Coming Up You

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"Coming Up You"
Single by The Cars
from the album Door to Door
B-side "Double Trouble"
Released January 1988 (1988-01)
Genre Synthpop, new wave
Length 4:18
Label Elektra 69432
Writer(s) Ric Ocasek
Producer(s) Ric Ocasek
The Cars singles chronology
"Strap Me In"
(1987)
"Coming Up You"
(1988)
"Sad Song"
(2011)

"Coming Up You" is a 1987 song by The Cars, appearing on their sixth studio album Door to Door. It was written by Ric Ocasek and sung by Benjamin Orr.

Release

"Coming Up You" first saw release as the eighth track on Door to Door in August 1987. The song later saw a single release in America and Australia, backed with the fellow Door to Door track "Double Trouble". The third single from Door to Door (after the top twenty hit "You Are the Girl" and its less successful follow-up "Strap Me In"), the song pŁeaked at #74 on the Billboard Hot 100 (a slight improvement from the performance of "Strap Me In") and #37 on the Adult Contemporary chart. However, unlike its predecessors, it failed to chart at all on the Mainstream Rock chart. Also it is among the very few songs by the group not to feature a promotional video.

The single was the final Cars single released before the band broke up in 1988 (although it was followed up by "Sad Song" when the band reunited in 2011).

Reception

AllMusic critic Mike DeGagne called the track the "most melodious tune [on Door to Door]" and went on to say it "was easily one of The Cars most distinct efforts since it doesn’t quite carry the same new wave/pop rock structure as the rest of their material yet relinquishes the same type of Cars charm."[1][2] DeGagne continued, "'Coming Up You' is one of [the] bright spots in an otherwise faltering release as fans were still comparing Door to Door to the success of 1984's Heartbeat City album. After all of the tracks are heard on Door to Door, 'Coming Up You' easily rises above the rest of the album's lackluster fair, mainly because [Ben] Orr seems to sound more enthused and more interested than [Ric] Ocasek does on any of his songs."[2]

Chart performance

Chart (1988) Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 100[3] 74
US Billboard Adult Contemporary[3] 37

References

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External links