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-
- ...presents... Retrospective Rock
- Ramones, The Runaways, and The Who
-
- typed by The Pusher
-
- >>> a cDc publication.......1989 <<<
- -cDc- CULT OF THE DEAD COW -cDc-
- _______________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Ramones
- From the liner notes of "RamonesMania" by Billy Altman
-
- August 1974, Washington, D.C. An entire country watches as Richard
- Milhous Nixon, 37th President of the United States, steps aboard a waiting
- helicopter and vacates the White House. News of the Nixon resignation fills
- newspaper pages and television and radio broadcasts the world over. From this
- moment forward, politics will never again be the same.
-
- August 1974, New York City. Scattered Bowery residents pay little notice
- as four young men from Forest Hills, Queens, enter a small club called CBGB in
- Manhattan's Lower East Side. The owner, Hilly Kristal, isn't sure if this
- strange-looking group - identically dressed in leather jackets, T-shirts,
- ripped jeans, and sneakers, and calling themselves the Ramones - are the ones
- who are supposed to be auditioning for a gig or just a bunch of hoodlums who've
- come to fence stolen musical equipment. They take to the stage and play a set,
- but even after they're through, Kristal still isn't sure if they're a real band
- or just a bunch of hoodlums. All of their songs are very loud, very short, and
- very fast. In fact, the only thing separating them are the bass player's
- shouts of "1-2-3-4" during the milliseconds in which they stop. He decides to
- book them anyway; business is bad. Their first public performance draws no
- attention from newspapers, radio, or television, and, in point of fact, is
- witnessed by a grand total of five warm bodies - six if you count the
- bartender's dog. No matter. From this moment forward, rock & roll will never
- again be the same.
-
- As the great philosopher Marx (that's either Karl or Groucho) once said,
- "Revolutions begin with ideas," and the revolution known as punk, ignited by
- the band known as the Ramones, began when four members of the New York division
- of the worldwide force known as disenfranchised youth realized that they shared
- some very basic ideas concerning music and culture. As Joey Ramone once
- explained it, "We decided to start our own group because we were bored with
- everything we heard. In 1974, there was nothing to listen to anymore.
- Everything was tenth-generation Led Zeppelin, tenth-generation Elton John, or
- overproduced, or just junk. Everything was long jams, long guitar solos. We
- missed music like it used to be before it got 'progressive.' We missed hearing
- songs that were short, exciting, and GOOD! We wanted to bring the energy back
- to rock & roll." And though, in their formative stages, they might not have
- displayed an abundance of what some might call "chops," the Ramones quickly
- discovered that, as a unit, they possessed a warehouseful of other qualities
- which, perhaps even more than music, have helped define rock 'n' roll
- throughout its history. Qualites like energy. And attitude. And passion.
-
- At their first rehearsals, the band tried to play songs by the artists
- they liked most- Gene Vincent, Eddie Cochran, The Beatles, the Beach Boys, the
- Kinks, the Stooges, MC5, Alice Cooper, Slade- but recalled Johnny, "we just
- couldn't figure them out, so we decided to try and write our own, and we had to
- make them basic enough so we could play them." That they did and, in the
- process, rock & roll was re-invented. Having found the old textbooks unusable,
- the Ramones simply created their own. They wrote about alienation ("Now I
- Wanna Sniff Some Glue") and isolation ("I Don't Wanna Walk Around With You)"
- about the power (Blitzkrieg Bop") and the fury ("Today Your Love, Tomorrow the
- World") of untamed youth, and about life on the mean streets ("53rd & 3rd"),
- and in the last house on the left ("I Don't Wanna Go Down to the Basement").
- Their songs were often funny, often hysterically so, who could keep a straight
- face envisioning all 6'3" of Joey Ramone stepping up to the plate to "Beat on
- the Brat" with a baseball bat? Yet their humor was adroitly counterbalanced by
- a ferociously serious musical attack, made up of Johnny's buzzsawing, no
- time-for-solos guitar (Pusher Note: More like no talent-for solos guitar), Dee
- Dee's pinpoint (and hell-bent) bass, and Tommy's "all meat, no filler" four
- on-the-floor drumming.
-
- The Ramones weren't the only alternative band on the New York scene during
- those fateful days of '74 and '75. There were those who'd come before, like
- the glittery New York Dolls from St. Mark's Place, the boys-will-be-boys
- Dictators from the Bronx, and the priestess from New Jersey, Patti Smith. And
- there were those who emerged alongside them. The Neon Boys, Tom Verlaine and
- Richard Hell who split up to form (respectively) Television and the Voidoids,
- the art school refugees Talking Heads, and the pop-aspiring Blondie. And they
- all met at such unlikely shrines as the aforementioned CBGB and the old Warhol
- hangout, Max's Kansas City. No one ever got up and officially proclaimed this
- motley crew of musical misfits as a movement. But as they began to draw
- increasingly larger audiences- audiences made up of people who, like them-
- selves, were bored with the music on their radios, and in their record stores-
- and as the critics began chronicling their exploits and singing their praises
- in print, a movement was indeed nurtured. Eventually it was given a name,
- Punk. And no band symbolized it better than the Ramones.
