Cars [CD-single] [Import]

Cars [CD-single] [Import]

Cars [CD-single] [Import]

Editorial Reviews
Product Description
1999 single from the hit metal group, a cover of Gary Numan's new wave anthem with Numan guesting! Contains 'Cars' (Remix by Junkie XL & Rhys Fulber), 'Descent' (Falling Deeper Mix by Junkie XL) and 'Edgecrusher' (Urban Assault Mix by Rhys Fulber). Junkie

Cars,Fear Factory & Gary Numan,Roadrunner Int'l,5"CD Singles,Alternative Metal,Heavy Metal,Industrial,Industrial Metal,Pop,Rock
Cars
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Good, but a little too country/western
  • Fun to drive with Cars!
  • great cd
  • Cars
  • My boys love it!
Cars

Manufacturer: Disney
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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  1. Cars (Widescreen Edition)
  2. Cars: Lightning McQueen's Fast Tracks
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ASIN: B000EUMPBS
Release Date: 2006-06-06

Tracks:

  1. Real Gone - Sheryl Crow
  2. Route 66 - Chuck Berry
  3. Life Is A Highway - Rascal Flatts
  4. Behind The Clouds - Brad Paisley
  5. Our Town - James Taylor
  6. Sh-Boom - The Chords
  7. Route 66 - John Mayer
  8. Find Yourself - Brad Paisley
  9. Opening Race
  10. McQueen's Lost
  11. My Heart Would Know - Hank Williams
  12. Bessie
  13. Dirt Is Different
  14. New Road
  15. Tractor Tipping
  16. McQueen And Sally
  17. Goodbye
  18. Pre-Race Pageantry
  19. The Piston Cup
  20. The Big Race

Amazon.com

Cars is a typical Disney-Pixar animated movie in that it deals with an anthropomorphic character (here, a car) and the heartwarming values of family and friendship. (Alas, we'll have to wait a little while longer for the company to take on greed and selfishness.) The accompanying soundtrack is equally typical in that it's split between catchy pop songs and a score by Randy Newman. The clear highlight of the pop tracks is Sheryl Crow's boisterous, huge-sounding "Real Gone" (her best song in ages). Rascal Flatts also cover Tom Cochrane's 1991 hit "Life Is a Highway," while John Mayer rocks out on "Route 66" (Chuck Berry's elegantly lean version is included as well). For his part, Newman continues his distinguished association with quality animation by supplying a nimble score. It's fun to hear him deploy riffs that wouldn't be out of place on a Quiet Riot album on the bombastic "Opening Race," while the bluesy "Bessie" does George Thorogood with a tuba. The CD's overall Southern flavor is emphasized by the frequent use of banjo and slide guitar, as well as by score tracks cantering about, like "McQueen and Sally." And, as usual, Newman delivers a nostalgic, misty-eyed song--in this case "Our Town," performed by that master of sensitive laid-back charm, James Taylor. --Elisabeth Vincentelli

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Good, but a little too country/western.......2007-07-17

My family LOVES a couple of the songs - Sheryl Crow's "Real Gone" and Brad Paisley's "Life is a Highway," but several of the rest are just too mellow or country/western-style for our taste. But there's a pretty good remake of "Route 66," as well as the classic original. All in all, it's worth the money just for those songs.

5 out of 5 stars Fun to drive with Cars!.......2007-07-13

Used Cars Gotta love it! The movie's great and having the music in the car makes it a fun ride!

4 out of 5 stars great cd.......2007-07-10

Great movie soundtrack cd. Lots of good songs and music; if you've seen the movie, you can almost see the action going on with the different orchestral pieces. The kids love the songs. We've only had the cd a couple of weeks but the kids are already singing along with the songs; the kids are 2 and 5.

5 out of 5 stars Cars.......2007-06-14

My son loved the movie and we love the soundtrack. Sheryl Crow's song is great!

5 out of 5 stars My boys love it!.......2007-05-25

I love this CD as much as my boys do. It is so upbeat and fun! We listen to this in the car all the time and the boys love to tell me what scene is happening with each different song. They even like listening to the back half of the CD and describing each part that is going on. I would definitely recommend this for any Cars fan - it's great!
Cars - Complete Greatest Hits
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Good Enough
  • economic car collection
  • Drive
  • The carrs cd
  • DRIVE
Cars - Complete Greatest Hits
The Cars , and Cars
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B00005Y1XY
Release Date: 2002-02-19

Tracks:

  1. Just What I Needed
  2. My Best Friend's Girl
  3. Good Times Roll
  4. You're All I've Got Tonight
  5. Bye Bye Love
  6. Moving In Stereo
  7. Let's Go
  8. It's All I Can Do
  9. Dangerous Type
  10. Touch And Go
  11. Shake It Up
  12. Since You're Gone
  13. I'm Not The One
  14. You Might Think
  15. Drive
  16. Magic
  17. Hello Again
  18. Why Can't I Have You
  19. Tonight She Comes
  20. You Are The Girl

Amazon.com

If rock's most successful and memorable acts have usually succeeded by wrapping their own distillation of music history and personal tastes in whatever fashionable trappings are currently gripping the culture, it's hardly surprising that the Cars remain one of the most enduring symbols of the punk/new wave era. This 20-track anthology distills that argument perfectly. Ric Ocasek's songs embody a solid '60s sense of pop craftsmanship informed by a trend-conscious stylistic sheen and a cynical, slippery emotional detachment that's often betrayed by his own distinctly weary brand of romanticism, from the anxious pop of "Just What I Needed" and "You're All I've Got Tonight" to the melancholy-on-ice musings of "Drive" and "Tonight She Comes." Sixteen of the 20 cuts here were chart singles, and radio staples like "Bye Bye Love" and "Dangerous Type" might as well have been. --Jerry McCulley

Album Description

20 of their best tracks available on 1 CD, including 'Just What I Needed', 'You're All I've Got Tonight', Touch and Go', 'Magic', 'You Might Think' & more. Rhino Records. 2002.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Good Enough.......2007-07-29

A decent enough compilation, but it's missing two of my favorites that showed more of their non-commercial roots at the time; "This Could Be Love" and "Don't Tell Me No". I think people forget that this is New Wave. They were a Post-Punk band when they came out and not really an FM radio band. So it would've beeen nice to hear some of the more "home played" cuts. I agree, a double disk would've been nice.But overall, I'm getting it.

5 out of 5 stars economic car collection.......2007-07-17

Excellent condensed collection of Cars hits. Easily could have been a 2 cd
collection as the Cars were a hit machine in their day. Very good selection of songs that are catchy and fun as well as mysterious and open-ended. Once you get this you will likely want more.

4 out of 5 stars Drive.......2007-07-06

A good late 70s early 80s CD. Reminds on of early MTV. Good mix, great sound

4 out of 5 stars The carrs cd.......2007-06-08

The itemwas fine but it took wayyyyy toooooo long to receive it!!!

5 out of 5 stars DRIVE.......2007-05-17

DRIVE--My favorite Cars' song and one of my top five songs EVER. Just so beautiful. It touches me in some way, even now.

