Farndon recommended fellow Hereford guitarist Honeyman-Scott to join up (and soon after, 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 big-time 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, Rovi