The Who / Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition) Æàíð: Album Rock, Hard Rock, Prog-Rock Íîñèòåëü: CD Ñòðàíà-ïðîèçâîäèòåëü äèñêà (ðåëèçà): USA Ãîä èçäàíèÿ: 2006 Èçäàòåëü (ëåéáë): Universal Republic Records Íîìåð ïî êàòàëîãó: B0007967-10 Ñòðàíà èñïîëíèòåëÿ (ãðóïïû): UK Àóäèîêîäåê: FLAC (*.flac) Òèï ðèïà: tracks+.cue Áèòðåéò àóäèî: lossless Ïðîäîëæèòåëüíîñòü: 00:58:57 + 00:43:26 = 01:42:23 Èñòî÷íèê (ðåëèçåð): own collection Íàëè÷èå ñêàíîâ â ñîäåðæèìîì ðàçäà÷è: äà
Òðåêëèñò
Disc One: Endless Wire (00:58:57)
01. Fragments 03:58
02. A Man in a Purple Dress 04:15
03. Mike Post Theme 04:28
04. In the Ether 03:36
05. Black Widow’s Eyes 03:07
06. Two Thousand Years 02:51
07. God Speaks of Marty Robbins 03:27
08. It’s Not Enough 04:03
09. You Stand by Me 01:36 WIRE & GLASS: A MINI-OPERA 10. Sound Round 01:21
11. Pick Up the Peace 01:29
12. Unholy Trinity 02:08
13. Trilby’s Piano 02:05
14. Endless Wire 01:52
15. Fragments of Fragments 02:23
16. We Got a Hit 01:18
17. They Made My Dream Come True 01:13
18.Mirror Door 04:14
19. Tea & Theatre 03:24
20. We Got a Hit (Extended Version) 03:05
21. Endless Wire (Extended Version) 03:05
Disc Two: Live at Lyon (00:43:26)
01. The Seeker 02:38
02. Who Are You 06:59
03. Mike Post Theme 03:55
04. Relay 07:41
05. Greyhound Girl 03:05
06. Naked Eye 08:26
07. Won’t Get Fooled Again 10:42
Ëîã ñîçäàíèÿ ðèïà
Disc One
Exact Audio Copy V1.3 from 2. September 2016 EAC extraction logfile from 12. November 2018, 13:34 The Who / Endless Wire: Main Album Used drive : ASUS BW-12D1S-U Adapter: 1 ID: 1 Read mode : Secure Utilize accurate stream : Yes Defeat audio cache : Yes Make use of C2 pointers : No Read offset correction : 667 Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000 Gap handling : Appended to previous track Used output format : User Defined Encoder Selected bitrate : 1024 kBit/s Quality : High Add ID3 tag : No Command line compressor : C:\Program Files (x86)\Exact Audio Copy\FLAC\FLAC.EXE Additional command line options : -V -8 -T "Genre=%genre%" -T "Artist=%artist%" -T "Title=%title%" -T "Album=%albumtitle%" -T "Date=%year%" -T "Tracknumber=%tracknr%" -T "Comment=%comment%" %source% TOC of the extracted CD Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector --------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 0:00.00 | 3:57.51 | 0 | 17825 2 | 3:57.51 | 4:14.72 | 17826 | 36947 3 | 8:12.48 | 4:28.29 | 36948 | 57076 4 | 12:41.02 | 3:35.57 | 57077 | 73258 5 | 16:16.59 | 3:07.36 | 73259 | 87319 6 | 19:24.20 | 2:50.63 | 87320 | 100132 7 | 22:15.08 | 3:26.64 | 100133 | 115646 8 | 25:41.72 | 4:02.45 | 115647 | 133841 9 | 29:44.42 | 1:36.03 | 133842 | 141044 10 | 31:20.45 | 1:21.31 | 141045 | 147150 11 | 32:42.01 | 1:28.39 | 147151 | 153789 12 | 34:10.40 | 2:07.51 | 153790 | 163365 13 | 36:18.16 | 2:04.70 | 163366 | 172735 14 | 38:23.11 | 1:51.67 | 172736 | 181127 15 | 40:15.03 | 2:23.12 | 181128 | 191864 16 | 42:38.15 | 1:18.05 | 191865 | 197719 17 | 43:56.20 | 1:13.02 | 197720 | 203196 18 | 45:09.22 | 4:14.00 | 203197 | 222246 19 | 49:23.22 | 3:23.38 | 222247 | 237509 20 | 52:46.60 | 3:04.68 | 237510 | 251377 21 | 55:51.53 | 3:05.34 | 251378 | 265286 Track 1 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\01. Fragments.wav Pre-gap length 0:00:02.00 Peak level 98.9 % Extraction speed 4.4 X Track quality 99.9 % Test CRC 954C7134 Copy CRC 954C7134 Accurately ripped (confidence 150) [3B15A369] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 2 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\02. A Man in a Purple Dress.wav Peak level 93.3 % Extraction speed 4.8 X Track quality 99.9 % Test CRC 4F709B57 Copy CRC 4F709B57 Accurately ripped (confidence 150) [DF3DEA6D] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 3 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\03. Mike Post Theme.wav Peak level 98.9 % Extraction speed 5.8 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC B873DA57 Copy CRC B873DA57 Accurately ripped (confidence 150) [3488FF52] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 4 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\04. In the Ether.wav Peak level 88.1 % Extraction speed 5.3 X Track quality 99.9 % Test CRC 69803151 Copy CRC 69803151 Accurately ripped (confidence 148) [EFD93D7E] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 5 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\05. Black Widow's Eyes.wav Peak level 98.9 % Extraction speed 6.1 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC D54B0558 Copy CRC D54B0558 Accurately ripped (confidence 148) [0B885882] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 6 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\06. Two Thousand Years.wav Peak level 98.9 % Extraction speed 6.3 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 869E3549 Copy CRC 869E3549 Accurately ripped (confidence 148) [8F19D2AF] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 7 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\07. God Speaks of Marty Robbins.wav Peak level 98.9 % Extraction speed 6.7 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC AB06D91F Copy CRC AB06D91F Accurately ripped (confidence 148) [6E7154DB] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 8 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\08. It's Not Enough.wav Peak level 98.9 % Extraction speed 7.2 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC BB9098FD Copy CRC BB9098FD Accurately ripped (confidence 147) [3A16BAD3] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 9 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\09. You Stand by Me.wav Peak level 98.9 % Extraction speed 6.1 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 1FFF7C17 Copy CRC 1FFF7C17 Accurately ripped (confidence 149) [D6A2F7C7] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 10 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\10. 