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Tonight She Comes

"Tonight She Comes"
Cover to Tonight She Comes by The Cars.jpg
Single by The Cars
from the album Greatest Hits
B-side "Just What I Needed"
Released October 14, 1985
Format 7"
Genre Pop rock, New Wave, Power Pop
Length 3:52
Label Elektra 69589
Songwriter(s) Ric Ocasek
Producer(s) The Cars and Mike Shipley
The Cars singles chronology
"Why Can't I Have You"
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"Tonight She Comes"
(1985)
"I'm Not the One"
(1986)
"Why Can't I Have You"
(US, 1985)
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"Heartbeat City"
(UK, 1985)
"Tonight She Comes"
(1985)
"I'm Not the One"
(1986)

"Tonight She Comes" is a 1985 song by American rock band The Cars, from their Greatest Hits album. It was released as a single in October 1985, reaching number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 in January, 1986. The song reached number one on the Top Rock Tracks charts, where it stayed for three weeks.

It is a straightforward, diatonic pop rock song in F major, with a hard rock-style guitar solo by Cars guitarist, Elliot Easton.

The solo was transcribed by Steve Vai in the February 1986 issue of Guitar Player magazine, as the centerpiece to an interview with Easton. In the interview, Easton described the custom-made Kramer guitar used for the solo, and said the reason the solo was "so dense" was due to the four weeks spent recording the single, which allowed Easton ample time to compose it.

The title of the song is yet another Ric Ocasek double-entendre, although, as Elliot Easton said, "It doesn't actually say that she reaches orgasm. It could mean that tonight she's coming over to make popcorn."

"Tonight She Comes" was The Cars' fourth Top 10 hit. It was the first of two songs to be released as a single from their Greatest Hits album; a remixed version of "I'm Not the One", previously recorded in 1981 for the album Shake It Up, was the second.

AllMusic critic Greg Prato, in his review of Greatest Hits described the track as "playful", while Tim Sendra, also of AllMusic, said in his review of The Essentials that the track (among the others on said album), was "definitely essential". Critic Donald Guarisco said that the song "is one of their most straightforward pop outings and shows just how far they had moved from the acidic mindset of 'Just What I Needed' and "Let's Go'". He went on to say that the track was "a delightful, pristine pop confection".


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