Thursday, August 10, 2023

The Deaf, Dumb And Blind Kid Is A Cork On The Ocean




Right from the start,
The Who sprang from youth culture in the way the Beatles never did. Mod was the first truly indigenous UK youth culture, and The High Numbers were its house band. Rockers - pitted in tabloid-staged seaside battles against the Mods - were greasemonkeys abetted by Teddy Boys - ageing dandruff dandies clinging to scratched American 78s, the fag-end last gasp of the dying decade.

At the birth of the 'sixties the USA was in youth culture limbo, black origins being whitewashed into the family values that would attract TV sponsors, so the Mods took their tailoring cues, as did Motown, from Italy. Cutting-edge, finger-popping sharp. Meanwhile, the Beatles were doing their show band schtick, affecting rebel leather (yeah, ri-ight) or beat group uniform, completely out of touch with street level London. But they were cute and pretty and happy in a way The Who could never be, never wanted to be, and the lovely lads were welcomed into the cosy coal-fire parlours of an England in dire need of a knees-up. The Who were ugly fucked up pill-poppers, and fucking furious. They smashed stuff up. They were a pre-psychedelic explosion of colour and wildness, living Pop Art, not appropriating it, and their look was their own, not the artifice of a Hamburg stylist. Their music offered no comfort to the mums and dads who'd lived through the war, but confronted them with noise and shock value that still holds its edge; My Generation is the definitive fuck you to the nine-to-fivers. For this they fought on the front lines? Had their houses bombed? Where was the gratitude? The respect?

Townshend was obviously aware of the Fab Four, but it's tough to point at any overt musical debt. Check out Ol' Bignose with his record collection [left - Ed.]; face out in the stack is Surfin' Safari. He was an admirer of the Beach Boys, influenced more by the California of Paul Revere & The Raiders than the Liverpool of Gerry And The Pacemakers. The Beach Boys were also embedded into their own youth culture, inseparable from it, and sang about cars, the beach, school, surfing, clothes ... and girls. The Beatles were self-isolated from cultural context, a kind of magpie nest to display stolen glitter. They mostly sang about ... girls. Brian Wilson had another link with Townshend - he wasn't embarrassed to express his interior life, and it's this rare balance of intro- and outro-spection that makes them both sensitive songwriters and documentary journalists. Pop as celebration and psychotherapy, without being self-conscious or ironically removed - accurate reflections both of the times and the soul of the artist. Go to the mirror! Smash the mirror!

Where Wilson was the suburban teen dreaming of love and marriage, Townshend struggled with the twisted legacy of his own childhood in the ruins of WW2, uprooted, abused, and searching for redemption and meaning. Brothers in spirit, both performing for the party happening outside their bedroom door and locking themselves away from it, shut out, shut in, shut down. My Generation and I Get Around are the same song - this is us! youth anthems without a Beatles equivalent. People try to put us down, just because I get around, round, get around ... Similarly, In My Room and Pictures Of Lily are polarised views of the same interior space. Brian finds spiritual comfort in his lair of solitude while Pete rubs one out under the sheets. When I grow up to be a man is drawn from the same dark well as hope I die before I get old - the deaf, dumb, and blind kid is a cork on the ocean.

As of right now, both these guys are still, blessedly, alive, and their music will live as close to forever as makes no difference - that is, longer than you and me.







58 comments:

  1. It would be cosy if we could keep any comments here relevant to th' 'Oo - the antecedent Aloha is still open for random business. Thanking you for your consideration, and here's 30 Years Of Maximum 'Oo for your contextual consideration:

    https://workupload.com/file/CQKxSehspzh

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  2. Good to see that watching the Aloha's go by coaxed the old man by the sea out of retirement...at least temporarily

    As for th 'Oo, everyone pretty much agrees on their best (everything from Sell Out to Quadrophonia in some order), but what does the isle think about the albums that didn't quite measure up?

    I recently picked up The Who By Numbers (on CD! To get free shipping) and it is as okay-ish but a little bit boring as I remember it from listening to my dad's vinyl a long time ago. I still stan for Who Are You, though, which is pretty good throughout. That is probably the highest praise you can have for a latter-day Who album because everything after...

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    1. It was reading Mark Blake's excellent "Pretend You're In A War" that *cough* inspired the screed. When a feller gets to book readin', why, it sets a feller to thinkin' ...

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  3. Ooo?
    I’ve got a few ‘best ofs’, and what I consider the essential albums (a similar choice to OBG). The ones that don’t measure up, just don’t measure up, and I still don’t like Tommy :-)
    I really enjoyed them live in 1981, which was the only time I saw them live. I was at Glastonbury Festival in 2007 when The Who headlined on the Sunday night, but because it had rained for most of the weekend I decided to leave the festival early and watched their set on the TV when I got home. I’ve not been to Glastonbury Festival since and have no intention of ever going again.