Fran Mobley
The Cars
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • The Soundtrack of My College Days
  • Best Album For a Drive in a Convertible
  • Just So Incredible!
  • In 1978, it was just what I needed
  • THE CARS ARE VERY GOOD
The Cars
The Cars
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B000002GWB
Release Date: 1990-10-25

Tracks:

  1. Good Times Roll
  2. My Best Friend's Girl
  3. Just What I Needed
  4. I'm In Touch With Your World
  5. Don't Cha Stop
  6. You're All I've Got Tonight
  7. Bye Bye Love
  8. Moving In Stereo
  9. All Mixed Up

Amazon.com essential recording

American art-rock was often stilted and lacking in humor until the New Wave arrived. Liberated by the influence of the Velvet Underground, Roxy Music and punk-era fellow travelers like Blondie and Suicide, the Cars methodically linked hookiness (enough to produce three hit singles and several other FM favorites from this debut album) and at least one raised eyebrow. The result still plays as a rock & roll classic. And if charm wasn't their aim, the fact is, it's undeniable. --Rickey Wright

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars The Soundtrack of My College Days.......2007-07-17

Back in the late 70's and early 80's, when musical technology made its biggest breakthrough since multi-track recording, some bands combined synthesizers with guitars, only to make them sound pretentious or out-of-place while others favored one instrument to the near-exclusion of the other. The Cars broke through by mixing guitar with synthesizers to produce a remarkably rare synergy. The result was danceable and appealed to both rockers and new wave fans. The band is fronted by two first-rate lead vocalists, Ric Ocasek and Benjamin Orr. Ocasek, a quirky-looking scarecrow of a man with voice to match, provides an almost cartoonish foil to the earnest, understated Orr. The cutting-edge keyboards and deceptively skillful guitar work are driven by thunderous drums and background vocals that sound somehow like thirty people crowded around a microphone in a room much too small to hold them. The result is music that entertains, breaks new ground and fills my memories of college. This debut album shows the Cars at their most down-to-earth and raw, before drum machines and Fairlight synthesizers gave them much more "corporate" kind of sound.

5 out of 5 stars Best Album For a Drive in a Convertible.......2007-03-21

In 1978, I was going to school at UC San Diego in La Jolla CA. I was living in a house on the beach in Del Mar with six other guys. One of these guys, Steve Pardella, had just purchased the new "The Cars" album and when I first heard it, It gave me a surge of energy that no other music had ever given to me. I immediately recorded it on cassette and put it in "My Car"

"My Car" at the time and which I still own is a 1969 Cougar Convertible in which I had installed a killer sound system.

This album, (along with Joe Walsh's "So What" album) was at the top of my play list when I drove to and from school. There was nothing more mood elevating than driving with the top down through Del Mar, along Torrey Pines Beach and through Torrey Pines State Park with "The Cars" cranked up to maximum volume.

Take this album for a drive with the top down - all your troubles will melt away. You are the king of the universe!

5 out of 5 stars Just So Incredible!.......2007-02-21

Even though this album produced three hot singles, I don't know why it had never won any awards for the best debut album; it really should have done thtough as The Cars by the Cars is one of the truly best first albums I ever heard bar none. Not even the Beatles has come up with such intensely thrilling music. Take the track, Moving In Stereo: wow, what a song! If this CD has a flaw, it's that with only nine songs the album is just a little too short. There was room for a couple of more songs on the original album and it's a shame that the band didn't have a few more songs to lengthen the album. Still, overall it is a near perfect album of truly great music.

Ron

5 out of 5 stars In 1978, it was just what I needed.......2007-01-03


There are precious few flawless albums in rock and roll history. This is one of them. Just as Nirvana's "Nevermind" singlehandedly turned Grunge into a mainstream phenomenon, so it was for New Wave with the Cars' debut album - And just like Nirvana fostered countless unlistenable imitators, so did the Cars. But I have a choice not to listen to all of the bad New Wave that followed this, and I also have a choice to listen to this impossibly catchy album as long as I have functioning ear drums.

For those who are only familiar with the Cars through classic rock radio, this is the Cars CD to get. It's a rare instance where one of the band's original albums is the first choice over a greatest hits package.

5 out of 5 stars THE CARS ARE VERY GOOD.......2006-12-11

THE CARS ARE AN EXTREMELY TALENTED AOR BAND FRONTED BY RIC OCASEK.THIS BAND IS VERY GOOD JUST LIKE PINK FLOYD,CREAM,THE ROLLING STONES,AC/DC AND QUEEN.THEIR DEBUT IS THEIR BEST.PICK IT UP RIGHT AWAY BUT IGNORE THE PREVIOUS REVIEWER AND HIS LOUSY RECMMENDATIONS.
Candy-O
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • CHEAP-O EDITION WITH NO LYRIC SHEET OR PHOTOS
  • THE CARS ARE WINNERS
  • In the shadow of their first album
  • not as brilliantly-conceived as the classic debut, but a highly enjoyable sophomore album
  • Hot album and even hotter cover!
Candy-O
The Cars
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B000002GWX
Release Date: 1990-10-25

Tracks:

  1. Let's Go
  2. Since I Held You
  3. It's All I Can Do
  4. Double Life
  5. Shoo Be Doo
  6. Candy-O
  7. Night Spots
  8. You Can't Hold On Too Long
  9. Lust For Kicks
  10. Got A Lot On My Head
  11. Dangerous Type

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars CHEAP-O EDITION WITH NO LYRIC SHEET OR PHOTOS.......2007-01-01

Music- excellent. Different, not better than the first album. A turn to the left (they'd been listening to Kraftwerk-ShooBeeDoo, anyone?)

Sound- a bit flat sounding remaster, but better than the original cd editions.

Packaging ...BAD...
c'mon Mr. Ocasek, aren't you a CEO or something in Elektra records???

You want lyrics or photos?
GET THE LP!!!!

I guess he felt that his lyrics weren't good enough to be reprinted...

Ben Orr was THE SINGER- RIP, man!!!

5 out of 5 stars THE CARS ARE WINNERS.......2006-12-12

THE CARS ARE AMONGST MY FAVOURITE AOR BANDS AFTER BOSTON.I JUST LOVE THIS ALBUM.HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.IGNORE THE BELOW MORON.
PS:PINK FLOYD,CREAM,THE ROLLING STONES ARE LEGENDS AND ARE MEANT FOR WINNERS.
FOREIGNER,GREEN DAY AND DIRE STRAITS SUCK AND ARE MEANT FOR LOSERS.

4 out of 5 stars In the shadow of their first album.......2006-10-27

Like the progression of Ambrosia's first two albums, this second album by the Cars features much more refined production and some fresh sounding, innovative uses of the latest technology, and also a slightly less personal touch at times, and resulting lack of conviction. (It does have a better cover than Ambrosia's 2nd album). Like the Cars' first album, this is meant to be fun music, party music. In my opinion, the best songs here are *slightly* better than anything on their first album (or anything they've done since). But there are some lesser moments too, where it sounds like they're on autopilot. These songs have a kitschy humor to them - especially the brilliant "You Can't Hold On Too Long", which captures the era. Those of us who remember the 'New Wave' craze have a hard time listening to this song without smiling. "It's All I Can Do" is an underrated gem, beautiful harmonies, arrangement, melody! "Let's Go" is a fine uptempo rock song with good synth solos and a Beatleish guitar riff that makes the bridge to the chorus. The slightly lesser song "Since I Held You" still has a very good guitar solo that develops over the song. But the rest of the album, though still very good, and not having a bad note or dull moment, lacks the punch of their first album.

