
WASHINGTON â The Cars will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in April to honor the bandâs undeniable role in defining the “new wave” genre of the late ’70s and early ’80s.
But first, the groupâs hit songwriter is bringing his new abstract art exhibit to the D.C. area.
Ric Ocasek will hold a free exhibit and fan meet-and-greet at the Wentworth Galleries on Friday at Westfield Montgomery Mall and Saturday in Tysons Galleria, both from 7 to 9 p.m.
âIâve been doing it for quite a long time,” Ocasek said. “But I never really showed it until now.â
The touring exhibit is fittingly titled âAbstract Reality.â
âItâs distorted reality,â Ocasek said. âIf somebody said, âWhy donât you paint a picture of that chair?â It would really look much different from the chair. I donât think Iâve had the kind of art training that would allow me to do things that would look realistic, and actually, I donât really want to do anything that would look realistic. Itâs more abstract.â
While Ocasek occasionally dabbles with acrylics on canvas, Pop Art photographs and mixed-media paintings, his primary medium is drawing on paper, usually with colored markers.
âItâs easy to carry around books with you, so having things that are portable [is key],” Ocasek said. “Often times, I’ll blow things up, add things to them and embellish it like that. Thatâs one method I use. I do use markers and pens, usually Japanese pens because of the colors.â
He said drawing is a free-flowing experience where he taps into his subconscious.
âItâs thinking on paper,â Ocasek said. âWhen Iâm quiet and Iâm pondering, thatâs the best time to do art. I donât know when itâs going to be, but itâs usually just when Iâm meditating on something. The concentration thing is really a bit like meditation, because in meditation, youâre supposed to have a focus, and this is what I focus on when Iâm deep in thought.â
He said itâs fun to see the art organically develop on the page â just like song lyrics.
âThe creative process is not so different from writing music,â Ocasek said. âYou start with a blank page and at the end, you have something. …Â I donât preconceive what itâs going to be.”
Ocasek first took up drawing and songwriting as a teenager in Baltimore, Maryland.
âI just kind of started drawing; I donât know why,â Ocasek said. âItâs the same reason I donât know why I said, âI think I want to write songs.â … I got a guitar when I was 14 and started to try to write songs. Obviously, I didnât have any good ones when I was 14, but I loved music. My family wasnât particularly musical. They didnât play instruments. In fact, they probably frowned upon it. So, it just came to me, and I just felt like music was something I could not ignore.â
At age 16, his family moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where he met future bandmate Benjamin Orr during the 1960s. Eventually, they made their way to Boston to form The Cars in 1976, alongside lead guitarist Elliot Easton, keyboardist Greg Hawkes and drummer David Robinson.
Their 1978 self-titled debut album featured the breakthrough hit âJust What I Needed.â
âI wrote it in Boston,â Ocasek said. âI was in a basement. Once I got everybody in the band together ⊠I did a big writing spree because it was going to be a new band. I think it came out of that bunch of songs. Maybe that was the time the songs were finally good enough.â
That initial writing spree also included âMy Best Friend’s Girl,â the albumâs second big hit.
âI donât think it was [based on an actual love triangle],â Ocasek said. âA lot of the songs I write are just from things I see or things I perceive or things that could be. So, I usually donât have a specific thing in mind; itâs just a reality that I see.â
Other hits followed with “Good Times Rollâ from the same album, “Let’s Go” from their second album âCandy-Oâ (1979), âTouch and Goâ from their third album âPanoramaâ (1980), “Shake It Upâ from their titular fourth album (1981), and “Drive” from “Heartbeat City” (1984).
âI remember âShake It Up.â I used to think that it was my silliest song, but so many people liked it that I had to do it, so I just kept doing it,â Ocasek said. âIt was kind of a cool little thing.â
What made the “new wave” genre so appealing? Why bend music history in that direction?
âI donât know why The Cars sounded like The Cars,â Ocasek said. âIt was obviously the combination of the people in the band, but we werenât trying to have a sound or try to sound like anybody else. We were pretty locked away in Boston just playing the club scene. It wasnât like, âOh, thereâs this new-wave thing going on.â It just was what the band sounded like. But I do think it was interesting that we approached it with a keyboard-oriented thing.â
All these years later, their contributions havenât gone unnoticed. The Cars will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame on April 14 in a class that includes Dire Straits, Moody Blues, Nina Simone and Bon Jovi. However, it will be a bittersweet induction without Orr, who died in 2000.
âIt would have been nice [to have Benjamin Orr there],â Ocasek said. âBut, it is a great honor. Itâs nice to be in the crew. Thatâll be great. Iâm looking forward to it. Iâm excited to get there and be part of that whole situation, especially since itâs in Cleveland, where I used to live.â
But before heading back to his teenage stomping grounds, heâs swinging back through the Maryland and Virginia area, where he first learned to play and draw as a young boy.
âIâm drawing right now,â Ocasek said. âIâm drawing right now while Iâm talking to you.â
Click for more exhibit details. Listen to the full conversation with The Cars’ Ric Ocasek below:
