Film & Music Reviews: ‘Alone with Chrissie Hynde’ of the Pretenders, plus Tomislav Goluban and Davis Kathriner

Alone with Chrissie Hynde

Chrissie Hynde has opened up a lot about her offstage life in recent years. In 2015, she delivered an autobiography,ย Reckless: My Life as a Pretender. And now we haveย Alone with Chrissie Hynde, a DVD of an hour-and-a-half BBC documentary whose title echoes that of her bandโ€™s latest album.

The show includes many recent and vintage performance and recording-studio clips, some of them fantastic. (Donโ€™t miss a high-octane โ€œThumbelina,โ€ performed in a North London pub with a small group called Motherโ€™s Little Helper.) But most of these clips deliver only segments of songs; in the bulk of the footage, Hynde is talking, not performing. We see her in New York, in her London and Paris apartments, shopping for clothes, and visiting Akron, Ohio, where she strolls through a cemetery and points out her childhood home and the shopping center where she once held jobs she hated. She discusses her music, shows off her paintings, and offers her thoughts about life and being constantly on the road. At George Harrisonโ€™s Bhaktivedanta Manor Hare Krishna Temple, she milks a cow.

Offstage, says Chrissie Hynde, โ€œI spend all my time aloneโ€ฆItโ€™s my choice; I like it.โ€

This is the first Iโ€™ve seen of Hynde offstage, and I was surprised at how unsurprised I was by the personality she displays: based on her music, this is pretty much exactly how Iโ€™d expected her to beโ€”variously rebellious, sarcastic, quirky, romantic, moody, feisty, and cynical. She says she doesnโ€™t look forward to sleeping in her own bed when a tour ends; she prefers hotels. And she loves performing not because of the connection with the audience but because when sheโ€™s on stage, itโ€™s the only time she really feels she knows what sheโ€™s doing. Offstage, she tells Sandra Bernhard, โ€œI spend all my time aloneโ€ฆItโ€™s my choice; I like it.โ€

Because the BBC program is a talk-heavy documentary and not a concert, youโ€™ll probably want to see it only once, but if youโ€™re a fan, youโ€™ll be glad you did. And youโ€™ll enjoy the DVDโ€™s major bonus feature, which you most likely will want to watch more than once: an 18-song, approximately 90-minute Cologne, Germany concert from July 1981, featuring Hynde with the original Pretenders: drummer Martin Chambers, who has worked with her on and off ever since; guitarist James Honeyman-Scott, whose cocaine-related death occurred less than a year after this concert; and bassist Pete Farndon, who lost his life due to a heroin overdose about 10 months after Honeymoon-Scott passed away.

Their set includes many classic songs that appeared on the first two Pretenders LPs, among them โ€œThe Wait,โ€ โ€œThe Adultress,โ€ โ€œMessage of Love,โ€ โ€œTalk of the Town,โ€ โ€œKid,โ€ โ€œPrecious,โ€ โ€œMystery Achievement,โ€ and โ€œStop Your Sobbing.โ€ This is a nearly 40-year-old recording, so donโ€™t expect widescreen or surround sound. Do expect some fireworks, though: Hynde continues to make great music today, but her early work with the original Pretenders had a uniquely raw and powerful energy that imbues this vintage concert.

The DVD is available here.

Also Noteworthy

Tomislav Goluban cover art

Tomislav Goluban featuring Toni Staresinic, Velvet Space Love.ย If you organize your music by genre, youโ€™re going to have a hard time deciding where to place this ethereal set from a pair of Croatian instrumentalists. Itโ€™s certainly spaceyโ€”some of it could work as an alternative soundtrack for a movie like 2001โ€”and Iโ€™d be tempted to call it new age or electronic if it werenโ€™t for Golubanโ€™s prominent bluesy harmonica. And then there are the songs where a brass section kicks in, and the music sounds like jazz. At any rate, this pensive collectionโ€”nearly all of it written by Goluban and pianist Staresinicโ€”is worth a listen.ย 

Losing Habits by Davis Kathriner

Davis Kathriner, Losing Habits. This folk-rooted release from guitarist Ben Davis and drummer/lead vocalist Danny Kathriner doesnโ€™t break any new stylistic ground, but itโ€™s loaded with strong melodies and harmony vocals and well-crafted lyrics, many of which describe the pleasures and pains of romantic relationships. Support comes from Lauren Balthrop (lead vocal on โ€œSame for Youโ€) and Laura Cantrell (lead vocal on โ€œBreakfast Table,โ€ which is a high point), as well as about a half dozen other players who add cello, piano, organ, pedal steel, and more. Davis and Kathrinerโ€”working together here for the first time since they led a band called Wagon about a decade agoโ€”wrote all the songs (with help from Cantrell on โ€œBreakfast Table”).


Discover more from By Jeff Burger

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

One comment

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.