Daughter of a part-time secretary and a Yellow Pages Manager, Hynde graduated from
Firestone High School, admitting "I was never too interested in high school. I mean, I never went to a dance, I never went out on a date, I never went steady. It became pretty awful for me. Except, of course, I could go see bands, and that was the kick. I used to go to
Cleveland just to see any band. So I was in love a lot of the time, but mostly with guys in bands that I had never met. For me, knowing that
Brian Jones was out there, and later that
Iggy Pop was out there, made it kind of hard for me to get too interested in the guys that were around me. I had, uh, bigger things in mind."
Hynde experimented with
hippie counterculture, psychotropic drugs, eastern mysticism, and
vegetarianism. Hynde joined a band called Sat. Sun. Mat. (which included
Mark Mothersbaugh from
Devo) while attending
Kent State University's Art School for three years. Hynde was on the campus during the infamous "
Kent State shootings".
Hynde also developed an interest in
NME when she wasn't waitressing or working various other jobs to support herself, eventually saving enough money for the move from Ohio to
London in 1973. With her art background, Hynde landed a job in an architectural firm but left after eight months. It was then that Hynde met rock journalist
Nick Kent and landed a writing position at NME. However, this proved not to last and Hynde later found herself working at
Malcolm McLaren and
Vivienne Westwood's then-unknown clothing store,
SEX, where Hynde was summarily fired for a fight with a customer in which Hynde was hit with a bell from the store. Hynde then made a fruitless attempt to start a band in
France before her return to Cleveland in 1975.
Hynde resurfaced in France in 1976 for another stab at forming a band. Finding her way to London in the midst of the
punk movement, Hynde tried to start a group with
Mick Jones from
The Clash. After the band failed to take off, Malcolm McLaren placed her as a guitarist in
Masters of the Backside. But Chrissie was asked to leave the group just as the band became
The Damned. By that time, Mick Jones had invited Hynde to join his band on their initial tour of Britain. Chrissie's recollection of that period: "It was great, but my heart was breaking. I wanted to be in a band so bad. And to go to all the gigs, to see it so close up, to be living in it and not to have a band was devastating to me. When I left, I said, 'Thanks a lot for lettin' me come along,' and I went back and went weeping on the underground throughout London. All the people I knew in town, they were all in bands. And there I was, like the real loser, you know? Really the loser." Chrissie states these words in The Pretenders Greatest Hits DVD documentary extra titled No Turn Left Unstoned.