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Showing posts with label Bob Ludwig Remasters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Ludwig Remasters. Show all posts

Tuesday 11 October 2022

"Who Are You" by THE WHO – August 1978 UK Eight LP on Polydor Records (MCA Records in the USA) featuring Pete Townshend, Roger Daltrey, John Entwistle and Keith Moon with Guests Rod Argent, Andy Fairweather-Low, Michael and Billy Nichols, String Arrangements by Ted Astley with Production by Glyn Johns and Jon Astley (November 1996 UK Polydor 'Expanded Edition' CD Reissue with Five Bonus Tracks and Jon Astley/Bob Ludwig Remixes/Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




 
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"...Guitar And Pen..."
 
Released October 1975 around the world, their seventh album "The Who By Numbers" had done respectable business on the UK and US LP charts too – No. 7 and No. 8. But in 1978 – a full three years on - and with British Punk and New Wave in the absolute full-throws of destroying all in its inventive three-minute path – The Who were beginning to seem like the dinosaurs the Young Turks were all snarling about. Even Townshend himself was saying it in press interviews.
 
Unfortunately – and with my lifelong affection for the band undiminished even an iota – you cannot call much of "Who Are You" anything other than just so-so. Outside of the killer title track and a few other moments of melody, I thought it was half-assed and coming three long years after 1975's "...By Numbers" - felt like critics were being fueled with and not starved of go-go juice. "Only frustration and overload..." Townshend sang on the disturbingly good outtake "No Road Romance".
 
But never underestimate the power of a killer riff and a single that distills it – July 1978 giving fans and lapsed buyers the cool of an edited "Who Are You" on 45-single three months before its parent LP arrived on Polydor Records in the UK and MCA Stateside. And the album was a huge hit. It reached No. 6 in the UK and a staggering No. 2 in the USA – beating its predecessor by a considerable country mile. Musically I can vividly recall thinking then that both "The Who By Numbers" and "Who Are You" were good-ish Who LPs – not great ones – the days of "Who's Next" and "Quadrophenia" already gone.
 
Which brings us to this...the November 1996 'Expanded Edition' single CD Remaster of "Who Are You". I cannot say that time has been kind to the 'oo' on this genuinely awkward outing - its lacklustre Side 1 stuff sticking out like a sore thumb and those strings on two tracks that feel intrusive and horribly out of touch. You have to worry when Entwistle produces the only ‘other’ real riffage moment of brilliance in "Trick Of The Light" and not Townshend.
 
But, this CD reissue is bolstered up with five Previously Unreleased goodies worthy of the moniker Bonus. A plus seventy-minutes playing time too. Guitar and Pen triumphant - let's get back to that Soho doorway; get up and walk away...
 
UK released 18 November 1996 - "Who Are You" by THE WHO on Polydor 533 845-2 (Barcode 731453384521) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Reissue and Remaster with Five Bonus Tracks that plays out as follows (70:59 minutes):
 
1. New Song [Side 1]
2. Had Enough
3. 905
4. Sister Disco
5. Music Must Change
6. Trick Of The Light [Side 2]
7. Guitar And Pen
8. Love Is Coming Down
9. Who Are You
Tracks 1 to 9 are the album "Who Are You" – released 18 August 1978 in the UK on Polydor Records WHOD 5004 (Polydor 2490 147) and 25 October 1975 in the USA on MCA Records MCA 3050. Produced by GLYN JOHNS and JON ASTLEY – it peaked at No. 6 and No.28 in the UK and US LP charts. Tracks 1, 4, 5 7, 8 and 9 written by Pete Townshend with Tracks 2, 3 and 6 by John Entwistle
 
THE WHO were:
Roger Daltrey on Lead Vocals
Pete Townshend on All Guitars, Keyboards, Lead and Shared Vocals
John Entwistle on Bass, Synths and Vocals (Synth and Lead Vocals on "905", Horns on "Had Enough" and "Music Must Change")
Keith Moon on Drums and Percussion
 
Guests:
Rod Argent of Argent on Keyboards – Synth on "Had Enough", "Guitar And Pen" and Piano on "Who Are You"
Andy Fairweather-Low [ex Amen Corner] and Billy Nichols on Backing Vocals Ted Astley - String Arrangements on "Had Enough" and "Love Is Coming Down"
 