-
- The group never campaigned to be the spokespersons of punk, but as their
- following swelled, and record companies began to sniff around, the band's image
- and style became issues of controversy. While the Ramones fancifully thought
- of themselves as a nouveau bubblegum band with guts, most music industry
- executives saw their twelve song 20-minute bursts of newspeak as a violent
- threat to the status quo, and many nervous jokes were made at their expense ("I
- would've walked out on them," one company president said, "but they were
- finished before I could get up.") By the end of 1975, though, the Ramones had
- a recording contract with Seymour Stein's Sire Records, and it was their
- signing that paved the way for the rest of New York's- and ultimately
- the nations- punk and new wave bands. Their debut album, recorded for the
- incredibly low sum of $6000 and featuring 14 songs crammed into less than 30
- minutes, exhilarated many, shocked more than a few and, in general, caused
- quite a stir upon its release in early 1976. While critics raved, radio
- programmers scratched their heads. What would their ad-conscious station
- managers say if they played a song whose only lyrics were, "You're a loudmouth
- baby/ You better shut it up/ I'm gonna beat you up/ Cause you're a loudmouth
- baby"? The right people, though, got the joke- and the point- of the Ramones'
- music. As summer arrived, the clarion call of "Hey ho, let's go!" was being
- sounded not only all across the U.S. but overseas as well. It somehow seemed
- fitting that on the Fourth of July of 1976- the exact day of the American
- Bicentennial- the Ramones stood on a stage in London, England, and proclaimed
- rock & roll's new declaration of independence to an audience composed of the
- future members of the Sex Pistols, the Clash, the Damned, Generation X, and,
- indeed most of what would soon be the core population of the British punk
- scene.
-
- Early in 1977, the group released their second album, Ramones Leave Home,
- another fun-filled excursion into the realms of unconsciousness ("Carbona Not
- Glue"), self-mutilation ("Suzy Is A Headbanger"), electroshock therapy ("Gimme
- Gimme Shock Treatment"), and freelance military activity ("Commando"). And, of
- course, "Pinhead." Partially inspired by the scene in Todd Browing's classic
- '30s horror film, Freaks, in which the title circus sideshow characters welcome
- a "normal" into their ranks, the cry of "Gabba gabba/ We accept you/ We accept
- you/ One of us" became the official slogan of the House of Ramones, the
- supreme howl of liberation for rock's underclass of punks and new wavers. Hot
- on its heels that spring came "Sheena Is a Punk Rocker," an infectious,
- anthemic tribute to the band's fans and their beloved hometown, and as the
- single made its way onto the Top 100 charts, its success served warning that
- the Ramones were well on their way to becoming a commercial, as well as
- artistic, force to be reckoned with.
-
- Rocket to Russia, released near the end of 1977, more than made good on
- that warning, for it established the stance, the philosophy, and the viability
- of the Ramones as never before. The bone-crunching muscularity of their live
- sound was finally captured accurately in the studio by producers Tony Bongiovi
- and Tommy (T.Erdely) Ramone, and engineer Ed Stasium. Songs like "Cretin Hop"
- and "Teenage Lobotomy" (Now I guess I'll have to tell 'em/ That I got no
- cerebellum) showed that the Ramones' wit was waxing ever sharper, while "Here
- Today, Gone Tomorrow" and "We're A Happy Family" (We ain't got no friends/ Our
- troubles never end/ No Christmas cards to send/ Daddy likes men") displayed
- a bite as sharp as the bark. And with the glorious, Beach Boys-styled chart
- single "Rockaway Beach", the Ramones proved conclusively that "Sheena" was
- indeed no fluke, that they could merrily rock out with anyone, anytime.
-
- 1978 found the band crisscrossing the U.S. on their first full-scale
- national tour as a headlining act, but at a price- a physically and emotionally
- drained Tommy announced at tour's end that he was leaving the band to
- concentrate on producing. His place was taken by Voidoid Marc Bell (known
- from that day forth as Marky Ramone). Road to Ruin, the group's first record
- with their new drummer, found the Ramones expanding their horizons while
- consolidating their by now prodigious strengths. Tracks such as "Go Mental"
- and "I Just Wanna to Have Something To Do" struck with the savage efficiency
- expected of the world's hardest-rocking punk band, while the rollicking "I
- Wanna Be Sedated" and a strikingly poignant cover of the Searcher's British
- Invasion classic, "Needles and Pins," (showcased here in its specially remixed
- 1979 single release form), once again underscored the fact that the Ramones
- could be as commercial as ABBA so long as the game was played on their own
- turf. Between these tunes and such heretofore uncharacteristic songs as the
- country-flavored "You Don't Come Close" (complete with- ahem- guitar solo) and
- the haunting ballad, "Questioningly," it was clear that the Ramones, secure
- with past accomplishments as leaders of a worldwide revolution, were now ready
- for an internal evolution.
