It seems everyone wants to sing with Chrissie Hynde. IN THE MIX Chrissie Hynde Edition Vol. 1 is packed with The Pretenders’ leader lending vocals to her friend’s songs (Chris Spedding, Cheap Trick, Elvis Costello, INXS, Ringo Starr) joining legends onstage (Jeff Beck, Rod Stewart) & supporting relative newcomers (Hybrid, Incubus, Rufus Wainwright, Tube & Berger). She adds some credibility to Russell Crowe’s band (one of my favorites of the tracks included here) & I included a couple tracks from her new duets album—songs with k.d. lang, & Julian Lennon. Maybe my favorite track is Hynde's live pairing with another go-to duet partner to the stars; Sheryl Crow.
Hynde is a tough as leather rock chick who’s too kind to eat meat. She's skippered a pirate ship on rock & roll's testosterone sea for 45 years without ever losing her femininity. And to me, Chrissie sings like no one else. The only influence I pick up from her singular vocal style is maybe a tiny bit of Cher—who I also find to be unique & unusual in a different way.
And despite all Hynde’s gone through—including the death of two of her original Pretenders bandmates in the space of ten months—she’s always written & recorded great music. And I've always liked that she tends to keep original Pretenders drummer Martin Chambers close. I feel like she's true to her friends, and her fans.
Even when I thought some material was weak, Hynde has proven my assessment to be inaccurate. The songs that failed to grab me on 1990’s Packed (recorded without Chambers) like Sense Of Purpose, & Criminal, and on 1986’s Get Close’s Chill Factor, & Hymn To Her took became some of my favorites when recorded with an orchestra for 1995’s The Isle Of View. The same is true of Revolution from 1994’s Last Of The Independents. I stand corrected, Ms. Hynde.







