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Joined: January 20 2013
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 11
Posted: May 30 2013 at 18:40
I'm definitely a Who fan, I have Townshend's autobiography and everything. They are certainly in the top 5 or so non-prog rock bands of all time, for me. Saw them do Quadrophenia live, and that was something. Crowd got really into it, especially during Bell Boy. Some genius was smoking up front, though, and that apparently interfere's with Daltrey's singing. He had to leave the stage late into The Rock, and there was a long instrumental section before he came back out and finished the album, then ran through a few classics.It was an amazing performance. They're a band everyone should listen to at least once, I think.
"The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents."
- HP Lovecraft, Call of Cthulhu
Joined: April 19 2011
Location: America
Status: Offline
Points: 877
Posted: February 11 2012 at 12:30
dude wrote:
Not prog of course but i was listening to "Wont get fooled again"..then i realised,So many great songs from a great band,The Who is one of those bands that creeps up on me,i think "im not a fan"
Then i think about all the songs i liked.."i liked that one,ANd that one,AND that one...my goodness,so many classics....what do other forum members think?
I don't give a rat's ass if people think The WHO are progressive or not or whatever....
QUADROPHENIA may be one of the best 3 records ever recorded.
Just my $.02.
Yeah, I love the phuckin WHO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yeah, Who's Next & Who By Numbers & Who Are You are pretty much top shelf as well.
"Yeah, people are unhappy about that - but you know what, it's still Yes." - Chris Squire
Joined: January 07 2012
Status: Offline
Points: 64
Posted: February 11 2012 at 07:42
Chicapah wrote:
You don't have to convince me. I've been a fan since I saw them open for Herman's Hermits in '67. Their catalogue of quality work is staggering.
What a strange pairing for a concert. It's almost as strange as Hendrix opening for the Monkees. I have alway's like the Who and historically they are an extremely important rock band. Though there is four of them I have always considered them to be one of rock music first power trios. They had great melodies but at the same they could rock as hard as anyone during their time. The early Who to me were a fusion of proto-punk, pop and hard rock which to me equals power pop.
Joined: September 20 2010
Location: Serbia
Status: Offline
Points: 10213
Posted: February 11 2012 at 07:31
rogerthat wrote:
I am not sure I could think of many better renditions by an out and out rock singer than Love Reign O'er Me. Great song and just incredible singing. The Who, collectively or individually, don't quite get their due and this applies to Daltrey.
Joined: September 03 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 9869
Posted: February 11 2012 at 04:16
I am not sure I could think of many better renditions by an out and out rock singer than Love Reign O'er Me. Great song and just incredible singing. The Who, collectively or individually, don't quite get their due and this applies to Daltrey.
Joined: January 07 2012
Location: Hannover
Status: Offline
Points: 42
Posted: January 13 2012 at 10:14
Hi everybody!
Difficult to say.
If I remember correctly, there has been a lot of talk
about Tommy as being progressive, cause the idea of
a Rock-Opera in those days was indeed innovative
(like it or not).
Who's Next Won't get fooled again and Baba O' Riley are
also prog-influenced, but surely the whole album is
not prog.
Again Quadrophenia also has its prog moments.
Of all the Who albums only Live At last (I regret to say) is in anyway poor. Concept albums, orchestral renditions, movies, soundtrack versions, one of greatest live albums (then one of the worst). They could rock more violently than anyone (the only band never to worry having Zeppelin as a warm up act) and still have exquisite melodies (I Can't Reach You). A band with one of rocks' greatest composers, one of rocks greatest singers, and the rhythm section that has more up front than say Townshend and Daltrey who were left to hold down the basic timing ...
Only regretable moment is no live rendition of Goin' Mobile a song guaranteed to lift (well, me anyway).
Were they the first band to really eschew the blues? This is the point where progressive rock departs rock. The development of psychedelic and rock symphonic arrangements (Armenia City In The Sky to Underture) is really progressing rock music. After all it can't be becuse they don't / didn't have a keyboard player. Neither did King Crimson... (ever.)
Speaking of eschewing the blues prog rock has something in common with punk and late 70s metal (both genres ignored the blues as a basis and yet the blues is the basis of rock.) I find this quite interesting. And for this reason alone The Who are a progressive rock band. They are also a heavy rock and soul band as well - but progressive (art rock) has never been defined properly as we know.
..but .try explaining proto prog to a, er, normal music fan.... (I won't, I'm not that courageous / stupid / desperate to be despised/ hard up for conversation...)
Joined: December 11 2011
Status: Offline
Points: 61
Posted: December 14 2011 at 09:29
Huge Who fan here. Gonna be boring and say that Tommy's my favorite album of theirs. Keith and John are two of my favorite drummers and bassists and I think Townshend really doesn't get enough credit as the genius he is.
Play me my song... Newest discovery: Shadow Circus
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