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  4. What's this -- a new "piece"?!?! Nice way to start the new year on the Isle. Who fans would be wise to check out the good Prof. Stoned's remastered Who collections here: https://www.profstoned.com/search?q=the+who

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  5. Here’s ten years (1965-75) of demos, Mr. Townshend made in his home studios.

    Part One
    https://we.tl/t-EehkpZscnt

    Part Two
    https://we.tl/t-adgMVtRqhb

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  6. Clip of The Who on The Smothers Brothers, including Tommy Smothers interviewing the band.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OiSKu7SbGNQ
    Oh, and wait till the end - Keith put too much dynamite in his drum kit and almost caused Townsend to go deaf.

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  7. I forgot to say, thanks for the great screed FT3. I’m pretty sure that ‘the swinging sixties’ only happened in London, the rest of the UK was still struggling with the effects of the war, and as you say there were quite a few fucked up kids around. I remember The Mods and Rockers were still fighting each other in the 80’s, thanks to our tabloid press that is still stoking the flames of hatred to this day.

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  8. My favorite Who album (picked it up in 76 in a album trade for Fleetwood Mac, never sure why I had that album) was Live at Leeds, loved the early Who, never connected completely with Tommy, first show was 75 @ the Spectrum

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  9. A fabulous read. Who’s Next notwithstanding, the ‘Oo were always and forever a singles band to my mind. Townshend invariably overthought things when it came to the LP format. Their 7”s though were 3-minute slices of British pop genius and very much of their time. Even when their albums became particularly unremarkable (after Quadrophenia) the singles still sounded urgent and relevant, for a while at least.

    As for the Boys of the Beach, they were much better as a singles band, too (you know my feelings on Pet Sounds).

    The Beatles may not have done anything to specifically match the visceral brilliance of My Generation, but overall, it was no contest. The Fabs’ strike rate was simply unassailable, and their output was of such high quality, no one could match them.

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    1. If by strike rate you mean chart placings, I think Hepworth brought up the point that The Kinks had as many, if not more, as did The Beach Boys. But I'm less interested in sales than in what they meant, and there's a lyrical void at the heart of the Fabs quite the equal of Freddie And The Dreamers.

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  10. Entertaining as ever, but I’d definitely quibble with the Mods being the first indigenous youth culture.
    Brian Case wrote a great article in the NME where he gave that title to the Teddy Boys. If I recall, ‘the Teds rolled a six out of an eggcup that had no dice’.
    As for the Fabs, once Eppy got them out of the leather (it was probably exciting him too much), they dress like Mods. Look at ‘Help’ for example. Sharp suits, ties and boots.
    Interesting point about the Fabs having no equivalent of My Generation, though mojo may come up with one.
    Is In my Life the equivalent of In my Room? Don’t know.

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    1. The Teddy Boys were a dress rehearsal for a youth culture. They had the threads, but that's as far as it went. Name four great Teddy Boy groups. Not groups liked by Teddy Boys - groups consisting of Teddy Boys. Okay - name one. Name their ritual drug of choice. Twenty Woodbine. Where did they stand on anything remotely political? Over to one side. Nah. They were a gang of strangely middle-aged young people dressing the same for a sense of identity, and that ain't culture, that's clobber.

      The Beatles were always styled (where the Who created their own). Biker leather, beat group uniforms, "mod" and "hippie" as soon as they caught up, and then following The Band, who aped The Charlatans from '64. In My Life is a lovely song, but it's not In My Room. It's not *about* anything, really, like all of Macca's melodies. It's just Paulie, remembering. Remembering ... er ... stuff.

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    2. Um, In my Life is John.

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    3. Probably why it's such a heartfelt song. It's still not about much, is it? Apart from the remembering. And there I was, not remembering.

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    4. Wasn’t it Gary Usher who wrote the lyrics to In my Room?

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    5. Partly it's simply timing - The Beatles started in 59-60 when nobody had any money. By 1964 we'd never had it so good. Another difference is the Beatles went to a good grammar school, Townshend & Daltrey to a crap one.

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  11. I saw the 'Oo just once, 2 days after the stampede in Cincinnati. Good time, but everyone seemed subdued; cops patrolled up and down the aisles, to make sure the audience didn;t get out of hand.

