The Pretender Jackson Browne

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Listener Rating: (2 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performance" See All

  • Release Date: 10/25/1990
  • Original Release: 1976
  • Sales Rank: 6,326
  • Label: ELEKTRA / WEA
  • UPC: 075596051323
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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The Pretender

1LISTENThe Fuse 5:50
2LISTENYour Bright Baby Blues 6:05
3LISTENLinda Paloma 4:06
4LISTENHere Come Those Tears Again 3:37
5LISTENThe Only Child 3:43
6LISTENDaddy's Tune 3:35
7LISTENSleep's Dark and Silent Gate 2:37
8LISTENThe Pretender evening, cool, pretender, true love, hopes, dreams 5:53

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

On The Pretender, Jackson Browne took a step back from the precipice so well defined on his first three albums, but doing so didn't seem to make him feel any better. Employing a real producer, Jon Landau, for the first time, Browne made what sounded like a real contemporary rock record, but this made his songs less effective; the ersatz Mexican arrangement of "Linda Paloma" and the bouncy second half of "Daddy's Tune," with its horn charts and guitar solo, undercut the lyrics. The man who had delved so deeply into life's abyss on his earlier albums was in search of escape this time around, whether by crying ("Here Come Those Tears Again"), sleeping ("Sleep's Dark and Silent Gate"), or making peace with estranged love ones ("The Only Child," "Daddy's Tune"). None of it worked, however, and when Browne came to the final track -- traditionally the place on his albums where he summed up his current philosophical stance -- he delivered "The Pretender," a cynical, sarcastic treatise on moneygrubbing and the shallow life of the suburbs. Primarily inner-directed, the song's defeatist tone demands rejection, but it is also a quintessential statement of its time, the post-Watergate '70s; dire as that might be, you had to admire that kind of honesty, even as it made you wince. William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

My favorite Jackson Browne album!by Roman46

Reader Rating:
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April 13, 2009: Beautiful track and memorable songs; a great addition to anyone's collection. I still have the album also and it's still playable!

I Also Recommend: Running on Empty, Late for the Sky, Jackson Browne.

filling in the missing colors with paint-by-number dreamsby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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June 07, 2001: Probably one of the most thought provoking songs ever written and sung. I fell in love with 'the pretender' when I first heard it and I kept playing it over and over again. I don't know what else to write...except for... this song tries to teach us: all those things that we were taught all our lives to be important...may not have been that important after all.