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Chrissie Hynde took a long, hard road to rock & roll stardom, but when her band, the Pretenders, finally broke through in 1979, they wasted no time, growing from promising newcomers on the British music scene to major international stardom with a pair of smash albums to their credit in a mere three years. But the Pretenders' meteoric rise came to a crashing halt in 1982, when drug abuse claimed the life of guitarist James Honeyman-Scott and forced Hynde and drummer Martin Chambers to dump bassist Pete Farndon, who would also succumb to an OD in April 1983. Hynde was forced by circumstance to reinvent the Pretenders for their third album, 1984's Learning to Crawl, but if the new edition of the group lacked some of the spark of the band that made the first two LPs, through sheer force of will Hynde created a masterpiece. While Hynde hardly held back in her emotionally potent songwriting in the Pretenders' early work, on Learning to Crawl there's a gravity to her lyrics that blended with her tough but wiry melodic sense and streetwise intelligence to create a set of truly remarkable tunes. Back on the Chain Gang is a touching tribute to her fallen comrades that still sounds bitterly rueful, Middle of the Road is a furious rocker that explores the emotional and physical toll of a musician's life, Time the Avenger is a taut, literate examination of a businessman's adulterous relationship, My City Was Gone deals with the economic and cultural decay of the Midwest in a manner bo
Middle of the Road
The Pretenders
Back On The Chain Gang
The Pretenders
Time the Avenger
The Pretenders
Watching the Clothes
The Pretenders
Show Me
The Pretenders
Thumbelina
The Pretenders
My City Was Gone
The Pretenders
Thin Line Between Love and Hate
The Pretenders
I Hurt You
The Pretenders
2000 Miles
The Pretenders