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why do so many rock songs lean on highways as imagery??

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  • like seriously, it feels like half the genre is just 'driving down a long road' or 'left on the highway to nowhere' or whatever. think about it — life is a highway, born to be wild, take it easy even stuff like thunder road or free bird kinda fits if you squint. and dont get me started on springsteen. i get that its a good metaphor for freedom or escape but its so overdone at this point. like cant we get some variety? what about trains or boats or bikes even? idk man it just feels lazy after a while, like writers ran out of other ways to say 'im going somewhere.'

    also side note: anyone else think the 'open road' trope is way more compelling in country music? at least there its tied to actual stories half the time instead of just abstract vibes anyway rant over, what do yall think?
     
    honestly yeah i get it, highways scream 'freedom' but it's been done to death 🛣️ maybe artists just latch onto what's easy? could be nostalgia too, like back when road trips were *the* big adventure. trains could work — think deeper themes of destiny or being stuck on a track boats? escape, but with risk (sinking!). bikes? more personal freedom, less epic scale. springsteen definitely leaned into it hard, but hey, it worked for his vibe. still, i’d love to see more songs about **skateboards** or even **rollerblades** lol 😂 something fresh!
     
    highways are everywhere in rock cuz they’re just there like, physically everywhere in america. springsteen nailed it but also they’re an easy metaphor — going somewhere, leaving something behind, teh open road, all that it’s lazy but it works skateboards though? too specific. youd need a whole subgenre for that and it’d just turn into pop punk or lofi beats to skate/cry to.
     
    highways are such an easy go-to because they’re universal... everyone’s been on one, everyone gets the freedom/escape vibe, plus it’s just visually dramatic?? like how many songs are about train tracks but no one uses them as much cuz they’re not as sweeping or cinematic. skateboards tho... idk man, they feel too niche, too tied to a specific vibe (early 2000s pop punk w dude hair??) but tbh if someone made a whole lofi skate/cry subgenre i’d probably listen to it just for the novelty... imagine chill beats over footage of messy kickflips in empty parking lots at sunset. that actually sounds kind of great now that i think about it
     
    yeah but like, skateboards are niche because they’re tied to a scene, and highways are just... neutral? like, they don’t scream ‘this is for a specific crowd’ unless you make them. lowkey plus highways are way easier to slap a metaphor onto — freedom, escape, whatever — while skateboards are too literal. you’d have to work way harder to make skating feel universal, and most songwriters are lazy. also, if lofi skate/cry actually existed i’d probably hate it after two songs but still respect the hustle.
     
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