Hailed by rock weekly Melody Maker as “the first important album of the 80s”, Pretenders’ self-titled debut album shot straight to No.1 upon its initial UK release, 11 January 1980. Its success was well deserved, too, for it was a nigh-on perfect synthesis of punky aggression and pop classicism – and it revealed that the band’s leader, Chrissie Hynde, was rapidly developing into one of her generation’s most distinctive singer-songwriters.
Establishing Pretenders on the world stage, the album also made the US Top 10, and its longevity was reflected by its induction to the prestigious Grammy Hall Of Fame in 2016. This track-by-track guide to each of its songs explains exactly why Pretenders still ranks as one of rock’s landmark debut albums.
Listen to Pretenders’ debut album here.
Pretenders’ Debut Album: A Track-By-Track Guide To Every Song
Precious
One of the first songs Pretenders rehearsed together, Precious was first taped during the group’s initial demo session, at London’s Regent’s Park Studio in July 1978, but then re-recorded for their debut album. In between times, it also secured Martin Chambers his seat on Pretenders’ drum stool when he auditioned following a recommendation from guitarist James Honeyman-Scott and bassist Pete Farndon. In the liner notes for the band’s 2008 box set, Pirate Radio, Chrissie Hynde recalled, “We got together and ran through [Precious] and as soon as [Martin] started to play, I had to turn my face to the wall. I was laughing so hard because I knew this was it. I’d found the band.”
Precious immediately makes it clear that the chemistry between Pretenders’ was something very special indeed. Following Chambers’ count-in, the song roars out of the traps, with the band’s blistering performance and Honeyman-Scott’s heavily phased guitar building the perfect bedrock for Hynde’s autobiographical lyric about ducking and diving in her native Ohio. “I had to fuck off,” she famously declares towards the song’s end – and that she did, heading to England to realise her musical ambitions on the advice of “Mr Stress”, Cleveland blues musician Bill Miller, with whom Hynde briefly collaborated during her early years.