Who
Back Home Up Next

 

Who.jpg (129902 bytes)

Few bands in the history of rock & roll were riddled with as many contradictions as the Who. All four members had wildly different personalities, as their notoriously intense live performances demonstrated. The group was a whirlwind of activity, as the wild Keith Moon fell over his drum kit and Pete Townshend leaped into the air with his guitar, spinning his right hand in exaggerated windmills. Vocalist Roger Daltrey strutted across the stage with a thuggish menace, as bassist John Entwistle stood silent, functioning as the eye of the hurricane. These divergent personalities frequently clashed, but these frictions also resulted in a decade's worth of remarkable music.
As one of the key figures of the British Invasion and the mod movement of the mid-'60s, the Who were a dynamic and undeniably powerful sonic force. They often sounded like they were exploding conventional rock and R&B structures with Townshend's furious guitar chords, Entwistle's hyperactive bass lines and Moon's vigorous, chaotic drumming. Unlike most rock bands, the Who based their rhythm on Townshend's guitar, letting Moon and Entwistle improvise wildly over his foundation, while Daltrey belted out his vocals. This was the sound the Who thrived on in concert, but on record they were a different proposition, as Townshend pushed the group toward new sonic territory. He soon became regarded as one of the finest British songwriters of his era, as songs like "The Kids Are Alright" and "My Generation" became teenage anthems, and his rock opera Tommy earned him respect from mainstream music critics.
Townshend continually pushed the band toward more ambitious territory, incorporating white noise, pop art and conceptual extended musical pieces into the group's style. The remainder of the Who, especially Entwistle and Daltrey, weren't always eager to follow him in his musical explorations, especially after the success of his first rock opera, Tommy. Instead, they wanted to stick to their hard-rock roots, playing brutally loud, macho music instead of Townshend's textured song suites and vulnerable pop songs. Eventually, this resulted in the group abandoning their adventurous spirit in the mid-'70s, as they settled into their role as arena-rockers. The Who continued on this path even after the death of Keith Moon in 1978, and even after they disbanded in the early '80s, as they reunited numerous times in the late '80s and '90s to tour America. The group's relentless pursuit of the dollar was largely due to Entwistle and Daltrey, who never found successful solo careers, but it had the unfortunate side effect of tarnishing their reputation for many longtime fans. However, there's little argument that at their peak, the Who were one of the most innovative and powerful bands in rock history.
Pete Townshend and John Entwistle met while attending high school in the Shepherd's Bush area of London. In their early teens, they played in a Dixieland band together, with Entwhistle playing trumpet and Townshend playing banjo. By the early '60s, the pair had formed a rock & roll band, but Entwistle departed in 1962 to play in the Detours, a hard-edged rock band featuring a sheet-metal worker named Roger Daltrey. By the end of the year, Townshend had joined as a rhythm guitarist, and in 1963, Daltrey became the group's lead vocalist once Colin Dawson left the band. Within a few months, drummer Doug Sandom had parted ways with the Detours, and the group added Keith Moon, who had previously drummed with a surf-rock band called the Beachcombers. The Detours changed their name to the Who in early 1964.
As the group struggled to get a break, Pete Townshend attended art school, while the remaining three worked odd jobs. Soon, the band became regulars at the Marquee club in London, which is where Townshend first smashed one of his guitars out of frustration with the sound system; the destruction would become one of his performing signatures. Soon, the group cultivated a small following, which led to the interest of manager Pete Meaden. Under the direction of Meaden, the Who changed their name to the High Numbers and began dressing in sharp suits in order to appeal to the style and R&B-obsessed mod audience. The High Numbers released one single, "I'm the Face" / "Zoot Suit," which was comprised of two songs written by Meaden. After the single bombed, the group ditched him and began working with Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp, two fledgling music business entrepreneurs who had previously failed as film directors. Instead of moving the band away from mod, Lambert and Stamp encouraged them to embrace the movement, offering them advice on both