4 out of 5 stars not as brilliantly-conceived as the classic debut, but a highly enjoyable sophomore album.......2006-08-25

I somewhat disagree with those who say that 1979's "Candy-O" is a carbon copy of the Cars' debut. Granted, it's not a drastic departure by any means, but the vibe is distinctly different--the rhythm guitars generally get pushed to the background and sound brittle; Greg Hawkes' synthesizer work is more prominent; and Elliot Easton is given more room to shine with his brilliant lead guitar work. The result is an intriguingly claustrophobic listening experience.

All the songs here are written by Ric Ocasek, and it's a fine batch indeed. A couple of the tunes are forgettable, particularly "You Can't Hold On Too Long" and the wimpily-harmonized "Since I Held You". And there's also the annoying, forced-sounding, albeit mercifully-brief experimental number "Shoo Be Doo". But otherwise the album is extremely pleasing, with great tunes such as the lovely mid-tempo ballad "It's All I Can Do"; the stipped-down, yet neatly textured and hook-heavy pop-rocker "Double Life" (great licks from Easton); and the riffy, ominously rocking "Night Spots". There are minor gripes you could make here and there--"Let's Go" feels kinda disjointed and insubstantial, the title track feels a bit TOO 'hip' for its own good, and the uptempo "Got A Lot On My Head" suffers a little from the overly cheesy 'Farfisa' organ, but these same tunes are still stuffed with irresistibly catchy hooks.

All in all, not as consistent or brilliantly-conceived as the self-titled debut, "Candy-O" is lots of fun regardless.

5 out of 5 stars Hot album and even hotter cover!.......2006-07-26

I don't know which I enjoy more; the great music on this follow-up to the Cars first smash album, or the amazinging hot girl on the car looking like she's just begging to be taken!
Heartbeat City
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Driven to Excellence
  • Heartbeat City
  • Automatic Loop-de-Loop: Greatest of the Great
  • We're not in Kansas anymore
  • One Of The top Recordings Of The 80's.
Heartbeat City
The Cars
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B000002H1T
Release Date: 1990-10-25

Tracks:

  1. Hello Again
  2. Looking For Love
  3. Magic
  4. Drive
  5. Stranger Eyes
  6. You Might Think
  7. It's Not The Night
  8. Why Can't I Have You
  9. I Refuse
  10. Heartbeat City

Amazon.com essential recording

Buddy Holly-meets-Roxy Music was the hook-filled formula Ric Ocasek and crew fell into on their classic 1978 debut--and it's one they continued to milk throughout the first half of the '80s. As in any formula, it seemed to dilute a bit with each subsequent release. Heartbeat City, however, saw the Cars shaking things up a bit and scoring three hit singles in the process. "You Might Think" does have that same old Cars pop sound, but "Magic" and especially "Drive" sound unlike anything the Boston band had previously recorded. The album proved to be a rebirth of sorts...as well as a final hurrah. Following their Greatest Hits package, the Cars would fade away following 1987's Door to Door. --Bill Holdship

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Driven to Excellence.......2007-07-07

The fifth studio release by the Cars' is Heartbeat City a CD filled with infectious songs and one that elevated the band to a new found glory thanks to some sharp, fun, intellectual, goofy and, most importantly, creative videos in the height of MTV's importance in pop culture.

This album spread the Cars' appeal to a new audience but it also came with a degree of spoil, perhaps putting the band in an unwanted position of notoriety one which was difficult to uphold for future releases.

The CD was produced by famed producer Mutt Lange and it exposed the use, maybe overuse, of a drum machine by drummer David Robinson; however, the Cars pulled off the trick of satisfying long time fans while developing a larger audience through catchy pop tracks.

A track-by-track review:

1. The CD starts off with "Hello Again" a track probably more famous for its extensive video presence with the likes of Andy Warhol and a group of purposely used freaky people. Ric Ocasek does lead vocals. The song is one of the album's best and was representative of the imagery of the time. It holds up today.

2. "Looking for Love" is an overlooked tune. While it isn't the pop sensation of others on the disc, it is a song that deserves merit for if nothing else Ocasek's unique vocal style.

3. "Magic" is another tune that congers up images of the video played many times on MTV. Ocasek walks on water and a gang of misfits fawn over his presence. The song instantly induces memories of summertime pleasures.

4. "Drive" is perhaps the signature vocal of Benjamin Orr. The man never got his due as one of rock's all-time great vocalists. Here is a perfect illustration of a phenomenal voice and a chilling reminder of a lost treasure. True fans will never forget him. The video starred Ocasek's future wife, model Paulina Porizkova, and highlighted the typical ups and downs of a relationship. Paulina's sexiness is ideal.

5. "Stranger Eyes" is another song that merits better appreciation than what history has written. Orr delivers the vocals and the song is a winner.

6. "You Might Think" is in a group of songs that defines the music of the new wave era of the 1980s. The video, an award-winner, is comical and shows the mystery that is Ocasek in an extroverted way. One of the band's all-time best songs. "You might think I'm crazy but all I want is you." What an obvious line but what a splendid one, too. Brevity is the soul of wit.

7. "It's Not the Night" is arguably the big rocker on this release. Orr again shows his vocals have no limitations. He evokes memories of "Cruiser" from Shake it Up. Crank this up.

8. "Why Can't I Have You" was a deep album cut at the time. It is melancholy and the cries of desperation in Ric's voice can be heard throughout. In one sense a soft song but in another so powerful.

9. "I Refuse" wallows in mediocrity but it does have some attraction. Ocasek does a good job here painting a picture of someone who is tired of being used by his mate and who refuses to be part of any charade.

10. "Heartbeat City" is the title track and is a cool, if not smashing, entry. It is a tune that will create an image of how one person can make another smile with just her (Jacki) presence. A really solid song. This is one of those tracks that never gets tired.

5 out of 5 stars Heartbeat City.......2007-01-17

The Cars was a interesting band. They got played on classic rock stations but they was a new wave band even the police had a hard time getting played on stations at the time. That being said when this album came out in 1984 it sounded different, clean yet a little rough, new wave yet a little hard around the edge which is why I loved this album. This is one of very few album that is flawless. Years later (around 1998) Ric said this was a experimental album and it was the first album ever that was recorded through computer with synth and drum machine which make it even more better album because it doesn't sound cold like other new wave bands at the time. I highly recommand this album to anyone that want a classic new wave album.