BONUS TRACKS (all PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED):
10. No Road Romance (Demo), 5:05 minutes
11. Empty Glass (Rough Mix), 6:23 minutes
12. Guitar And Pen (Olympic ’78 Mix), 6:00 minutes
13. Love Is Coming Down (Work-In-Progress Mix), 4:06 minutes
14. Who Are You (Lost Verse Mix), 6:21 minutes
 
The 24-page booklet is substantial, packed with period photos of the band in studio and live modes - including a center spread shot of rows of people behind each band member that was going to be the front sleeve, but abandoned for the wires and equipment photo. Bolstering the text are a lot of great power live shots and new MATT RESNICOFF liner notes that not only outline the band's troubled history by 1978 (beloved drummer Keith Moon passing from drugs aged only 30 - even seeming to know his end was nigh by citing his out-of-control behavior as no longer being a laughing matter) - but they go into tremendously helpful track-by-track details. And yet despite his best efforts to convince me that much of the LP is a misunderstood gazelle – even a friendly re-listen does not hold that up at all (critics at the time weren't exactly bowled over by it either).
 
The tapes (and reissue) were prepared by long-time Who-associates and archivists JON ASTLEY and ANDY MacPHERSON with Remasters done by the legendary BOB LUDWIG and as I said earlier, this is a full WHO sound and the CD properly rocks because of it. I wish the actual album did, but to the music anyway...
 
"New Song" comes screaming out of your speakers – all big-daddy riffs pumped up underneath by synths. Coming on very quickly as a lyrical parody on the public's need to hear the same old riffage just being done with different words (everyone wants to cheer it). "New Song" is angry and cynical and I can't help thinking that if it had had better lyrics about something else – it wouldn't have the awful feeling of a band taking the piss out of itself. Strings and Disco Synth Beats fill up "Had Enough", but again it just feels wrong to me – the strings hamming it something awful. Recorded in March 1978 at St. John's Wood, "905" is the second of three Entwistle songs ("Had Enough" was the first) and it would have opened the album on a winner. In his usual heavy-strings attack, it's hard to know what's lead electric guitar or his Bass – either way it is one of the better tracks on Side 1. "Sister Disco" has always been a hateful tune to me, but the version we get of "Music Must Change" is a new mix with different guitar parts than that which first appeared on the 1978 MCA LP. The Audio is spectacular – as are Daltrey's vocals – snarling out wild stallion lyrics.
 
Side 2 opens with the fantastic "Trick Of The Light" where apparently all that guitar riffage is not a guitar at all but his Atlantic Bass strings hammered out like a lead guitarist. Rod Argent steps in to help Pete Townshend on the very Quadrophenia feeling "Guitar And Pen" – both giving it layer after layer of keyboards over Pete’s biting guitar stabs. For me, it's always been a highlight on the album. The lonely "Love Is Coming Down" comes in two forms – the recording done in October 1977 with its heavy strings arrangement added in December – far better is the Work-In-Progress Mix which strips it back to a guide vocal with different piano and Bass parts. The LP finally delivers a bona fide classic in the title track – the stunning and musically complex "Who Are You" – quite possibly in the top five of everyone's fave raver by the band - six-minutes and seventeen seconds of why people love THE WHO to distraction.
 
And here for me lies the weird thing about the CD reissue of "Who Are You" - it's Five Previously Unreleased Tracks feel like a better album that the released deal! 
 
"No Road Romance" is first - an almost finished album outtake that was considered superfluous to requirements at the time - but I absolutely love it. Sporting a huge array of melody breaks, backing vocals and astute lyrics, Townshend's lead vocal has an urgency to it that makes much of the released album stuff feel staged. I could imagine Daltrey would have eaten this alive had it been put on the record in finished form.
 
Next is a gem - recorded in April 1978 and originally called "Choirboy" - we get a Rough Mix of his second solo LP's beloved title track "Empty Glass" and again it's ALIVE! Both Entwistle and Moon play on it and if you're unconvinced by the 'Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Drummer Ever' moniker so easily lumped onto Keith Moon - then check out his work here! Because he rocks - you can actually here it - Moony playing a blinder. Entwistle too does Bass Harmonics as the tune begins and again, you can really hear both his huge signature sound allied with what he brought to the Who dance, innovation not flattened or buried by mixing. Great stuff... 

