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Hymn to Her

"Hymn to Her"
Hymn to Her single cover.jpeg
Single by The Pretenders
from the album Get Close
B-side "Room Full of Mirrors"
Released 1986
Recorded 1985
Genre Soft rock
Length 4:27
Label Warner Music Group
Songwriter(s) Meg Keene
Producer(s) Jimmy Iovine, Bob Clearmountain
The Pretenders singles chronology
"Don't Get Me Wrong"
(1986)
"Hymn to Her"
(1986)
"My Baby"
(1987)
"Don't Get Me Wrong"
(1986)
"Hymn To Her"
(1986)
"My Baby"
(1987)

"Hymn to Her" is a song that was first released on the Pretenders' 1986 album Get Close. It was written by Meg Keene, a high school friend of Pretenders' lead singer Chrissie Hynde. "Hymn to Her" was released as a single in the UK and reached #8 on the charts. According to AllMusic critic Matthew Greenwald, the song has remained popular on adult contemporary radio stations.

According to Spin magazine critic Erik Himmelsbach, "Hymn to Her" is one of the songs presenting "traditional pop sentiments" which Hynde and the Pretenders mixed in with their more vitriolic work.Spin critic Brian Cullman described it as a "hymn to the eternal feminine."The Encyclopedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo-Paganism interprets the song as containing pagan themes. Vic Garbarini of Musician magazine suggested that a theme of the song is Hynde "trying to listen to that part of [herself] where all [her] songs come from." Greenwald considers it "a timeless love song about a life-long love." According to Greenwald, the melody combines folk music and gospel music elements.

Cullman evaluated "Hymn to Her" as "a stunner" which combines "the spirit behind 'The Mists of Avalon' with the beauty of Sandy Denny's best work." Greenwald particularly praised the lyrics, Hynde's delivery, and the refrain.Ira Robbins and Delvin Neugebauer of Trouser Press described "Hymn To Her" as a "haunting ballad" that was one of the few worthy songs on Get Close. Author Barbara O'Dair described it as "glorious" and "spine-tingling" and "the best thing" on Get Close.The Encyclopedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo-Paganism called it "enchanting."


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