Brand New Cadillac
Producer
Brand New Cadillac Lyrics
Drive!
Drive!
[Chorus]
My baby drove up in a brand new Cadillac
Yes, she did
My baby drove up in a brand new Cadillac
She said, "Hey, come here, Daddy!"
"I ain't never comin' back!"
[Verse 1]
Baby, baby, won't you hear my plea?
C'mon, sugar, just come on back to me
She said, "Balls to you, Big Daddy"
[Verse 2]
Baby, baby, won't you hear my plea?
Oh, c'mon, just hear my plea
She said, "Balls to you, Daddy"
She ain't comin' back to me
[Chorus]
Baby, baby drove up in a Cadillac
I said, "Jesus Christ! Where'd ya' get that Cadillac?"
She said, "Balls to you, Daddy"
She ain't never coming back!
She ain't never coming back!
She ain't never coming back!
She ain't never coming back!
About
“Brand New Cadillac” is a 1959 12-bar blues song by Vince Taylor and The Playboys, and featured as the second song on The Clash’s album London Calling.
It was the first song recorded by The Clash at London Calling’s Wessex studio. According to Marcus Gray’s Route 19 Revisited: The Clash and London Calling, Topper Headon called Cadillac “the first British rock and roll song.” Joe Strummer called Vince Taylor, who presented a leather-clad, wild man image, the beginning of rock and roll in England.
Vince Taylor was born in Middlesex, England but moved to the States at the age of 7 where he attended the fabled Hollywood High. Growing up there, he listened to Gene Vincent and Elvis Presley and, while travelling in London with his sister, formed The Playboys. “Brand New Cadillac” was the b-side to their second single (Parlophone) but became one of their most well-known songs and was sought out by collectors even before The Clash covered it.
The choice of Taylor’s song reflects Joe Strummer’s clear preference to “rockers” over “mods” – a constant theme in his compositions and lyrics, his personal image and a sub-text to the lyrics of the title track of London Calling.
Q&A
Find answers to frequently asked questions about the song and explore its deeper meaning
- 2.Brand New Cadillac
- 3.Jimmy Jazz
- 4.Hateful
- 9.Clampdown
- 11.Wrong ’Em Boyo
- 12.Death or Glory
- 13.Koka Kola
- 14.The Card Cheat
- 15.Lover’s Rock
- 16.Four Horsemen
- 17.I’m Not Down
- 18.Revolution Rock
- 19.Train in Vain