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We Got a Hit.wav Peak level 99.3 % Extraction speed 6.2 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 60C8AC4B Copy CRC 60C8AC4B Accurately ripped (confidence 147) [5B6F2AFF] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 17 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\17. They Made My Dream Come True.wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 4.6 X Track quality 99.8 % Test CRC 0EC92669 Copy CRC 0EC92669 Accurately ripped (confidence 146) [1E9CBBD3] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 18 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\18. Mirror Door.wav Peak level 99.2 % Extraction speed 8.1 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 332355EA Copy CRC 332355EA Accurately ripped (confidence 146) [FE9CBFC9] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 19 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\19. Tea & Theatre.wav Peak level 99.2 % Extraction speed 7.1 X Track quality 99.9 % Test CRC F99949E5 Copy CRC F99949E5 Accurately ripped (confidence 144) [6A8AF273] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 20 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\20. We Got a Hit (Extended Version).wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 7.0 X Track quality 99.9 % Test CRC 78FDB727 Copy CRC 78FDB727 Accurately ripped (confidence 147) [51D2A413] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 21 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc One~ Main Album\21. Endless Wire (Extended Version).wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 8.1 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 47B62AAA Copy CRC 47B62AAA Accurately ripped (confidence 145) [FF23A724] (AR v2) Copy OK All tracks accurately ripped No errors occurred End of status report ---- CUETools DB Plugin V2.1.6 [CTDB TOCID: H3OiAprPLU14fTGBChVDHV6wZqM-] found Submit result: H3OiAprPLU14fTGBChVDHV6wZqM- has been confirmed Track | CTDB Status 1 | (333/334) Accurately ripped 2 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 3 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 4 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 5 | (333/334) Accurately ripped 6 | (332/334) Accurately ripped 7 | (333/334) Accurately ripped 8 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 9 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 10 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 11 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 12 | (333/334) Accurately ripped 13 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 14 | (333/334) Accurately ripped 15 | (334/334) Accurately ripped 16 | (333/334) Accurately ripped 17 | (332/334) Accurately ripped 18 | (333/334) Accurately ripped 19 | (332/334) Accurately ripped 20 | (333/334) Accurately ripped 21 | (329/334) Accurately ripped ==== Log checksum 90CC6967159780E3D1AB7DA5449199FC564E357F9F6AAC9425679D1EC8EABD77 ====
Disc Two
Exact Audio Copy V1.3 from 2. September 2016 EAC extraction logfile from 12. November 2018, 14:03 The Who / Endless Wire: Live at Lyon, Disc 2 Used drive : ASUS BW-12D1S-U Adapter: 1 ID: 1 Read mode : Secure Utilize accurate stream : Yes Defeat audio cache : Yes Make use of C2 pointers : No Read offset correction : 667 Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000 Gap handling : Appended to previous track Used output format : User Defined Encoder Selected bitrate : 1024 kBit/s Quality : High Add ID3 tag : No Command line compressor : C:\Program Files (x86)\Exact Audio Copy\FLAC\FLAC.EXE Additional command line options : -V -8 -T "Genre=%genre%" -T "Artist=%artist%" -T "Title=%title%" -T "Album=%albumtitle%" -T "Date=%year%" -T "Tracknumber=%tracknr%" -T "Comment=%comment%" %source% TOC of the extracted CD Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector --------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 0:01.00 | 2:37.55 | 75 | 11904 2 | 2:38.55 | 6:58.44 | 11905 | 43298 3 | 9:37.24 | 3:55.35 | 43299 | 60958 4 | 13:32.59 | 7:40.51 | 60959 | 95509 5 | 21:13.35 | 3:04.54 | 95510 | 109363 6 | 24:18.14 | 8:26.25 | 109364 | 147338 7 | 32:44.39 | 10:41.64 | 147339 | 195477 Track 1 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc Two~ Live at Lyon\01. The Seeker.wav Pre-gap length 0:00:03.00 Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 4.5 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 4DB19F6A Copy CRC 4DB19F6A Accurately ripped (confidence 35) [7C86602E] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 2 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc Two~ Live at Lyon\02. Who Are You.wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 5.7 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC ECBFF2A9 Copy CRC ECBFF2A9 Accurately ripped (confidence 35) [B0818EBC] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 3 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc Two~ Live at Lyon\03. Mike Post Theme.wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 5.9 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 64E8E021 Copy CRC 64E8E021 Accurately ripped (confidence 35) [F02E640F] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 4 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc Two~ Live at Lyon\04. Relay.wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 6.8 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC DE734337 Copy CRC DE734337 Accurately ripped (confidence 35) [A180C8F4] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 5 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc Two~ Live at Lyon\05. Greyhound Girl.wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 6.5 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 44A4876B Copy CRC 44A4876B Accurately ripped (confidence 35) [5EA58D8A] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 