5 out of 5 stars Automatic Loop-de-Loop: Greatest of the Great.......2007-01-13

The Cars, in a word, are unbelievable. As popular as they were in their heyday of the '80s, the quality and sophistication of their music remains largely unappreciated. Heartbeat City is one of the finest albums of the period, and of New Wave as a genre altogether. It brought together and for the first time to the mainstream, a perfect interaction of rock and electronica, in such an understated way that the very notion passed unnoticed. The title track itself is emblematic of great soundscape-driven pop/rock, and I don't have enough time to write about all the other tracks in the album. Suffice it to say that, musically, aesthetically and artistically this was a high watermark for the band and New Wave in the Pop world. Its follow-up album, Door to Door, was equally good and largely misunderstood, and I would recommend it as much as this one.

2 out of 5 stars We're not in Kansas anymore.......2006-11-03

I remember when You Might Think, the first song off the Cars' new album made itself known - it was upbeat, but completely overshadowed by its groundbreaking video that set new standards. The problem with that was, it was easy for the video to distract from the fact that the song was a bit fluffy, for a group that made its name by vowing "there's no mistaking rock and roll". By now the Cars sound has lost just about everything that made it unique, and gone from having lots of synths to having TOO MANY. It still has Rik Ocasek's odd voice, but instead of amusing, wry humor, the emphasis is slickness and a certain smugness. This album has a terrifically produced sound, and there are some well written songs, like 'Hello Again' (which contains a lot of the old Cars humor) and the title track. Songs like 'Magic' and 'You Might Think' are instantly catchy, but don't really merit repeated listenings. 'Drive' is a nice ballad, it's nothing TOO amazing but it avoids a lot of the traps that made other ballads of the time (like Chicago/Peter Cetera's) so bad. This isn't bad music by any means, like the Moody Blues' Other Side of Life, it is elegantly put together, but the soul's gone. I guess the guys just got older and weren't as peppy and intense into the music anymore. And one last thing, the album cover is pretty terrible. What a confusing jumble of car parts and body parts (and interestingly, a two-star rating). Their other covers you could UNDERSTAND what you were looking at.

5 out of 5 stars One Of The top Recordings Of The 80's........2006-09-25

Owning every Cars CD and solo recording by this group I feel quite familiar with the Cars music. I've listened to ALL of them countless times, but always find myself back in "Heartbeat City". What a CD!!!! When the album was first released unbeknownst to me I heard Drive and Magic on the radio, and immediately went out and purchased the cassette. To this day the CD still remains in my changer. This music defined so many things for me back then. I feel this CD help change the direction on music at the time. All they're previous releases led up to this. It was the pinnacle of their music. Important yet dreamy at times, dark and light, sad yet compelling. An absolutely fantastic recording that I cannot say enough good things about. On another note I've listened to the New Cars release that just came out..........Todd is great in his own right but this is nothing more than a $$ scheme. I can't help but laugh every time I hear his voice on a favorite Cars song. Give me a break. Ric, are you listening? There is one and only will be one lead singer for the Cars, ever.
Chasing Cars
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Snow Patrols Greatest Hit Yet
  • Chasing Cars
Chasing Cars
Snow Patrol
Manufacturer: Umvd Import
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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  1. You're All I Have
  2. Open Your Eyes
  3. Signal Fire
  4. Shut Your Eyes, Pt. 1
  5. Shut Your Eyes, Pt. 2

ASIN: B000H80M0I
Release Date: 2006-11-06

Tracks:

  1. Chasing Cars
  2. Play Me Like Your Own Hand
  3. It Doesn't Matter Where, Just Drive

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Snow Patrols Greatest Hit Yet.......2007-06-24

If you haven't heard the track 'Chasing Cars' by Snow Patrol, you are really missing out. This is a truly wonderful track, and whether you own the single or the album, there is no denying it is a great song.
It's a very meaningful melodius track, with so much heart and feeling in it. It's one of those songs that just makes you stop and think about life. And for those of you that have heard 'Chasing Cars' but not the rest of the new album 'EYES OPEN', I can highly recommend it. Eyes Open

1 out of 5 stars Chasing Cars.......2007-04-06

$13.99 for THREE songs? I thought I was ordering the whole cd for that price. It should be more clearly marked as a SINGLE. That is a ridiculous amount to pay for THREE songs.
Panorama
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Panoramic View, from 2007--
  • weird and wonderful Cars
  • Quirky and essential Cars album
  • New Wave was nearly over
  • Ric Ocasek writes some trippy stuff
Panorama
The Cars
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Pop | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Shake It Up
  2. Candy-O
  3. Heartbeat City
  4. Door to Door
  5. The Cars

ASIN: B000002GX3
Release Date: 1990-10-25

Tracks:

  1. Panorama
  2. Touch & Go
  3. Gimme Some Slack
  4. Don't Tell Me No
  5. Getting Through
  6. Misfit Kid
  7. Down Boys
  8. You Wear Those Eyes
  9. Running To You
  10. Up & Down

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Panoramic View, from 2007--.......2007-06-20

"Panorama" was released in the later days of my initial Cars thrill, in August, 1980. I had listened to Candy-O far more than any sane person ever would, and was ready for a new Cars ride. "Touch and Go" was just what I needed to get me to Musicland to buy the new LP, "Panorama."

The first few listens had me basically lifting the needle after "Touch and Go," and dropping it back to the beginning of the track. Eventually the needle found its way to the rest of the LP, and I found more and more music to like. And, 27 years later, I love this album (now on CD!) more than ever... it has the staying power very few albums from 1980 ever had.

May God grant rest to my beloved Benjamin Orr, the most underrated vocalist and song writer of his time. The man had singing chops that shamed many of his peers. I recommend his final interview, on "The Cars Live," on DVD The Cars Live - Musikladen 1979 from Image Entertainment. He was a sick man at the time, but was happy to keep giving his all to his fans.

5 out of 5 stars weird and wonderful Cars.......2007-03-17

Few bands were able to bridge the gap between hook-laden hard rock and the synthesizer dominated noodling of new wave music that was enjoying its relatively short heyday in the early '80's. Nobody attracted classic rock fans and new wavers alike better than the Cars, with the possible exception of Devo or The Pretenders.
"Panorama" unlike the first two releases, is full ahead Ric Ocasek quirkyness, full of strange rhythms, sample noises and alienating lyrics. The title track layers itself over and over into a puddle of delightful electronic swirls by songs' end. Give rock fans credit for showing an appetite for weird rhythms particularly with "Touch And Go", a hit for the band and similiar somewhat to the Police's "Spirits In The Material World" without being a knockoff.
"Gimme Some Slack" gives us a Stonesy riff and the most accessible beat on the CD. Other tracks like "Getting Through" are punky in spirit, "Down Boys" snarls with lines like "You thought you were hysterical and I still ain't laughing" and a theremin style synth during the chorus.
Unlike the next two albums the Cars would release before disbanding that were decidedly commercial and anything but adventurous, not that they were bad by any means, "Panorama" probably stands as the one album the Cars did with little concern for accessability. As such, it has aged well, standing tall next to the debut "The Cars", which is still one of rock and roll's greatest debut albums ever. It's interesting that with the onset of the technology available that computer driven music hasn't evolved much over the years, except for rude noise by NIN and some bland dance beats. "Panorama" shows us what could have been had music turned more electronic instead of hair farmer metal and grunge within ten years of its release.

