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The pretenders learning to crawl songs
The pretenders learning to crawl songs







the pretenders learning to crawl songs the pretenders learning to crawl songs

New guitarist Robbie McIntosh supplies simpler, bluesier, basic guitar lines and the foursome know how to all-out rock, with the furious “Middle of the Road” and socially conscious “My City Was Gone” testifying to a stinging, thrilling sensibility that can exist only because of the devastation that the band survived. Throughout the record, the Pretenders are again one. “Back on the Chain Gang,” the Pretenders’ most commercially successful hit, functioned as a bittersweet tribute to her ex-mates while the Christmas-themed “2000 Miles” holds rank as one of the most effecting, penetrating love songs of Hynde’s career. Hynde answers this question with a resounding “yes” on Learning to Crawl, which still contains signs of the band’s early, street-wise rawness but also adds new wrinkles, with more streamlined melodies, sensitive ballads, and reflective tones. Shortly thereafter, founding member Pete Fardon, fired just two days before his partner’s death, also succumbed to an overdose, leaving the band’s state in tatters. After releasing two records that swept the world by storm (Pretenders and Pretenders II, the latter available on hybrid SACD from Mobile Fidelity), the group’s fortunes reversed after guitarist James Honeyman-Scott was found dead of a drug overdose in 1982. The story behind Learning to Crawl is directly connected to the powerful, moving music within. To say nothing of how fresh the effort’s hit singles (“Middle of the Road,” “Back on the Chain Gang”) and incredible deep cuts sound. Leader Chrissie Hynde’s voice is made viscerally apparent, wavering between vigorous determination and solemn reflection, while drummer Martin Chamber’s punchy backbeats register with requisite punch. Mastered from the original master tapes, Learning to Crawl finally possesses the combination of whisper-in-your-ear intimacy and nerve-checking toughness that it’s always demanded on Mobile Fidelity’s super-quiet analog LP. The Pretenders Learning to Crawl on Numbered Edition 180g LPġ984 Smash the Sound of a Band Overcoming Tragedies and Staggering Odds With Gutsy Performances









The pretenders learning to crawl songs