The Cars was a popular American New Wave band, fronted by Ric Ocasek, that emerged out of the early punk scene in the late 1970s. They hailed from Boston, Massachusetts and were signed to Elektra Records in 1977 (1977 in music).
Band history
The Cars were at the forefront in merging 1970s guitar-oriented rock with the new
synth-oriented pop then becoming popular, and which would flower in the early
1980s. While most of the singles included an
Elliot Easton guitar solo, The Cars' sound was defined much more by the distinctive and instantly recognizable vocals of chief songwriter/rhythm guitarist
Ric Ocasek and bassist/sex symbol
Benjamin Orr. The sound was filled out by
Greg Hawkes' synthesizers and the huge harmonies of Easton,
David Robinson, and Hawkes.
The band's hits dominated the charts for over nine years; their most successful albums were
1978's
The Cars, which featured the hit "Just What I Needed,"
1979's
Candy-O, which featured the hit "Let's Go", and
1984's
Heartbeat City, which included four Top 20 singles: "Magic", "
Drive", "Hello Again" and "You Might Think", which also won the
MTV Video Music Award for
Video of the Year (see
1984 in music). "Drive" gained particular notability when it was used in a video of the
Ethiopian famine prepared by the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and introduced by
David Bowie at the
1985 Live Aid concert at
Wembley Stadium in
London. Another extremely popular song from the Cars (but often not attributed to them) is "
Moving in Stereo". It became infamous for its use during the
Phoebe Cates pool scene in the 1982 movie
Fast Times at Ridgemont High.
After the resulting period of superstardom and another hit single ("Tonight She Comes", a new song from their first Greatest Hits album), the Cars released their last album Door to Door in 1987, but it failed to approach the success of their previous albums. The Cars announced the group's break-up in February 1988 (1988 in music). In the late 1990s, rumors circulated of a Cars reunion, but Orr's death of pancreatic cancer on October 3, 2000 put an end to them for a time.
The New Cars
In
2005, rumors began circulating that Easton and Hawkes would be teaming with
Todd Rundgren in a new Cars lineup. As preposterous as the rumor seemed, it turned out to be true, with the revamped lineup calling itself The New Cars. Two regular Rundgren collaborators, bassist
Kasim Sulton and drummer
Prairie Prince, are replacing Orr and Robinson in the new lineup.
The band's first single, "Not Tonight", released on March 20, 2006, sounds uncannily like the original group.
According to a March 14, 2006 press release announcing The New Cars, a greatest hits collection, The New Cars: It's Alive, will be released May 9 on Eleven Seven Music. The album will include classic Cars songs recorded live plus never-before-released studio tracks.
A summer tour with Blondie kicked off May 12 in Mississippi.
Rundgren has referred to the project as "an opportunity ... for me to pay my bills, play to a larger audience, work with musicians I know and like, and ideally have some fun for a year." Ocasek—who has opted out of any possibilities of a reunion—has reportedly given his blessing to Easton and Hawkes, saying, "I want Elliot and Greg to be happy." He has also appeared on The Colbert Report and during a comedy segment, was asked if there was anyone he wanted to put "On Notice" a The Colbert Report recurring elements and answered Todd Rundgren on April 17, 2006 - further supporting the tour with publicity.
The New Cars played "Just What I Needed" on the 06/06/06 CBS TV show Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.
=Discography=
Image:The Cars - The Cars.jpg|The Cars
(1978)
#18 U.S.
Image:The Cars - Candy-O.jpg|Candy-O
(1979)
#3 U.S.
Image:The Cars - Panorama.jpg|Panorama
(1980)
#5 U.S.
Image: The Cars - Shake It Up.jpg|Shake It Up
(1981)
#9 U.S.
Image:The Cars - Heartbeat City.jpg|Heartbeat City
(1984)
#3 U.S.
Image:The_Cars-Greatest_Hits.jpg |The Cars Greatest Hits
(1985)
#12 U.S.
Image:The Cars - Door to Door.jpg|Door to Door
(1987)
#26 U.S.
Image:The_Cars_Anthology_Cover.jpg| The Cars Anthology
(1995)
Image:The_Cars_-_The_Cars_(Deluxe_Edition)1.jpg| Deluxe Edition
(1999)
Image:The_Cars_-_Shake_It_Up_And_Other_Hits.jpg|Shake It Up & Other Hits
(2001)
Image:The_Cars_-_Complete_Greatest_Hits1.jpg|Complete Greatest Hits
(2002)
Image:The_Cars_-_The_Essentials.jpg|The Essentials
(2005)
Image:The_New_Cars_-_It's_Alive.jpg|It's Alive!
(2006)
Singles
Chart positions for US only.
|
| - 1984 You Might Think (7)
- 1984 Magic (12)
- 1984 Drive (3)
- 1985 Hello Again (20)
- 1985 Why Can’t I Have You (33)
- 1985 Tonight She Comes (7)
- 1986 I’m Not The One (32)
- 1987 You Are The Girl (17)
- 1987 Strap Me In (85)
- 1987 Coming Up You (74)
- 2006 Not Tonight
Other media
Starting in late
2004, The Cars hit song "Just What I Needed" was played in
Circuit City television ads.
The song 'Moving In Stereo' was used during the Phoebe Cates pool scene in the 1982 movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High. This scene has later been parodied in The Man Show, Scrubs (TV series) and Family Guy, and the song is generally considered a song to which one will strip.
Trivia
- "Stacy's Mom" by Fountains Of Wayne - This 2003 smash hit very closely mimicks The Cars' sound. The video clip re enacts a scene from the film "Fast Times at Ridgemont High". In the scene from the film, the accompanying music is the Cars' "Moving in Stereo".
- "Also in the video "Stacy's Mom" by Fountains Of Wayne - There is a quick shot of a car, and the rear license plate says "I ♥ RIC", a reference to Cars frontman Ric Ocasek.
- On an April 17, 2006 episode of The Colbert Report, Ric Ocasek put Todd Rundgren "On Notice".
- In the music video for "Get Free" by The Vines, lead singer Craig Nicholls wears the band's t-shirt.
See also
External links
Massachusetts musical groups |
New Wave groups |
1970s music groups |
1980s music groups |
American musical groups
The Cars | The Cars | The Cars