Drive And Listen Chile Site
Now you are north. The asphalt is straight and blinding. To your left: the Pacific, violent and gray, crashing against cliffs of rust-colored rock. To your right: the Atacama Desert, the driest non-polar place on Earth. It looks like Mars, but with more abandoned copper mines.
In Chile, you don't just drive. You surf the earth. And the soundtrack is nothing less than the song of the living edge of the world. Drive safely. Keep your eyes on the road. But let your ears wander.
Listen. Most Drive & Listen videos (Tokyo, Los Angeles, Berlin) are about the rhythm of the city. But Chile is a country that forces you to confront scale. You drive for 12 hours and the landscape changes from bone-dry desert to temperate rainforest to frozen tundra. The radio goes from reggaeton to folk ballads to dead air. drive and listen chile
So turn up the volume. Put the car in gear. Let the wind carry the sound of the tricahue parrot and the distant zampoña pipes.
Audio cue: Inti-Illimani on low volume. The charango (a small Andean guitar) sounds like raindrops on a tin roof. Now you are north
This is the soundtrack of the campiña . The sun is softer. You pass a truck carrying avocados, a stray dog sleeping on the center line, a family selling choclo (corn) out of a plastic bucket. Driving here is slow. You listen to the crunch of gravel as you pull over to look at the Pacific from a cliff. The waves below sound like thunder rolling in reverse. This is where the Drive & Listen concept turns melancholic. The pavement ends. The road becomes ripio —gravel that pops against the undercarriage like gunfire. The sky is heavy, white, and low. It starts to rain. Then it stops. Then it rains sideways.
You are driving toward Chiloé. The palafitos (stilt houses) appear in the mist. The radio loses signal. You switch to a podcast about the missing Caleuche —the mythical ghost ship that sails these waters. The forest closes in: alerce trees that are 3,000 years old, their roots covered in moss the color of emeralds. You roll up the window. It is cold. The only sound now is the rhythmic thwump of the windshield wipers and your own breathing. This is the ultimate Drive & Listen fantasy. There is no radio. There is only the roar of the ferry you must take to cross a fjord, because the road simply stops. To your right: the Atacama Desert, the driest
But then, you drive through the Lo Prado tunnel. 30 seconds of darkness and echo. When you emerge, the city is gone. Audio cue: Static, then a lone tropipop ballad, then the crackle of a miner’s radio.
There is a specific kind of freedom found behind the wheel in Chile. It is not the flat, predictable hum of a Midwest highway, nor the frantic honking of a European roundabout. Driving in Chile is a sensory negotiation between the absurdly beautiful and the intensely fragile. To truly understand this 2,500-mile sliver of a country, you cannot just look at a map. You have to drive . And you have to listen .
Audio cue: Switch the dial. Los Jaivas —prog-rock psychedelia from the Andes.
