All Mixed Up (The Cars song) explained

All Mixed Up
Cover:All_Mixed_Up_-_The_Cars.jpg
Caption:The single release of the song in the Netherlands
Type:single
Artist:the Cars
Album:The Cars
B-Side:You're All I've Got Tonight
Released:1979
Genre:Rock, new wave
Length:4:14
Label:Elektra 46014
Producer:Roy Thomas Baker
Chronology:The Cars Netherlands
Prev Title:Just What I Needed
Prev Year:1978
Next Title:Let's Go
Next Year:1979

"All Mixed Up" is a song by the Cars and the final track on their 1978 self-titled debut album. It was written by bandleader Ric Ocasek.

Background

On the album, "All Mixed Up" is bridged together with "Moving in Stereo". Released as the B-side to the single "Good Times Roll", the song has received widespread airplay on American FM rock radio stations, and is generally played together with "Moving in Stereo" on AOR and classic rock radio stations. The song also saw single release in the Netherlands, backed with "You're All I've Got Tonight" (also from The Cars.)[1]

"All Mixed Up" features bassist Benjamin Orr on lead vocals in the studio version, though Ocasek sang lead vocals on the demo version. The song afforded Hawkes a chance to step away from his many synthesizers and play the closing saxophone solo, the only one in the Cars' discography. "All Mixed Up" also featured the Mu-Tron Octavider pedal, which Benjamin Orr recalled he "had to have."[2]

Other versions

Notes and References

  1. Web site: "All Mixed Up"/"You're All I've Got Tonight". 45cat.
  2. Web site: The Cars interview. . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/Y9LQ3VfvH_Q . 2021-12-21 . live.