what to play and what to wear, including pushing the target T-shirt that became a key visual signature. The group reclaimed the Who name and began playing a set that consisted entirely of soul, R&B and Motown - or, as their posters said, "Maximum R&B." By late 1964, they had developed an enthusiastic mod following. At the end of 1964, the Who signed with Decca on the strength of Townshend's "You Really Got Me" knockoff, "I Can't Explain." The group entered the studio with producer Shel Talmy, who previously worked with the Kinks, and the single was released to little attention in January 1965. Once the Who appeared on the television program Ready, Steady, Go, the single shot up the charts, since the group's incendiary performance, featuring Townshend and Moon destroying their instruments, became a sensation. "I Can't Explain" reached the British Top Ten, followed that summer by "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere." That fall, "My Generation" climbed all the way to number two on the charts, confirming the band's status as British pop phenomenons. An album of the same name followed at the end of the year, and early in 1966, "Subsititute" became their fourth British Top Ten hit.
Following "Substitute," the Who acrimoniously left Talmy, and Lambert became the group's producer. Lambert and Stamp decided that every member of the Who should contribute songs to the group's second album in order to generate more revenue. Although the ploy meant A Quick One was uneven, Lambert's presence allowed Townshend to write the title track as a 10-minute mini-opera, an idea he would expand over the next few years. Upon its 1966 release, A Quick One became another British hit. In America, the group was ignored until A Quick One was retitled Happy Jack and its title track reached the Top 40 in 1967. By that time, the group had already eclipsed A Quick One with The Who Sell Out, a concept album constructed as a mock-pirate radio broadcast. The album featured "I Can See for Miles," which became the group's first Top Ten hit in America. That year, the group also appeared at the Monterey Pop Festival.
During 1968, the Who delivered their final mod single with the bizarre "Dogs." By that time, the mod audience had declined considerably, and the single bombed, sending Townshend into seclusion to write a rock opera about a deaf, dumb and blind boy with a gift for pinball. As he worked on the record, the compilation Magic Bus - The Who on Tour was released in America.
The Who returned in 1969 with the double concept album Tommy, which was acclaimed as the first successful rock opera. The album became a huge hit, earning positive reviews from mainstream publications as well as underground rock magazines. Tommy climbed into the American Top Ten as the group supported the album with an extensive tour, where they played the opera in its entirety, including dates at the London Coliseum and the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. In some respects, Tommy became too successful, since it soon overshadowed the Who themselves; it was performed as a play across the world and would eventually be filmed by Ken Russell in 1975 (the movie starred Roger Daltrey) - plus, in 1993, Townshend turned it into a Broadway musical with director Des McAnuff.
While the legacy of Tommy would prove formidable, in 1970 Townshend was stumped about how to follow it up. As he worked on new material, the group released Live at Leeds in 1970, as well as the single "The Seeker." The following year a singles collection called Meaty, Beaty, Big and Bouncy was released. Eventually, he settled on a sci-fi rock opera called Lifehouse, which he intended to be strongly influenced by the teachings of his guru, Meher Baba. Townshend also intended to incorporate electronics and synthesizers on the album, pushing the group into new sonic territory. The remainder of the Who wasn't particularly enthralled with Lifehouse, claiming not to understand its plot, and their reluctance contributed to Townshend suffering a nervous breakdown. Once he recovered, the group picked up the pieces of the now-abandoned Lifehouse project and recorded Who's Next with producer Glyn Johns. Boasting a harder, heavier sound, Who's Next became a major hit, and many of its tracks - including "Baba O'Riley," "Bargain," "Behind Blue Eyes," "Won't Get Fooled Again" and Entwistle's "My Wife" - became cornerstones of album-oriented FM radio in the '70s.