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  12. Had the (mis?)fortune to be in the same year as Daltrey at Acton County Grammar School - he was always an oooligan, very streetwish and punchy. Townshend was in the year below and received a lot of ridicule because of his proboscis. One of my mates and fellow pupil (Reg Bowen) played rhythm guitar for a short time during their brief time as The Detours; he was tolerated because his mother allowed them to practice in her house. The Detours played regularly at the White Heart in Acton and the Notre Dam Ballroom in Leicester Square Place where young ‘sorts’ could be picked up for a guaranteed knee-trembler. Daltrey was pretty insatiable in those days, shagging any and all who offered. I remember Carol, but not her surname, who was up for giving all of us ‘50 off the wrist’ for which we lined up. They were golden days. Yo . . . Orson Carte.

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  13. Live at Leeds album was my favourite, with the exception of the overlong Magic Bus. The rest was thunderous. I saw them headline at Parkhead Stadium in Glasgow in ‘76. Little Feat, Chapman-Whitney and SAHB were all on the bill. The Who blew them all away effortlessly. Most exciting gig I’d ever witnessed.

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  14. The only 2 albums that I still play by them are Quadrophenia and Who's Next, but if a band's legacy is going to be defined by 2 recordings, there aren't many that did better.

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    1. You still give Meaty Beaty a spin, Shirley? That's a best of best of!

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    2. I haven't listened to that in years, but now that you mention it, I'll give it a reach around today.

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  15. Always loved The Who Sell Out & Odds & Sods, but lately have been enjoying Pete's demos from the Scoop albums. I think it's time for them to retire (again). When the band is down to 2, and they don't really care for each other that much...Do the really need the money?

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    1. Even The Searchers had a more dignified afterlife. At some point, Townshend and Daltrey became parodies of themselves, more pitiless than anything Spitting Image could have come up with. Someone should set up a gofundme for them to just shut up.

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    2. It's almost like Lynyrd Skynyrd. If there are no more original members, then you by default become a tribute band, which is not quite the same!

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    3. Almost. But Daltrey/Townshend aren't paying tribute to a great band, they're dragging it through the mud.

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  16. Their next project: "Tommy" scored for high school musicals. Now EVERY teen can be deaf, dumb & blind!

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  17. The 'Oo, when they still were The 'Oo, asking the musical question Who Are You? @ a Jeff Bezos superyacht FLACK:

    https://workupload.com/file/5NDeK2z9Su8

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  18. The Who - ‘Who’s Next (MCA Ultimate MasterDisc Version)’
    This is the 1995 24-karat gold CD, remastered from the original two-track analog master.

    https://we.tl/t-Hz88i7MUl2

    ‘Who's Next Outtakes etc…’
    Leslie “The Great Fatsby” West turns up on this.

    https://we.tl/t-JO9xwMSIQl

    The Who - Fillmore East, New York, April 6, 1968
    No artwork, just an excellent soundboard recording.

    https://we.tl/t-Vcq5SY2nkW

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  19. Much Thanx Babs & FQ3...All in all, Who's Next is the go-to 'OO!

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  20. If you're gonna use the Who as a stick to beat another act with, please do it to the preening self-regarding gated-medieval-court that was Led Zeppelin whose big shows could have just as easily been performed without an audience whilst Pete and Co seemed to embody (or at least strongly avow) the dictum of the great Trapeze number 'You Are The Music, We're Just The Band'.

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    1. I think my point was - looking back through my notes - that a comparison between Townshend and Wilson is worth making, and rarely made. The artist singing about the culture he was born into, the culture he helped to make. The Fabs got shoehorned into it because they never wrote songs about their mates, basically. Neither did they write honestly and transparently about themselves (with a few exceptions). No My Generation, no In My Room (other songs are available). The problem with mentioning the Lovely Lads is that they tend to make the conversation about them. It isn't. They weren't alone in their lyric limitations. But Ray Davies did the social documentary thing brilliantly. See My Friends (another, gentler My Generation) and Waterloo Sunset describe the real world he lived in. Can't offhand think of a soul-bearing confessional, although David Watts reveals the singer's inadequacy, so that may count.

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  21. Thinking of the Wilson - Townshend connection, other than what Farq describes in the screed, they made their allegiance known pretty quickly. You can write off the side b of their Ready Steady Who EP as a lark if you want, but them covering Jan & Dean and The Beach Boys (via The Regents) shows that th' Oo were surfers at heart all along!

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  22. the surf thing was mainly Moon I think. I saw em at the Lyceum doing Quadrophenia. Quite good.

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  23. Oh they did Bucket T didn't they? The original of that song (the StingRays?) is identical to "Jennie Lee" (not the founder of the Open University) by Jan & Arnie.

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  24. That surf beat influence is apparent in some early songs, and they took harmony cues (such as they could) from the Beach Boys. But the influence was one-way - I doubt Brian Wilson paid them much attention.

