Atavachron wrote:
Yeah but I doubt this kid would've been mouthing 'Hey Jude' or 'Brown Sugar'. There appears to be something truly eternal in the Who's music that even the Beatles and Stones can't seem to match. I always assumed it would be Floyd or Zep that would continue to capture teens, but instead it's AC/DC, Sabbath, and The Who.
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Floyd, as a band in the genre of progressive psychedelia, has a great, worldwide popularity. If nothing else, everybody knows Floyd due to
The Wall.Led Zep were a heavy blues-rock band that is world-wide knowing due to their songs Stairway To Heaven, Kashmir and Who Lotta Love.
AC/DC and Black Sabbath were great 70s heavy rock bands. Black Sabbath is still to be influential to young heavy bands.
However, it's something bigger with The Who. You have the mods-60s The Who with My Generation the song as a hymn of one (any?) generation. Then comes "pop art" The Who as a part of the British Invasion and you have a power pop / psych-pop 60s The Who and the songs like I Can See For Miles (that one is especially timeless and could be a hit right now!). Then comes Tommy and Woodstock festival 1969 that launched them into the orbit.
1970, the greatest live recorded Rock album ever, Live at Leeds was released.
1971, Who's Next was released with a ground-breaking songs as Baba, BBE and WGFA that decades later featured in the great 'punk-movie'Summer of Sam.
1972, The first-class single Join Together / Baby Don't You Do It released.
1973, Quadrophenia
1975, Tommy the film by Ken Rusell & double LP soundtrack (Mr Townshend was completely rewriting the opera, this time in a 70s proggy style with so much of crazy synths played by him). No doubt that Rusell's Tommy is one of the most memorable films of 20th century cinematography. The Who By Numbers the album released.
1978, Who Are You the album and the first-class hit single released and the title song, decades later, was used so beautifully in very popular CSI tv serie.
1979, The Kids Are Alright was the best big-screen rockumentary at the moment when it comes in the cinemas; a soundtrack double LP album released and went Platinium.
1979, Quadrophenia the film.
1979 / 1980, the great "come-back" tour, the first tour without Moon.
1981, Face Dances the album released, with first-class single You Better You Bet / The Quiet One released.
1982, the "firewall tour" with the full stadiums in USA & UK and the full arenas in Europe and with The Clash as an opening act. A double live album Who's Last released.
1985, The Who participated at Live Aid what the whole world was watching live on tv.
1986, the band was perfoming Quad in its entirety at one-day event in Hyde Park, London.
It's not all, but I think it's quite enough to whip e.g. Led Zep to death.
Oh and there are many The Who songs that were / are radio friendly, there are countless The Who covers by so many young bands from variety of genres and, of course, these countless, amazing and memorable The Who concerts from 60s to 00s ( John Entwistle died ) as for example their stunning performance at Concert for New York (available at Youtube as many other The Who live footages from different eras).
Edited by Svetonio - March 11 2015 at 07:55