"Beep Beep" was written by Carl Cicchetti and Donald Claps,[2] also known as Chic Hetti and Donny Conn,[3] the band's arranger/pianist and drummer, respectively.[4]
The song is built around accelerando: the tempo of the song gradually increases commensurate with the increasing speed of the drivers.[5] In his book The Guide to United States Popular Culture, Ray B. Browne lists "Beep Beep" as an example of "motoring music [...] in the chase mode".[6] It is a tortoise-and-the-hare race,[3][1] substituting the drivers of two unequal cars, originally a Nash Rambler and Cadillac, respectively.[1]
Roulette Records did not want to release the song as a single, because the song changed tempo, it explicitly named contemporary products on the market, and was not danceable; when disc jockeys began playing it off the album, it forced the label's hand, and Roulette released the 45 single.[3] Because of a contemporary BBC directive that prohibited songs with brand names in their lyrics, a UK version of "Beep Beep" was recorded for the European market, replacing the Cadillac and Nash Rambler with the generic terms limousine and bubble car; this recut version was also released in the US for radio stations with similar policies about product placement.[7]
In December 1958, Time credited the popularity of "Beep Beep" with helping American Motors Corporation break sales records. In November 1958, the company doubled its previous year's production record with 26,782 cars; Ramblers accounted for 9.2% of October 1958's automobile sales in the United States; and though "total U.S. exports slid 16% in 1958, Rambler's climbed 10.3%."[11] "Beep Beep" was also popular with the workers building Ramblers on AMC's assembly lines in Kenosha, Wisconsin.[12]
In 1994, a "near-mint commercial copy" of the single was valued at US$8 (equivalent to $16.45 in 2023).[8]
^Pica, Rae (2008). "Elements of Movement". Physical Education for Young Children: Movement ABCs for the Little Ones. Champaign, Illinois: Human Kinetics. p. 38. ISBN978-0-7360-7149-9.