The last three are more alive in my books in all cases than their finished versions - frenzied guitar parts - "Love Is Coming Down" stripped of those intrusive strings - that spiky unheard second verse in "Who Are You" that was re-written by Townshend (both work). Now here's the innards of a great band - brilliant...

I hate to dis a Who LP, but 1978's "Who Are You" was a serious regular sell-in at Reckless Records in Berwick Street for decades on end when I worked there - not something fans fretted over when they needed a few bob or a swap. But the kick-ass audio, the first-rate considered presentation and those five tag-on Bonuses have moved it up from three to four stars. And I'll take that kind of upgrade on a reissue CD any day of the week...

Tuesday 3 May 2022

"Peel Slowly And See" by THE VELVET UNDERGROUND – All Four of Their Studio Albums - "The Velvet Underground And Nico" (1967), "White Light/White Heat" (1968), "The Velvet Underground" (1969) and "Loaded" (1970) - featuring Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison, Maureen 'Mo' Tucker, Nico and Doug Yule (October 1995 UK Polydor/Chronicles 5CD Compilation Long Box Set (6" x 12") with 74 Remastered Tracks (25 Previously Unreleased) and an 88-Page Booklet - Bob Ludwig, Dan Hersch, Dan Kincaid and Joseph M. Palmaccio Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




 
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"...Falling In And Out of Grace..."
 
I remember when this re-peelable 5CD brute used to turn up in second-hand record shops with alarming regularity - always with its sticker curled or plain knackered (truly a sin). But in May 2022, maybe now not so much. And speaking of much to linger on (pale blue eyes anyone as one of the most gorgeous songs ever written, or certainly by Lou Reed anyway) - let's get to the details and what Candy says (she's always sayin' sumthin' that Candy)...
 
UK released October 1995 - "Peel Slowly And See" by THE VELVET UNDERGROUND on Polydor/Chronicles 527 887-2 (Barcode 731452788726) is a 5CD Long Box Set (6" x 12") of 74 Remastered Tracks (25 Previously Unreleased). It comes with a Re-Peelable Banana Sticker on the front lid (mimicking their debut album of 1967), an 88-page illustrated booklet with essays, rare photos, repro'd memorabilia and text involvement from all members of the band - Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison, Maureen Tucker, Nico and Doug Yule. It plays out as follows: 
 
CD1 "The Velvet Underground Demo Tape, July 1965" (78:12 minutes):
1. Venus In Furs (Demo, 15:33 minutes) 
2. Prominent Men (Demo, 4:53 minutes)
3. Heroin (Demo, 13:34 minutes)
4. I'm Waiting For The Man (9:50 minutes)
5. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams (15:50 minutes) 
6. Tomorrow's Parties (18:26 minutes)
Lou Reed, John Cale and Sterling Morrison - recorded live at John Cale's Ludlow Street loft apartment in Mono - all Previously Unreleased
 
CD2: "The Velvet Underground And Nico" (78:06 minutes):
1. All Tomorrow's Parties (Mono Single Version) 
July 1966 US Debut 45-single on Verve VK-10422 in Mono, A-side 
 
2. Sunday Morning [Side 1]
3. I'm Waiting For The Man 
4. Femme Fatale 
5. Venus In Furs 
6. Run Run Run 
7. All Tomorrow's Parties 
8. Heroin 
9. There She Goes Again 
10. I'll Be Your Mirror 
11. The Black Angel's Death Song 
12. European Son
Tracks 2 to 12 are their debut album "The Velvet Underground And Nico" - released March 1967 in the USA on Verve V-5008 (Mono) and V6-5008 (Stereo) - November 1967 in the UK on Verve SVLP 9184 - the STEREO MIX is used here
NOTES: 
The MONO MIX is available on the June 2002 Deluxe Edition reissue, CD2. 
NICO sings lead vocals on "Femme Fatale", "All Tomorrow's Parties" and "I'll Be Your Mirror" - Lou Reed on all others
 
13. Melody Laughter (Live, 10:43 minutes)
Recorded 4 November 1966 at the Valleydale Ballroom, Columbus, Ohio and is edited down from a 30-minute performance - Previously Unreleased
 
