Heartbeat City is the fifth studio album by American new wave band the Cars, released on March 12, 1984, by Elektra Records. This marks the band's first album not produced by long-time producer Roy Thomas Baker, instead opting to produce with Mutt Lange. The album was a major commercial success, certifying quadruple platinum in the U.S.
Music journalist and essayist Robert Christgau noted that "the glossy approach the Cars invented has made this the best year for pure pop in damn near twenty, and it's only fair that they should return so confidently to form." Numerous tracks from the album received airplay on modern rock and AOR stations, with the singles "Drive" and "You Might Think" reaching the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100, while the album peaked at number three on the Billboard 200.
Heartbeat City was recorded at Battery Studios in Willesden, London with producer Mutt Lange. The band followed a method where the keyboards, guitars and vocals were recorded first to a LinnDrum click track, then the bass and drums were added. According to drummer David Robinson, all the drums and keyboards were sampled into and played or programmed via the Fairlight CMI, which he felt gave "a much better, cleaner, more controllable sound" for the album.
Heartbeat City spawned six singles. "Drive" and "You Might Think" reached the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at numbers three and seven, respectively. A number of songs from the album gained significant radio and television exposure, notably "Drive", "You Might Think" and "Magic", which all received heavy rotation on MTV. The title-track served as the album's sixth and final single outside North America.
The lead vocals on "Drive" were performed by bassist Benjamin Orr. The song's video was directed by actor and film director Timothy Hutton and features Ric Ocasek arguing with a troubled young woman played by fashion model Paulina Porizkova (whom Ocasek would later marry). "Hello Again" had a music video directed by Andy Warhol, who also appeared onscreen.
Despite not being released as a single, "It's Not the Night" reached number 31 on the Top Rock Tracks chart. The song "Stranger Eyes" was used in the theatrical trailer of the action drama film Top Gun (1986), but never made it onto the soundtrack. "Looking for Love" was covered by Austrian musician Falco as "Munich Girls" on his third studio album Falco 3 (1985).
When the Cars performed at Live Aid in 1985, they played three songs from the album ("You Might Think", "Drive", and the album's title-track), alongside the fan favorite "Just What I Needed".
The album was produced by Mutt Lange. His commitment to the Cars' album meant that he told Def Leppard he could not work on their fourth studio album Hysteria (1984). However, due to delays in that album's recording, Lange was eventually able to produce it.
The cover art (including an image of a 1971 Plymouth Duster 340 and an Alberto Vargas pin-up model) is from a 1972 piece by Peter Phillips called Art-O-Matic Loop di Loop.
Credits adapted from the liner notes of Heartbeat City.