4 out of 5 stars Quirky and essential Cars album.......2007-01-01

As the other reviewers have noted here, this album was a big departure from the first two Cars albums. The first two albums were catchier and more upbeat; this one has a more despairing or at least curious feel, and yet it still has it's own greatness. Not surprising that this is the Cars album with the strongest Ric Ocasek imprint on it, yet the full band also contributes nicely. The title track "Panorama" is probably my personal favorite, "Touch and Go" is the most Cars-like when compared to the first two albums, and "Misfit Kid" is much like a great Ocasek solo track - a theme of alienation combined with wry humor, in other words an Ocasek specialty. In fact "Misfit Kid" could well be a biographical song about Ocasek himself. Really all the songs here have something to offer, once you get used to the offbeat style. The Cars album that followed this one, "Shake it Up", was much more of a return to the form of the catchier first two albums. Possibly if Shake it Up had been the third album, and Panorama the fourth, this album might have been better appreciated in its own time. Or maybe not. But viewed now as one of six Cars albums rather than one of three, Panorama can be appreciated as a very interesting and essential part of the Cars catalog. It's really hard to rate this album vs. the other Cars albums, given that it's not the type of album that made the band so popular, I wouldn't say it's their best, but given the interesting creativity that often "works" here, I'd say it's not their least worthy album either. So "essential" works as well as anything. If only Ocasek's solo albums were near this good.

3 out of 5 stars New Wave was nearly over.......2006-10-27

Almost as good as Candy-o, but even more trendy and the New Wave sound is losing the punkish, bizarre edge and becoming a bit monotonous. That being said, there are some good songs on this album, oh yes. "Touch and Go" is one their best songs ever, with an odd, lurching beat in the verse that gives way to a stunning, grooving, chorus, that gives way to one of the best guitar solos ever recorded. "You Wear Those Eyes" is a beautifully weird love song. There's a bit of reuse of old ideas and lyrics (how many times can Rik Ocasek make wordplay with "come"), but it's not a bad album. New wave had several elements or angles to it, one was its punk roots, but there was also an influence of the 'robotic' sound of bands like Kraftwerk. At this stage in the game, the keyboard sounds are a bit tamer and the groove is getting very robotic and mechanical. This is their last really good album.

5 out of 5 stars Ric Ocasek writes some trippy stuff.......2006-10-26

Not the greatest Cars album, but lyrically it is one of their most interesting. Several songs from this album do make the "greatest hits" list, but it is some of the non-singles like "Down Boys" that will draw most of your attention.
Shake It Up
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Solid songs carry this not too extensive CD
  • More New Wave than Rock
  • Check out the words
  • Doesn't this disc need RE-MASTERING?!?
  • Shake It Up
Shake It Up
The Cars
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Pop | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Panorama
  2. Heartbeat City
  3. Candy-O
  4. The Cars
  5. Door to Door

ASIN: B000002GXD
Release Date: 1990-10-25

Tracks:

  1. Since You're Gone
  2. Shake It Up
  3. I'm Not The One
  4. Victim Of Love
  5. Cruiser
  6. A Dream Away
  7. This Could Be Love
  8. Think It Over
  9. Maybe Baby

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Solid songs carry this not too extensive CD.......2006-10-14

Almost every Cars CD contained songs with infectuous hooks, simple but fabulous guitar work, and songs driven by powerful rhythm and catchy lyrics. "Shake It Up" is no exception. Not unlike other artists of their time, however, the Cars also weren't exempt from tossing in a muligan or two to fill out their albums and/or contract obligation. Despite that fact, the first 6 songs on this CD are strong enough to outweigh the remaining fluff. "Since You're Gone" is my favorite Cars song for so many reasons. One of the best heartbreak/love songs ever written is an unrelenting, powerful, impossible not to sing along with tune, even if you can't relate to the simple but brilliant lyrics penned by Ric Ocasek (his solo effort, "Emotion in Motion" in my opinion, would provide the next best Cars' related love song). "Shake It Up" was the other radio darling from this CD. But you can't emphasize those 2 simply for that fact. "Victim of Love" and "A Dream Away" are 2 of the most unheralded songs by the Cars, certainly by radio play standards. Though "A Dream Away" didn't escape the astute ears of the deep AOR stations who know great music when they hear it. Talk about your infectuous songs. I challenge anyone to listen to this song cranked on a quality sound system and try to sit still. "Victim of Love" too has typical Cars hooks and is another Ocasek sung empathetic dity to the love lorn that is also one of my favorite Cars songs. "Cruiser" and "I'm Not The One" round off the best six songs for other reasons and make this CD worth buying, particularly at the bargain prices it can be found at. The last three songs are throwaways, but that doesn't make any difference as far as how I rate this CD. My last edition of this CD, though not remastered had very good sound quality. It was bought several years after the intial release of this CD (I bought the album my first copy) so it may have benefited from a quality production by that time. The point being you needn't wait for remastering to enjoy a solid Cars CD.

4 out of 5 stars More New Wave than Rock.......2006-08-10

The first four Cars albums, all produced by Roy Thomas Baker and released in the space of four years, are a really solid body of work. Each one is not quite as good as the one that came before it, but this was a great band, so even this fourth one, "Shake It Up," is still a four-star album in my book. It's probably not the one to start with, but if you own a couple others and you're still curious about the Cars, give it a try.

"Shake It Up" is more commercial than the previous album, "Panorama," but at the same time, it has a warmer, more intimate sound, more along the lines of "Candy-O." The biggest difference is that "Shake It Up" is not as guitar-oriented as any previous Cars album (nor any of the later ones, for that matter). After delivering great solos on the first two songs, Elliot Easton only gets one more solo, on "Victim of Love," though he does play some really nice, raunchy fills at the end of "Cruiser." There is not a single solo on the entire second half of the album, as the keyboards carry the melodies and the guitar is relegated to a complementary role.

Still, this album sticks in my mind just as much as the first three. Ric Ocasek was still wrting good tunes, and even the weaker material toward the end is so cleverly arranged that it jumps right out of the speakers and into your head. "Think It Over" and "Maybe Baby" would've been dumb songs in the hands of lesser musicians, but the Cars make them come alive. "Maybe Baby" is the only song where David Robinson has a chance to cut loose on drums, and he attacks them with all the ferocity of a guy who has spent the entire album up till then playing with a drum machine.

There are two first-rate keyboard-driven slow songs on this album, "I'm Not the One" and "A Dream Away." "Since You're Gone" is one of the funniest, most fatalistic songs Ocasek ever wrote, and "Cruiser" is a great crunching rocker in the tradition of "Candy-0." Some people hate the title song, but I've always loved it.

Yes, the Cars were less of a "rock" band here, but being a "rock" band was never the point anyway. They always walked both sides of the line between rock and new wave. They just chose to be more of a new wave band with this album. And it worked out just fine, as far as I'm concerned.

