Highway To Hell album cover

AC/DC – Highway To Hell Lyrics

Rock

Ooh, come on

Livin' easy, livin' free
Season ticket on a one-way ride
Askin' nothin', leave me be
And takin' everything in my stride

Don't need reason, don't need rhyme
There ain't nothin' I would rather do
Goin' down, all the time
My friends are gonna be there, too

I'm on the highway to Hell
Highway to Hell
I'm on the highway to Hell
On the highway to Hell, yeah

No stop signs, speed limit
Nobody gonna slow us down
Like a wheel, gonna spin it
Nobody gonna mess me around

Hey Satan, payin' my dues
Playin' in a rockin' band
Ooh, Mama, look at me
I'm on my way to the Promised Land
Come on

I'm on the highway to Hell
Highway to Hell
Highway to Hell
I'm on the highway to Hell, yeah
Come on
Don't stop now
Hey, hey, come on now

I'm on the highway to Hell
Highway to Hell
I'm on the highway to Hell
On the highway to Hell

Highway to Hell
I'm on the highway to Hell
(Highway to Hell)
(Highway to Hell)

I'm on the highway to Hell, yeah
Come on yeah, gotcha
Everybody coming down with us?
Come on
And I'm goin' down
Yeah, yeah, yeah, alright

I said woah, yeah
I said woah, ooh baby
I think I got one more in me
I said all the way
You're goin' down, down, down
All the way down, come on
I'm on the highway to Hell, alright

About This Song

"Highway To Hell" is a defiant anthem of hedonistic rebellion that celebrates living life on one's own terms, regardless of moral or societal consequences. The song presents a protagonist who has fully embraced a lifestyle of excess and freedom, viewing his journey toward damnation not as a tragedy but as an exhilarating choice made with eyes wide open. Rather than a literal ode to Satan worship, the "highway to hell" serves as a metaphor for rejecting conventional morality and responsibility in favor of pure, unrestrained pleasure-the rock and roll lifestyle taken to its ultimate extreme. The lyrics reveal someone who has made peace with his fate, even finding camaraderie in it ("my friends are gonna be there too"), suggesting that this path of hedonism is shared with fellow outcasts and rebels. Musically, the song exemplifies AC/DC's signature hard rock formula with its driving, relentless rhythm, Angus Young's razor-sharp guitar riffs, and Bon Scott's gravelly, charismatic vocals that perfectly embody the swaggering confidence of the narrator. The production is deliberately raw and powerful, with a thunderous backbeat that mirrors the unstoppable momentum of a vehicle speeding toward its destination. The song resonated with listeners because it captured the essence of rock rebellion-the fantasy of living without consequences or compromise-while delivering it through an irresistibly catchy and anthemic musical package that made defiance feel celebratory rather than destructive.

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