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Pete Farndon

 
Artist: Pete Farndon
Pete Farndon

  • Born: 1953
  • Died: April 14, 1983
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Bass

Biography

Besides the Allman Brothers, perhaps the only other rock band to lose bandmembers under exactly the same circumstances (and almost exactly one year apart) was the Pretenders, when guitarist James Honeyman-Scott and bassist Pete Farndon both succumbed to drug overdoses during the early '80s. Farndon was born on June 2, 1952, and hailed from Hereford, England. After traveling around the world during the early-mid '70s, which included a stint in Australia (where he was a brief member of the folk rock outfit, the Bushwackers) and Hong Kong (where he indulged so heavily in drugs that his teeth rotted away), Farndon returned back to Hereford by the end of the decade. With England still caught up in the punk craze, Farndon looked to form a new group, and met guitarist/singer/songwriter Chrissie Hynde through a local drummer friend. After jamming on a few soul obscurities and Hynde originals (at a rehearsal space Farndon described as "the scummiest basement I've ever been in my life"), Farndon was welcomed onboard as a bassist.

Farndon recommended fellow Hereford guitarist Honeyman-Scott to join up (and soonafter, another Hereford resident, drummer Martin Chambers), and by 1979, the Pretenders were up and running. A recording contract with the Sire label soon followed, as such subsequent albums as 1980's the Pretenders and 1981's Pretenders II, became worldwide hits - making the quartet one of new wave's biggest names. But bigtime success proved hard to handle for longtime pals Farndon and Honeyman-Scott, who both indulged heavily in drugs. By 1982, drug abuse had affected Farndon's playing and relationship with the others so badly that he was asked to leave the group. But in a cruel twist of fate, Honeyman-Scott was found dead from a cocaine-induced heart attack in London on June 16, 1982, only two days after Farndon's ousting. Farndon supposedly attempted to form another group in the wake of his exit from the Pretenders, but failed to do so. On April 14, 1983 (less than a year after Honeyman-Scott's death), Farndon was found dead in his apartment at the age of 30, having drowned in his bathtub after doing heroin. ~ Greg Prato, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Pete Farndon
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Pete Farndon

Pete Farndon, December 1981
Background information
Born 12 June 1952(1952-06-12)
Origin Hereford, England
Died 14 April 1983 (aged 30)
Genres Rock
Occupations Musician
Instruments Bass
Years active 1976 - 1983
Associated acts The Pretenders

Pete Farndon (12 June 1952 – 14 April 1983) was an English bassist and founding member of the rock band The Pretenders. Farndon attended Hereford Cathedral School in his home town of Hereford, before embarking on his musical legacy with The Pretenders. In addition to playing bass with the group, Farndon sang backup vocals and co-wrote two of the group's songs ("The Wait" and "Space Invader"), before being dismissed from the group on 14 June 1982 (Uncut, 1999).

Contents

Career

Farndon and fellow bandmates James Honeyman-Scott (guitar / vocals / keyboards), and Martin Chambers (drums / vocals / percussion) hailed from Hereford, England. Prior to joining the Pretenders, Farndon played with a group called Cold River Lady until the summer of 1976, and then toured with Australian folk-rock band The Bushwackers prior to the Pretenders in 1978 (Melody Maker 1979; Rolling Stone 1980). Farndon's musical influences included Stanley Clarke and Jeff Beck (Rhino Entertainment Group, 2006).

Farndon joined the Pretenders in the Spring of 1978, and was the first member of the 1978-82 lineup to be recruited by Chrissie Hynde. Farndon recalled their first rehearsal: "I'll never forget it, we go in, we do a soul number, we do a country and western number, and then we did 'The Phone Call' which is like the heaviest fuckin' punk rocker you could do in 5/4 time. Impressed? I was very impressed." (Rolling Stone, 1980). A guitarist was still needed, however, and Farndon recruited lead guitarist James Honeyman-Scott into the group that summer (Rolling Stone, 1980; Uncut, 1999).

Martin Chambers worked with Farndon to adjust to Hynde's timing: "Pete and I did a fair amount of work on our own, in terms of the rhythm section being able to play Chrissie's odd timing things. So Pete and I would come in a couple of hours ahead of the others and baby talk our way through the songs. You know, 'da dad da, boom boom.' She didn't count in the traditional way so we had to reinterpret the counts. Once we made the adjustment and learned to go with her flow, so to speak, it became second nature. It's the bedrock of Pretenders music" (Rhino Entertainment Group, 2006)

Farndon played a large role in shaping The Pretenders' tough image, often wearing his biker clothing, or later, samurai gear onstage. Hynde later acknowledged that two Pretenders' songs, "Biker" and "Samurai" had "references to a Pete Farndon type of character" (Uncut, 1999). As a performer, Hynde recalled that "Pete was fantastic. Pete was blagging it a lot because technically he wasn't any kind of great musician. But he had real heart, like in boxing terms, he could win the fight on heart alone. And he had a great energy, borne of a kind of desperation." (Rhino Records, 2006).

Farndon's distinctive bass guitars also played a role in shaping his image and included a Fender Precision Bass, Rickenbacker, and at least three Hamer guitars. The first Hamer was a double cutaway model in 1950s pink. Later Farndon switched to the Hamer 'Cruisebass' model, including one with a distinctive Japanese "Rising Sun" battle flag graphic (Dantzig Design Group, 2006).

By 1982, Farndon caused increasingly strained relations with his bandmates due to his drug use. He became increasingly belligerent, and he, according to Hynde, "was in bad shape. He was really not someone you could work with." (Uncut, 1999). He was fired on 14 June 1982. Surprisingly, two days after Farndon's dismissal, guitarist James Honeyman-Scott was found dead of heart failure caused by a cocaine overdose. Meanwhile, Farndon was in the midst of forming a new band with former Clash drummer Topper Headon - who coincidently also was battling heroin abuse and left the band unable to cope with it - when he was found dead on 14 April 1983 by his American model wife, Conover, after passing out and drowning in his bathtub after a heroin overdose. This left The Pretenders with only two of their original four members.

Pete Farndon is buried at St. Peter's Church, Withington, Herefordshire, England.

Sources

  • Dantzig Design Group, 2006, Pete Farndon of the Pretenders. Hamer Unofficial Artist Archives. Accessed 29 July 2006, at [1]
  • Melody Maker, 1979, Say a Prayer for the Pretenders, by Mark Williams, 17 February 1979.
  • Rhino Entertainment Group, 2006a, "The Wait", performed live 7 December 1980 for "Alright Now" TV show. Video from Pirate Radio box set DVD.
  • Rhino Entertainment Group, 2006b, This is Pirate Radio, by Ben Edmonds. Article from Pirate Radio box set booklet.
  • Rhino Records, 2006, Interview (Part II) with the Pretenders' Chrissie Hynde. RhinoCast show no. 037, 6 June 2006. Accessed 29 July 2006, at [2]
  • Rolling Stone, 1980, The Pretenders Leather Love Songs by Kurt Loder. Rolling Stone, vol. 318, 29 May 1980. Accessed 29 July 2006, at [3]
  • Uncut, 1999, Rock and Roll Heart, by Allan Jones. Uncut, v. 25, June 1999.

Discography

The Pretenders

1980 - Pretenders

1981 - Extended Play

1981 - Pretenders II

External links


 
 
Learn More
Learning to Crawl (1984 Album by The Pretenders)
Get Close/Last of the Independents (2008 Album by Pretenders)
Learning to Crawl [Bonus Tracks] (2007 Album by Pretenders)

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