6 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc Two~ Live at Lyon\06. Naked Eye.wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 7.7 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 7863D518 Copy CRC 7863D518 Accurately ripped (confidence 35) [517180A1] (AR v2) Copy OK Track 7 Filename E:\Torrents of Autumn\Who, the [2006] Endless Wire (Special Limited 2-CD + DVD Edition)\Disc Two~ Live at Lyon\07. Won't Get Fooled Again.wav Peak level 100.0 % Extraction speed 8.4 X Track quality 100.0 % Test CRC 2DA710B5 Copy CRC 2DA710B5 Accurately ripped (confidence 35) [E125F34D] (AR v2) Copy OK All tracks accurately ripped No errors occurred End of status report ---- CUETools DB Plugin V2.1.6 [CTDB TOCID: cYFkaRGRmQ.YKysafb4NdvS54k0-] found Submit result: cYFkaRGRmQ.YKysafb4NdvS54k0- has been confirmed Track | CTDB Status 1 | (102/102) Accurately ripped 2 | (101/102) Accurately ripped 3 | (101/102) Accurately ripped 4 | (101/102) Accurately ripped 5 | (102/102) Accurately ripped 6 | (102/102) Accurately ripped 7 | (102/102) Accurately ripped ==== Log checksum 8EF4C295CF03F53420DD1EFC8FE70A4CCF47953BB6774AF16CE08AF257C82E3B ====
Ñîäåðæàíèå èíäåêñíîé êàðòû (.CUE)
Disc One
REM GENRE Rock REM DATE 2006 REM DISCID 3D0DD115 REM COMMENT "ExactAudioCopy v1.3" PERFORMER "The Who" TITLE "Endless Wire: Main Album" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" FILE "01. Fragments.wav" WAVE TRACK 01 AUDIO TITLE "Fragments" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "02. A Man in a Purple Dress.wav" WAVE TRACK 02 AUDIO TITLE "A Man in a Purple Dress" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "03. Mike Post Theme.wav" WAVE TRACK 03 AUDIO TITLE "Mike Post Theme" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "04. In the Ether.wav" WAVE TRACK 04 AUDIO TITLE "In the Ether" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "05. Black Widow's Eyes.wav" WAVE TRACK 05 AUDIO TITLE "Black Widow's Eyes" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "06. Two Thousand Years.wav" WAVE TRACK 06 AUDIO TITLE "Two Thousand Years" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "07. God Speaks of Marty Robbins.wav" WAVE TRACK 07 AUDIO TITLE "God Speaks of Marty Robbins" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "08. It's Not Enough.wav" WAVE TRACK 08 AUDIO TITLE "It's Not Enough" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "09. You Stand by Me.wav" WAVE TRACK 09 AUDIO TITLE "You Stand by Me" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "10. Sound Round.wav" WAVE TRACK 10 AUDIO TITLE "Sound Round" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "11. Pick Up the Peace.wav" WAVE TRACK 11 AUDIO TITLE "Pick Up the Peace" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "12. Unholy Trinity.wav" WAVE TRACK 12 AUDIO TITLE "Unholy Trinity" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "13. Trilby's Piano.wav" WAVE TRACK 13 AUDIO TITLE "Trilby's Piano" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "14. Endless Wire.wav" WAVE TRACK 14 AUDIO TITLE "Endless Wire" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "15. Fragments of Fragments.wav" WAVE TRACK 15 AUDIO TITLE "Fragments of Fragments" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "16. We Got a Hit.wav" WAVE TRACK 16 AUDIO TITLE "We Got a Hit" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "17. They Made My Dream Come True.wav" WAVE TRACK 17 AUDIO TITLE "They Made My Dream Come True" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "18. Mirror Door.wav" WAVE TRACK 18 AUDIO TITLE "Mirror Door" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "19. Tea & Theatre.wav" WAVE TRACK 19 AUDIO TITLE "Tea & Theatre" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "20. We Got a Hit (Extended Version).wav" WAVE TRACK 20 AUDIO TITLE "We Got a Hit (Extended Version)" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "21. Endless Wire (Extended Version).wav" WAVE TRACK 21 AUDIO TITLE "Endless Wire (Extended Version)" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00
Disc Two
REM GENRE Rock REM DATE 2006 REM DISCID 5C0A2D07 REM COMMENT "ExactAudioCopy v1.3" PERFORMER "The Who" TITLE "Endless Wire: Live at Lyon, Disc 2" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" FILE "01. The Seeker.wav" WAVE TRACK 01 AUDIO TITLE "The Seeker" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" PREGAP 00:01:00 INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "02. Who Are You.wav" WAVE TRACK 02 AUDIO TITLE "Who Are You" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "03. Mike Post Theme.wav" WAVE TRACK 03 AUDIO TITLE "Mike Post Theme" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "04. Relay.wav" WAVE TRACK 04 AUDIO TITLE "Relay" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "05. Greyhound Girl.wav" WAVE TRACK 05 AUDIO TITLE "Greyhound Girl" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "06. Naked Eye.wav" WAVE TRACK 06 AUDIO TITLE "Naked Eye" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00 FILE "07. Won't Get Fooled Again.wav" WAVE TRACK 07 AUDIO TITLE "Won't Get Fooled Again" PERFORMER "The Who" REM COMPOSER "Pete Townshend" INDEX 01 00:00:00
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Few rock & roll bands were riddled with as many contradictions as the Who. All four members had wildly different personalities, as their notorious live performances demonstrated: Keith Moon fell over his drum kit while Pete Townshend leaped into the air with his guitar, spinning his right hand in exaggerated windmills. Vocalist Roger Daltrey prowled the stage as bassist John Entwistle stood silent, the eye of the hurricane. They clashed frequently, but these frictions resulted in a decade’s worth of remarkable music. Though it took a while to find their audience, by the late ’60s the Who rivaled the Rolling Stones as a live act and in album sales.