- Tabbed by film director Allan Arkush to guest star in a Roger Corman
- -produced movie about life in America's secondary school system (Corman had no
- previous knowledge of the band, but gave them the nod when Arkush showed him
- the Cormanesque "Mutant Monster Beach Party" action comic issue of PUNK
- magazine which featured Joey as the behemoth-battling, surfin' safari-ing
- hero), the Ramones finished 1978 in Hollywood making their celluloid debut
- in- and supplying the theme song for- Rock 'n' Roll High School, in which they
- led the dedicated students of Vince Lombardi High in that time-honored
- tradition of blowing up the school at the end of the term. While in
- California, the band was approached by legendary record producer Phil Spector,
- who expressed his desire to work with them. The following spring, the band
- returned to Los Angeles to record under Spector's supervision at the famed Gold
- Star Studios, site of all those Crystals, Ronettes, and Righteous Brothers
- classics. True to his word, Spector succeeded in giving the Ramones his
- patented "wall of sound" treatment, as evidenced by "Do You Remember Rock 'n'
- Roll Radio," a cascading, swirling salute to rock & roll's inspirational past,
- "Danny Says" (featuring the world's loudest acoustic guitar), and "Chinese
- Rock," a dark tale of hard times on Manhattan's Lower East Side.
-
- Over the course of the next few years, the Ramones continued to experi-
- ment, broadening the range of both their material and overall sound. With
- former 10CCer and British Invasion hit songwriter Graham "Bus Stop" Gouldman at
- the controls, 1981's Pleasant Dreams brought out the more pop-orientated facets
- of the band's musical personality without any loss of identity. After all,
- only the Ramones could have you blissfully humming along the chorus of "The
- KKK Took My Baby Away" or giddily grabbing the nearest blunt object with which
- to smash your radio to smithereens ("We Want the Airwaves"). Likewise, 1983's
- Subterranean Jungle, produced by Ritchie Cordell- uberlord of all those
- wonderful Tommy James and the Shondells records, and composer of the eternal
- teen mating call "I Think We're Alone Now"- saw the band adding a glistening
- shine to their music, reflected brightly on such jet-propelled fireballs as
- "Psycho Therapy" and "Outsider". And those bubblegum roots which were always
- implicit in the band's work finally emerged with the recording of "Little Bit
- o'Soul" and the Cordell co-authored "Indian Giver" (originally released solely
- as a B-side in the U.K. and presented here in album form for the very first
- time.)
- The summer of 1983 marked yet another turning point in the Ramones'
- career. After more than 5 years of virtually incessant worldwide touring, the
- band was forced off the road for a spell due to a variety of reasons (Joey and
- Johnny were both hospitalized for illnesses, and Marky left the band to attend
- to personal matters). When they emerged, with new drummer Richie (Beau) Ramone
- on board, it was with a renewed and recharged sense of purpose. Incorporating
- the fiercest aspects of both the punk rock they'd originated and the
- hardcore/speed metal genres they'd laid the groundwork for, 1984's Too Tough To
- Die (produced by old hands Tommy (Ramone) Erdelyi and Ed Stasium) answered any
- possible doubts about the band's rightful place as keepers of rock & roll's
- white-hot flame. From the rockabillying "Mama's Boy" to the breakneck-paced
- "Warthog" (the latter featuring a rare vocal by Dee Dee), and from the
- shoulda-been-a-hot-catchiness of "Howling at the Moon" (produced by Eurythmics'
- Dave Stewart) to the disarmingly heartfelt "I'm Not Afraid of Life", Too Tough
- to Die was a towering reaffirmation of the Ramones' rock & roll principles.
- Animal Boy (1986, produced by former Plasmatic, Jean Beauvoir), continued the
- band's resurgence. And among the album's many gems, like the headbanging title
- track and the ominous "Somebody Put Something in My Drink", came graphic
- evidence of the Ramones' growing maturity, in the form of the politically
- active "Bonzo Goes to Bitburg", a song takes dead aim at a certain
- actor-turned-President we all know.
