In January 1979,
the Pretenders released their version of "Stop Your Sobbing" as their first single. The track would be included on
their self-titled debut album, released a year later, which reached no.1 in the UK and the Top Ten in the US. Pretenders frontwoman
Chrissie Hynde had been a longtime Kinks fan and suggested the band try the song. She explained, "I pulled it out of the air when we were in rehearsals, surprised that no one had heard it before".
Ray Davies and Hynde eventually met at a
New York club in 1980, beginning a relationship which eventually resulted in the birth of a child. Lowe recalled of the experience: Despite Lowe's skepticism, the single made the UK Top 40, reaching number 34 and became the first of more than a dozen UK Top 40 hits for the band. It also afforded the band their first studio appearance on
Top of the Pops in February 1979. It didn't perform quite as well in the US, reaching number 65 on the
Billboard Hot 100, but was the first of ten
Billboard Hot 100 hits for the band. This was one of many songs initially recorded by the Kinks that were covered by other bands during the late seventies and early eighties. Others include the version of "
David Watts" recorded by
the Jam, "
The Hard Way" by
the Knack, and "
I Go to Sleep", an unreleased track written by Ray Davies, which, like "Stop Your Sobbing", was covered by the Pretenders.
Rolling Stone critic Ken Tucker calls the Pretenders' "Stop Your Sobbing" "ideal radio fare," describing it as having "''
Labour of Lust's'' feathery pop feel" and that "echoed to enhance Davies' wistful melancholy, Hynde sounded like a solo
Mamas and the Papas, but her tone surged at the ends of choruses to imply enormous resentment at even having to think about sobbing."
Cash Box said that "Lowe's
production captures the jangling guitars perfectly and Chrissie Hynde's vocals are confident yet sensual."
Record World called it a "a contagious rocker that's...powerful pop." ==References==