger who's been publicly executed hundreds of times?

Jim Adkins of Jimmy Eat World

Jim Adkins of Jimmy Eat WorldSongwriter Interviews

Jim talks about the impact of "The Middle" and uses a tree metaphor to describe his songwriting philosophy.

Zac Hanson

Zac HansonSongwriter Interviews

Zac tells the story of Hanson's massive hit "MMMbop," and talks about how brotherly bonds effect their music.

Vanessa Carlton

Vanessa CarltonSongwriter Interviews

The "A Thousand Miles" singer on what she thinks of her song being used in White Chicks and how she captured a song from a dream.