A Gallon of Gas Can’t Be Purchased Anywhere

kinks low budget Since Hurricane Sandy hit New York, it has been quite difficult to find gasoline, as stations are still closed because they do not have power and those that are open run out of gas quickly. I have seen long lines and closed stations around and outside the city.

So, today, New York City and Long Island began a gas rationing plan like New Jersey previously implemented. Drivers with license plates that end in an even number can buy gas on even-numbered days, and those with vanity plates or plates that end in an odd number can buy gas on odd-numbered days. For the most part, it should cut down the length of lines at least. And it is hard to complain too much about the temporary rationing when so many people in the area were hurt much worse by the hurricane.

The rationing reminded me of when I was a kid in the 1970s and there was gas rationing across the country. Hopefully, our regional gas problem will end quickly, but the 1970s the problem lasted long enough for The Kinks to record a song about the problem. In The Kinks’ blues-influenced “A Gallon of Gas,” the singer finds himself successful enough to finally buy a Cadillac but then discovers he cannot get gas for it. He goes to his “local dealer” to buy some gas but is told that while a number of drugs are available for a reasonable price, there is no gasoline.

There’s no more left to buy or sell;
There’s no more oil left in the well;
A gallon of gas can’t be purchased anywhere,
For any amount of cash
.

You also may track down a live performance of the song from “Rockpalast Night” in Essen in 1982. The Kinks released “A Gallon of Gas” as a single only in the U.S. in August 1979, and the song appeared on their 1978 album, Low Budget. While the song’s title may be aimed at the U.S. market, I believe the song uses the gallon measurement instead of the liter/litre because at the time the U.K. had not yet converted gas sales to the metric system, although I have found conflicting reports of the actual year the U.K. made the change at gas stations.

Bonus Gas Songs: There does not seem to be a lot of songs inspired by gas shortages, but another 1970s gas song is John Mayall’s “Gasoline Blues,” from the album The Latest Edition (1974). More recently, Britney Spears released a song called “Gasoline” on Femme Fatale (2011), although for some reason I don’t think the song has anything to do with gas prices and gas shortages (“Your touch, burning me / It’s too much, gasoline”).

What are your favorite gas-related songs? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Author: chimesfreedom

    Editor-in-chief, New York.

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