-
- With 1987's Halfway to Sanity- represented here by the affirmative-
- actioned "I Wanna Live" and the appropriately frantic "Bop Til' You Drop"- and
- with the appearance of this collection, the Ramones commemorate two rather
- significant milestones. They have, at this point, contributed ten studio
- albums's worth of might fine music to the world, and they are celebrating (with
- Marky Ramone back in tow, we might add) their 15th year as a working rock &
- roll band. A decade and a half after their humble beginnings at the corner of
- Bleecker and the Bowery, much of what fills the air on radio stations and the
- racks of record stores, is STILL tenth-generation Led Zeppelin, tenth-
- generation Elton John, or overproduced, or just junk. So long as the Ramones
- continue to soldier on, however, there will also still be a living, breathing
- entity known as rock & roll. And something to believe in.
-
- ______________________________________________________________________________
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Runaways
- From the liner notes of "The Best Of The Runaways" by Len Epand
-
- January 1976. Hardly rock 'n' roll's proudest moment. America's pop Top
- 10 drifts aimlessly in the Me Decade, awash with MOR flotsam and disco jetsam.
- What little rock 'n' roll succeeds in poking through probably attracts scant
- attention in rock 'n' roll heaven: The Bay City Rollers and Sweet are more on
- the level of confection or novelty, not unlike, say, C.W. McCall, whose
- "Convoy" is serious business. In short, the charts offer little that's potent,
- important, tough 'n' honest. Interviewing Joan Jett, the emerging head of the
- Runaways, for a magazine's update on the group as they finish recording their
- second album in L.A., I note the state of pop radio and ask how she likes the
- gestating New York CBGB scene and acts like Patti Smith, Blondie, Television,
- the Ramones, et al. For there is a sort of connection - they're all sparks in
- a rock 'n' roll renaissance, new voices making some noise.
-
- "It's about time some fun kind of music came back," Joan asserts. "We
- want to get some other kind of music in there 'cause every time I turn on KHJ
- [then L.A.'S reigning Top 40] I can't listen to it for more than 10 minutes.
- 'Cause it's the same kind of music over and over, disco, pop, and... if they'd
- just throw something in there once in a while! I think a lot of people want to
- hear it."
-
- April 1982. A lot of people do want to hear it, and they keep Joan Jett's
- first single from her second solo album on Boardwalk Records, "I Love Rock 'n'
- Roll," number one for seven weeks. Unfortunately, KHJ, on which Joan very
- much wanted to be heard, has long retired into a country format. But Joan is
- heard on Top 40 stations as well as FM album rock radio, and her song stands as
- an anthem. It's all more triumphant-sounding when you know what went before
- it. From the critical lambasting the Runaways suffered (ROLLING STONE still
- refers to them as "Kim Fowley's quintet of teen teasers"), the group's failure
- to succeed in the U.S. (in Japan they were superstars), and the fact that the
- other Runaways twice refused Joan's plea to record the song, to the lengthy
- string of rejections Joan Jett's first solo album elicited from major labels.
- "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" exemplifies the winning style Joan has forged with
- produced/manager Kenny Laguna. It's a heavy metal approach to pop that might
- lapse into bubblegum were it not for Joan's sensibility, which is very much
- punk.
-
- The origins of Joan's style are here to be relived in The Best Of The
- Runaways. With a directness previously unheard from women in rock, the
- Runaways belted out statements of teen rebellion. Lady James Deans, if you
- will. Teenagers themselves, they championed for their g-g-generation the
- glories of rock 'n' roll, late night partying, and sex, but the archetypal
- emphasis was on living to the max, true to your passions. And of course in a
- middle class world this meant being "bad." And fairly often - as in most of
- the tracks selected for this set - they expressed this most devastatingly in
- writing and performance. The Runaways played loud, hard, heavy, and... well.
- The rhythm section of Sandy West (drums), Jackie Fox (bass) and later Vicki
- Blue (bass), and Jett (rhythm guitar) cooked, and provided a great foundation
- for Lita Ford's adept and aggressive lead guitar playing, which ambitiously
- reached for Jeff Beck/Jimmy Page heights.
-
- The Runaways moxie shocked many (including some critics?). But it also
- changed some male-female stereotypes, and spoke for a whole lotta girls, some
- of whom consequently turned to playing rock 'n' roll too. Arguably, the
- Runaways made possible Chrissie Hynde, Pat Benatar, the Go-Gos, Girlschool, and
- countless others.
-
- If that end justifies the means, one cannot fault the Runaways for the way
- they were formed, produced and "directed" - largely by Hollywood Argyle-
- turned-rockmeister Kim Fowley. Fowley, it seems to me, was more catalyst than
- Svengali. Most of the Runaways were very talented, and when they came to
- Fowley they were rockers looking to happen, not seals looking to be trained.
