Categories: ListThe Who

The Who – 30 Greatest songs – a list from Uncut Magazine Oct. 2009 (videos & Audio)

It’s Pete Townshend’s 68th birthday tomorrow.. & in addition to our upcoming calendar post .. here is a great list.

From the Oct.2009 edition of Uncut Magazine. Videos & pictures are included at top 15…

All quotations are from Uncut’s article.

30. Shakin’ All Over
29. Boris The Spider
28. Heaven And Hell
27. Sparks
26. Guitar And Pen
25. I’m One
24. Happy Jack
23. Magic Bus
22. Young Man Blues
21. Tea And Theatre

20. Pinball Wizard
19. Who Are You
18. Anyway Anyhow Anywhere
17. So Sad About Us
16. 5.15

15. The Kids Are Alright

14. See Me, Feel Me

13. Bargain

12. Blue, Red And Grey

11. Pictures of Lily

10. I Can’t Explain

Released as a single January 1965. Highest UK chart position 8. Highest US chart position 93. The perky 7″ under The Who name. The original demo was under a minute and a half long…

9. A Quick One While He’s Away

Identified as a mini-opera by townshend, the dynamic, nine-minute, six-section medley includes “a cappella” harmonizing,  a tantalizing snippet from “Ivor The Engine Driver” and a soaring “You Are Forgiven”.

8. Behind Blue Eyes

“No one knows what it’s like to be the bad man…” Angsty soul-searching from townshend. On a low after the Lifehouse project collapsed, this rises from ballad to tumultuous rock anthem, superbly delivered by Daltrey.

7. I’m A Boy

Cheerful mod pop, this was the first Who song produced by co-manager Kit Lambert, and initially earmarked for Townshend’s unreleased opera, Quads.

6. Baba O’Riley

Named after both Townshend’s guru Meher Baba and composer Terry O’Riley, this became the second who song to be picked up by the CSI franchise (for the NY setting). Originally intended for Lifehouse, where it went by the title “Teenage Wasteland”.

5. Love, Reign O’er Me

The epic closing track on Quadrophenia, with Daltrey in full-on rock god mode. It’s title inspired a 2007 movie, “Reign Over Me”, starring Adam Sandler, for which Pearl Jam recorded a cover version of the song.

4. Substitute

Rumored to be Townshend’s response to the Stones’ “Satisfaction”, a firm fan favorite “about nothing”, and later covered by the Ramones, Sex Pistols & Blur.

3. I Can See For Miles

Here, Townshend brilliantly balanced both the swaggering power pop of the band’s early sound with more recent psych influences

2. Won’t Get fooled Again

An eight-minute statement of defiance, with Townshend disgust that “the new boss” is the “same as the old boss”, offset by a surprisingly positive conclusion – “to pick up my guitar and play, just like yesterday…” Oh, and it also features rock’s most spine-tingling scream.

1. My Generation

Could It Be Anything else? More than just The Who’s own statement of rebellion, “My Generation” became a rallying cry fro disaffected teenage youth. And the song wasn’t time-locked in the 60’s – the aggressive backing, Daltrey’s snarled vocals and the key lyric, “I hope I die before I get old”, prefigured punk by a decade. And as for that stutter….

-Egil

Egil

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