CD
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| CD - Special Edition | $19.89 |
| CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks | $19.99 |
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"I've got to have some of your attention," Chrissie Hynde commanded on "Brass in Pocket" from The Pretenders; "Give it to me!" And the world obeyed. Hynde, an Ohioan transplanted to London, staged her own British invasion in l980. A smart rock journalist turned singer, she launched her band and her career with a jangly rendition of a lesser-known Kinks song, "Stop Your Sobbing," that featured perfect, girl-group-style vocals. The album that followed seamlessly blended classic British sounds of the '60s with a tough, punk-inspired approach that was absolutely modern. The band -- James Honeyman Scott on guitar, Pete Farndon on bass, Martin Chambers on drums -- was a no-nonsense, hard-rocking combo every bit as bold as the headline-grabbing Hynde. As a vocalist, Hynde was utterly compelling from the start, approaching her work with a sophistication foreign to most newcomers. The Pretenders is stacked with tracks that have since become rock-radio standards: "Tatooed Love Boys," "Kid," "Private Life," "Brass in Pocket," and the always thrilling "Mystery Achievement." It remains a powerful document of a short-lived but white-hot band that helped launch the '80s. Michael Hill, Barnes & Noble