-
- The beginning predates Fowley, actually. It goes back to 1974 when
- 14-year old Joan Jett trailed Suzi Quatro around Hollywood's Continental "Riot"
- House. Quatro, though Detroit bred, was one of the several glitter-pop stars
- (Gary Glitter was another) who became the rage in England in the early 70's but
- could barely get arrested in the U.S., except to fans like Joan. As she
- explained her Quatro fixation to me, "I didn't like [early 70's all-women
- groups] Fanny or Isis. They didn't really do it - play rock 'n' roll." In
- 1975, Joan and friend Kari Krome approached Fowley to help them form a band.
- Fowley, the story goes, told them if they could find one more he'd do it. Soon
- after Joan and Kari met Sandy West in the Rainbow Bar parking lot... and Kim
- went to work. First he determined that Krome was okay as a lyricist but not as
- a singer, and proceeded to bring in Mickey Steel (quickly replaced by Jackie),
- Lita, and a vocalist Cherie Currie, whom he found at a San Fernando Valley teen
- club called the Sugar Shack.
-
- After rehearsing them, Fowley signed them to Mercury, and produced THE
- RUNAWAYS. Like most first albums it was raw like the ch-ch-cherry bomb of the
- opening track, "Cherry Bomb" (which by the way was the sort of number that
- tagged them as Jailbait Rock. Consider such lines as "Hey street boy...I'll
- give you some/to live for/Have ya, grab ya, 'til yo're sore"). Definitely not
- the stuff of Queen/Yes/Genesis-styled opuses, the music prevailing on album
- rock radio in the mid-70's. QUEENS OF NOISE, the second LP, wasn't exactly
- subdued, but its songs and production were far more refined, with Earle Mankey
- (Sparks, the Beach Boys) brought in to co-produce. By this LP, Joan's sphere
- had grown more dominant. Previously, she'd written or co-written much of the
- Runaways' best material, now she sang most of it, too. Yet, the Runaways
- persisted as a group effort, and this is evidenced on their Live In Japan LP,
- an LP never released in America but represented here by "You Drive Me Wild",
- and "Queens of Noise."
-
- Back in the U.S. in 1977, the girls cut their third Fowley-produced studio
- LP, WAITIN' FOR THE NIGHT. It was pretty much Joan's record, considering that
- both Cherie and Jackie earlier had left the band, and only Jackie had been
- replaced (by Blue). Once again, the Runaways propounded their essential
- pop/metal/punk style, but American radio refused them again, now lumping them
- with the Sex Pistols, Clash, Jam, and whatever as an excuse not to admit that
- times had changed.
-
- Still, Joan, Lita, Sandy, and Vicki clung together, and in 1978 they
- parted ways with Kim Fowley and, since their deal was tied to Fowley, Mercury.
- In now was Suzi Quatro and Blondie's manager at the time, Toby Mamis. It was
- Mamis' inspired idea to offer the group to producer Kenny Laguna, but Laguna,
- Joan's current mentor, turned them down! Mamis then turned to ex-Thin Lizzy
- producer John Alcock, and they cut AND NOW...THE RUNAWAYS!, as it was titled in
- Europe (The LP wouldn't find release in North America until 1981, when Rhino
- Records put it out as LITTLE LOST GIRLS). It was during these sessions that
- the difference set in that would tear them apart, with Lita and Sandy on one
- side (heavy metal), and Joan on another (punk). Vicki Blue, meanwhile, was
- sidelined with a medical condition (not drugs), leaving Lita to record many of
- the bass parts on the album. For their remaining gigs, they replaced Blue with
- Laurie McCallister. But McCallister would leave shortly to form the Runaways-
- like Orchids (who released one LP on MCA). Yet the final bizarre twist in the
- story came in the months before the Runaways' total dissolution in early 1979.
- Joan ended up fulfilling an obligation to film the Runaways movie (!). Called
- "We're All Crazy Now", it would star Joan with actresses playing her fellow
- bandmates. The movie, thanks to Joan's current success but much to her
- chagrin, may find release in late 1982. In the meantime, it sits vaulted away.
- The Runaways' records, thankfully do not.
-
- And where are the Runaways now?
- Joan: Well accounted for here and in journals everywhere.
- Lita: About to release her debut with the Lita Ford Band, a metal outfit also
- featuring Neil Merryweather on bass.
- Cherie: Acting in films. Did "Foxes" and recorded one poorly received LP with
- sister Marie called MESSIN' WITH THE BOYS. See Vicki.
- Sandy: Rehearsing the hard rock Sandy West Group to begin playing the Hollywood
- club scene.
- Jackie: Last reported to be working for a motivational therapy organization,
- after having toiled in record promotion.
- Vicki: Recording with Cherie in the Currie Blue Band, after having recorded one
- unreleased LP.
-
- Epitaph:
- "I think the Runaways were just too honest."
- - Joan Jett, New Musical Express, April 1982.
