
It alone took about three account afore Pretenders frontwoman Chrissie Hynde removed a brand account of accouterment at the band's Fresh York City Central Park SummerStage appearance on Monday night. Her white pinstriped belong wasn't continued for the NYC summertime calefaction and was tossed abreast afterward the band's aperture number, 'Break Up the Concrete.'
"It's girls' night," Hynde said from the stage. And it was. The Pretenders were the third of a touring leash to booty the stage, as Juliette Lewis and Cat Power (aka Chan Marshall) performed earlier, apparently to their chagrin, in the baking sun.
"Central Park, we've got a bulletin of love," Hynde roared afore segueing into the song, well, 'Message of Love.' Hynde was abutting by aboriginal Pretenders bagman Martin Chambers at the kit, with he and Hynde actual as the sole aboriginal associates back the accumulation formed aloof over 30 years ago. It was a affect that wasn't absent on the evening. "Here's one for Peter Farndon and James Honeyman-Scott," she said of her backward bandmates afore a booty on 'Kid.' "Without them we wouldn't be here."
All of this isn't to say the absolute appearance was a absorption of area the Pretenders accept been.
Hynde and Co. -- Chambers, forth with newbies James Walbourne (guitar), Eric Haywood (pedal steel) and Nick Wilkinson (bass) -- showcased abundant of the fresh songs from the Pretenders' most recent album, 'Break Up the Concrete,' to a alloyed yet acceptant army of loyal devotees, punks, hippies and hipsters. One song in particular, 'Rosalee,' got a balmy accession acknowledgment to a coy addition by Hynde. "This abutting song's about a girl," she said as admirers cheered. "Don't get too excited. I can't bethink if I snogged her or not." How 'bout them apples, Katy Perry?
Still, it was the hits that absolutely alive the crowd, including 'Don't Get Me Wrong,' 'Brass in Pocket,' 'I'll Stand by You' and, of course, 'Back on the Chain Gang.'
"I'd rather shoot myself than sing 'Back on the Chain Gang,'" Hynde told Spinner at the band's Sessions taping. In the end, she did sing the song. You see, Hynde's consistently been a beeline shooter. But she doesn't charge a gun.
"It's girls' night," Hynde said from the stage. And it was. The Pretenders were the third of a touring leash to booty the stage, as Juliette Lewis and Cat Power (aka Chan Marshall) performed earlier, apparently to their chagrin, in the baking sun.
"Central Park, we've got a bulletin of love," Hynde roared afore segueing into the song, well, 'Message of Love.' Hynde was abutting by aboriginal Pretenders bagman Martin Chambers at the kit, with he and Hynde actual as the sole aboriginal associates back the accumulation formed aloof over 30 years ago. It was a affect that wasn't absent on the evening. "Here's one for Peter Farndon and James Honeyman-Scott," she said of her backward bandmates afore a booty on 'Kid.' "Without them we wouldn't be here."
All of this isn't to say the absolute appearance was a absorption of area the Pretenders accept been.
Hynde and Co. -- Chambers, forth with newbies James Walbourne (guitar), Eric Haywood (pedal steel) and Nick Wilkinson (bass) -- showcased abundant of the fresh songs from the Pretenders' most recent album, 'Break Up the Concrete,' to a alloyed yet acceptant army of loyal devotees, punks, hippies and hipsters. One song in particular, 'Rosalee,' got a balmy accession acknowledgment to a coy addition by Hynde. "This abutting song's about a girl," she said as admirers cheered. "Don't get too excited. I can't bethink if I snogged her or not." How 'bout them apples, Katy Perry?
Still, it was the hits that absolutely alive the crowd, including 'Don't Get Me Wrong,' 'Brass in Pocket,' 'I'll Stand by You' and, of course, 'Back on the Chain Gang.'
"I'd rather shoot myself than sing 'Back on the Chain Gang,'" Hynde told Spinner at the band's Sessions taping. In the end, she did sing the song. You see, Hynde's consistently been a beeline shooter. But she doesn't charge a gun.
0 komentar:
Post a Comment