4 out of 5 stars Check out the words.......2005-01-24

A long time ago, I bought this record, not the CD. The Cars were a group that I considered popular. I know some of the songs were on the radio and eventually I saw a great music video of "You Might Think" that seemed as witty as anything that was on TV that week, but I was mainly buying records that appealed to me in a weird way, and The Cars always seemed to be weird enough for me. By the time "Shake It Up" came out in 1981, I might have read that their experimental efforts had flopped and The Cars were sticking with a simple format that worked for them in the past; so the title "Shake It Up" was meant in a mild way. The words tended to seem hypothetical, particularly in the song "This Could Be Love" :

. . . more than you want me to

till i met you in the dark
i was chasing little sparks
when you think you're going to sink
comes someone you wouldn't think
is this the kill
is this the thrill
i'll wait until you say
this could be love

Which is followed by a song called "Think It Over." The poetry is magically evasive, totally eschewing concrete images, calling a song "Maybe Baby." The tragic element is destiny for the victim of love :

framed by the night touched by the glove
you're the victim victim of love.

There might be a greatest hits CD with a lot more Cars songs that radio listeners would recognize, but this collection of nine songs in 1981 was the set I could even buy a book of music for and try to play and sing in simple beginner fashion. The sounds on the record were never as simple as what was in the book, but the music worked well at that level. Actually learning these songs was much better than just hearing them on the radio, and we all ought to be grateful that Ric Ocasek came up with so many songs that fans of popular culture could enjoy, even if our understanding was a bit vague.

1 out of 5 stars Doesn't this disc need RE-MASTERING?!?.......2004-08-15

I appreciate the content-based reviews, but some of us are long-time Cars fans who made their minds up about the songs many years ago. The question is, is this compact-disc everything it could be in terms of SOUND REPRODUCTION?

Regrettably not. The Cars albums were initially "dumped" to CD back in the early 90s, and it took a long time for the first three albums to be decently re-mastered. (Sadly, ART and LYRIC reproduction still has not been handled properly! Each new CD version looks exactly like the older, worse version!) As far as I can tell, Shake It Up and Heartbeat City have never been properly transferred. In other words -- they sound terrible.

Seems the problem is, Elektra's out of business. Certaintly, it's not a question of The Cars being able to sell records, since they ALWAYS DID, FROM DAY ONE. It's just not fair.

Somebody, please, obtain the rights and do The Cars right! Don't these pioneers of 80s sound quality deserve modern reproduction?

5 out of 5 stars Shake It Up.......2004-08-13

A little more light-hearted this time around, a year after the darker textures of Panorama. Shake It Up is a wonderful album that's sometimes forgotten, stuck between their "commercial disappointment album" and their "commercial smash album". It all starts out with one of the band's most memorable tunes, 'Since You're Gone', with Ric Ocasek's charming rhymes and Elliot Easton's faux E-Bow solo. A true classic. The title track is also a true classic, featuring a neo-doo-wop groove that remains the Cars' most danceable tune. 'I'm Not The One' is a simply incredible ballad, one of their best. It wasn't released as a single until 1986, as a remixed version from the Greatest Hits album. The original is better, with yet another wonderful synth solo by the band's secret weapon, Greg Hawkes. It sounds downright gothic. 'Victim Of Love' is a more light-hearted ditty. I love Hawkes' giddy synth touches on this one. 'Cruiser' is an awesome rocker, a perfect cruising song, naturally. I haven't owned this album for very long, and 'Cruiser' has already become one of my favorite Cars songs, along with the next song, 'A Dream Away'. This song is astounding; a great mood created by a driving synth line and synthesized drums, coupled with Ric's moody voice and lyrics. Probably my favorite song on the album. 'This Could Be Love' is another moody ballad, and a great one at that. Could've made a good single, too. 'Think It Over' has a bit different sound for the Cars. Despite the synths, it feels a little more rockabilly than usual. Ben Orr's vocal, as usual, make this song jump from good to great. "Everytime you run around, it makes me wanna pop". Also would've made a great single. 'Maybe Baby' is a driving Ric Ocasek rocker with some pretty slick percussion. And that's the end of this short but sweet Cars album, their one and only album cut at their own custom studio, Syncro Sound in Boston. I wonder whatever happened to that place? Anyway, Shake It Up remains one of the Cars' more light, enjoyable albums and I never tire of it.
Door to Door
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Crossing the finish line under a chequered flag
  • Missed this CD in the 80s
  • Uninspired. Lacking the one time unmistakable Cars stamp.
  • WAY underrated...
  • Personal but unpassional review
Door to Door
The Cars
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Pop | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Panorama
  2. Shake It Up
  3. Heartbeat City
  4. Candy-O
  5. The Lace

ASIN: B000002H52
Release Date: 1990-10-25

Tracks:

  1. Leave Or Stay
  2. You Are The Girl
  3. Double Trouble
  4. Fine Line
  5. Everything You Say
  6. Ta Ta Wayo Wayo
  7. Strap Me In
  8. Coming Up You
  9. Wound Up On You
  10. Go Away
  11. Door To Door

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Crossing the finish line under a chequered flag.......2007-06-26

The Cars' final studio release, 1987's "Door to Door," is often dismissed as a throwaway by many and is often equated with the band's sudden termination.

While this CD does not have the glitz of prior releases it does have some quality tracks that would be considered powerful if attached to other albums. As a huge fan of the band, I can understand the criticism of this effort. It didn't reach the lofty expectations coming off the wildly popular 1984 release "Heartbeat City," the darling of MTV, or have the appeal for commercial radio due to the absence of radio-friendly pop hits.

Yet, as this CD enters the legal drinking age (21), it remains a sweet mix of fun and maturity and will forever be a guilty pleasure.

A breakdown of the songs:

1. "Leave or Stay" -- Perhaps not the best choice for the album's opener. There were better options to serve that purpose but though not a memorable track it isn't without merit.

2."You are the Girl" -- Chosen as the first single to be released, the song was weak compared to previous singles that introduced the band's other efforts. Perhaps a bit on the mushy side, the song can be somewhat catchy though not sensational.

3. "Double Trouble" -- The first song on the CD that is delivered with the vocals of Benjamin Orr, this is a terrific song that should be considered among the band's tightest efforts. For fans of "Shake it Up" think the song "Cruiser" with a bit of a twist. It rocks.

4. "Fine Line" -- Singer Ric Ocasek did a masterful job with this tune. A very mellow song that borders on very dark; it would have been a perfect companion to a "Miami Vice" episode. The conclusion of this song has some crafty yet distinct musicianship. Excellent song.

5. "Everything You Say" -- Again Benjamin Orr's vocals are phenomenal with a sort of country-esque appeal. It is to the Cars' what "Hot Dog" was to Led Zeppelin. It is right around here that the CD kicks it up a notch.

6. "Ta Ta Wayo Wayo" -- A weird title for a song that actually injects some frivolity to this release. In just under three minutes, this song is reminiscent of earlier efforts which instantly makes the listener want to tap fingers and toes.

7. "Strap Me In" -- Ocasek has a virtual masterpiece with this song. What an outstanding track. A true classic! This should be considered one of the band's best songs ever but will never get its just rewards because of the lack of support achieved by this CD.

