Break Up the Concrete is the ninth (and to date, final) studio album by rock group The Pretenders. It is their first studio album since Loose Screw in 2002. Several "exclusive" editions of the disc exist (see track listing below); each appends a new countrified version of a Pretenders classic, in keeping with the general sound of the album. The title song "Break Up the Concrete" was used in the opening scene of an episode of House M.D. ("5 to 9", season 6, episode 14).
The first edition of Break Up the Concrete also includes a small sheet of "handmade seed paper", which can be planted, and if cared for, promise to sprout within a few weeks.
Break Up the Concrete was the first Pretenders album since 1994's Last of the Independents not to feature Martin Chambers on drums. In an interview, Chrissie Hynde said that she was looking for a different style that she didn't believe that Martin was capable of playing to her satisfaction. Session drummer Jim Keltner took his place in the studio, although Chambers would return for the tour in support of the album.
Reception
The album so far has a score of 74 out of 100 from Metacritic based on "generally positive reviews".[1] Mojo gave the album four stars out of five and said that it was "looser and more organic, and a different sonic palette for Hynde."[1] Q also gave it four stars out of five and said, "It's Hynde who steals the show with her lip-curling vibrato, part Elvis, part Dusty, never more intoxicating than on the seductive 'Almost Perfect.'"[1] The Boston Globe gave it a positive review and said that the album "just might be [Hynde's] most congenial, and certainly rootsiest, collection yet."[12]
Other reviews are average or mixed: Under the Radar gave the album six stars out of ten and said it had "a few throwaway tunes", but that it was "probably the best Pretenders album since Get Close."[13] Uncut gave it three stars out of five and said that the album might be "a bargain... but the triumphs of yore tend to expose the new album's low-fi rockabilly and country strums."[1] The Observer also gave it three stars out of five and said that Chrissie Hynde was "reinvestigating her roots with some rockabilly and a Dylan vibe."[14] The Austin Chronicle, however, gave it two-and-a-half stars out of five and asked, "Why not take the five really good tracks... and offer a stellar EP for download?"[15]
Track listing
1. |
"Boots Of Chinese Plastic" | Hynde |
2:31 |
2. |
"The Nothing Maker" | Hynde |
3:58 |
3. |
"Don't Lose Faith In Me" | Hynde |
2:45 |
4. |
"Don't Cut Your Hair" | Hynde |
2:14 |
5. |
"Love's A Mystery" | Hynde |
3:03 |
6. |
"The Last Ride" | Hynde |
3:40 |
7. |
"Almost Perfect" | Hynde |
4:48 |
8. |
"You Didn't Have To" | Hynde |
3:09 |
9. |
"Rosalee" | Robert Kidney |
4:14 |
10. |
"Break Up The Concrete" | Hynde |
2:39 |
11. |
"One Thing Never Changed" | Hynde |
3:46 |
12. |
"I Go To Sleep" (new version) | Ray Davies |
2:55 |
13. |
"Both Sides Of Goodbye" (with Willie Nelson) | Jackson Leap, Kim Williams |
4:03 |
12. |
"Biker" (new version) | Hynde |
2:34 |
13. |
"Nothing Breaks Like A Heart" (new version) | Hynde, Billy Steinberg, Tom Kelly |
3:03 |
UK and Brazilian versions track listing
Disc 1 – The Best of Pretenders
Disc 2 – Break Up the Concrete
1. |
"Boots of Chinese Plastic" | Hynde |
2:31 |
2. |
"The Nothing Maker" | Hynde |
3:58 |
3. |
"Don't Lose Faith in Me" | Hynde |
2:45 |
4. |
"Don't Cut Your Hair" | Hynde |
2:14 |
5. |
"Love's a Mystery" | Hynde |
3:03 |
6. |
"The Last Ride" | Hynde |
3:40 |
7. |
"Almost Perfect" | Hynde |
4:48 |
8. |
"You Didn't Have To" | Hynde |
3:09 |
9. |
"Rosalee" | Robert Kidney |
4:14 |
10. |
"Break Up the Concrete" | Hynde |
2:39 |
11. |
"One Thing Never Changed" | Hynde |
3:46 |
Personnel
Chart
Break Up the Concrete debuted at number 32 on Billboard's album chart in the issue dated 25 October 2008 and it stayed on the chart for three weeks. The album was issued with a 'best of' in a double-disc edition in the UK and charted at number 35 on the UK Albums Chart.
Popular culture
Disc 2, track 1 "Boots of Chinese Plastic" was featured on the AMC television show Breaking Bad during Walt's "joyride" scene in episode 407, "Problem Dog".
Disc 2, track 10 "Break Up the Concrete" has been used in the FOX television show House M.D. during the first scene in episode 123, "5 to 9".
References
External links
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| Singles | |
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| Related articles | |
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| Book:The Pretenders |
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