The success of Who's Next prompted Townshend to attempt another opera. This time, he abandoned fantasy in order to sketch a portrait of a '60s mod with Quadrophenia. As he wrote the album in 1972, he released Who Came First, a collection of private recordings and demos he made for Meher Baba. Around that time, Entwistle, frustrated at his lack of songwriting input in the Who, began his own solo career, pursuing his with more dedication than Townshend. Quadrophenia was released as a double album in 1973, and although the band attempted to play the music on tour, technical difficulties prevented them from doing so.
The Who began to fragment after the release of Quadrophenia, as Townshend began to publicly fret over his role as a rock spokesman; in private, he began sinking into alcohol abuse. Entwistle concentrated heavily on his solo career, including recordings with his side projects Ox and Rigor Mortis, as Daltrey alternately pursued an acting career and solo recordings. Moon, meanwhile, continued to party, celebrating his substance abuse and eventually releasing the solo album Two Sides of the Moon, which was studded with star cameos. During this hiatus, the group released the rarities collection Odds and Sods. Meanwhile, Townshend continued to work on songs for the Who, resulting in the disarmingly personal The Who By Numbers in 1975. The record and its accompanying tour became a hit, but following the tour's completion, they officially took an extended hiatus. The Who reconvened in 1978 to release Who Are You. Instead of responding to the insurgent punk movement, which labeled the Who as has-beens, the album represented the group's heaviest flirtation with prog-rock since Quadrophenia. The album became a huge hit, peaking at number two in the American charts and reaching platinum. Instead of being a triumphant comeback, though, Who Are You became a symbol of tragedy, since Keith Moon died of a drug overdose on September 7, 1978, mere months after the record's release. Since Moon was such an integral part of the Who's sound and image, the band had to debate whether continuing on was a wise move. Eventually, they decided to continue performing, but all three surviving members would later claim that they felt the Who ended with Moon's death.
Hiring Kenny Jones, a former member of the Small Faces, as Moon's replacement, as well as keyboardist John "Rabbit" Bundrick to round out the lineup, the Who began working on new material in 1979. Before they released a new record, they released the live documentary The Kids Are Alright and contributed music to Franc Roddam's cinematic adaptation of Quadrophenia, which starred Phil Daniels. The Who began touring later in 1979, but the tour's momentum was crushed when 11 attendees at the group's December 3, 1979 concert at Cincinnati's Riverfront Coliseum where trampled to death in a rush for choice festival seating. The band wasn't informed of the incident until after the concert was finished, and the tragedy deflated whatever good will they had.
Following the Cincinnati concert, the Who slowly fell apart. Townshend became addicted to cocaine, heroin, tranquilizers and alcohol, suffering a near-fatal overdose in 1981. Meanwhile, Entwistle and Daltrey soldiered on in their solo careers. The band reconvened in 1981 to record and release Face Dances, their first album since Moon's death. The album was a hit but received mixed reviews. The following year, they released It's Hard and embarked on a supporting tour billed as their farewell to fans. The live Who's Last was released in 1984 as a commemoration of the tour.
The farewell tour didn't turn out to be the final goodbye from the Who. While Entwistle and Daltrey slowly faded away, Townshend continued recording to relative success. However, the Who still haunted him. The group reunited to play Live Aid in 1985, and three years later, they played a British music awards program. In 1989, Townshend agreed to reunite the band, with Jones being replaced by session drummer Simon Phillips, for a 25th anniversary tour of America. Whatever goodwill the Who had with many fans and critics was squandered on that tour, which was perceived as simply a way to make a lot of money. The Who reunited again in 1994 for two concerts to celebrate Roger Daltrey's 50th birthday. Following the success of his Broadway adaptation of Tommy, Townshend decided to revive Quadrophenia in 1996, reuniting the Who to perform the piece at the Prince's Trust concert in Hyde Park that summer. The Who followed it with an American tour in the fall, which proved to be a failure. The following summer, the Who launched an oldies tour of America which was ignored by the press. In October 2001, they played the Concert for NYC benefit for families of the victims of the Sept. 11 attacks. In late June, 2002, The Who had once again regrouped and were about to kick off a North American tour when John Entwhistle died at the age of 57 in Las Vegas' Hard Rock Hotel.

