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The
Who
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. -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Source:
AllMusicGuide.com -->
The-Who.com
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