-
- ______________________________________________________________________________
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Who
- From the liner notes of "Who's Better, Who's Best" by Richard Barnes
-
-
- The Who's 20-year career saw them progress from school mates jamming at
- the Acton Congregational Church Hall to become The Greatest Rock Band In The
- World. During those two erratic and spectacular decades they produced a series
- of records which include many of the greatest-ever classics in rock and pop
- history.
-
- Pete Townsend, Roger Daltrey, and John Entwistle attended Acton Grammar
- School in West London. Entwhistle could already read music but Townsend
- admitted he'd been 'buggering about for guitar for years getting nowhere'.
- They joined Roger Daltrey's group - the Detours, which two years later they
- renamed the Who. Their next incarnation, from long-haired R&B group to
- short-haired mods, brought another short-lived name change, to the High
- Numbers, and a new drummer - Keith Moon. After a 'mod single' flopped, they
- reverted to the Who.
-
- By late 1964 through word-of-mouth and sheer hard work the Who had
- attracted great interest plus a large, loyal following and were ready to make
- another record. A demo of their song, this time written by Townsend, was
- played over the phone to record producer Shel Talmy. He saw them play and
- found them '...funky, loud, raw, but they had balls...I loved them the moment I
- heard them.'
-
- I CAN'T EXPLAIN was released in early 1965. The Who had been regularly
- playing Tuesday (the duff night) at Soho's Marquee Jazz Club transforming it
- into a packed-out 'Maximum R&B' success. This led to a live TV appearance on
- Ready Steady Go. A pre-arranged "spontaneous outburst" at the end of their
- song by Who fans in the studio audience caused a rumpus, drawing viewers'
- attention to the group. It worked and next week the record charted at no. 28,
- eventually making no. 8.
-
- I CAN'T EXPLAIN is a great pop classic. It's brilliantly held together by
- a tight funky guitar riff. Moon's drumming is like well-timed snatches of a
- hammer-gun. Daltrey's voice slurs against the high dreamy backing voices of
- the Ivy League. As first records go, it was miles better than either the
- Beatles or the Stones.
-
- Much of the Who's breakthrough was due to their very devoted Mod cult
- following plus the heavy airplay they got from pirate stations, Radio Caroline
- and Radio London. By 1965, Melody Maker described their attitude and music as,
- "defiant!... their sound is vicious."
-
- The Who were THE loudest group and ended their sets by systematically
- destroying their equipment. Townsend would violently shove his guitar through
- the speakers, or hammer his Rickenbacker on the floor to get electronic
- feedback. He'd use the mike stand on it as if playing violin to get more
- strange effects.
-
- Moon would 'take it out' on his drum kit in sympathy, then set about
- anything left. Daltrey would scrape the mike over the cymbals creating a
- wrenching sound, while Entwhistle, ignoring the mayhem, would keep still,
- calmly playing on, protecting his bass, and acting as anchor to the others.
- Surrounded by smoke and a debris of fused smoldering amps, buzzing speakers,
- smashed guitars, and battered drums, they'd walk off.
-
- They were a highly 'visual' group - Moon continually twirling and hurling
- drumsticks as he played. Townsend spinning his arm like a windmill smashing at
- the strings, and Daltrey swinging his mike around like a lasso. The NME's
- Roy Carr said, "It was like seeing a piece of pure energy, pure raw energy."
-
- An attempt was made to capture their live sound on their next record.
- When ANYHOW, ANYWAY, ANYWHERE was released in May 1965, Decca at first returned
- the tapes assuming the feedback was a technical fault. It reached no. 10 and
- was described as a 'Pop Art' single now that the group had moved on to wearing
- clothes plastered with Pop images such as targets, chevrons, and flags inspired
- by 60's Pop artists.
-
- The next single was a monster and shot the Who straight into the
- limelight, propelling the articulate, intelligent and verbose Townsend even
- further as semi-official spokesman for pop music and the young. MY GENERATION,
- the legendary Who anthem released in November 1965, had the most fantastic
- heavy pounding bass riff. It's about a stuttering piled-up mod telling the
- older generation to F-F-F-Fade Away (or words to that effect), and has the
- provocative line "Hope I die before I get old." It went straight into the
- British charts at no. 16 and despite being initially banned by the BBC reached
- no. 2. It's still a f-f-fading great record today. They released their first
- album, also called MY GENERATION a month later.
-
- SUBSTITUTE (March 1966) was yet another powerful classic and a brilliant
- follow-up single. The great 'Plastic spoon' lyrics, are mugged along once more
- by Entwhistle's superb deep, rich, overloud power-bass.
-
- SUBSTITUTE was produced by Townsend himself as the Whowere now attempting
- to break from their record deal with Shel Talmy. The very same day, Decca
- released another Who track confusing the market. Despite injunctions and
- seizures, Substitute reached no. 5 staying in the charts for 13 weeks.
