The Cars Band Bio, Rock Trivia about
The Cars »
Following
are a few fun facts about The Cars for your review.
To create your quiz camel quiz, simply take the
ideas you like and then click
here to quiz your friends about The Cars.
The Cars Band Biography
Let the good times roll… again. This ain't
your father's automobile, or your older brother's
for that matter, but the emergence of The New
Cars, comprised of original members of The Cars.
Joining Elliot Easton on guitar and Greg Hawkes
on keyboards, will be an all-star group of rockers
in Todd Rundgren, fellow Utopia bassist Kasim
Sulton, and Prairie Prince, former drummer for
The Tubes. Each shares a passion for recreating
the ground breaking music of The Cars, one of
the most successful (and influential) bands of
the "new wave" era.
The Cars' initial success was
immediate. The Boston-based group's demo version
of "Just What I Needed" was the first
single from the band's debut album, The Cars,
which reached #3 on the Billboard Pop album chart
upon its release in 1978, and produced further
hits such as "My Best Friend's Girl"
and "Good Times Roll." Under the guidance
of ace producers Roy Thomas Baker and Robert John
"Mutt" Lange, a string of smash albums
and singles followed. The 1979 sophomore release,
Candy-O, went Top 20, producing the hits "It's
All I Can Do" and "Let's Go." Panorama,
in 1980, cracked the Top 5 on the strength of
the hit single "Touch and Go," while
the Top 10 release Shake It Up produced the title
track hit and "Since You're Gone" in
1981.
It's been 17 years since The
Cars last toured. Since then, bassist Benjamin
Orr passed away from cancer, and, despite discussions
over the years, lead singer Ric Ocasek and drummer
David Robinson have decided not to participate
in a reunion. But that hasn't stopped Easton and
Hawkes, who have longed to get back on stage and
play. The Cars' material has remained popular
to this day, both on radio and on national commercials
such as the current Circuit City television campaign
featuring "Just What I Needed."
"We tried approaching it
in different ways, but at the end of the day,
Ric and David didn't want to do it, but Greg and
I did," says Easton, of the process, which
took on momentum when Rundgren joined he and Hawkes
in the studio to work on Cars songs. "After
all, the guitar and keyboards were the band's
musical nucleus, in terms of arrangements and
hooks. Greg and I put the flesh on the bones of
Ric's songs. We helped craft and carve out the
sound that people recognize as The Cars' music."
"This is our way of bringing
The Cars into the 21st century," nods Hawkes.
"It's a good opportunity to renew and reconnect,
and to put it into a modern context. It's a pretty
exciting opportunity."
The addition of Todd Rundgren,
a celebrated performer, songwriter, producer and
technology groundbreaker (with hits like "I
Saw the Light," "Hello It's Me,"
"Can We Still Be Friends" and "Bang
the Drum" to his credit) is particularly
exciting, as is the involvement of his longtime
Utopia bandmate, acclaimed bassist and singer/songwriter
Kasim Sulton, who has played with the likes of
Meat Loaf, Celine Dion, Hall & Oates, Ronnie
Spector and the Indigo Girls in his distinguished
career. Rounding out the five-piece band is Prairie
Prince, who embarked on a staggering 15 world
tours in his career with pop rock group The Tubes
and recorded albums with a variety of rock's most
notable musicians - seven of them with Rundgren
himself.
"Suffice to say, the list
for lead singer was a short one and Todd was at
the top of it," says Easton. "And we
were thrilled that he was interested."
Rundgren knew Elliot from when
his band Utopia toured with The Cars and also
worked with him on an album he produced for Jules
Shear. "This is kind of a hybrid," he
says. "We got together for a brief rehearsal
in L.A., just to work up a couple of the songs
and see if I felt comfortable singing them. We
all felt it sounded pretty good, so we've moved
on to the next step, which is negotiating all
the paperwork it takes to get something as complex
as this off the ground."
"It was incredible,"
says Elliot of that first session. "Like
falling off a log. Todd did an unbelievable job
with the music. And it sounded like The Cars.
There was a lot of common ground. We all grew
up on '60s pop music, the Beatles and Brian Wilson."
Expect to hear all of The Cars'
big hits in concert, as well as some of Todd's
material, along with several new songs the band
has already recorded.
"I'm still an artist in
my own right," says Todd. "We want to
pay homage to The Cars...the songs are the essential
core, what we're hanging our hats on. People know
the material and want to re-experience it in a
live context."
The group points to other similar
situations where bands were forced to replace
their lead singers, such as AC/DC, Van Halen,
Fleetwood Mac, Pink Floyd, the Doors, Queen, or
the most recent example, INXS.
"This is The New Cars,"
insists Easton. "We'll play people favorites,
but eventually, we'll introduce new songs that
will stand on their own merit. Go from strength
to strength. We didn't want to just find ringers
for Ric and Ben, trot out the hits and play the
casino and state fair circuit. We want fans to
accept us as what The New Cars are today - strong
artists, and artists who make it just as good
as we were. Greg and I dedicated our professional
lives to establishing The Cars' stylized sound
and innovative approach to rock music. It's our
right to carry on if we want to."
With bands like Fountains of
Wayne, The Vines, The Killers, Interpol, Franz
Ferdinand and others carrying on The Cars sound,
there appears to be a new generation hungering
for the original.
"The Cars' music has aged
very well," says Easton. "It's amazing.
I think it would be great to bring back the real
thing. Todd, Kasim, and Prairie are very dynamic
performers. This band is, in many ways, even a
better live attraction. The unique thing about
The Cars, and the thing that's helped it last
so long is, it was certainly pop music, but there
was always this sense of irony about it. The lyrics
explored a darker side of relationships and life.
It would be great if we could capture people's
imaginations all over again."
Look for The New Cars to release
a live album comprised of the greatest hits of
The Cars along with new material. They will also
embark on a headlining tour this year. It's time
to let the good times roll…again.
Blondie may have had a
string of number one hits and Talking Heads may
have won the hearts of the critics, but the Cars
were the most successful American new wave band
to emerge in the late '70s. With their sleek,
mechanical pop/rock, the band racked up a string
of platinum albums and Top 40 singles that made
them one of the most popular American rock roll
bands of the late '70s and early '80s. While they
were more commercially oriented than their New
York peers, the Cars were nevertheless inspired
by proto-punk, garage rock, and bubblegum pop.
The difference was in packaging. Where their peers
were as equally inspired by art as music, the
Cars were strictly a rock roll band, and while
their music occasionally sounded clipped and distant,
they had enough attitude to cross over to album
rock radio, which is where they made their name.
Nevertheless, the Cars remained a new wave band,
picking up cues from the Velvet Underground, David
Bowie, and Roxy Music. Ric Ocasek and Ben Orr's
vocals uncannily recalled Lou Reed's dead-pan
delivery, while the band's insistent, rhythmic
pulse was reminiscent of Berlin-era Iggy Pop.
Furthermore, the group followed Roxy Music's lead
and had artist Alberto Vargas design a sexy illustration
for their 1979 album Candy-O. The provocative
airbrushed drawing was the primary visual identifier
for the group until 1984, when the group made
a series of striking videos to accompany the singles
from Heartbeat City. The videos for "You
Might Think," "Magic," and "Drive"
became MTV staples, sending the Cars to near-superstar
status. Instead of following through with their
success, the Cars slowly faded away, quietly breaking
up after releasing one final album in 1987.
Click
Here to Create fun quizzes about The Cars
»
| | | | | | |
| |
| | |
| |
|
| | | |
|