Pretenders - Original Album Series [5 CD's][2009][320 KBPS]seeders: 4
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Pretenders - Original Album Series [5 CD's][2009][320 KBPS] (Size: 625.1 MB)
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Pretenders - Original Album Series [5 Albums][2009]
Disc 1 [Pretenders][1980] 01. Precious 02. The Phone Call 03. Up The Neck 04. Tattooed Love Boys 05. Space Invader 06. The Wait 07. Stop Your Sobbing 08. Kid 09. Private Life 10. Brass In Pocket 11. Lovers Of Today 12. Mystery Achievement Disc 2 [Pretenders II][1981] 01. The Adultress 02. Bad Boys Get Spanked 03. Message Of Love 04. I Go To Sleep 05. Birds Of Paradise 06. Talk Of The Town 07. Pack It Up 08. Waste Not Want Not 09. Day After Day 10. Jealous Dogs 11. The English Roses 12. Louie, Louie Disc 3 [Learning To Crawl][1984] 01. Middle Of The Road 02. Back On The Chain Gang 03. Time The Avenger 04. Watching The Clothes 05. Show Me 06. Thumbelina 07. My City Was Gone 08. Thin Line Between Love And Hate 09. I Hurt You 10. 2000 Miles Disc 4 [Get Close][1986] 01. My Baby 02. When I Change My Life 03. Light Of The Moon 04. Dance 05. Tradition Of Love 06. Don't Get Me Wrong 07. I Remember You 08. How Much Did You Get For Your Soul? 09. Chill Factor 10. Hymn To Her 11. Room Full Of Mirrors Disc 5 [Last Of The Independents][1994] 01. Hollywood Perfume 02. Night In My Veins 03. Money Talk 04. 977 05. Revolution 06. All My Dreams 07. I'll Stand By You 08. I'm A Mother 09. Tequila 10. Every Mother's Son 11. Rebel Rock Me 12. Love Colours 13. Forever Young 320 KBPS [CBR] Cover Art From Wikipedia: Pretenders are an English-American rock band formed in Hereford, England, in March 1978. The original band comprised initiator and main songwriter Chrissie Hynde (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), James Honeyman-Scott (lead guitar, backing vocals, keyboards), Pete Farndon (bass guitar, backing vocals), and Martin Chambers (drums, backing vocals, percussion). Following the drug-related deaths of Honeyman-Scott and Farndon, the band has experienced numerous subsequent personnel changes, with Hynde as the only consistent member, and Chambers returning after an absence of several years. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pretenders is the debut studio album by the British-American band The Pretenders, released on 27 December 1979 under Real Records (Sire Records in the United States). A combination of rock, punk, and pop music, this album made the band famous. The album features the singles "Stop Your Sobbing" "Kid" and "Brass in Pocket". -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pretenders II is the second studio album by British rock band the Pretenders. The success of the Pretenders' debut album in 1980 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" and "Message of Love," respectively. In the US, where standalone singles had become rare, these tracks were combined with three others for a stopgap EP release called Extended Play, in March 1981. Their second album, Pretenders II, was released a scant two months later, to mixed critical reception, partly because two of the better songs on the album had been previously released, and partly because many of the songs were viewed as overly-similar (though not quite as groundbreaking) to the band's debut. Nevertheless, several of the album's songs became hits and the album has increased in critical stature with time. The album is notable for the inclusion of a cover of The Kinks' "I Go to Sleep" (they had covered that band's "Stop Your Sobbing" on their debut album, and band leader Chrissie Hynde would have a personal relationship with Kinks' frontman Ray Davies), as well as the sexually-forward tunes "Bad Boys Get Spanked" and "The Adultress". Perhaps the album's most ambitious track, "Day After Day" spins 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. The song ends suddenly, mid-guitar-solo, with the sound of a crashing fighter plane. The song "Louie, Louie" is an original composition and not a version of identically titled and often covered song by Richard Berry. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Learning to Crawl is the Pretenders' third album, released in 1984 after a two-year hiatus, during which time James Honeyman-Scott and Pete Farndon both died of drug overdoses. After Farndon's dismissal from the band and Honeyman-Scott's death, Chrissie Hynde and Martin Chambers initially recruited Rockpile's Billy Bremner and Big Country's Tony Butler to fill in a caretaker line-up of the band in 1982. Bremner played guitar and Butler played bass on the band's September 1982 single "Back on the Chain Gang/My City Was Gone", both sides of which were later included on Learning to Crawl. As the album sessions got under way, Bremner, Graham Parker's bass player Andrew Bodnar, and Paul Carrack (formerly of Squeeze, Ace and Roxy Music) played guitar, bass and piano respectively for the track "Thin Line Between Love and Hate". Finally, Robbie McIntosh (guitar) and Malcolm Foster (bass) were recruited to join Hynde and Chambers, and the band was now officially a quartet. It was this line-up that recorded the majority of the tracks featured on Learning to Crawl. The November 1983 single "2000 Miles/Fast or Slow (The Law's the Law)" was the newly reconstituted foursome's first release, followed shortly by the full Learning to Crawl album in January 1984. Hynde named the album "Learning to Crawl" because her daughter, Natalie Rae Hynde, was learning to crawl at the time that Chrissie was trying to determine a name for the album. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Get Close is the fourth album by rock group The Pretenders, released in 1986. Officially, the band for this album now consisted of Chrissie Hynde (vocals, guitar), Robbie McIntosh (guitar), T.M. Stevens (bass) and Blair Cunningham (drums); however, this line-up (often augmented by session players) played on only five of the album's eleven tracks. As well, the track "Room Full of Mirrors" was in fact performed by the Learning to Crawl-era line up of Hynde, Mcintosh, Malcolm Foster and Martin Chambers, with keyboards by Rupert Black. The rest of the album was performed by Hynde and McIntosh, backed by session musicians. The album contained the band's two biggest Mainstream Rock Tracks chart hits, "Don't Get Me Wrong" and "My Baby", both of which reached #1. McIntosh and Cunningham would be re-united in 1991 as members of Paul McCartney's backing band. They appear together on McCartney's 1991 album Unplugged, 1993 album Off the Ground and the subsequent live release Paul Is Live. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Last of the Independents is the sixth album by rock group The Pretenders, released in 1994. For this album, the band is officially credited as being Chrissie Hynde (vocals, guitar), Adam Seymour (guitar), Andy Hobson (bass) and Martin Chambers (drums). However, this line-up only plays together on one track ("All My Dreams"); the rest of the album is performed by Hynde and Seymour in conjunction with a rotating series of musicians on bass and drums. These musicians include Hobson and Chambers, as well as bassists Andy Rourke, Tom Kelly and David Paton, and drummers Jimmy Copley and J.F.T. Hood. A few other session musicians also appear, including Ian Stanley, and one-time Pretenders guitarist Robbie McIntosh, who plays alongside Hynde and Seymour on "I'm a Mother". The album also marked the official return of Chambers, who had been fired by Hynde eight years prior. Sharing Widget |