Ric Ocasek, lead singer of new-wave band The Cars, found dead in NYC apartment, police say

I just got home and heard about this. The Cars were an awesome band! My Favorite song and video from them had to be "Drive" in 1984.

Ric Ocasek, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame singer whose popular new-wave band, The Cars, helped define the sound of rock music in the late 1970s and '80s, was found dead in his New York City apartment on Sunday, a police spokesman told Fox News. Ocasek was 75.

His estranged wife, supermodel Paulina Porizkova, found him unresponsive Sunday afternoon at his home in Manhattan's Gramercy Park neighborhood, sources told the New York Post, adding that he apparently died of natural causes. Police said there was no sign of foul play.

The Cars' self-titled 1978 debut album was a smash hit, boosted by singles including "Just What I Needed." The album helped lead the way for new wave's influence on rock music throughout the following decade.

The band's 1981 single "Shake It Up" hit #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, while 1984's "Drive" hit #3.

"I liked songwriters, I was always attracted to people like Buddy Holly, Little Richard, Gene Vincent in the '50s, and when the '60s came, of course I loved The Beatles, but I also loved the Velvet Underground, Captain Beefheart, and Frank Zappa," Ocasek told The Vinyl District earlier this year. "I certainly always loved a good pop song. I always liked great songs, and it didn’t matter if it was from the Carpenters or Lou Reed. As long as they were done well and they weren’t corny or fake."

The band broke up in the late-'80s, as Ocasek embarked on a solo career. His 1986 single "Emotion in Motion" was Ocasek's only song to crack the Top 40 without The Cars behind him.

Ocasek and Porizkova were married for 28 years before their breakup last year. They were said to have met while The Cars recorded the music video for "Drive."

The Cars were inducted in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2018, an occasion that saw the band perform together for the first time in years -- but without co-founder Benjamin Orr, who died in 2000.

Ocasek, in a Rolling Stone interview, described the performance as "a good cap on the bottle" of his career, which also included painting in his later years.

"It’s kind of weird because it’s like a lifetime. It is a lifetime. I had three families during that time. They are like lives that go by and millions of people and things and artists and writers and business people and fans. … It’s a lot of stuff. It’s been a pretty eventful life, I can say."

FOX News
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Comments (5)

I lived 3.5 miles from Gramercy Park til I was 17. I also went to the Kips Bay Boys Club swimming which is only a few blocks from Gramercy Park.
BTW, I saw Buddy Holly at an Alan Freed R&R show at the NY Paramount in 1958. Things were done differently back then. Instead of 1 or 2 groups doing 4-5 numbers, there were 10 groups doing 2 songs ea. I saw Richey Valens do La Bamba and Oh Donna, Thurston Harris do Little Bitty Pretty One, Jackie Wilson do Lonely Teardrops, and Higher and Higher.
In fact, something happened when Jackie Wilson came on stage I will never forget as long as I live. The audience was about half & half black and white fairly evenly mixed throughout the theater, When Jackie Wilson was announced, the entire theater audience stood up and all the black kids migrated to the front of the theater and the white kids moved to the rear. Not a word was spoken. It was understood by the white kids that Jackie Wilson was like a hero to the black kids and they wanted to get as close to him as possible. We white kids knew that and willingly surrendered any and all seats we had toward the front. I can't tell you how proud I was to be a part of that. If only governments could learn to cooperate like that there would be no more wars.
Saw John Denver in concert! He was great! He performed for a couple of hours straight!

Another time saw Kenny Rogers in concert.

Skeeter Davis and a lot of country/western singers and musicians!


GREAT MEMORIES!!!
There was a little club in NY we used to go to quite often, see;

(venue)

What was great about it was it was sort of informal and small so you could get pretty close to the performers, like 15-25 feet. I saw David Bromberg there and John Prine.
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