Who - The Who Sings My Generation.jpg (32838 bytes)

The Who Sings My Generation - 1965

An explosive debut, and the hardest mod pop recorded by anyone. At the time of its release, it also had the most ferociously powerful guitars and drums yet captured on a rock record. Townshend's exhilarating chord crunches and guitar distortions threaten to leap off the grooves on "My Generation" and "Out in the Street"; Keith Moon attacks the drums with a lightning, ruthless finesse throughout. Some "Maximum R&B" influence lingered in the two James Brown covers, but much of Townshend's original material fused Beatlesque hooks and power chords with anthemic mod lyrics, with "The Good's Gone," "Much Too Much," "La La La Lies," and especially "The Kids Are Alright" being highlights. "A Legal Matter" hinted at more ambitious lyrical concerns, and "The Ox" was instrumental mayhem that pushed the envelope of 1965 amplification with its guitar feedback and nonstop crashing drum rolls. While the execution was sometimes crude, and the songwriting not as sophisticated as it would shortly become, the Who never surpassed the pure energy level of this record. - Richie Unterberger

01 - (2:38) Out In The Street
02 - (2:42) I Don't Mind
03 - (4:08) The Good's Gone
04 - (2:21) La-La Lies
05 - (2:53) Much Too Much
06 - (3:25) My Generation
07 - (2:53) The Kids Are Alright
08 - (2:51) Please, Please, Please
09 - (2:37) It's Not True
10 - (3:58) The Ox
11 - (2:53) A Legal Matter
12 - (3:15) Circles (Instant Party)

 

Who - A Quick One.jpg (11504 bytes)

A Quick One (Happy Jack) - 1966

The group's second album is a less impressive outing than their debut, primarily because, at the urging of their managers, all four members penned original material (though Townshend wrote more than anyone else). The pure adrenaline of My Generation also subsided somewhat, as the band began to grapple with more complex melodic and lyrical themes, especially on the erratic mini-opera, "A Quick One While He's Away." Still, there's some great madness on Moon's instrumental "Cobwebs and Strange," and Townshend delivered some solid mod pop with "Run Run Run" and "So Sad About Us." John Entwistle was also revealed to be a writer of considerable talent (and a morbid bent) on "Whiskey Man" and "Boris the Spider." The 1995 CD reissue adds ten bonus tracks: some 1966-67 B-sides, their U.K.-only 1966 Ready Steady Who! EP, an acoustic version of "Happy Jack," and a previously unreleased cover of the Everly Brothers' "Man with the Money." - Richie Unterberger

01 - (2:47) Run Run Run
02 - (2:32) Boris The Spider
03 - (2:28) I Need You
04 - (3:01) Whiskey Man
05 - (2:00) Heat Wave
06 - (2:35) Cobwebs And Strange
07 - (2:58) Don't Look Away
08 - (1:56) See My Way
09 - (3:07) So Sad About Us
10 - (9:16) A Quick One, While He's Away
11 - (1:38) Batman
12 - (2:17) Bucket "T"
13 - (2:02) Barbara Ann
14 - (3:14) Disguises
15 - (3:02) Doctor Doctor
16 - (2:11) I've Been Away
17 - (2:25) In The City
18 - (2:58) Happy Jack
19 - (2:49) Man With Money
20 - (2:04) My Generation - Land Of Hope And Glory

 

Who - Who Sell Out.jpg (11145 bytes)

The Who Sell Out - 1967

Townshend originally planned this as a concept album of sorts that would simultaneously mock and pay tribute to pirate radio stations, complete with fake jingles and commercials linking the tracks. For reasons that remain somewhat ill-defined, the concept wasn't quite driven to completion, breaking down around the middle of side two (on the original vinyl configuration). Nonetheless, on strictly musical merits, it's a terrific set of songs that ultimately stands as one of the group's greatest achievements. "I Can See For Miles" (a Top Ten hit) is the Who at their most thunderous; tinges of psychedelia add a rush to "Armenia, City in the Sky" and "Relax"; "I Can't Reach You" finds Townshend beginning to stretch himself into quasi-spiritual territory; and "Tattoo" and the acoustic "Sunrise" show introspective, vulnerable sides to the singer-songwriter that had previously been hidden. "Rael" was another mini-opera, with musical motifs that reappeared in Tommy. The album is as perfect a balance between melodic mod pop and powerful instrumentation as the Who (or any other group) would achieve; psychedelic pop was never as jubilant, not to say funny (the fake commercials and jingles interspersed between the songs are a hoot). The 1995 CD reissue has over half a dozen interesting outtakes from the time of the sessions, as well as unused commercials, the B-side "Someone's Coming," and an alternate version of "Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand." - Richie Unterberger