-
- Later that year the band again had two competing records out at the same
- time. THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT was released two weeks later before I'M A BOY, on a
- rival label. Moon was particularly praised on THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT for "one of
- the most sublime drumrolls in rock." It charted at 41. I'M A BOY, with its
- Beach Boys vocals, rose to the top of the Melody maker Top Fifty (In the NME
- it only managed No. 2 - beaten by JIM REEVES' Distant Drums). In December
- their second album, A QUICK ONE was released.
-
- HAPPY JACK, released December 1966 in the UK and March 1967 in the US was
- the Who's first American breakthrough reaching 24 in Billboard and selling over
- 300,000 copies. It got to no. 3 in the UK. PICTURES OF LILY (April 1967) hit
- trouble too as it was thought to be about masturbation and banned by many US
- radio stations. It got to no. 5 in the U.S. As Townsend remarked later -
- PICTURES OF LILY, I'M A BOY, and HAPPY JACK, had "the strange attraction of
- being 'sweet songs' sung by a violent group."
-
- In 1967 they played the Monterey Pop Festival, followed by seven weeks of
- havoc on the U.S. Herman's Hermits tour. Moon celebrated his 21st birthday at
- Decca's party in Flint, Michigan by ruining several cars with fire-extinguisher
- foam and diving into an empty swimming pool, smashing his front teeth. The
- $15,000 or so damages were paid by a tour whip-round (including Herman). The
- Who were banned - their first - from Holiday Inns worldwide.
-
- I CAN SEE FOR MILES. An obvious masterpiece. Though released in October
- 1967, it had been written much earlier and held in reserve. When it failed to
- reach no. 1 in Britain, Townsend was 'crushed' (it reached no. 10 and 9 in
- the U.S.). The slightly sinister sound, Moon's timing, Townsend's one-note
- solo: Critic Dave Marsh enthuses, "...it's quite simply the most exciting piece
- of music the Who ever recorded."
-
- A month later they released the album THE WHO SELL OUT - considered pure
- pop at its very best - a tribute to the recently outlawed pirate radio stations
- including the actual jingles from the late Radio London.
-
- In September 1968 they released MAGIC BUS with its simple Bo Diddley-like
- guitar. It got to no. 26 in the UK and 25 in the U.S. Amazingly, it was
- accused in the U.S. of being drug oriented.
-
- The great PINBALL WIZARD was released in 1969. This brilliant no-nonsense
- triumph of guitar rock immediately caused another row. The BBC attacked it as
- sick. However, the New Yorker magazine called it, "...more than excellent -
- one of the great rock songs of the decade." It climbed to no. 4 in the UK and
- 19 in the U.S.
-
- Shortly after the Who presented their much-awaited rock opera double album
- TOMMY, from which PINBALL WIZARD, I'M FREE, and SEE ME, FELL ME are taken.
- TOMMY was a major milestone in rock history. The most important and innovative
- rock album since SGT. PEPPER.
-
- It was an immediate huge success and obviously inspired Townsend's
- interest in the mysticism which he'd developed two or three years earlier.
- He'd been discussing in interviews his devotion to Mether Baba for some time.
- Life Magazine said, "...for sheer power, invention and brilliance of
- performance TOMMY outstrips anything that has ever come out of a rock recording
- studio."
-
- It established Townsend as the greatest rock songwriter after Lennon and
- McCartney, and elevated Daltrey as the most important rock vocalist and stage
- performer. At live shows TOMMY sounded even better. Seeing the Who perform
- TOMMY on stage must have been the high point of rock for very many people.
- When they were good - they were overwhelming. During 1979 and 1980 the group
- toured America, Europe, and Britain with TOMMY, leaving a trail of mind-blown
- disbelieving Who converts in their wake. They also played it in the major
- European opera houses, at the London Coliseum, and finally, the New York Met.
- They were now the biggest box office draw on both sides of the Atlantic.
-
- The extent of the success of TOMMY surprised even the Who. The post-TOMMY
- Who had finally reached the position of the DEFINITIVE rock band. The Melody
- Maker summed it up declaring, "Surely the Who are now the group against which
- all others are to be judged." Their concerts sold out twenty times over. The
- San Francisco Chronicle claimed the show, "Absolutely staggering in its
- emotional and musical power." Townsend said later, "We went from the
- ridiculous to the sublime - being told we were musical geniuses when really we
- were just a bunch of scumbags."
-
- In 1970 to counter TOMMY-hysteria they released an album of a live
- concert, LIVE AT LEEDS, still regarded as the best intelligent heavy metal
- album ever. In June of 1971 came the phenomenal WON'T GET FOOLED AGAIN, almost
- a 70's version of MY GENERATION. The first intelligent use of synthesizer in
- rock. It reached no. 15 in the States, and no. 9 in Britain.
