Highway Tune
Greta Van Fleet
Greta Van Fleet's "Highway Tune" doesn't ask for forgiveness and doesn't need it. The blues riff that opens the song is a direct address: this is where we come from and we are not embarrassed. Josh Kiszka's voice is the real argument — a genuinely extraordinary instrument, high and wild and controlled all at once, carrying the kind of heat that suggests the Led Zeppelin comparisons are inevitable not because the band is imitative but because they arrived at the same source material and drank deeply. The production has muscle: drums that sit loud in the mix, guitar tone thick and immediate, a rhythm section that swings with classic-rock swagger. The song is short, focused, and indulgent in the best sense — it's a showcase for what the band can do and it knows it. The emotional range is simple: exhilaration, physical energy, the pleasure of forward motion for its own sake. This is music for driving with windows down in warm weather, for barbecues where someone has the good sense to put on vinyl, for the exact moment when the afternoon is going perfectly and you want a song that matches it.
fast
2010s
raw, warm, electric
American blues rock revival
Rock, Blues Rock. Hard Rock. euphoric, energetic. Immediate exhilaration that ignites at the opening riff and sustains without drop for the full runtime.. energy 9. fast. danceability 6. valence 9. vocals: high, wild, powerful, blues-drenched, extraordinary upper register. production: thick guitar tone, loud punchy drums, warm bass, classic rock muscle. texture: raw, warm, electric. acousticness 2. era: 2010s. American blues rock revival. Driving with windows down on a warm afternoon when everything is going exactly right.