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The cars T shirt
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Click
on picture to return
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Code: TCAT0181r |
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Size chart
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T-shirt short sleeve for:$19.99 each.
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THIS T-SHIRT IS NEW.
MATERIAL %100 COTTON.
STRAIGHT FROM THE
MANUFACTURE.
High Quality Silk Printed Image.
Not some cheap iron.
You can wear it as many times as you want,
but the picture will be like new.
Do not shrink after washing.
We guarantee uniqueness in most
alterna-oriented and gothic club movements.
The Cars
were at the forefront in merging 1970s guitar-oriented rock with the new synth-oriented
pop then becoming popular, and which would flower in the early 1980s. While most
of the singles included an Elliot Easton guitar solo, The Cars' sound was
defined much more by the distinctive and instantly recognizable vocals of chief
songwriter/rhythm guitarist Ric Ocasek and bassist/sex symbol Benjamin Orr. The
sound was filled out by Greg Hawkes' synthesizers and the huge harmonies of
Easton, David Robinson, and Hawkes. The band's hits dominated the charts for
over nine years; their most successful albums were 1978's The Cars, which
featured the hit "Just What I Needed," 1979's Candy-O, which featured the hit
"Let's Go", and 1984's Heartbeat City, which included four Top 20 singles:
"Magic", "Drive", "Hello Again" and "You Might Think", which also won the MTV
Video Music Award for Video of the Year (see 1984 in music). "Drive" gained
particular notability when it was used in a video of the Ethiopian famine
prepared by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and introduced by David Bowie
at the 1985 Live Aid concert at Wembley Stadium in London. Another extremely
popular song from the Cars (but often not attributed to them) is "Moving in
Stereo". It became infamous for its use during the Phoebe Cates pool scene in
the 1982 movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High. |
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