Key figures of the British Invasion and the mid-’60s mod movement, the Who were an undeniably powerful sonic force. They exploded conventional rock and R&B structures with Townshend’s furious guitar chords, Entwistle’s hyperactive basslines, and Moon’s vigorous, seemingly 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. The Who thrived on this sound in concert, but on record they were a different proposition: Townshend pushed the group toward new sonic territory, incorporating pop art and conceptual extended musical pieces into the group’s style. He was regarded as one of the era’s finest British songwriters, as songs like “The Kids Are Alright” and “My Generation” became teenage anthems, while his rock opera Tommy earned respect from mainstream music critics. However, the rest of the Who, especially Entwistle and Daltrey, weren’t always eager to follow his musical explorations. They wanted to play hard rock instead of Townshend’s textured song suites and vulnerable pop songs. The Who settled into their role as arena rockers in the mid-’70s, continuing on this path after Moon’s death in 1978 and following it through various disbandments and reunions in the ’80s and ’90s. Nevertheless, at their peak, the Who were one of rock’s most innovative and powerful bands. Townshend and Entwistle met while attending high school in London’s Shepherd’s Bush area. In their early teens, they played in a Dixieland band, with Entwistle on trumpet and Townshend on banjo. By the early ’60s, the pair had formed a rock & roll band, but in 1962 Entwistle joined the Detours, a hard-edged group featuring a sheet-metal worker named Roger Daltrey on lead guitar. By the end of the year, Townshend joined as a rhythm guitarist, and in 1963 Daltrey became the group’s lead vocalist after Colin Dawson left the band. The group’s sound evolved rapidly, influenced not only by American acts such as James Brown, Booker T. & the MG’s, and Eddie Cochran but also one classic British act, Johnny Kidd & the Pirates, who rocked the British charts with an original called “Shakin’ All Over” (which Townshend and company added to their set list). They built their reputation on fierce renditions of American-style R&B, which relied on a lean single guitar/bass/drums approach with the guitarist playing lead and rhythm, a rarity in England at the time. Townshend, realizing that approach suited him, became the band’s lone guitarist. A name change also followed; with the Beatles burning up the charts, they needed something more striking than the Detours. Daltrey and Townshend settled on the Who, which confused people in conversation initially, but worked memorably on posters. Amid these changes, original drummer Doug Sandom—who was married and considerably older than the others—parted ways with the band just as they were about to attempt cutting a record. The group replaced him with Keith Moon, previously the drummer for the surf-rock group the Beachcombers. As the group struggled to get a break, Townshend attended art school, while the remaining three worked odd jobs. The band became regulars at the Marquee Club in London and attracted a small following, leading to the interest of manager Pete Meaden. Under his direction, the Who were renamed the High Numbers and dressed in sharp suits to appeal to style- and R&B-obsessed mods. Many R&B-oriented groups tried to cultivate relationships with the mods, who could fill clubs and help propel a record onto the charts—among those who succeeded best, besides the Who, were the Small Faces (“face” being a part of mod slang) and the Move. The High Numbers released one single, “I’m the Face.” After it bombed, the group began working with Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp, two fledgling music business entrepreneurs. Lambert was the son of composer/arranger Constant Lambert; Stamp was the brother of actor Terence Stamp, and both wanted to make their mark on England’s percolating music scene. Lambert spotted the group playing at the Railway Hotel in the wake of “I’m the Face” and brought in Stamp. Lambert and Stamp encouraged them to embrace the mod movement, advising them on what to play and wear, including the target T-shirt that became a visual signature. The group reclaimed the Who name and began playing a set consisting entirely of soul, R&B, and Motown—or, as their posters said, “Maximum R&B.” During this period, Townshend smashed his first guitar at a gig at the Railway Hotel—by accident. A temporary stage extension built by the band caused him to hit the ceiling with his guitar; frustrated by the damage, and the crowd’s reaction, he struck it until it was in pieces; he was only able to finish the show by using a recently acquired 12-string Rickenbacker. The following week, he discovered that people had come to see him smash his guitar. He eventually obliged with encouragement from Keith Moon, who attacked his drum kit. At first Lambert and Stamp were appalled, but Townshend soon demolished another guitar as part of Lambert’s publicity campaign (and it worked, even though the journalist for whose benefit he committed the destruction never actually saw it). He didn’t smash guitars at every show in those days; what he was doing in terms of generating feedback sufficed in most audience’s minds. It did enhance their status with the mods: by late 1964, they’d developed an enthusiastic following—mods loved destruction as part of an act. At the end of 1964, Townshend presented the group with an original song called “I Can’t Explain,” which owed a little to the Kinks’ “You Really Got Me,” but had lots of fresh angles. Townshend’s lyrics gave a vivid impression of teenage angst perfect for Daltrey’s powerful vocals and the band’s full-bore attack. The result was equally punchy, sensitive, and macho, with a mean lead guitar and even some harmonies. The band and their managers thought it seemed like a great potential debut single for the newly rechristened Who. So did producer Shel Talmy, an American based in England who was producing the Kinks’ records (including “You Really Got Me”). Talmy got the band a contract with the American Decca Records label on the strength of “I Can’t Explain” and followed it with a contract with English Decca (the two companies were divided into separate entities at the time). Though the Talmy-produced single arrived to little attention in January 1965. After the group’s incendiary performance on the television program Ready, Steady, Go—which featured Townshend and Moon destroying their instruments—“I Can’t Explain” reached the British Top Ten. Their next single, that summer’s “Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere,” declared the mod ethos to the world: “I can go anywhere (where I choose).” While it wasn’t far removed from the mentality behind early rock & roll anthems, the Who made it sound resolutely English. That fall, “My Generation” climbed to number two on the charts, confirming their status as a British pop phenomenon. An album of the same name appeared at year’s end, featuring various R&B covers and some interesting originals (mostly by Townshend) on