14. It Was A Pleasure Then (8:02 minutes)
15. Chelsea Girls (7:24 minutes)
Tracks 14 to 15 are from "Nico: Chelsea Girl"- the solo debut album by NICO released October 1967 on Verve V6-5032 (Stereo) and finally released in the UK in September 1971 on MGM Select 2353 025 (Stereo) 
 
CD3: "White Light/White Heat" (74:15 minutes):
1. There Is No Reason (Demo, 2:12 minutes)
2. Sheltered Life (Demo, 2:52 minutes)
3. It's All Right (The Way That You Live) (Demo, 2:48 minutes)
4. I'm Not too Sorry (Now That You're Gone) (Demo, 2:17 minutes)
5. Here She Comes Now (Demo, 2:46 minutes)
Tracks 1 to 5 are The Velvet Underground Demo Acetate, recorded early 1967 in Mono at John Cale's Ludlow Street loft apartment in Manhattan, NYC - Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison and Maureen 'Mo' Tucker - all 5 tracks Previously Unreleased 
 
6. Guess I'm Falling In Love (Live, 4:40 minutes)
7. Booker T. (Live, 6:30 minutes)
Tracks 6 and 7 recorded live April 1967 at the Gymnasium, NYC - Previously Unreleased 
 
8. White Light/White Heat [Side 1]
9. The Gift 
10. Lady Godiva's Operation 
11. Here She Comes Now [Side 2]
12. I Heard Her Call My Name 
13. Sister Ray 
Tracks 8 to 13 are their second studio album "White Light/White Heat" - released January 1968 in the USA on Verve V-5046 (Mono) and V6-5046 (Stereo) - the STEREO MIX is used here
 
14. Stephanie Says (2:49 minutes)
15. Temptation Inside Your Heart (2:30 minutes) 
Tracks 14 and 15 are from the post compilation album "VU" - released February 1985 on Verve 823 721-2 – Previously Unreleased at the time
 
16. Hey Mr. Rain (Version One) 
Track 16 take from the post compilation album "Another View" - released July 1986 on Verve 829 405-2 - Previously Unreleased at the time
 
CD4: "The Velvet Underground" (75:41 minutes)
1. What Goes On (Live, 5:34 minutes)
Track 1 recorded live 2 October 1968 at La Cave, Cleveland, Ohio, Previously Unreleased
 
2. Candy Says [Side 1]
3. What Goes On
4. Some Kinda Love
5. Pale Blue Eyes
6. Jesus
7. Beginning To See The Light [Side 2]
8. I'm Set Free
9. That's The Story Of My Life
10. The Murder Mystery
11. After Hours
Tracks 2 to 11 are their third studio album "The Velvet Underground" - released March 1969 in the USA on MGM Records SE-4617 and April 1969 on MGM Records CS 8108 in STEREO (reissued November 1971 in the UK on MGM Select 2353 022 with different artwork). The album was recorded Nov/Dec 1968 at the T.T.G. Studios in Hollywood, California. 
 
NOTE: The 1995 "Peel Slowly And See" 5CD Box Set Version of their third studio album "The Velvet Underground" is known as the Closet Mix - a mix that was ok'd by Lou Reed on original American LPs and is therefore restored as such here. This was done for the 1995 box because mixes from the 80ts onward - including even the 45th Anniversary CD from 2014 - all contain what's become known as the Val Valentin Mix which upped the brightness of many instruments, making the album more poppy. I personally prefer the quieter (even more sedate) Closet Mix. See separate review for The Val Valentin Mix...
 
12. Foggy Notion
13. I Can't Stand It
14. I'm Sticking With You 
15. One Of These Days 
16. Lisa Says 
Tracks 12 to 16 are from the post compilation album "VU" - released February 1985 on Verve 823 721-2 – Previously Unreleased at the time (October 1969 recordings). "I Can't Stand It" and "Lisa Says" ended up being re-recorded for Lou Reed's debut solo album "Lou Reed" issued June 1972 in the USA on RCA Victor LSP-4701. 
 
