Before forming the Cars, members of the band performed together in several different groups. Ric Ocasek and Benjamin Orr met in Cleveland, Ohio in the 1960's after Ocasek saw Orr performing with his band The Grasshoppers on the Big 5 Show, a local musical variety program. The two were members of various groups in Columbus, Ohio and Ann Arbor, Michigan before moving to Boston in the early 1970's, and once there Ocasek and Orr, along with lead guitarist Jas Goodkind, formed a Crosby, Stills and Nash-style folk rock band called Milkwood. In 1972, they released an album titled 'How's The Weather' through Paramount Records, but it failed to chart, and so Milkwood fell apart and Ocasek and Orr formed a new group called Richard And The Rabbits, a name suggested to them by Jonathan Richman. This band included Greg Hawkes, who had studied at the Berklee School of Music and had played saxophone on Milkwood's album, but when Hawkes left to tour with musical comedy act Martin Mull and His Fabulous Furniture, the duo then performed as an acoustic duo called Ocasek and Orr at the Idler Coffeehouse in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In 1974 they recorded demos of a few of their songs using the Richard And The Rabbits line-up, which included Hawkes and Fuzzbee Morse, with the addition of Tom Yates on guitar and Glenn Evans on drums for a cover of Buddy Holly's 'Everyday'.
Ocasek and Orr later teamed with guitarist Elliot Easton (who had also studied at Berklee) in the band Cap'n Swing, which featured the afore-mentioned Glenn Evans on drums, later followed by Kevin Robichaud, and a jazzy bass player, which clashed with Ocasek's preference for a rock-and-roll sound. Orr was the lead vocalist and did not play an instrument, and they soon came to the attention of WBCN disc jockey Maxanne Sartori, who began playing songs from their demo tape on her show. After being rejected by several record labels, Ocasek fired the bass player, keyboardist and drummer and resolved to form a band that better fitted his style of writing. Orr took over bass guitar duties, and Robichaud was replaced by David Robinson, formerly of The Modern Lovers and DMZ. Robinson's sense of fashion exerted a strong influence on the band's image, and he also suggested the band's new name, and so The Cars was formed in 1976, going on to become one of the best late 70's pop bands. These 1974 demos show a more laid-back style than would later emerge in the power-pop of The Cars, and as the tape is only 29 minutes long I've picked a couple of Cap'n Swing songs that blended in nicely with the other tracks to flesh it out to album length. The title alludes to the fact that this was their learning period before they were allowed out in their own Cars.
Track listing
01 Harlequin
02 Sam's Decision
03 I Need Spring
04 You're Always Brighter
05 Goes On Sleeping
06 Never Gonna Get Over You
07 Twilight Superman
08 Everyday
09 Dream Trader
10 Start It All Again
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