the U.K. Brunswick label. Early in 1966, “Substitute” became their fourth British Top Ten hit. Produced by Kit Lambert, the single marked the band’s acrimonious split with Talmy and the end of the group’s British Decca/Brunswick recording contract. Lambert and Stamp also tried to scrap the American Decca deal, but that proved impossible. Starting with “Substitute,” the band was signed to Polydor in England, and issued on Reaction. For a time, there were rival releases on Brunswick and Reaction, but the competition was eventually sorted out in Lambert and Stamp’s (and the band’s) favor. “I’m a Boy,” issued in the summer of 1966, was the first Who single without a rival release on Brunswick, and it showed just how far the band and Townshend had come in 18 months. During this period, Lambert introduced Townshend to a huge range of classical music that broadened his way of thinking about composition, songs, and subject matter: “I’m a Boy,” about a teenage boy forced to dress and act like a girl by his dominating mother, carried an amazing amount of exposition, but left plenty of room for the band’s furious attack. In their own way, the Who were having as profound effect on rock & roll as the Beatles or the Rolling Stones: they generated immensely popular English singles that redefined the acceptable content and boundaries of pop/rock music and were also some of the era’s hardest—yet most melodic and complex—songs. The story in the United States was very different. “I Can’t Explain” barely created a ripple, and “Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere” did little better, despite publicity on the ABC television rock & roll showcase Shindig. Even with Decca getting behind “My Generation” for a major marketing push, it only got to number 74, a shadow of what it did in England. British success was all well and good, but it wasn’t enough. The instrument-smashing routine and the attendant effects (often involving flash-powder and damage to Moon’s drums, as well as Townshend’s guitars) were frightfully expensive, and the band was carrying an ongoing debt that drove expenses through the roof. Financial ruin was never far from the thoughts of their management, despite the fact that Lambert and Stamp now had their own Polydor imprint, Track Records—which had a new signing in late 1966, a transplanted American guitarist/singer named Jimi Hendrix. A breakthrough for the Who in America, or in the album market in a major way, was essential. For the Who’s second album, Lambert, Stamp, and the band had a more ambitious agenda. Townshend’s success at writing singles inspired the Who’s managers, and it was decided that this time, every member of the band would contribute songs to generate more revenue. Although this meant A Quick One was uneven, Lambert’s presence allowed Townshend to write the title track as a ten-minute mini-opera. “A Quick One While He’s Away” found Townshend writing (and the Who singing and playing) in idioms far beyond rock & roll, including faux Western and faux operetta. Getting dedicated rockers Daltrey and Entwistle to throw their full talents into the music, and the track’s successful extended narrative, showed Townshend and company that this idea had potential. A Quick One also provided a canvas for Entwistle’s blossoming songwriting: His macabre humor shone through on the catchy “Boris the Spider” and “Whisky Man,” the latter showing off his skills on the French horn. Moon’s “Cobwebs and Strange” was also a suitable moment of light humor, and even Daltrey—whose songwriting aspirations never rated much of his attention—contributed “See My Way.” A Quick One had a diversity of sounds and creative voices, though the Who got relatively little recognition for it at the time. Upon its 1966 release, A Quick One became another British hit, and also provided a minor American breakthrough. Retitled Happy Jack, its title track reached the Top 40 in early 1967. To do that, the Who played the U.S. as part of a package tour organized by DJ-turned-impresario Murray the K. Booked alongside Cream, folkies Jim & Jean, and Wilson Pickett, doing short sets five times a day, the group got the necessary exposure to a wider public, even though “Happy Jack”’s vocal harmonies and relatively restrained guitars made it an atypical Who song. Their next major U.S. milestone was playing the Fillmore in San Francisco. For that occasion, they had a problem that was the reverse of the Murray the K performances—the latter had been too slight at 15 to 20 minutes, but their usual 40-minute sets were too short for the Fillmore. In the Richard Barnes’ book Maximum R&B, it was recalled that to lengthen their set, they learned the entire mini-opera and the rest of A Quick One, which they hadn’t performed live. After the Fillmore gig in June 1967, they played their most important American show yet, the Monterey International Pop Festival, which put them in a duel with labelmate Jimi Hendrix to see who could end their set more outrageously. Hendrix won with his incendiary performance, but the Who acquitted themselves admirably with a dramatic destruction of their instruments. Reverting to their old stage act was especially awkward, as they’d finished an album and single that represented a new phase. Constructed as a mock-pirate radio broadcast, The Who Sell Out was a concept album and a loving tribute to England’s pirate radio stations, which had been closed in a government crackdown. The group threw everything they had into the album in order to solidify their position in England and finally crack the U.S. market, including the classic “I Can See for Miles.” An explosion of excitement and controlled tension, it seemed like a certain chart-topper. Daltrey’s performance was the best of his career to date, matched by Townshend’s slashing guitar, Moon’s frenetic drumming, and Entwistle’s anchor-like bass. It took a lot of work at three different studios—including Los Angeles’ Gold Star—on two continents and two coasts to get that sound; as a consequence, it was so difficult to perform that it became the only hit that they abandoned playing live. It became their first Top Ten hit in America, and reached number two in England, but that wasn’t sufficient for what the band or their management needed. The group spent much of 1968 seeing the singles “Call Me Lightning,” “Magic Bus,” and “Dogs”—inspired by Townshend’s interest in dog racing—fail to meet expectations. Track Records, squeezed for cash even with Hendrix’s burgeoning sales, assembled Direct Hits, which compiled the band’s recent singles (minus the Shel Talmy-produced Brunswick sides). In the United States, Decca Records—with only two actual “hits” by the group to work with, plus “Magic Bus” (which did unexpectedly well on that side of the Atlantic)—released Magic Bus, an unacknowledged compilation album built around the hit and drawn from U.K. singles, EPs and recent album tracks. It was misleadingly subtitled The Who on Tour, and that’s a lot of what they did in 1968, especially in the United States, but not the way they did in 1967; this time, they were playing places