Pretenders II The Pretenders

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CD

  • Release Date: 10/25/1990
  • Original Release: 1981
  • Sales Rank: 30,856
  • Label: WARNER BROS UK
  • UPC: 075992357227
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CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks$19.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Pretenders II

1LISTENThe Adultress 3:55
2LISTENBad Boys Get Spanked 4:04
3LISTENMessage Of Love 3:26
4LISTENI Go To Sleep 2:55
5LISTENBirds Of Paradise 4:14
6LISTENTalk Of The Town 2:45
7LISTENPack It Up 3:50
8LISTENWaste Not, Want Not 3:43
9LISTENDay After Day 3:45
10LISTENJealous Dogs 5:36
11LISTENThe English Roses 4:28
12LISTENLouie, Louie 3:30

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The Pretenders' debut album was such a powerful, monumental record that its sequel was bound to be a bit of a disappointment, and Pretenders II is. Essentially, this album is an unabashed sequel, offering more of the same sound, attitude, and swagger, including titles that seem like rips on their predecessors and another Ray Davies cover. This gives the record a bit too much of a pat feeling, especially since the band seems to have a lost a bit of momentum -- they don't rock as hard, Chrissie Hynde's songwriting isn't as consistent, James Honeyman-Scott isn't as inventive or clever. These all are disappointments, yet this first incarnation of the Pretenders was a tremendous band, and even if they offer diminished returns, it's still diminished returns on good material, and much of Pretenders II is quite enjoyable. Yes, it's a little slicker and more stylized than its predecessor, and, yes, there's a little bit of filler, yet any album where rockers as tough as "Message of Love" and "The Adultress" are balanced by a pop tune as lovely as "Talk of the Town" is hard to resist. And when you realize that this fantastic band only recorded two albums, you take that second album, warts and all, because the teaming of Hynde and Honeyman-Scott was one of the great pairs, and it's utterly thrilling to hear them together, even when the material isn't quite up to the high standards they set the first time around. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

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