Pretenders II | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 7 August 1981 [1] | |||
Recorded | 1980–81 | |||
Studio |
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Genre | ||||
Length | 46:11 | |||
Label | Sire | |||
Producer | Chris Thomas | |||
The Pretenders chronology | ||||
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Singles from Pretenders II | ||||
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Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [4] |
The Austin Chronicle | [5] |
Blender | [6] |
Chicago Tribune | [7] |
Christgau's Record Guide | B+ [8] |
PopMatters | 9/10 [9] |
Rolling Stone | [10] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [11] |
Spin Alternative Record Guide | 6/10 [12] |
Uncut | 8/10 [13] |
Pretenders II is the second studio album by British-American rock band the Pretenders, issued on Sire Records in August 1981. It incorporates two songs that had been released as singles in the UK and placed on an EP in the US. It peaked at #7 on the UK Albums Chart and #10 on the Billboard 200, and has been certified a gold record for sales by the RIAA. It is the final album by the original line-up, as the following year bassist Pete Farndon was dismissed and guitarist James Honeyman-Scott died in the same week. Farndon died in 1983, and a new line-up would make the band's next album, Learning to Crawl .
The success of their 1979 debut album created a great demand for more material from the fledgling band; however, a lack of songs precluded the quick release of a follow-up album. In the UK, the band released two hit singles in 1980 and early 1981, "Talk of the Town" followed by "Message of Love". In the US, where standalone singles had become rare, these tracks were combined with three others for a stopgap extended play release in March 1981 simply titled Extended Play . Pretenders II was released two months later to mixed critical reception arguably because many of the songs were viewed as too similar to (though not quite as groundbreaking as) the band's debut.[ citation needed ] Nevertheless, several of the album's songs became hits and the album has increased in critical stature with time.[ citation needed ]
As on their previous album, the band includes a song by Ray Davies of The Kinks, although in this case "I Go to Sleep", written by Davies in 1965, was not recorded by the group. Band leader Chrissie Hynde and Davies were in a relationship at the time of the album's recording, and would eventually have a daughter, Natalie Rae Hynde, in 1983. "Talk of the Town", though rumoured to be about her relationship with Davies, [14] was inspired by a fan Hynde had encountered on the band's first tour and whom she regretted not speaking to at the time. [15]
The album also includes the sexually-forward tunes "Bad Boys Get Spanked" and "The Adultress", with perhaps the album's most ambitious track, "Day After Day" spinning a common second-album narrative of unaccustomed celebrity, with the band rushing from gig to gig, hotel to hotel, head-spun from the swiftness of it all.[ citation needed ] The single version of the song ends with a guitar solo that gradually fades out; the album edit ends suddenly, mid-solo, with the sound of a crashing fighter plane. The album's final track, "Louie, Louie", is an original composition and not a version of the identically titled and often covered song by Richard Berry.
In 2000 it was voted number 403 in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums . [16] The following year, twenty years after its release, it was certified gold in the United States. [17]
Rhino released a re-mastered edition of Pretenders II in 2006, including a second disc of live tracks and outtakes. [18] Most of the tracks on the bonus disc originally appeared as a Warner Bros. 1982 promotional live album, Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic. Specialist label Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs (known as MFSL or MoFi) released a re-mastered version in 2010. [19] The track listing, however, reverted to that of the original release, without bonus tracks. A further 2015 reissue repeated the original album plus bonus disc of the 2006 version with two additional bonus tracks, this time including a DVD containing four promotional videos and two appearances by the band on Top of the Pops . [20]
Another deluxe edition of the album, curated by Hynde, was released on 5 November 2021, and features the original album remastered by Chris Thomas, alongside demos, rarities, and two live performances. One is from a performance in Central Park, New York City, and the other from an electric performance at The Santa Monica Civic. [21]
All tracks are written by Chrissie Hynde except where noted. Tracks 1-15 on the reissue bonus disc were recorded at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium 4 September 1981
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "The Adultress" | 3:55 | |
2. | "Bad Boys Get Spanked" | 4:04 | |
3. | "Message of Love" | 3:26 | |
4. | "I Go to Sleep" | Ray Davies | 2:55 |
5. | "Birds of Paradise" | 4:14 | |
6. | "Talk of the Town" (album version) | 2:45 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Pack It Up" |
| 3:50 |
2. | "Waste Not Want Not" | 3:43 | |
3. | "Day After Day" |
| 3:45 |
4. | "Jealous Dogs" | 5:36 | |
5. | "The English Roses" | 4:28 | |
6. | "Louie Louie" | 3:30 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "The Wait" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) |
| 3:23 |
2. | "The Adultress" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | 4:07 | |
3. | "Message of Love" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | 3:28 | |
4. | "Louie Louie" (US b-side to "I Go to Sleep") | 3:50 | |
5. | "Talk of the Town" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | 3:27 | |
6. | "Birds of Paradise" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | 4:27 | |
7. | "The English Roses" (UK b-side to "I Go to Sleep") | 4:51 | |
8. | "Up the Neck" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | 6:16 | |
9. | "Bad Boys Get Spanked" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | 3:19 | |
10. | "Stop Your Sobbing" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | Davies | 3:46 |
11. | "Private Life" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | 7:04 | |
12. | "Kid" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) | 3:48 | |
13. | "Day After Day" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) |
| 4:41 |
14. | "Brass in Pocket" (previously unreleased) |
| 3:28 |
15. | "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher" (previously issued on Pretenders Live at the Santa Monica Civic) |
| 4:24 |
16. | "Talk of the Town" (previously unreleased Free Range studio demo 21 December 1979) | 2:49 | |
17. | "I Go to Sleep" (previously unreleased guitar version) | Davies | 2:59 |
18. | "Pack It Up" (previously unreleased radio mix) | 3:50 |
The Pretenders
Additional personnel
Technical
Chart (1981) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia (Kent Music Report) [22] | 18 |
UK Albums Chart [23] | 7 |
US Billboard 200 [24] | 10 |
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
United Kingdom (BPI) [25] | Silver | 60,000^ |
United States (RIAA) [26] | Gold | 500,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
The Pretenders are a British-American rock band formed in March 1978. The original band consisted of founder and main songwriter Chrissie Hynde, James Honeyman-Scott, Pete Farndon and Martin Chambers. Following the deaths of Honeyman-Scott in 1982 and Farndon in 1983, the band experienced numerous personnel changes; Hynde has been the band's only consistent member.