like the Fillmore East, where they recorded one show for a possible live album. This plan went awry when the show wasn’t quite good enough to represent the group, and was abandoned entirely with the vast changes in their songbook in 1969. While making their first serious long-term headway in the U.S., the band—mostly Townshend, in collaboration with Lambert on the early libretto—were devising and recording a large-scale work. Tommy arrived in May of 1969, more than a year and a half after The Who Sell Out. However, it was still unfinished—the band wanted to add more instruments on certain songs, and Entwistle was particularly upset at the bass sound on the released recording. But they were out of money and options, so Tommy was released as a work in progress. And for the first time, the stars lined up in the Who’s favor, especially in the United States. The serious rock press seized on the album as a masterpiece, while the mainstream press started to take rock music seriously. The Who were new and fresh enough, and Tommy ambitious enough, that it became one of the most widely reviewed and written-about albums in history. Tommy climbed into the American Top Ten as the group supported the album with an extensive tour where they played the complete opera. In some respects, Tommy became too successful. Audiences expected it to be done in its entirety at every show, and suddenly the Who were routinely playing for two hours at a clip. The work soon overshadowed the Who; it was performed as a play, redone as an orchestrated all-star extravaganza (starring Daltrey and featuring Townshend’s guitar), and would eventually be filmed by Ken Russell in 1975 (the movie starred Daltrey). In 1993, Townshend turned it into a Broadway musical with director Des McAnuff. While Tommy kept the band busy touring for almost two years, how to follow it stumped Townshend. As he worked on new material, the group released Live at Leeds in 1970 (which yielded the hit single “Summertime Blues”), as well as the single “The Seeker,” giving them some breathing room. Eventually, he settled on Lifehouse, a sci-fi rock opera strongly influenced by the teachings of his guru, Meher Baba, which pushed the group into new sonic territory with electronics and synthesizers. The rest of the Who weren’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 abandoned project and recorded Who’s Next with producer Glyn Johns. Boasting a harder sound, Who’s Next was a major hit, and many of its tracks—including “Baba O’Riley,” “Bargain,” “Behind Blue Eyes,” and “Won’t Get Fooled Again” (which were both issued as singles), and Entwistle’s “My Wife”—became cornerstones of ’70s album-oriented FM radio. The Who’s Next tour solidified the band as one of the two top live rock attractions in the world along with the Rolling Stones. Suddenly their history was of interest to millions of fans; Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy, a 14-song retrospective of their singles, also sold in massive numbers. Who’s Next’s success spurred Townshend to attempt another opera. With Quadrophenia, he abandoned fantasy to sketch a portrait of a ’60s mod. He stopped working with Kit Lambert, who lost influence with the group in Tommy’s wake; the band also left Lambert and Stamp’s management. As Townshend wrote the album in 1972, he released Who Came First, a collection of private recordings and demos he made for Meher Baba. Entwistle began his own solo career with Smash Your Head Against the Wall, which he followed with Whistle Rhymes, released the same day as Townshend’s album. A double album, Quadrophenia sold extremely well, but it proved to be a troublesome concert piece. It was difficult to play live, and few outside of England were familiar with its mod subject matter. It soon became clear that audiences hadn’t had the time to familiarize themselves with the work, leading to a lukewarm response on tour. After some retooling, the group performed an abbreviated version of Quadrophenia with some success. The Who began to fragment after Quadrophenia’s release. In public, Townshend fretted over his role as a rock spokesman; in private, he sank into alcohol abuse. Entwistle concentrated on his solo career, including recordings with his side projects Ox and Rigor Mortis. Meanwhile, Daltrey approached the peak of his powers: he had become a truly great singer and was surprisingly comfortable as an actor as he alternately pursued a film career and solo albums. Moon continued to party, celebrating his substance abuse and releasing the solo album Two Sides of the Moon. During this hiatus, the group issued the rarities collection Odds & Sods (1974), which surpassed existing bootleg collections and charted like a new release. Meanwhile, Townshend worked on new songs, resulting in 1975’s disarmingly personal The Who by Numbers. The album was a hit, though its number eight placement in the U.S. reflected listeners’ modestly diminishing enthusiasm (Quadrophenia, despite being a rather expensive double LP built around a somewhat outré subject, reached number two on both sides of the Atlantic). Following The Who by Numbers tour, the band took an extended hiatus. During the late ’70s, the band started to succumb to age and the rock & roll lifestyle. After years of playing live, Townshend permanently damaged his hearing. On their 1976 tour, Moon collapsed on-stage just a few minutes into a show at the Boston Garden—he recovered and seemed to laugh off the incident, while an audience member sat in behind the drum kit to allow the band to finish playing. He continued partying and even suggested a possible successor, ex-Small Faces/Faces drummer Kenney Jones. The Who reconvened in early 1978 to record Who Are You, which was released that August, accompanied by a stunning promotional/performance video of the title song. 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. It was a huge hit, peaking at number two in the American charts and earning a platinum sales. Instead of being a triumphant comeback, however, Who Are You became a symbol of tragedy: on September 7, 1978, Moon died of a drug overdose. Since he was such an integral part of the Who’s sound and image, the band debated carrying on. Though they continued, all three surviving members later claimed they felt the Who ended with Moon’s death. They took Moon’s suggestion and hired Small Faces drummer Kenney Jones as his replacement, as well as keyboardist John “Rabbit” Bundrick, and 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 that year, but the tour’s momentum was destroyed when 11 attendees at the group’s December 3, 1979, concert at Cincinnati’s Riverfront Coliseum were trampled to death in a rush for choice festival seating. The band wasn’t informed of the incident until after the concert, 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 their first album since Moon’s death, Face Dances, a hit that received mixed reviews. The following year, they released It’s Hard and embarked on a supporting tour billed as their farewell to fans, with the live Who’s Last arriving in 1984 as a commemoration of the tour.