17. It's Just Too Much (Live) - recorded 28 Oct 1969 at The End of Cole Ave., Dallas Texas - Previously Unreleased
 
18. Countess From Hong Kong (Demo) - recorded late 1969, Previously Unreleased
 
CD5: "Loaded" (76:24 minutes): 
1. Who Loves The Sun [Side 1]
2. Sweet Jane [Previously Unreleased Full Length Version, 4:06 minutes]
3. Rock And Roll 
4. Cool It Down
5. New Age [Previously Unreleased Full Length Version, 5:07 minutes]
6. Head Held High 
7. Lonesome Cowboy Bill
8. I Found A Reason 
9. Train Round The Bend 
10. Oh Sweet Nuthin'  
Tracks 1 to 10 are their 3rd studio album "Loaded" - released September 1970 in the USA on Cotillion SD 9034 and April 1971 in the UK on Atlantic 2400 111. Produced by GEOFFREY HASLAM, SHEL KAGAN and THE VELVET UNDERGROUND – the album didn't chart in either country. 
 
11. Satellite Of Love 
12. Walk And Talk 
13. Oh Gin 
14. Sad Song 
15. Ocean 
16. Ride Into The Sun 
Tracks 11 to 16 and Track 19 are "Loaded" outtakes. "Satellite Of Love" would be used on his second solo LP "Transformer" in 1972, "Sad Song" would be revisited with orchestration on his third solo album "Berlin" in 1973 while "Ocean" and "Ride Into The Sun" would be re-worked for the "Lou Reed" debut solo LP (also in 1972).
 
17. Some Kinda Love (Live) 
18. I'll Be Your Mirror (Live)
Tracks 17 and 18 recorded live 23 August 1970 at Max's Kansas City, New York. 
Track 17 is Previously Unreleased
Track 18 first appeared May 1972 on the US LP "Live At Max's Kansas City" on Cotillion SD 9500   
 
19. I Love You (see Tracks 11 to 16)
 
Quite apart from the gimmicky and hard-to-keep-from-getting-knackered Banana Peel sticker (aping their famous Andy Warhol artwork debut) - the first thing that hits you is the 88-page booklet (6" x 12") - a seriously in-depth and beautifully annotated work of art in itself. Produced by BARRY LEVINSON, Essay by DAVID FRICKE and Remasters from a team of four Universal-related Audio Engineers - Bob Ludwig, Dan Hersch, Dan Kincaid and Joseph M. Palmaccio - all names known to collectors - it's an impressive package for damn sure. There's posters, flyers, gig adverts, press reviews and all five of the jewel cases are adorned not with the LP artwork but Mono and Stereo master-tape boxes. Page 55 has a gig poster from December 1969 with Detroit's MC5 as the support act - or Page 65 with its beautiful psych typeset poster for the Hippodrome with Clover and Maya in tow. The card that advertises 'the world's first mod wedding happening' with 'girl-of-the-year' Nico and Andy Warhol for The Carnaby Street Fun Festival. The infamous toilet in Warhol's New York studio hang...and on it goes to credit pages at the end. 
 
It's astonishing (even in 2022) to think that the Velvets never charted any of their four LPs - so by all accounts were an abysmal chart failure. Yet their influence and ethos stretches its tentacles out like a beast. When I worked at Reckless Records in Berwick Street, Soho, London - there was only one album we kept over 100 copies of in new and sealed reissue form - "The Velvet Underground And Nico" - their mind blowing debut. Copies of the US original with the Peelable Banana sleeve still relatively intact go on auction sites for ludicrous sums - The Velvet Underground the very epitome of what cult means. 
 
In truth I cannot abide much of "White Light/White Heat" with its sonic onslaught - but at least the Remaster gives the seriously rough recording the audio bombast its always needed. But I adore the third platter "The Velvet Underground" - so skipping a needless live version of "What Goes On" - I play Tracks 2 to 19 all the way through - hell I even suffer the nine-minute speaker-to-speaker Lou Reed/Doug Yule consciousness reading in "The Murder Mystery". And killer tracks like "Foggy Notion" should have been on an official Velvets LP and not just ended up as a Punk-sounding Sally May curiosity on a post split-up compilation from 1985.      
 
I have to be truthful and say that much of the vaunted Previously Unreleased material is either badly recorded or when it comes to the serious full-on grunge and noise of the "White Light/White Heat" period - excuses for pig outs that are largely unlistenable. But then I go to the five "Loaded" outtakes on Disc 4 and I can't get enough. Love those extended versions of "Sweet Jane" and "New Age" on the seriously underrated "Loaded" album from 1970. "Rock And Roll" too - what a great tune.

