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They just don't make 'em like this anymore......


Beedster
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13 minutes ago, Cosmo Valdemar said:

Empty Glass is a fantastic album, although I actually prefer the earlier Who version - well, Pete's demo with Moon and Entwistle overdubs.

 

 

 

 

Who Are You is such a great, if occasionally flawed, album 👍

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57 minutes ago, Cosmo Valdemar said:

Empty Glass is a fantastic album, although I actually prefer the earlier Who version - well, Pete's demo with Moon and Entwistle overdubs.

 

 

 

 

Great stuff! I’ll have a listen to that - I hadn’t realised Townsend had done any versions previously with the band…

 

 

 

43 minutes ago, Beedster said:

 

Who Are You is such a great, if occasionally flawed, album 👍

 

That was the album I bought with my first wages from my first proper Saturday job! Worked in the storeroom at the local Woolies (was too young to be on the shop floor) and at the end of the shift promptly spent most of my hard-earned on that LP. Sat on the bus going home feeling like king of the world. I was dying to get it out of the bag, but didn’t have the courage to do so, in case, a. it looked too flash, or b. someone nicked it! The feeling of coming of age independence was soon shattered when I got home for my tea and had to explain why I’d spent most of my wages on an LP!

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On 23/11/2024 at 19:56, Beedster said:

I'm learning a Who set at the moment. This, not one of their greatest or most recognised, takes my breath away every time I watch it. Mad, odd, loud, visceral (in places), and strangely beautiful, although not in a conventional sense :) 

 

 

 

Wow - absolutely sublime; a new one on me, had to watch it twice. :i-m_so_happy:  The  Who a full on rock band by then I guess, but what a combination of that sheer visceral power with Townsend's quirky Mod - and for me quintessentially English - song writing.

Townsend the best rhythm guitarist ever bar none; he never rated himself as a lead guitarist and I'm sure channelled much of his frustration with that into pure angst driven energy.

Roger Daltrey's contribution often overlooked , but I think it was around this time that he hit his true form in the band, and for me no other singer could really do justice to the emotive and often complex vocals in Townshend's songs.

And yes; the most distinctive and innovative virtuoso rhythm section ever.    Interesting to see that JE left the pickup cover of his P bass on, given his very physical stye of playing; personally it's the first thing I take off.

 

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33 minutes ago, Shaggy said:

 

Wow - absolutely sublime; a new one on me, had to watch it twice. :i-m_so_happy:  The  Who a full on rock band by then I guess, but what a combination of that sheer visceral power with Townsend's quirky Mod - and for me quintessentially English - song writing.

Townsend the best rhythm guitarist ever bar none; he never rated himself as a lead guitarist and I'm sure channelled much of his frustration with that into pure angst driven energy.

Roger Daltrey's contribution often overlooked , but I think it was around this time that he hit his true form in the band, and for me no other singer could really do justice to the emotive and often complex vocals in Townshend's songs.

And yes; the most distinctive and innovative virtuoso rhythm section ever.    Interesting to see that JE left the pickup cover of his P bass on, given his very physical stye of playing; personally it's the first thing I take off.

 

 

Agree with all of that 👍

 

First thing I noticed was the PUP cover also. I wonder if - given the physicality of JE's playing - it simply reduced the chances of him damaging the PUP during a set. This would be kinda ironic given that the rest of the rhythm section were doing just the opposite at many gigs, but then JE was of a very different type to Moon and Townsend...... 🤔

 

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1 hour ago, Shaggy said:

 

  Interesting to see that JE left the pickup cover of his P bass on, given his very physical stye of playing; personally it's the first thing I take off.

 

He must have wanted it there as the bass in the video is Frankenstein, built from dead parts. It's actually a Jazz Bass cover. It didn't stay on for long though.

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Veering off topic somewhat but speaking of men of their time, is that The Hairy Cornflake at the beginning of the 'My Generation' clip? I only remember him from his 80s iteration but he looks a bit more aggressive there. As a London lad the only time I have been genuinely scared in a pub was in the Forest of Dene in about 1995. A few mates went down for a weekend and we went into a pub where, in my memory at least, everyone looked like that - almost as if they were still in black and white. They made sure we had all bought a drink but had not had time to take more than a sip or two before they told us to do one if we wanted to leave with legs intact. We assumed it was thier way of getting free beer so finishing someone else's drink / cigarette / food became known as 'doing a Dene' for a while. 

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52 minutes ago, Grooverjr said:

Veering off topic somewhat but speaking of men of their time, is that The Hairy Cornflake at the beginning of the 'My Generation' clip? I only remember him from his 80s iteration but he looks a bit more aggressive there. As a London lad the only time I have been genuinely scared in a pub was in the Forest of Dene in about 1995. A few mates went down for a weekend and we went into a pub where, in my memory at least, everyone looked like that - almost as if they were still in black and white. They made sure we had all bought a drink but had not had time to take more than a sip or two before they told us to do one if we wanted to leave with legs intact. We assumed it was thier way of getting free beer so finishing someone else's drink / cigarette / food became known as 'doing a Dene' for a while. 

Nothing changes much . They have always been a little strange down Coleford/Cinderford way . Its the Forest of Dean by the way . Spell it the wrong way and they would just as likely nail you to a tree and feed you to the wild boar . 😆

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