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    1. Wait, I thought Brian is the one that got Carl to do those windmill licks on the guitar during Good Vibrations?!?

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  25. The Who - ‘Maximum As & Bs: The Complete Singles’

    This is a 5CD, 86-track collection from the Brunswick, Reaction, Track and Polydor labels, and (obviously) has every hit, along with all the B-sides, some of which were on CD for the first time when this collection was released in 2017.

    Part One
    https://we.tl/t-RlUgzrBBf9

    Part Two
    https://we.tl/t-GuiTjPcHpY

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  26. Phantom Of The Rock OperaJanuary 5, 2024 at 11:42 AM

    Just a small mention for Pete Meaden, the 'Ace Face' who managed the 'Oo' for just a very short time , renamed them "the High Numbers" for an even shorter time, wrote the lyrics to their first single and supposedly sold their management contract for £50 in 1964 to Kit Lambert but without whose influence the band might have become something very different.

    if you can get hold of a copy of his 1975 NME interview (published in 1979 after his death) its well worth a read.

    https://www.modculture.co.uk/?s=Meaden

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Meaden

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  27. Saw them once 1981 at Wembley supported by The Stranglers, AC DC and Nils Lofgren. Missed train back to home town Didcot from Paddington was kicked awake by a policeman as teenagers dressed as mods not allowed to sleep on platform. Got home at 10 am on milk train hallucinating as had been working night shift in a pea factory day before 48 hours little sleep...all fits. Townsend got married in home town registry office to Virginia Astley's mother. Google it tis true 1968. So soft spot for the herberts but still some bad jujuj on them there hard drives.

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  28. Correction (ed.) Virginia Astley was the sister of Karen Astley that Pete betrothed at Didcot registry office. I went to school in Wallingford and local diskery Astleys (run by brother I believe) was a fave spot.

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    1. Co-inkidink Dept. - I "worked" in Wallingford for a time, and Astley's was a regular lunch-time haunt.

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  29. As part of my research for this timely and provocative piece, I gave Tommy a spin for the first time in a long time. It's an album that has rather diminished in general estimation (Quadrophenia being the preferred concept double) but it played a whole lot better than I remembered. I listened to it all the way through, and was mightily impressed.

    "The plot makes no sense." Well, welcome to opera. Or superhero franchise movies. Or most long form TV series. Tommy does have a coherent and imaginative narrative - the wiki page is a useful guide. The problem is that it's a very complex story, with a strong "fable" or metaphorical element, and needs more than a few paragraphs to tell (it actually need a double album). And that the very idea of a deaf, dumb and blind boy playing virtuoso pinball is in-credible, literally unbelievable - inviting ridicule, or reactions of distaste. It's a metaphorical, allegorical leap too far for some to make. But some critics' advice to "ignore the story" is just ignorant. There's a story there worth understanding (and one that required Kit Lambert working at when it got too much for Pete).

    "The production is weak/unfinished." Lambert wrote orchestral arrangements in an "operatic" mode that Townshend didn't use, because he wanted the band to be able to replicate the record live, which they did, to astonishing global success. By modern terms, yes, the production sounds thin, but apart from a powerful remix, what does it actually need? Horns? Strings? Nah. Play it loud.

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    1. Here's the Nabob of Needledrops, pbthal, with his bat-eared flac rip of the original vinyl (or something):

      https://workupload.com/file/Y2dkWHjkVq

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    2. ... and here's the Special Deluxe 3-disc edish @320:

      https://workupload.com/file/vWSRHV6bUwa

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  30. Does anybody out there have mp3s of "Rough Mix", my fave Pete T album ?
    Brandi

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    1. Available at myzuka.club (sort it out yerself!).

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    2. Pete Townshend and Ronnie Lane – ‘Rough Mix’
      This is the 2006 remaster, with a few bonus tracks.

      https://we.tl/t-GEtGHBB3on

      Rest In Peace Ronnie Lane.

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    3. Ronnie Lane - one of the best second bananas in Rock'n'Roll and a hell of a musician in his own right. Quite underrated, too.

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  31. I wish Who Sell Out would get more notice. For me it is the pinnacle of the pop and art in rock and roll. Townshend and Moon going into the stratosphere on I Can See for Miles. Still one of my memorable listening moments listening to this great lp for the first time.

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    1. Love the album. The idea that The Who were a "singles band" (ie couldn't cut an album) is nonsense. All their albums up to and including Quadrophenia - that's eight years - are not only essential but took the form to new places. And the Meaty Beaty comp released during that period is one of the very best rock/pop comps ever.

      There's an argument to be made that The Kinks were a singles band ...

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