8. "Coming Up You" -- Orr's vocals were impressive here. The song isn't a classic but it is tough to overlook.

9. "Wound Up on You" -- A typical Cars' love song, this works because of Ocasek's quirkiness. Very mellow, very charming, very good.

10. "Go Away" -- Perhaps the best choice for the lead single on this album, this song is a steady and solid effort. Orr's voice is one for the ages.

11. "Door to Door" -- The title track is the anti-"Panorama." In fact, it isn't the other title tracks "Shake it Up," "Heartbeat City" or "Candy-O." This is, well, as a DJ once said jokingly "Did the Cars just go heavy metal?" Not quite. But this song is a very different production for the band and it roars with pleasure. It certainly is a very unique effort. The perfect finish for the song, the album and the band -- the final sounds are of a door slamming shut. And that was that!

4 out of 5 stars Missed this CD in the 80s.......2007-01-15

I guess being married and in college, somehow I missed this CD when it was first released. I caught a couple of the tracks on The Cars Unlocked and realized this CD was worth picking up. There are only 4 or 5 good tracks here, but I love Double Trouble, Strap Me In and a few others. Worth the price.

2 out of 5 stars Uninspired. Lacking the one time unmistakable Cars stamp........2006-10-16

Just like the year their debut CD came out, This Cars CD in 87 showed something completely different. Both the times and The Cars had drastically evolved by this year, and neither necessarily for the better. When their debut album came out "The Cars" (self-titled CD) showed a unique, extremely catchy sounding brand of music that was unmatched, even at a time when rock/pop music was going through an extremely transitional period in many ways. New wave, punk, hard rock, classic rockers and even dance music were all at a crossroads and the Cars debut was a product of that time, showing influences from that period, but with a creative, imaginative sound that was unmatched. The result, a powerful musically and lyrically infectuous sound that didn't let up with their subsequent 4 CDs. But by the late 80s, aside from the totally new unique sounding bands, those who had evolved before then that were accustomed to CDs that seemingly always included filler grizzle either lost their identity or got lost in the times and seemed to put out efforts that sounded completely like filler fluff. "Door to Door" epitomized that fact. Though "Coming Up On You" and "Wound Up On You" had appeal relatively close to some earlier Cars ballads, this CD lacked the power and solid singles that used to make such songs acceptable and they weren't strong enough to carry a record. The result, this was the first Cars CD I didn't buy. While each Cars CD had evolved into other areas, there was always an inspired identity was distinctly The Cars. This effort was mundane at best, as could be said of many bands who'd evolved in the same time period. There's a reason this era found many music stores with bargain bin "cut out" albums/CDs. When your band starts in at a time when classic rockers were still putting a stamp on the music world, and still puts out a record at the zenith of MTV's music video era and all that implies, you're bound to get lost to some point. 1987 marked that point for The Cars. This CD has no power driving guitar riffs that put them on the map, no catchy hooks, and no anthemic lyrics to anchor a CD strong enough to support the uninspired material found here, unlike earlier efforts. Most Cars CDs were not exempt from throwing in a muligan or 2 to fill out a record obligation. This CD is the converse- almost completely muligans. Money would be better spent on their first 5 CDs, or their almost definitive double greatest hits CD, "Just What I Needed."

4 out of 5 stars WAY underrated..........2006-03-24

If this album had been released 1 year after 'Heartbeat City', rather than 3 years, I reckon it would have STORMED the charts- it may not be as adventurous or edgy as their 70s work, but so many people seem to have overlooked the fact that this is REALLY solid, catchy, satisfying, eclectic, hugely enjoyable pop/rock. 80s fans should go nuts for this if they give it a try- it's got everything from pop/rock songs absolutely PILED high with synths AND guitars to slow, simple, moody ballads to big growling rockers to accostic driven pop songs to piano boogie to explosive speed metal, all armed with strong hooks and polished with just-right production. Far from being messy or incoherent, I think this is one of The Cars' most consistent albums in terms of quality (I'm yet to hear 'Panorama'). Give it a go- you may just find 'Door to Door', as I did, becoming a highly valued part of your music collection!

4 out of 5 stars Personal but unpassional review.......2005-12-24

Well, they ask you for a review and...

I'm 37, and I know what I'm writing about!!!

This was the last album of ¨The Cars, as a group, and the had the ¨momentum¨ from their lastest albums...

Ok....It's all 80's but remember:

It has been the most prolific decade in rock-pop music on history...

The album has good tracks¨, and has all The Cars flavor you can get. They really realized (maybe a little late) that Benjamin Orr could sing, but they got a very balanced album.

You don't get those tracks from the late 70's, but you have a very good mix of unconventional songs on it. (I'm not a fan of those repetitive songs of the 70's at all, if they didn't have deep lyrics).

¨Go away¨ sounds great and keep the spirit of those years..

¨You are the girl¨ is simple but beautiful...

At the end, this is the end of a wonderful journey as a group for ¨The Cars¨.

The radio stations didn't air these tracks, but this is a hidden treasure, if you can appreciate this type of pop-rock music.

Go for it, if you're becoming a fan!!! or if you're a good one!!

Just What I Needed: The Cars Anthology
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • No "Bye Bye Love"?!
  • Just what you need . . .
  • It IS just what I needed!
  • Why a Cars anthology?
  • PACKED with goodies, but I would change a coupla things...
Just What I Needed: The Cars Anthology
The Cars
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Pop | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. The Cars: Deluxe Edition
  2. Shake It Up
  3. The Cars Live - Musikladen 1979
  4. Panorama
  5. Heartbeat City

ASIN: B000003474
Release Date: 1995-11-07

Tracks:

  1. Just What I Needed
  2. My Best Friend's Girl
  3. Good Times Roll
  4. You're All I've Got Tonight
  5. Don't Cha Stop
  6. Moving In Stereo
  7. Take Me Now
  8. Cool Fool
  9. Let's Go
  10. Candy-o
  11. Dangerous Type
  12. Double Life
  13. Got A Lot On My Head
  14. Gimme Some Slack
  15. Nightspots
  16. Slipaway
  17. That's It
  18. Panorama
  19. It's All I Can Do
  20. Don't Go To Pieces

Tracks:

  1. Touch and Go
  2. Don't Tell Me No
  3. Shake It Up
  4. Since You're Gone
  5. I'm Not The One
  6. Cruiser
  7. The Little Black Egg
  8. Funtime
  9. You Might Think
  10. Drive
  11. Magic
  12. Hello Again
  13. Why Can't I Have You
  14. Breakaway
  15. Tonight She Comes
  16. You Are The Girl
  17. Strap Me In
  18. Door To Door
  19. Leave Or Stay
  20. Ta Ta Wayo Wayo

Amazon.com

Despite musical roots that branched from the Velvets to Steely Dan and the likes of then-new wave icons Roxy Music, the Cars never strayed far from the crucial, hook-conscious, three-minute pop song sensibility which made them one of the most successful and long-lived radio staples of the '70s and '80s. As well as being catchy, Ric Ocasek's best songs are also ironic--"Good Times Roll" and "Just What I Needed" both contain winking lyrical twists. With Ben Orr vocalizing the sweeter material, guitarist Elliott Easton's and keyboardist Greg Hawke's often-quirky musical embroidery, and drummer David Robinson's rhythmic propulsion and fashion sense, the Cars became the self-contained rock juggernaut--or, if you prefer, new wave arena band--documented on these two discs.

