Chrissie Hynde

Before she formed the Pretenders and became one of rock's definitive female icons, Chrissie wrote for NME and other music mags of the '70s.
9 articles
List of articles in the library by date
Brian Eno: Everything You'd Rather Not Know About Eno
Interview by Chrissie Hynde, New Musical Express, 2 February 1974
IT WAS WITH a certain apprehensive curiosity that I first noticed the brown lace-up shoes. He displayed a normalcy that I just couldn't trust. After ...
Gram Parsons: Grievous Angel (Reprise import)
Review by Chrissie Hynde, New Musical Express, 23 February 1974
WHEN YOU'RE sitting in a trailer at 2 a.m. somewhere out in 'Last Stopsville', and there's just you, one more hit of apple wine, the ...
Suzi Quatro: A Rap In The Loo With Suzi Q.
Interview by Chrissie Hynde, New Musical Express, 23 February 1974
CHRISSIE HYND, who's got this thing about black leather, snuggles up to SUZI QUATRO for an intimate girl-to-girl tête-à-tête in the Ladies' toilet ...
Live Review by Chrissie Hynde, New Musical Express, 9 March 1974
Music to build empires ...
Velvet Underground: The Velvet Underground: 1969 Live
Review by Chrissie Hynde, New Musical Express, 27 April 1974
IT'S SATURDAY NIGHT. I'm alone and all I don't wanna do is keep leafing through this copy of Vogue I got in my mits - ...
David Cassidy: Terminal Fandom
Report and Interview by Chrissie Hynde, New Musical Express, 8 June 1974
IN "FREE" ADULTS, mass frustration breeds war. In "free" teenagers, mass frustration breeds rock phenomena. ...
Tim Buckley: How a Hippie Hero became a sultry Sex Object...
Interview by Chrissie Hynde, New Musical Express, 8 June 1974
...and had a simply devastating effect on the glands of a certain Chrissie Hynd [sic]. ...
Andy Mackay: In Search Of Marcel Proust
Interview by Chrissie Hynde, New Musical Express, 6 July 1974
IN TERMS of the rock machine they were chronologically burned out from the start. Who but a pack of literary looneys could have survived falling ...
Retrospective by Chrissie Hynde, Word, The, February 2004
"In the Sixties our motto was: never trust anyone over 30. It was all about youth — and youth was a huge threat", by Chrissie ...
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