01 - (3:51) Armenia City In The Sky
02 - (1:02) Heinz Baked Beans
03 - (2:32) Mary Anne With The Shaky Hand
04 - (2:37) Odorono
05 - (2:54) Tattoo
06 - (3:26) Our Love Was
07 - (4:47) I Can See For Miles
08 - (3:07) I Can't Reach You
09 - (1:00) Medac
10 - (2:44) Relax
11 - (3:10) Silas Stingy
12 - (3:09) Sunrise
13 - (5:49) Rael 1
14 - (1:31) Rael 2
15 - (4:02) Glittering Girl
16 - (3:25) Melancholia
17 - (2:44) Someone's Coming
18 - (3:05) Jaguar
19 - (3:29) Early Morning Cold Taxi
20 - (4:23) Hall Of The Mountain King
21 - (3:54) Girl's Eyes
22 - (3:24) Mary Anne With The Shaky Hand [Alternative Version]
23 - (2:44) Glow Girl

 

Who - Magic Bus.jpg (15327 bytes)

Magic Bus - 1968

A ripoff of sorts even upon its original release, with a few senseless repeats of tracks from Quick One and Sell Out, as well as a sleeve that erroneously implied a live recording. This mish-mash of singles, B-sides, and stray tracks from past British releases did have some fine moments, particularly the singles "Call Me Lightning" and the Bo Diddley-influenced "Magic Bus," which became one of their most popular concert numbers. Other highlights are the fine '66 pop-art tune "Disguises" and Entwistle's hysterical "Doctor, Doctor," but these (and a few of the other cuts) are now available as bonus tracks on the Quick One and Sell Out reissues. Completists should know that one song, Entwistle's typically black-humored "Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde," is unavailable on any other U.S. release, so it's not time to throw away your copy of Magic Bus just yet. - Richie Unterberger

01 - (3:19) Disguises
02 - (2:50) Run Run Run
03 - (2:32) Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde
04 - (3:10) I Can't Reach You
05 - (3:15) Our Love Was
06 - (2:30) Call Me Lightning
07 - (3:26) Magic Bus
08 - (2:38) Someone's Coming
09 - (3:08) Doctor Doctor
10 - (2:17) Bucket "T"
11 - (2:46) Pictures Of Lily

 

Who - Tommy.jpg (11518 bytes)

Tommy - 1969

The full-blown rock opera about a deaf, dumb, and blind boy that launched the band to international superstardom, written almost entirely by Townshend. Hailed as a breakthrough upon its release, it's critical standing has diminished somewhat in the ensuing decades, because of the occasional pretensions of the concept, and the insubstantial nature of some of the songs that functioned as little more than devices to advance the rather sketchy plot. Nonetheless, the double album has many excellent songs, including "I'm Free," "Pinball Wizard," "Sensation," "Christmas," "We're Not Gonna Take It," and the dramatic ten-minute instrumental, "Underture." Though the album was slightly flawed, Townshend's ability to construct a lengthy conceptual narrative brought new possibilities to rock music. Despite the complexity of the project, he and the Who never lost sight of solid pop melodies, harmonies, and forceful instrumentation, imbuing the material with a suitably powerful grace. - Richie Unterberger

01 - (5:24) Overture
02 - (0:41) It's A Boy
03 - (2:53) 1921
04 - (3:28) Amazing Journey
05 - (3:50) Sparks
06 - (2:16) Eyesight To The Blind
07 - (4:37) Christmas
08 - (4:10) Cousin Kevin
09 - (3:38) The Acid Queen
10 - (10:10) Underture
11 - (0:27) Do You Think It's Alright?
12 - (1:32) Fiddle About
13 - (3:04) Pinball Wizard
14 - (0:26) There's A Doctor
15 - (3:51) Go To The Mirror
16 - (1:38) Tommy, Can You Hear Me?
17 - (1:41) Smash The Mirror
18 - (2:29) Sensation
19 - (0:15) Miracle Cure
20 - (4:14) Sally Simpson
21 - (2:42) I'm Free
22 - (4:36) Welcome
23 - (1:00) Tommy's Holiday Camp
24 - (7:08) We're Not Gonna Take It

 

Who - Live At Leeds.jpg (4814 bytes)