-
- The next album, WHO'S NEXT, their first "polished" studio album, went gold
- in six weeks in the U.S. reaching no. 4. The Who had opened London's new
- Rainbow Theater and were soon back for a posher do when a star-studded cast
- performed TOMMY in a version scored for the London Symphony Orchestra and
- Chamber Choir (The Royal Albert Hall refused it as 'unsavory').
-
- JOIN TOGETHER was released in June 1972 reaching no. 9 in the UK and 17 in
- the States, and the long-awaited concept album QUADROPHENIA, about a young 60's
- mod was issued in November 1973. ODDS AND SODS, an album of previously
- unreleased material was issued in 1974.
-
- In 1975, Ken Russell's film version of TOMMY was lavishly premiered in
- London, New York, and L.A., and was a huge box office success. THE WHO BY
- NUMBERS album came out in October of 1975. The Who introduced lasers into the
- act in America. It was the first time they'd been used in rock. The band were
- now using 72 speakers and 14 tons of equipment.
-
- 1976 saw SQUEEZE BOX a lively foot-stomping number, brilliantly sung by
- Daltrey and with a banjo guitar solo from Townsend, it reached 16 in the U.S.
- charts and 10 in the UK. At their Charlton football ground concert, 70,000
- loyal fans braved five hours of rain to hear what the Guinness Book of Records
- measured as the loudest ever rock concert (76,000 watts producing 120
- decibels).
-
- The Who were inactive throughout 1977. Moon had beenliving full time in
- America and early in 1978 Townsend declared the Who wouldn't tour any more.
- WHO ARE YOU issued in the summer of 1978, was hailed (by some) as their best
- single for ten years. It's driven along by a strong riff which is a
- combination of guitar, bass, and synthesizer with a powerful chanting chorus.
- In the UK it reached 18, in the U.S. 14.
-
- The WHO ARE YOU album which followed became their biggest and fastest
- seller ever. Daltrey was much praised for the vocals.
-
- Moon had moved back to live in England but in the early hours of September
- 7th, 1978, after attending Paul McCartney's party for the screening of The
- Buddy Holly Story, Keith died from overdosing on a drug prescribed for
- alcoholic withdrawal symptoms.
-
- Keith Moon was unique and universally acclaimed as the greatest drummer in
- rock (as nearly all the tracks here prove). He could almost be called the lead
- drummer on many of the tracks. He not only kept the beat but played like an
- extra instrument. His ability to anticipate a gap in the music, jump in quick
- as a flash, fill it with a dozen sharp machine-gun 'shots', and get out cleanly
- in time for tea, was incredible. (Just listen to I CAN SEE FOR MILES, PINBALL
- WIZARD, THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT - any of them). He was also (in)famous as 'Moon
- the Loon', the witty, outrageous, lovable, eccentric of rock. Master
- practical-joker and hotel-wrecker par-excellence. He was genuinely funny and
- one of the most-liked individuals in the music business.
-
- For a time it looked like the end of the Who. However, the other three
- eventually decided that Keith wouldn't have wanted that and resolved to carry
- on and even go back on the road. Old friend and ex-Faces drummer Kenney Jones
- joined the band and proved himself at their first concert at London's Rainbow
- Theater.
-
- They played the huge Wembley stadium to 77,000. A major tour of the
- States followed starting in Detroit. The Who were back on the road and did
- several more major concerts in Europe and the States. The film version of
- QUADROPHENIA was premiered in 1979, very timely for the mod revival. As
- Newsweek noted, "...a damn good movie," and a huge box-office success in
- Britain . About the same time THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT, a documentary film on the
- band came out.
-
- The first single with Jones as drummer YOU BETTER YOU BET was released in
- February 1981 and the album from which it came FACE DANCES, a month later.
- Both went to no. 1 in Billboard's rock charts and the single to no. 9 in the
- British charts. The album was beaten into the no. 2 spot in Britain by ADAM
- ANT who sold just nine copies more.
-
- The last album the Who released was IT'S HARD. They played their farewell
- concert in Toronto at the end of 1982. No guitars were smashed at the end.
- They reformed to play four numbers for the Live Aid concert in 1985. In
- February 1988 the British Phonographic Industry presented the Who with a
- special Lifetime Achievement award for their contribution to rock music and in
- March this album WHO'S BETTER WHO'S BEST was released. JIM REEVES, and ADAM
- ANT permitting, it deserves to go to no. 1.
-
- _ _ _____________________________________________________________________
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- (U) |=====================================================================
- .ooM |1989 cDc communications by The Pusher. 09/30/89-#119
- \_______/|All Rights Pissed Away.
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