Pretenders is the debut studio album by British-American band The Pretenders, released in January 1980. A combination of rock and roll, punk and new wave music, this album made the band famous. The album features the singles "Stop Your Sobbing", "Kid" and "Brass in Pocket".
Christine Ellen Hynde is an American-British musician. She is a founding member and the lead vocalist, guitarist, and primary songwriter of the rock band The Pretenders, and one of the band's two remaining original members alongside drummer Martin Chambers. She is the only continuous member of the band, appearing on every studio album.
¡Viva El Amor! is the seventh studio album by the rock band the Pretenders, released in 1999. The band's lineup for the album is the same as that credited on 1994's Last of the Independents: Chrissie Hynde, Martin Chambers (drums), Andy Hobson (bass) and Adam Seymour (guitar). This time, however, the credited line-up actually plays on most of the album, although Hobson is replaced on bass by session musicians on a few cuts.
James Honeyman-Scott was an English rock guitarist, songwriter and founding member of the band the Pretenders.
Martin Dale Chambers is an English musician, best known as a founding member and drummer of the rock band the Pretenders. In addition to playing the drums with the group, Chambers sings backing vocals and plays percussion. He was part of the original band line-up, which also included Chrissie Hynde (vocals/guitar), James Honeyman-Scott (guitar/vocals/keyboards) and Pete Farndon. Hynde and Chambers are the only two surviving original members, and he has served two separate tenures with the group.
Peter Granville Farndon was an English bassist and founding member of the rock band the Pretenders. In addition to playing bass with the group, Farndon sang backup vocals and co-wrote two of the group's songs, before a drug problem resulted in his dismissal from the group in 1982 and his death a year later.
Learning to Crawl is the third studio album by British-American rock band the Pretenders. It was released on 13 January 1984 by Sire Records after a hiatus during which band members James Honeyman-Scott and Pete Farndon died of drug overdoses. The album's title of "Learning to Crawl" was given in honour of Chrissie Hynde's then-infant daughter, Natalie Rae Hynde. She was learning to crawl at the time that Hynde was trying to determine a title for the album.
Get Close is the fourth studio album by rock band the Pretenders, released on 20 October 1986 in the United Kingdom by Real Records and on 4 November 1986 in the United States by Sire Records. The album contains the band's two highest-charting Mainstream Rock Tracks entries, "Don't Get Me Wrong" and "My Baby", both of which reached number one.
Packed! is the fifth studio album by rock group Pretenders, released in 1990.
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Extended Play is a 1981 EP released by new wave band The Pretenders. "Message of Love" and "Talk of the Town" featured on this EP were also included on their second album Pretenders II released later the same year. "Porcelain" and "Cuban Slide", outtakes from their Pretenders debut album, were included on disc two of the 2006 and 2021 remastered editions of their debut album and on the Pirate Radio box set. The live version of "Precious" on this EP, recorded at their New York Central Park performance on 30 August 1980, was finally released on CD on November 5, 2021. The booklet for disc one of the Pretenders debut album from the 2015 UK Edsel/Rhino Records box set 1979–1999 incorrectly states "Precious" is from that Central Park performance. Instead, the box set version is from their Boston performance of 23 March 1980; it is also included on disc two of the 2006 remastered edition of Pretenders.
The Isle of View is a live acoustic album by rock band The Pretenders, released in 1995. It was recorded in May during a live, televised performance at London's Jacob Street Studios. The Duke Quartet accompanied Chrissie Hynde for much of the performance. The title is a pun on the words I Love You.
Busted is the eleventh studio album released by Cheap Trick, which was released in 1990 and peaked at number 44 on the US album charts. After the success of "The Flame" from the previous album Lap of Luxury, the band recorded Busted with a similar format, especially on the single "Can't Stop Fallin' into Love." The single peaked at number 12 on the US charts. The album failed to be as successful as the label had hoped, and about a year after the release of Busted, Epic Records dropped the band.
"Back on the Chain Gang" is a song written by American-British musician Chrissie Hynde, originally recorded by her band the Pretenders and released as a single by Sire Records in September 1982. The song was included on The King of Comedy soundtrack album in March 1983 and was later included on the Pretenders' third album, Learning to Crawl, in January 1984.
"Stop Your Sobbing" is a song written by Ray Davies for the Kinks' debut album, Kinks. It was later covered by the Pretenders as their first single.
"Precious" is a song written by Chrissie Hynde and performed by her band the Pretenders. First released on the band's self-titled debut album in late 1979, the song features punk-inspired music and aggressive lyrics.
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"Message of Love" is a song written by Chrissie Hynde and performed by the Pretenders. Released first as a single and then on the Pretenders' 1981 EP Extended Play, it was later re-released on the band's 1981 album Pretenders II.