Live At Leeds - 1970

A loud, raunchy concert showcase for the group, with surprisingly little material from Tommy. The group's R&B roots are showcased here far better than on their post-My Generation studio albums, and the only problem for some listeners is the lack of the sophisticated studio sound they'd developed on previous releases. The 1995 CD reissue doubles the length of the original LP, with plenty of additional material from the same performance, including versions of some more of their early singles and unexpected items like "Tattoo" and the R&B standard "Fortune Teller." - Bruce Eder

01 - (4:51) Heaven And Hell [Live]
02 - (2:59) I Can't Explain [Live]
03 - (2:35) Fortune Teller [Live]
04 - (3:43) Tattoo [Live]
05 - (5:53) Young Man Blues [Live]
06 - (2:07) Substitute [Live]
07 - (2:14) Happy Jack [Live]
08 - (4:43) I'm A Boy [Live]
09 - (8:43) A Quick One, While He's Away [Live]
10 - (7:57) Amazing Journey - Sparks [Live]
11 - (3:23) Summertime Blues [Live]
12 - (4:35) Shakin' All Over [Live]
13 - (15:50) My Generation [Live]
14 - (7:50) Magic Bus [Live]

 

Who - Who's Next.jpg (10794 bytes)

Who's Next - 1971

Much of Who's Next derives from Lifehouse, an ambitious sci-fi rock opera Pete Townshend abandoned after suffering a nervous breakdown, caused in part from working on the sequel to Tommy. There's no discernable theme behind these songs, yet this album is stronger than Tommy, falling just behind Who Sell Out as the finest record the Who ever cut. Townshend developed an infatuation with synthesizers during the recording of the album, and they're all over this album, adding texture where needed and amplifying the force, which is already at a fever pitch. Apart from Live at Leeds, the Who have never sounded as LOUD and unhinged as they do here, yet that's balanced by ballads, both lovely ("The Song Is Over") and scathing ("Behind Blue Eyes"). That's the key to Who's Next - there's anger and sorrow, humor and regret, passion and tumult, all wrapped up in a blistering package where the rage is as affecting as the heartbreak. This is a retreat from the '60s, as Townshend declares the "Song Is Over," scorns the teenage wasteland, and bitterly declares that we "Won't Get Fooled Again." For all the sorrow and heartbreak that runs beneath the surface, this is an invigorating record, not just because Keith Moon runs rampant or because Roger Daltrey has never sung better or because John Entwistle spins out manic bass lines that are as captivating as his "My Wife" is funny. This is invigorating because it has all of that, plus Townshend laying his soul bare in ways that are funny, painful, and utterly life-affirming. That is what the Who was about, not the rock operas, and that's why Who's Next is truer than Tommy or the abandoned Lifehouse. Those were art - this, even with its pretensions, is rock & roll. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine

01 - (5:10) Baba O'Riley
02 - (5:36) Bargain
03 - (2:11) Love Ain't For Keeping
04 - (3:43) My Wife
05 - (6:16) The Song Is Over
06 - (4:52) Getting In Tune
07 - (3:44) Going Mobile
08 - (3:43) Behind Blue Eyes
09 - (8:35) Won't Get Fooled Again
10 - (4:23) Pure And Easy
11 - (5:16) Baby Don't You Do It
12 - (5:33) Naked Eye
13 - (6:27) Water
14 - (4:26) Too Much Of Anything
15 - (4:57) I Don't Even Know Myself
16 - (3:29) Behind Blue Eyes

 

Who - Meaty Beaty Big And Bouncy.jpg (14570 bytes)

Meaty Beaty Big And Bouncy - 1971

Meaty, Beaty, Big & Bouncy has the distinction of being the first in a long line of Who compilations. It also has the distinction of being the best. Part of the reason why it is so successful is that it has an actual purpose. Meaty was designed as a collection of the group's singles, many of which never appeared on albums. The Who recorded their share of great albums during the '60s, but condensing their highlights to just the singles is an electrifying experience. "The Kids Are Alright" follows "I Can't Explain," "I Can See for Miles" bleeds into "Pictures of Lily" and "My Generation," "Magic Bus" gives way to "Substitute" and "I'm a Boy" - it's an extraordinary lineup, and each song builds on its predecessor's power. Since it was released prior to Who's Next, it contains none of the group's album rock hits, but that's for the best - their '60s singles have a kinetic, frenzied power that the louder, harder AOR cuts simply couldn't touch. Also, there is such a distinct change in sound with Who's Next that the two eras don't quite sound right on one greatest-hits collection, as My Generation and Who's Better, Who's Best proved. By concentrating on the early years - when the Who were fresh and Pete Townshend was developing his own songwriting identity - Meaty, Beaty, Big & Bouncy is musically unified and incredibly powerful. This is what the Who sounded like when they were a great band. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine

