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A Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee, he wrote songs that updated classic sounds and managed to please both punk-rock fans and a broader pop audience.
Ric Ocasek, the songwriter, rhythm guitarist and lead singer for the Cars, was found dead on Sunday afternoon at his townhouse in Manhattan. He was 75.
The New York City medical examiner’s office said the cause was high blood pressure and heart disease. Mr. Ocasek’s wife, the model and actress Paulina Porizkova, said in an Instagram post that he had been recovering from surgery.
From 1978 to 1988, Mr. Ocasek (pronounced oh-CASS-eck) and the Cars merged a vision of romance, danger and nocturnal intrigue and the concision of new wave music with the sonic depth and ingenuity of radio-friendly rock. The Cars managed to please both punk-rock fans and a far broader pop audience, reaching into rock history while devising fresh, lush extensions of it.
Ric Ocasek’s Essential Songs: Listen to 11 Tracks
The Cars grew out of a friendship forged in the late 1960s in Ohio between Mr. Ocasek and Benjamin Orr, who died in 2000. They worked together in multiple bands before moving to Boston and forming the Cars in the late 1970s with Elliot Easton on lead guitar, Greg Hawkes on keyboards and David Robinson on drums. It was the beginning of the punk era, but the Cars made their first albums with Queen’s producer, Roy Thomas Baker, creating songs that were terse and moody but impeccably polished.
Mr. Ocasek’s lead vocals mixed a gawky, yelping deadpan with hints of suppressed emotion, while his songs drew hooks from basic three-chord rockabilly and punk, from surf-rock, from emerging synth-pop, from echoes of the Beatles and glam-rock, and from hints of the 1970s art-rock avant-garde.
Each of the five albums the Cars released from 1978 to 1984 sold a million copies in the United States alone, with ubiquitous radio singles like “Just What I Needed” in 1978, “Shake It Up” in 1981, “You Might Think” in 1984 and “Drive” in 1984. Although Mr. Ocasek wrote them, “Just What I Needed” and “Drive” had lead vocals by Mr. Orr.
When the Cars were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2018, the group’s surviving members reunited, joined by Scott Shriner of Weezer on bass. In his induction speech, Brandon Flowers of the Killers described the band as “a slick machine with a 340 V8 under the hood that ran on synergy, experimentation and a redefined cool, adding, “They had it all: the looks, the hooks, Beat romance lyrics, killer choruses.”
Richard Theodore Otcasek was born in Baltimore on March 23, 1944. His father was a systems analyst for NASA. At the Cars’ Hall of Fame induction, Mr. Ocasek credited his grandmother for getting him to sing as a child and buying him his first guitar at 14. The family moved to Cleveland when he was a teenager, and he briefly attended Antioch College and Bowling Green State University before dropping out and turning to music.
After he and Mr. Orr met in Ohio, the two, performing in various bands, worked their way to the Boston area, where they started a folk-pop trio, Milkwood; it made one album, in 1972, before dissolving. But Mr. Ocasek and Mr. Orr continued to work together around Boston. Mr. Easton, the lead guitarist, joined them in the mid-1970s, playing with their band Cap’n Swing, which got airplay on Boston’s rock radio station WBCN but went no further.
With Mr. Easton, Mr. Hawkes and Mr. Robinson — who had been the drummer for the Modern Lovers, local heroes in Boston — the Cars coalesced in 1976, working in Mr. Ocasek’s basement in Newton, Mass. They would start with Mr. Ocasek’s basic recordings of songs, Mr. Easton told Rolling Stone in 1978, and “we just built the songs up.”
“When there was a space for a hook or a line — or a sinker — we put it in,” he added.
WBCN gave the band’s demo recordings extensive airplay, and Elektra Records signed them. The first Cars album was made in 21 days — 12 for recording, nine for mixing. It would go on to sell six million copies in the United States. The band became a staple of FM radio in the late 1970s and of MTV in the ’80s, toying with textures and ironies but sticking to neat pop structures.
Mr. Ocasek’s songs were invariably terse and catchy, spiked with Mr. Easton’s twangy guitar lines and Mr. Hawkes’s pithy keyboard hooks. But they were also elaborately filled out by multitracked instruments and vocals. Lyrics that might initially seem like pop love songs were, more often, calmly ambivalent.
“Just What I Needed,” the Cars’ first single, revolves around negatives: “I don’t mind you coming here and wasting all my time/’Cause when you’re standing oh so near, I kind of lose my mind.” And the Cars’ biggest United States hit, “Drive,” poses a series of glum questions even as it sounds like a stately ballad: “Who’s going to hold you down when you shake?/Who’s going to come around when you break?”
The Cars disbanded in 1988 as Mr. Ocasek and Mr. Orr grew apart. Mr. Ocasek had begun making music on his own while still in the group and would eventually release seven solo albums from 1982 through 2005, though none achieved the popularity of his Cars catalog.
While he said he didn’t want people prying into his personal life, “I feel that my song lyrics are kind of an open book.” he told The Chicago Tribune in 1986. “I feel that writing songs for my solo albums is kind of like spilling my guts, telling people how I really feel subconsciously. When I’m writing, it’s like I’m not really in control.”
In 2003, he took a job at Elektra as senior vice president for artists and repertoire, charged with finding new hitmakers, but the label rejected his choices; he lasted in the post less than a year. While in the Cars, he had produced albums for the bands Bad Brains and Suicide, punk pioneers he admired. And after the Cars disbanded, he produced music for Weezer, Bad Religion and No Doubt.
In a post on Twitter, Weezer said the group was “devastated” by Mr. Ocasek’s death and would “forever cherish the precious times we got to work and hang out with him.”
After two previous marriages, Mr. Ocasek married Ms. Porizkova in 1989; they met in 1984 while the Cars were making the video for “Drive.” She announced in 2018 that they had separated a year earlier. His survivors include their two children, Jonathan and Oliver Otcasek, and four sons from previous marriages: Christopher, Adam, Eron and Derek.
Mr. Ocasek often said that he did not enjoy the grind of touring, and Mr. Easton and Mr. Hawkes performed without him as the New Cars from 2005 to 2007, joined by Todd Rundgren as lead singer. But in 2011, Mr. Ocasek gathered the surviving members of the Cars for a final album, “Move Like This,” and a tour, although his stage presence had always been diffident.
“I don’t think I’m an entertainer,” he told The New York Times in 2011. “I never think, Wow, I can’t wait to get the crowd moving.”
In a pop world full of extroverts and peacocks, Mr. Ocasek presented himself as a detached, introverted craftsman, dedicated to songwriting rather than showmanship. He told The Times in 1987: “I’m happy that the pop songs have a bit of a twist. When I’m writing, I never know how it’s going to come out. I don’t think, Well, I’ve done a catchy one, now I can do a weird one.
“I read a lot of poetry, and that gives me a wide range of permission to say anything in a song — they’re more twisted than I’ll ever be.”
Joe Coscarelli and Daniel E. Slotnik contributed reporting.
Jon Pareles has been The Times’s chief pop music critic since 1988. A musician, he has played in rock bands, jazz groups and classical ensembles. He majored in music at Yale University. @JonPareles
A version of this article appears in print on , Section A, Page 24 of the New York edition with the headline: Ric Ocasek, Cars Lead Singer Who Wrote Catchy New Wave Hits, Dies at 75. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe