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When

Oct 7, 2008 9:00 pm - 7:00 pm (Tuesday)

Where

Highline Ballroom (map)

431 West Sixteenth Street
New York, NY 10011
Who
What
General Admission / Standing Room Only / All Ages / $10 min per person at tables / Full dinner menu available------------------------ October 7,2008 ADVANCE TICKETS ARE SOLD OUT. A...
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Description

General Admission / Standing Room Only / All Ages / $10 min per person at tables / Full dinner menu available

------------------------

October 7,2008

ADVANCE TICKETS ARE SOLD OUT. A LIMITED NUMBER OF DAY OF SHOW TICKETS WILL BE AVAILABLE AT DOORS.

Concert starts @ 9PM
Doors open @ 7 PM
Tickets $40.00

Buy Tickets Online [more]

General Admission Standing Room Only / All Ages

Chrissie Hynde - one of the boys or femme fatale? Provocateur or force of nature? Tremulous alto or ultimate rock & roll chick? Woman of the world or bandleader? How about all of them? Since forming the Pretenders three decades ago, Hynde has proven to be a one-of-a-kind tough-minded, outspoken and an utterly uncompromising artist - yet also capable of moments of heart-wrenching tenderness.

Hynde has recorded just nine studio albums since the original Pretenders lineup cranked out their barrier-smashing debut in 1980 and Break Up the Concrete is but the second album to bear the Pretenders nameplate in a decade. That makes the arrival of any new Pretenders album something of an occasion and even outright celebration. Throughout the dozen songs on Break Up the Concrete, Hynde brings the trademark cool and much of the heat of the early Pretenders albums to a richly American setting. None of the five musicians who comprise this set of Pretenders has recorded with her before - but they take to her songs like they've been waiting all their lives for this moment. Legendary drummer Jim Keltner needs no introduction. HYNDE “I met Jim when we toured with Neil Young and dreamed of working with him ever since. Martin Chambers is the worlds most entertaining rock drummer that’s for sure, but Keltner is an alchemist, a magician. I wanted a different groove on this album and Martin had no problem letting Jim take over for the project. Although Martin will be with us when we go on the road.” The rest of the crew collectively represents something dynamic and fresh . Added to this is Concrete showing Hynde in peak form as a singer, engaged as a writer and p performing with the same vitality and intimacy of the classics she penned years ago.

No guest artists, no vanity duets, just five shit-hot players getting down to business, bashing out 11 songs in 12 intensive days live off the floor of a vintage Hollywood studio. The song-serving urgency Hynde’s new cohorts bring to the party clearly contributed to the immediacy of her vocal performances, with her equally compelling tough and tender sides in full effect – each imbued with the aching nuance of life experience.

English guitarist James Walbourne has played with indie-rock darlings the Pernice Brothers. High Fidelity author and hard-core music fan Nick Hornby recently described the preternaturally skilled young gun as “an unearthly cross between James Burton, Peter Green and Richard Thompson; Walbourne’s fluid, tasteful, beautiful solos drop the jaw, stop the heart, and smack the gob, all at the same time.” On pedal steel is Eric Heywood, who’s brought his signature overdriven sound to the original lineup of alt-country trailblazers Son Volt, and to the records of Joe Henry, the Jayhawks and Alejandro Escovedo; more recently, he’s been recording and touring with singer/ songwriter Ray LaMontagne. HYNDE “James had worked with Eric and suggested we bring him in. His playing is often more akin to a sound effect. Imagine our surprise when we heard the jazz flute of “Almost Perfect”.” Bassist Nick Wilkinson, the longest-tenured Pretender, poached from a North London punk karaoke band, has toured extensively with The Pretenders over the last few years, and, like Walbourne, has an innate feel for American roots idioms.

The grittily elegant “Don’t Lose Faith in Me” enables Hynde to give her most soulful vocal performance since her 1984 cover of the Persuaders ’ “Thin Line Between Love and Hate,” and the poignant but buoyant “Love’s a Mystery” ponders the ongoing challenges of conjugal commitment on the way to the payoff lines, “But I’d do it again/I’d do it again,” the impact underscored by her vibrato, while the exceedingly offbeat “Almost Perfect” has to be the most-lemon-tart song she’s ever dreamed up, melodically or lyrically (sample lines: “Unemployable, illegal/You’re a whole film by Don Siegel”).

“Boots of Chinese Plastic” opens the album in mind-blowing fashion, as Chrissie attacks the elliptically metaphysical lyric with the primal intensity she brought to the more earthbound concerns of “Precious” and “Tattooed Love Boys,” while Walbourne sounds like he’s channeling the great James Honeyman-Scott himself. “Don’t Cut Your Hair” hits with the force of a Category 5 storm, the righteously old-school “Rosalee”, the only non Hynde penned song on the album, written by Robert Kidney, rocks out in real time, right down to Chrissie’s initial throat clearing and command to the band to crank out one more chorus. They soup up the Bo-Diddley beat on “Break Up the Concrete,” inspiring her to spit out a feral speed-chant at the ends of two choruses.

Rock’s great iconoclast, Neil Young, perfectly summed up what we all know about Chrissie Hynde: “She’s a rock & roll woman. She’s got it in her heart. She’s gonna be rocking till she drops.”

The truth of that statement is right here in the grooves of Break Up The Concrete.

The Pretenders homepage
The Pretenders myspace page

Cost
$40.00
More about these performers
The Pretenders's bio and tour dates
The Pretenders
The Pretenders are a British rock band. The original band consisted of group founder 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). The band was fractured by drug-related deaths and numerous subsequent personnel changes have taken place over the years, with Hynde as the sole continual member. Hynde, originally from Akron, Ohio, attended the Kent State University at the time of the Kent State shootings in 1970. Hynde moved to London in 1973 and from there beg...

The Pretenders tour dates and bio

The Pretenders ringtones

More about Highline Ballroom
Highline Ballroom
The High Line is a 1.45-mile-long elevated rail structure set to open in 2008 as a public open space. Running through the West Side neighborhoods of the Meatpacking District, West Chelsea and Clinton/Hell's Kitchen, it was built in the 1930s to remove dangerous trains from Manhattan’s streets. No trains have run on it since 1980. Friends of the High Line (FHL), a community-based 501(c)(3) non-profit group, formed in 1999 when the historic structure was under threat of demolition. FHL is currently working with the City of New York to transform the structure into a park. The High Line south of 30th Street was donated to the City by CSX Transportation in 2005. The team of Field Operations and Diller Scofidio + Renfro is now at work on a design for the High Line’s public landscape. Construction began in spring 2006. The first phase (Gansevoort Street to 20th Street) is projected to open in 2008. For more information, and to see designs for the new park, please visit www.thehighline.org.

Phone: (212) 414-5994

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