01 - (2:06) I Can't Explain
02 - (2:46) The Kids Are Alright
03 - (2:14) Happy Jack
04 - (4:07) I Can See For Miles
05 - (2:44) Pictures Of Lily
06 - (3:20) My Generation
07 - (3:12) The Seeker
08 - (2:44) Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
09 - (3:01) Pinball Wizard
10 - (2:49) A Legal Matter
11 - (2:29) Boris The Spider
12 - (3:22) The Magic Bus
13 - (3:50) Substitute
14 - (3:43) I'm A Boy

 

Who - Quadrophenia.jpg (8454 bytes)

Quadrophenia - 1973

Pete Townshend revisited the rock opera concept with another double-album opus, this time built around the story of a young mod's struggle to come of age in the mid-'60s. If anything, this was a more ambitious project than Tommy, given added weight by the fact that the Who weren't devising some fantasy, but were re-examining the roots of their own birth in mod culture. In the end, there may have been too much weight, as Townshend tried to combine the story of a mixed-up mod named Jimmy with the examination of a four-way split personality (hence the title Quadrophenia), in turn meant to reflect the four conflicting personas at work within the Who themselves. The concept might have ultimately been too obscure and confusing for a mass audience. But there's plenty of great music anyway, especially on "The Real Me," "The Punk Meets the Godfather," "I'm One," "Bell Boy," and "Love, Reign O'er Me." Some of Townshend's most direct, heartfelt writing is contained here, and production-wise it's a tour de force, with some of the most imaginative use of synthesizers on a rock record. Various members of the band griped endlessly about flaws in the mix, but really these will bug very few listeners, who in general will find this to be one of the Who's most powerful statements. - Richie Unterberger

Disc 1

01 - (2:10) I Am The Sea
02 - (3:22) The Real Me
03 - (6:15) Quadrophenia
04 - (3:46) Cut My Hair
05 - (5:12) The Punk And The Godfather
06 - (2:38) I'm One
07 - (4:30) The Dirty Jobs
08 - (2:34) Helpless Dancer
09 - (3:45) Is It In My Head
10 - (6:16) I've Had Enough

Disc 2

01 - (5:01) 5.15
02 - (5:03) Sea And Sand
03 - (5:29) Drowned
04 - (4:57) Bell Boy
05 - (8:39) Doctor Jimmy
06 - (6:39) The Rock
07 - (5:50) Love Reign O'Er Me

 

Who - The Who By Numbers.jpg (30653 bytes)

The Who By Numbers - 1975

The Who by Numbers functions as Pete Townshend's confessional singer-songwriter album, as he chronicles his problems with alcohol ("However Much I Booze"), women ("Dreaming from the Waist" and "They Are All in Love"), and life in general. However, his introspective musings are rendered ineffective by Roger Daltrey's bluster and the cloying, lightweight filler of "Squeeze Box." In addition, Townshend's songs tend to be under-developed, relying on verbosity instead of melodicism, with only the simple power of "Slip Kid," the grace of "Blue Red and Grey," and John Entwistle's heavy rocker "Success Story" making much of an impact. The 1996 CD reissue adds three live tracks from a 1976 concert. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine

01 - (4:34) Slip Kid
02 - (5:07) However Much I Booze
03 - (2:45) Squeeze Box
04 - (4:13) Dreaming From The Waist
05 - (4:05) Imagine A Man
06 - (3:24) Success Story
07 - (3:04) They Are All In Love
08 - (2:51) Blue, Red And Grey
09 - (4:10) How Many Friends
10 - (3:29) In A Hand Or A Face
11 - (4:18) Squeeze Box [Live]
12 - (3:46) Behind Blue Eyes [Live]
13 - (4:54) Dreaming From The Waist [Live]