The Velvet Underground were and have always been an acquired taste - part genius - part smoke and mirrors - but man those foggy notions put to tunes slaughter me still. Venus In Furs, Shiny Leather, Lisa says, and she would know...

Tuesday 8 June 2021

"The Who By Numbers" by THE WHO – October 1975 UK LP on Polydor Records (MCA Records in the USA) featuring Pete Townshend, Roger Daltrey, John Entwistle and Keith Moon with Nicky Hopkins guesting on Piano (December 1996 UK Polydor 'Expanded Edition' CD Reissue and Remaster with Three Bonus Tracks - Jon Astley/Bob Ludwig Remixes/Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...




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CAPT. FANTASTIC - 1975

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"...Control Myself..."

"No easy way to be free – I'm a soldier at 63 – off to the civil war... " - Daltrey snarled on "Slip Kid". Further into the LP "Success Story" echoes that weariness again, "This used to be fun..."

Ten years together burning down that Rock and Roll road, in 1975 The Who were battling internal demons that threatened to rip them apart. Principal songwriter and spiritual soldier Pete Townshend (turning 30) was clearly questioning where they fit in after a disconcerting American Tour that he felt had reduced them to an oldies act where fans only wanted what had gone before and not what was new – break yer guitar and give us a jump – they demanded. 

PT didn't feel inclined any more to oblige. With Punk whiffing at their heels (they even prophetically cite Punks in the lyrics to "They Are All In Love") - were The Who the greatest R&R band ever as so many had claimed - or were they fast becoming a cliché that could no longer be sustained? Townshend needed to answer all these questions and more and much of that turmoil and searching came out in this 'maturely' worded LP.

Put down at Shepperton Sound Stage using Ronnie Lane's Mobile in April and May 1975 - The Who's seventh album is certainly a professionally recorded affair (this CD sounds so damn good). But I recall that after the mighty "Quadrophenia" double-LP-splurge of 1973 on Track Records – "The Who By Numbers" had huge boots to fill – and many felt this single LP with its rather naff Entwistle-designed join-the-dots numbered sleeve barely squeezed into the left foot never mind both plates of meat.

But as with so much around them, time has been kinder to the 'oo' and this 1996 'Expanded Edition' CD Remaster of "...By Numbers" is a wee belter to me – not a masterpiece - but still an album full of songs rather than just bluster and riffage. "I'm dreaming of the day I can share the world... " Townshend channeled on "Dreaming From The Waist" (originally called "Control Myself"). Well, let's wrestle back some of that control and share it again...

UK released December 1996 - "The Who By Numbers" by THE WHO on Polydor 533 844-2 (Barcode 731453384422) is an 'Expanded Edition' CD Reissue and Remaster with Three Bonus Tracks that plays out as follows (49:51 minutes): 

1. Slip Kid [Side 1]
2. However Much I Booze 
3. Squeeze Box
4. Dreaming From The Waist 
5. Imagine A Man 
6. Success Story [Side 2]
7. They Are All In Love 
8. Blue Red And Grey 
9. How Many Friends 
10. In A Hand Or A Face 
Tracks 1 to 10 are the album "The Who By Numbers" – released 18 October 1975 in the UK on Polydor Records 2490 129 and 25 October 1975 in the USA on MCA Records MCA 2161. Produced by GLYN JOHNS – it peaked at No. 7 and No. 8 in the UK and US LP charts. 

Roger Daltrey on Lead Vocals, Pete Townshend on All Guitars, Keyboards, Lead and Shared Vocals, John Entwistle on Bass and Vocals (Brass and Arrangements on "Blue, Red And Grey"), Keith Moon on Drums with Pianist Nicky Hopkins guesting on "They Are All In Love".  

BONUS TRACKS:
11. Squeeze Box (Live) – PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED 
12. Behind Blue Eyes (Live) – PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED 
13. Dreaming From The Waist (Live)
Tracks 11, 12 and 13 recorded live at Swansea Football Ground on 12 June 1976 – Track 13 first issued June 1994 and only available on the 4CD Box Set "Thirty Years Of Maximum R&B"

The poster to THE WHO 'Put The Boot In' 1976 UK Tour with The Sensational Alex Harvey Band, Little Feat, Outlaws and Streetwalkers on the same bill (what a line-up) fills Page 23 of the 24-page booklet. It's there because it lists the Swansea Football Ground gig of 12 June 1976 – the date for the two Previously Unreleased Live Tracks. But I’m disappointed to once again not see the lyrics in a reissue of this most literate of Who albums. All that searching and life observation and social commentary is absent and I really think if there is ever a 2CD Deluxe Edition of this album, the brilliant and highly literate lyrics should be present. 