The farewell tour wasn’t the Who’s final goodbye. While Entwistle and Daltrey’s solo careers lost momentum in the ’80s, 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 (minus Jones, who was replaced by session drummer Simon Phillips) for a 25th anniversary American tour, which was perceived as a way to make a lot of money—which Daltrey and especially Entwistle needed. They followed it with a live album, Join Together. The Who reconvened in 1994 for two concerts celebrating Daltrey’s 50th birthday, commercial success that helped Townshend’s effort to bring Tommy to the Broadway stage. It became a huge hit and revived interest in the album. Townshend revived Quadrophenia in 1996, reuniting the Who to perform it at the Prince’s Trust concert in Hyde Park that summer, and it was followed that fall by an American tour that proved to be a failure. The following summer, the Who launched an oldies tour of America that was ignored by the press. In October 2001, they played the Concert for New York City benefit for families of the victims of the September 11 attacks. In late June 2002, the Who were about to kick off a North American tour when Entwistle died at the age of 57 in Las Vegas’ Hard Rock Hotel. In 2006, Townshend and Daltrey released the mini-opera Wire & Glass, their first collaboration as the Who in over 20 years. The full-length Endless Wire, which included the EP, was released later that year to the best reviews of any Who album since Who Are You 28 years earlier; the accompanying tour was similarly well-received. On December 7, 2008, at a gala ceremony in Washington, D.C., Townshend and Daltrey received Kennedy Center Honors for the Who’s lifetime contributions to American culture. Townshend rumbled about the Who writing and recording new material, but instead, he and Daltrey turned their attention to Quadrophenia, once again touring the album in its entirety. After a full performance in 2010 to benefit the Teenage Cancer Trust, a Quadrophenia and More tour began in the summer of 2012 and ran for over a year, culminating with a July concert at Wembley Arena, which was later released as the live package Quadrophenia: Live in London. This 2014 release was the opening salvo in a farewell tour, with dates during 2015 in cities they’d never played previously. Also, a hits compilation appeared late in 2014; titled The Who Hits 50!, it included the band’s first new material in almost a decade, “Be Lucky.” The Who supported The Who Hits 50! with a tour that ran into 2016. (Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AllMusic)
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The Who retired following their 1982 farewell tour but like Frank Sinatra’s frequent retreats from the stage, it was not a permanent goodbye. Seven years later, the band—Pete Townshend, Roger Daltrey and John Entwistle; that is, Keith Moon’s replacement Kenny Jones wasn’t invited back—embarked on a reunion tour, and ever since then the band was a going concern. Perhaps not really active—they did not tour on a regular basis, they did not record outside of a version of “Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting” for the 1991 Elton John and Bernie Taupin tribute album Two Rooms—but they were always around, playing tribute gigs and reviving old projects, such as a mid-’90s stab at Quadrophenia, before truly reuniting as an active touring band after the turn of the century. Just as they were reaching cruising altitude in 2002, bad luck and tragedy intervened, as Entwistle died from a heart attack on the eve of a summer tour, leaving Townshend and Daltrey the only surviving original members. Their decision to continue performing as the Who rankled some longtime fans—many of whom thought they should have packed it in after Moon’s death in 1978—but the ensuing tours helped them work through their grief, not only over Entwistle’s death but during the fallout surrounding Pete Townshend’s arrest for accessing child porn on the Internet. Townshend was cleared of all charges, and throughout the turmoil of the scandal he had no stronger defender than Daltrey. According to several interviews with both men, the process brought them closer together and they began seriously talking about recording a new Who studio album—something that had not happened since It’s Hard in 1982. They tentatively dipped their toes in the water with a couple of strong new songs on the 2004 hits comp Then and Now, and two years later, they followed through with the long-promised, long-awaited Endless Wire. Opening with a synth riff that strongly recalls, if not directly quotes, the famed loop underpinning “Baba O’Reilly,” Endless Wire often hearkens back to previous Who albums in its themes, structure, and sound. The “Baba O’Reilly” riff pops up in “Fragments,” the pummeling triplets of “The Punk Meets the Godfather” resurface in “Mike Post Theme.” Like The Who by Numbers, it has its fair share of stark acoustic introspection. Like The Who Sell Out and A Quick One, it closes with a mini-rock opera, this one called Wire & Glass. This closing suite also shares a lineage with Townshend’s 1993 solo album Psychoderelict, a record that’s not well loved but one that is connected thematically to Lifehouse Chronicles, his often-muddled yet often-intriguing futuristic rock opera that seemed to suggest portions of a technologically saturated internet age. Such ideas bubble up throughout Endless Wire and not just on Wire & Glass, yet that opera specifically shares a character with Psychoderelict in Ray High, a rock star who was the central figure in that 1993 opus and functions as a semi-autobiographical distancing device for Townshend, particularly on this record where the narrative ebbs and flows and sometimes disappears completely. Since the whole of Townshend’s rock operas always were overshadowed by the strength of their individual parts—musically and emotionally, “Pinball Wizard,” “Bargain,” “Behind Blue Eyes,” “The Real Me,” and “Love Reign O’er Me” carried as great a weight, if not greater, on their own as they did as part of a larger theme—this is not unusual or unwelcome, because the focus turns away from the specifics of the narrative and to the merits of the songs and the Who’s performances, and how they