The track kicks off with gritty guitar and stomping drums, setting a party-loud tone. He grins through lyrics like:
“Let it rip”—a tongue-in-cheek anthem about buddies, moonshine, and bad choices.
It’s rebel spirit for the modern small-town square—equal parts fun and devilish.
In the Levitt video, crowd reactions punch through; Green moves with swagger, energy boiling through every frame. The audio’s loud, visuals are clean, and you get that Texas-born rebel heart in full drive.
William himself says:
> “It’s a song about golf carts, moonshine, and dodging domestic consequences. You’ve been warned.”[1]
That Texas-sized honesty is always welcome.
Final Verdict:
“Drinkin’ and Drivin’” isn’t preaching—it’s provoking. William Clark Green knows how to light the fuse, and this live take is the spark. It’s rural rebellion you want to blast—and get away with.