The hit singles and select album cuts stretch from their improbably rich debut through moodier efforts like "Panorama" and the vibrant, yet satisfying "Shake It Up" and "Heartbeat City." The CD is well seasoned by a cache of previously unreleased demos, B-sides, and outtakes. The earliest of these ('77 demos of "Take Me Now" and "Cool Fool") demonstrate that the band's sound was intact before they met their first multiplatinum producer, while later rarities (playful covers of Iggy's "Fun Time" and the Nightcrawlers' "Little Black Egg") underscore their eclectic, seemingly incongruous tastes. --Jerry McCulley

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars No "Bye Bye Love"?!.......2007-06-03

They chose to leave out the song that put the Cars on the radio? And some of these choices are not just what I needed; better left to a complete-est CD for those who must have every song no matter what. "All mixed up" would have been a better choice than some of the out takes they put on the set. Which points up the main weakness of the Cars; on Shake it up and later recordings they had become locked into the Techno sound and it seems that it was imposable for them to break the mold and they died out with the `80s.

5 out of 5 stars Just what you need . . . .......2007-04-22

An outstanding 40 song compilation on 2 CDs. Owning this arguably eliminates the need for owning any individual Cars albums (I have them all). Packing these tunes onto 2 CDs allowed the producers to include all the best songs and even a few alternative numbers . . . unreleased demos and covers. Cool.

I noticed that Reviewer Larry Davis wrote that the playlist was perfect except that Dontcha Stop should have been replaced with Bye Bye Love. I concur. It would have made this collection perfect. But that is not a deal breaker. If you enjoy The Cars, this is just what you need.

5 out of 5 stars It IS just what I needed!.......2007-04-06

When the Cars burst onto the scene in 1978 it was with an energy rarely seen in the increasingly stuffy and stagnant rock scene. The Cars embodied the then-emerging punk ethos of modern rock; edgy, dark, mysterious and somewhat retro with oblique lyrics about nothing and seemingly anything. They were on a par with other strong groups emerging at the time like Blondie, the Ramones, the Clash, and others that broke the traditional rock mold of groups like Aerosmith and the Rolling Stones. The group had an amazing decade long run with 13 Top 40 hits and six best-selling albums. Listen to any classic rock station today and you'll likely hear a Cars song before too long. But the Cars defied easy classification drawing fans of rock, new wave, and punk, even becoming popular with MTV.

"Just What I Needed" pulls in all their Top 40 hits and fan favorite tracks from their albums such as "You're All I've Got Tonight," "Moving In Stereo," "Touch and Go," and previously unreleased tracks such as their take on the Iggy Pop gem "Funtime." If you're a hardcore Cars fan who already has all of their six previous releases on CD then this is probably worth it for the previously unreleased tracks and demos and it's nice to have most of their best known tracks on two CDs. This compilation is perhaps the best out there and neatly sums up the Cars career including a really nice booklet covering their career. While they didn't last long their influence on other bands still reverberates today. When they reformed in 2006 adding Todd Rundgren to replace lead singer Ric Ocasek (who declined) and bassist/singer Ben Orr (who had died) it was something of a pale imitation of the first version of the Cars.

3 out of 5 stars Why a Cars anthology?.......2006-12-18

The Cars released only seven or so studio albums in their short recording career. And, as evidenced by JUST WHAT I NEEDED: THE CARS ANTHOLOGY, the band did not have many other recordings (unreleased, flip sides, and so on) worth including on a 40-song repackage such as this.

So most of the JUST WHAT I NEEDED collection comprises songs already available on the Cars' readily available albums. As their seven or so albums are all worth owning, who needs this anthology? People who just want the hits can get the band's greatest hits CD.

5 out of 5 stars PACKED with goodies, but I would change a coupla things..........2006-09-30

Now, I would actually give this set a 4.5, instead of the full 5. Why?? Well, I'll tell ya.

At the time this sucker was released, 11 years ago, it was perfect, but in 2006, 2 things were nagging me.

Firstly, it's the tracklisting. For 99% of it, it's perfection, the tracks selected and remastering. The one negative?? I'd replace "Dontcha Stop" with "Bye Bye Love", and that's it!!! "Bye Bye Love" belongs in "Dontcha Stop"'s slot, as on the first album, it comes immediately, without pause, after "You're All I Got Tonight" (and on rock radio in the late 70s/early 80s, stations would always play these two songs back-to-back), AND the song ends with the synth whoosh that goes into "Moving In Stereo", which is placed after "Dontcha Stop" on this collection. That song wasn't really a hit and it didn't get much airplay, BUT "Bye Bye Love" did. So I'd do that switcheroo, and not even have to move any of the other tracks!!!

Second, the packaging. It's too bulky!!! It's only 2 CDs, not 3 or 4, there are no pictures underneath the CD trays (they are black, not clear), and the booklet is thin, so instead of a thick double clamshell case, it should be a THIN double case, which is prominent today, but not in existence back in 1995 when this sucker was released. And, that cool, sparkly purple slipcase??? It is cool, so I cut it up. I made it so, it's in a thin double case, the front of the sparkly slipcase is a page in the front, over the booklet, and the back (where the songlist is), I placed underneath the CDs, the clear tray holding both discs. This is so, when you look at the case now, the purple sparkly color shows underneath the spine. You have to see it to know what I'm talking about. Also, the inner back, with the shot of Elliot Easton's lefthanded Telecaster guitar should NOT be hidden, so I made it the regular back cover of this reconfigured package...also cuz the barcode and catalogue number shows here too. As for the side spine, it originally was divided up into two, with the thick case. Well, after some cutting and snipping and taping, it now looks like (on ONE single sidespine): R2 73506/(in green) THE CARS ANTHOLOGY/ (in blue) Just What I Needed/ Elektra/Rhino. It looks better this way, anyway...who knows if this package will ever be redone??? Is it out-of-print??

Oh and one last thing, there is a glaring picture caption error in the booklet!!! On page 4 is a picture of the band, and on page 5 is the caption, listing the band members. Um, they left out leader Ric Ocasek's name!!! Kind of unacceptable really.

Otherwise, perfect killer 2CD anthology. Now, we need the rest of the catalogue to get the proper treatment similar to the debut, or at least have "Shake It Up", "Heartbeat City" and "Door To Door" get remastered, and there be a proper Ric solo anthology and include those rare soundtrack cuts.

Music Track:

  1. Cats & Dogs
  2. Caution in the Wind
  3. Colonizing the Sun
  4. Cryptobeast
  5. D.C. Cooper
  6. Day of the Robots [Explicit Lyrics]
  7. Do You Like It Here, Are You Settling In?
  8. Doctor Butcher [Explicit Lyrics] [Import]
  9. East Side Militia
  10. Expositionsprophylaxe

Music Track

music track

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