connect at a gut level. And, like much of the best of the Who’s work, the best of Endless Wire does indeed connect at a gut level, even if it's in a considerably different way than it was in the past: instead of being visceral and immediate, this is music carries a slow burn. This is partially because they are no longer driven by Moon and Entwistle, but quite frankly, this most manic of rhythm sections never really anchored the Who; Townshend always did with his furious windmills and propulsive rhythms, and there was never any question that this, along with his songs, formed the complex, contradictory heart of the Who, while Daltrey gave the songs both muscle and a commonality, undercutting Townshend’s pretensions—or giving him a voice behind which to hide, a voice to act out his best and worst impulses. After all the upheaval of the first part of the 2000s, Townshend needed to have Daltrey interpret his songs, which do confront many tough emotions and questions regarding faith, mortality and persecution, albeit often in oblique ways. For a writer as obsessed with concepts and fictionalized autobiography as Townshend, obliqueness serves him well, and often turns out to be more revealing than blunt confessionals, as is the case with “A Man in a Purple Dress,” a searing, bitter, anti-religion folk tune reportedly inspired by a viewing of The Passion of the Christ but unmistakably bearing echoes of Townshend’s treatment in the tabloids during his 2003 scandal. Townshend does not sing this tune, Daltrey does, and it’s an angry performance that leans heavily on his blunt force, but also reveals a new subtlety that serves him very well throughout Endless Wire. Instead of powering through the songs as he could tend to do in the past, Daltrey is truly interpreting Townshend’s songs here, giving them nuanced, textured readings that cut close to the emotional quick of the tunes. His voice may have lost some of its range and power over the years, but Daltrey has developed into a better singer, and he helps ground Endless Wire, which doesn’t meander so much as it overreaches, a trend not uncommon to either the Who or Townshend. Even the best Who albums had a tendency to not quite follow through on their concepts—the mock pirate-radio broadcast of The Who Sell Out is abandoned on the second side, Who’s Next was pulled together from the flailing Lifehouse—but even so they were nevertheless triumphs given the sheer power of the band, or Townshend’s writing. Here, the band is indeed changed, and while they have top-notch professional support from drummer Zak Starkey and bassist Pino Palladino, they do not sound like a session band: they sound like the Who, only older, with their boundless energy replaced by a bittersweet melancholy undercurrent. It’s a sound that fits Townshend’s new songs, alternately sweetly sad, bitterly reflective and, despite it all, cautiously optimistic. Unlike the fussy theatricality of The Iron Man or the impenetrable mess that was Psychoderelict—or any Townshend project since It’s Hard, really—Endless Wire is not a slave to its concept; the songs fuel the album instead of the other way around. Even when it goes off the tracks—and it does, most grandly on the bizarre “In the Ether,” where Townshend affects Tom Waits’ patented growl—it feels as if it was written from the heart, which is why it’s always appealing even though it feels curiously disjointed, with the The Who by Numbers-styled first half not quite synching up with the mini-opera that dominates the second side. It may not add up to a totally satisfying whole, yet within both halves of Endless Wire there is much to treasure: on the first half, there’s the incendiary “A Man in a Purple Dress,” the powerful yet understated “Mike Post Theme,” the delicate “God Speaks of Marty Robbins,” a surging rocker in “It’s Not Enough” (whose lyrics are riddled with the self-doubt of Empty Glass) and the sweet song sketch “You Stand by Me”; on the second, there’s the mini-opera of Wire & Glass, a ten-song suite beginning with the rampaging “Sound Round” and closing with the haunting “Tea & Theatre,” which manages to touch on every one of the band’s strengths. Taken on its own, Wire & Glass does stand as the greatest Who music since Who Are You, so it’s a bit hard not to wish that the entire album had its thematic cohesion, muscular melody, and sense of purpose, but if it meant losing the quite wonderful highlights of the first half, it may not have been worth it because they’re not only strong songs, they give this record its ragged heart. No, Endless Wire is not perfect—its parts don’t quite fit together, and not all of the parts work on their own—but it is an endearingly human, impassioned work that more than justifies Townshend’s and Daltrey’s decision to continue working as the Who. Hopefully, it will lead to another record or two but if it doesn’t, Endless Wire is certainly a better final Who album than It’s Hard, which is quite an accomplishment after a quarter-century hiatus. (Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AllMusic) The Who Live at Lyon:
Recorded at The Vienne Amphitheatre, Lyon, France on 17th July 2006
Mixed at Oceanic Studios
CD Mastering by Metropolis Mastering, London
Video editing at Left Coast Digital, Santa Cruz, CA
Taken from the Encore Series. The Who produce the Encore Series to benefit charitable causes.
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IN THE STUDIO: Roger Daltrey: Lead Vocals Zak Starkey: Drums on 5 Pino Palladino: Bass on 10, 11, 14, 16, 17, 18 John “Rabbit” Bundrick: Hammond organ on 10, 11, 18 Simon Townshend: Backing Vocals on 10, 11, 14 GUEST MUSICIANS Peter Huntington: Drums on 8, 10, 11, 14, 16, 17, 18 Billy Nichols: Backing Vocals on 10, 11, 14 Lawrence Ball: Electronic Music on 1, 15 Rachel Fuller: Orchestration supervisor on 13, keyboards on 8 Gill Morley: Violin on 13 Brian Wright: Violin on 13 Ellen Blair: Viola on 13 Vicky Matthews: Cello on 13 Stuart Ross: Bass on 8 Jolyon Dixon: Acoustic guitars on 8 PETE TOWNSHEND: EVERYTHING ELSE (see the booklet for details) ON STAGE: Roger Daltrey: Lead Vocals Pete Townshend: Guitars, Vocals Zak Starkey: Drums Pino Palladino: Bass John “Rabbit” Bundrick: keyboards Simon Townshend: Guitars, Backing Vocals