What you do get is new JOHN SWENSON liner notes and classy black and white live shots of the band on their 1975 and 1975 tours. Swenson also gives indepth insights into each and every song and along with Townshend and Entwistle recollections of old, all of it gives you a fuller picture of an album many have written off over the years. The tapes (and reissue) were prepared by long-time Who-associates and archivists JON ASTLEY and ANDY MacPHERSON with Remasters done by the legendary BOB LUDWIG and as I said earlier, this is full WHO sound and the CD properly rocks because of it. To the music... 

"Slip Kid" kicks open proceedings strongly, Daltrey's voice full of ballsy maturity as he snarls out words about a second-generation lad who already feels he's faking it. 13 going on 63 – well, is he going to die inside and out before he gets old? But best of all is that fabulous guitar-solo towards the end - the remaster lifting it up - PT's playing inspired and not just impressive (he never gets enough credit for what a good player he is). Things darken on the PT-sung "However Much I Booze" – our man having been on a bender – shakily picking through his thoughts the morning after – at the least the one he can remember. The strummed acoustics combined with a jaunty guitar and drums backbeat gives it an almost upbeat Country-Rock lilt, like a ditty, but with lyrics that namecheck Brandy and no way out and a destiny he can’t seem to prevent, it has a walls-closing-in dark heart. 

By immediate contrast, the Daddy-never-sleeps-at-night saucy banjo-soloing "Squeeze Box" is great fun and a typically cool WHO song. Issued 9 January 1976 in the UK, Polydor 2121 275 featured the superb "Success Story" on the flipside. The British 45 gave them a No. 10 chart hit whilst it had been issued November 1975 in the USA on MCA Records MCA-40475 in an album-artwork picture sleeve that attained a No. 16 chart position. In some ways it’s decidedly odd that such a ‘fun’ tune is associated with an album mired in such personal turmoil. Both "Dreaming From The Waist" and the Side 1 finisher "Imagine A Man" are up there in my Who books – especially the strangely beautiful acoustic-led "Imagine A Man" where Roger Daltrey's expressive voice elevates PT's poetic lyrics (gorgeous clarity too).

A Rock and Roll singer is on television giving up his music for religion in "Success Story" - a tune I always thought a winner. Ace sessionman Nicky Hopkins lends his distinctive and lovely piano playing to "They Are All In Love" - a sort of kids-are-alright homage from Townshend to the young. And once again on "Success Story" he lambastes his musical output as 'recycling trash' (a tad unfair), while the recrimination goes even further on the core-deep "How Many Friends" - a song so personal it actually makes for affection and uncomfortable listening at one and the same time. Out comes the George Fornby Ukulele for the quietly lovely "Blue, Red And Grey" - Bassist Entwistle stepping up the plate with truly gorgeous Silver Brass fills (he arranged them too). The LP ends with the riffage of "In A Hand Or A Face" - a reflection on society's inequalities - going round and round - one man sipping champagne while another goes through your dustbin looking for food. 

We get to hear Keith Moon work the crowd for the unreleased live cut of "Squeeze Box" (introduces the song) - Townshend turning it into a guitar-driven beast (no banjo in sight). In fact the last minute of it is a witty intro to "Behind Blue Eyes" (Keith Moon left the stage) - and it's really good. My love is vengeance that is never free - Daltrey and Entwistle holding it intact as Pete strums that "Who's Next" gem. And the live cut of the LP’s "Dreaming From The Waist" turns into a barnstormer – a genuinely great addition and not surprising it was included on the 30 Years Box set. 

The more I rehear this 1975 WHO album, the more I realize I dismissed it all too easily back in the day. "Imagine a man tied up in life...a road so long...you will see the end..." I can’t imagine a world where my love of The Who will ever diminish and this cool CD only reaffirms that... 

INDEX - Entries and Artist Posts in Alphabetical Order