Christine
Ellen "Chrissie" Hynde, 1951-
Christine "Chrissie"
Hynde, lead singer with The Pretenders, got her musical foundation at Firestone
High School in Akron, Ohio
Hynde is the daughter of
Bud, who worked for Ohio Bell, and Delores (Dee), who worked as a secretary. She
graduated from Firestone High School where she was a member of choral groups and
briefly attended Kent State University where she majored in Art.
But Hynde wanted to be a
rock star and she didn't think she needed a college degree to do it. She also
didn't think she could reach her goal in Akron so she moved to London, vowing
not to return until she made it big.
In London she went through
a series of jobs - including a brief stint as a critic for a music magazine, New
Musical Express - and a number of different bands. By 1979 everything clicked
musically; her band, The Pretenders, hit it big with a recording that went on
to be nominated for three Grammy awards. Hynde wrote many of the songs. Billboard
saw her as a talent. "Hynde writes literate, sharp, biting lyrics and
demonstrates a flair for melodies that ring with elements of rack classicism."
The New York Times saw her as the key to the Pretenders' success. "Miss
Hynde's songs and singing and her tough, rock-and-roll-woman persona are what
makes the Pretenders really special
."
Hynde is still with the
Pretenders and still recording, although with a different label. She and the Pretenders
are no longer with Sire/Warner Brothers and now records on the smaller Artemis
label.
Hynde has long been one
of the more controversial characters in popular music. As an animal rights activist,
she implied that McDonald's should be bombed because it encouraged meat consumption
and she was arrested for protesting the department store Gap's use of leather.
The Pretenders still tour.
In 2002, they opened for the Rolling Stones on their American tour. Hynde returns
to Akron to perform to visit her family who still live there.
Photo courtesy of the Beacon
Journal.
--Kathleen
L. Endres
