Regular readers of my Who posts on
Just Backdated, and there must be a few of you, will be aware that I have
contributed the liner notes to the box set of 7-inch vinyl Track singles that
is being released at the end of October. It is the third in the series, with
similar boxes of Brunswick (eight discs) and Reaction (five, including the Ready Steady Who EP) singles already
released and a fourth, the Polydor singles, yet to be scheduled. Mark Blake
wrote the notes in the Brunswick and Reaction boxes and Matt Kent is lined up
for the slightly more difficult task of writing about the later singles, of
which there are 15, the same as the Track box. I think I had the pick of the
bunch by writing about the Track records, though I’m probably not alone in
believing that The Who rarely put a foot wrong in the sixties.
Anyone assuming that
record companies reselling the same music again and again in different formats
is a practice that came in with CDs in the eighties is directed to page 210 of Electric Shock, Peter Doggett’s new and
first-rate history of popular music, which I will be reviewing on Just
Backdated in due course. At the start of the fifties, writes Peter, “many early
LPs were simply collections of previously released 78s, repackaged as a ‘gift’
to the artists’ fans… [and]… to explore the extended landscape of the
12-inch disc, they embarked on another round of creative marketing, by
adding a handful of additional tracks to their existing ten-inch albums and
presenting them as new product.”
So reselling the
same music again and again has been ongoing since the introduction of the
12-inch album and everyone is guilty, of course, not least The Who. Nowadays,
however, the practise has been upgraded to a degree, insofar as the music of
heritage acts is being repackaged in limited edition collectable sets, in many
cases facsimiles of earlier vinyl releases, hence the presentation boxes of Who
singles. They are, quite simply, nice things to own.
Well, my copy
arrived last Thursday and very nice it is too, a sturdy box in the same shade
of navy blue as the picture sleeve for ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’, slightly
lighter than the sleeve for the Tommy
EP. All the singles from ‘Pictures Of Lily’ to ‘5.15’ are present and correct,
including (to my surprise) the ‘See Me Feel Me’/’Overture’ single that was
released and withdrawn in October 1970 in favour of the EP that came out two
months later. Designer Richard Evans has paid scrupulous attention to detail, even
down to spelling John’s name wrongly (as Entwhistle) in the composer credit for
‘Doctor Doctor’ on the B-side of ‘Lily’, as it was on the original single. They
all have black Track labels barring ‘5.15’ which is silver, again like the
original, and have plain white sleeves except for the Tommy EP and ‘Won’t Get
Fooled Again’ which had a picture sleeve with a shot of the four lads from the
same David Montgomery photo session as the well known pic that appears here on the front of the
booklet.
And they sound
fantastic! Even on my budget record player, the sound of The Who at their very
best comes zinging out of the tiny speakers at either side and, of course,
seriously rattles the brain on cans. I played most of them yesterday
afternoon, hoping that the far-from-new needle wouldn’t harm them, and –
perhaps inevitably – pride of place goes to ‘I Can See For Miles’, with
‘Pinball’ and ‘Fooled Again’ running The Who’s 1967 masterpiece a close second
and third. In a note at the back of the booklet, our attention is drawn to the
fact that Jon Astley remastered the tracks from the original mixes at
half-speed “in the way that early Motown records were cut”. This evidently
gives a better finish because the cutting head is moving about more slowly so
it has more time to give a more detailed, less distorted, record with a much
smoother top end.
As for the booklet,
modesty precludes me from commenting on the notes but the design features
contemporaneous adverts for the singles as well as a few facsimiles of
interesting memorabilia, including the form on the back of the IBC Studio tape
box for ‘Moon Blues Song’, on which someone has helpfully written ‘became known
as Dogs 2’. Keith is actually the only member of The Who whose photograph
appears inside the booklet, twice actually – once atop his ‘Lily’ kit and looking
very fetching in his blonde wig and corset promoting ‘WGFA’.
So just to round off
this report on the Track Singles Box Set, here’s what I had to say about the
final single in the collection, ‘5.15’, with a scan below of the actual single
in the box.
(Townshend) © 1973 Fabulous Music
Ltd.
Produced by The Who.
B: Water
Written by Pete Townshend. © 1970
Fabulous Music Ltd.
Produced by The Who, associate
producer Glyn Johns.
Track 2094 115. Released 5 October 1973 it reached Number 20.
Produced by The Who at The
Kitchen, Battersea, June 27, 1973, ‘5.15’ is the best-known song on Quadrophenia, Pete’s second major rock opera and The
Who’s sixth original
album. Quadrophenia is the
story of the journey of a Mod by the name of Jimmy, whose restlessness,
frustration and ultimate disillusionment drive him almost to suicide. It takes
in many Mod concerns – clothes, style, Brighton trips, pills and even a Who
concert – and ends on a note of triumph when Jimmy somehow manages to free
himself from the shackles of the cult. It is now probably best known for the
1979 cult film starring Phil
Daniels.
As a unified piece of music it was
always going to be tricky slicing off a single from Quadrophenia but ‘5.15’ – which describes Jimmy’s extra-sensual experiences on a train from
London to Brighton sandwiched between two city gents – was the best choice. “He goes through a not
entirely pleasant series of ups and downs as he thinks about the gaudier side
of life as a teenager that we see in newspapers like the News Of The World,” said Pete.
Opening with a
brief ethereal meander, ‘5.15’ soon settles into a memorable riff, emphasised
by a horn section, before returning to its dreamlike state. With lyrics about
“girls of fifteen sexually knowing” and being “out of my brain on a train” it
invited the attention of social activist Mary Whitehouse, the permissive
society’s worst enemy, but she was evidently looking the other way at the time.
However, ‘5.15’ was probably too raw to be a serious chart contender, but
listen out for Keith
imitating the sound of train wheels decelerating, an effect he repeated when
The Who performed ‘5.15’ live, which they often did.
Invited
to promote the song on the 500th
edition of Top Of The Pops on
October 3, The Who disgraced or – depending on your point of view – distinguished
themselves by smashing their equipment (Pete wrecked a lovely orange Gretsch
Tennessean, a gift from Joe Walsh), abusing the producer Robin Nash and
misbehaving in the Green Room, thus earning a ban from the BBC staff club that
was lifted after Track sent a letter of apology.
In
later years, a
spectacular bass solo from John was incorporated into ‘5.15’, and this
continued whenever it was performed live right up to John’s death in 2002.
Thereafter, using film and audio footage (from a charity show at London’s Royal
Albert Hall on November 27, 2000) of John synchronised with the live group, it
was retained for Who concerts dedicated to Quadrophenia
and for some shows on the ‘Who Hits 50’ tour in 2014/5.
Produced
by Pete at Eel Pie Studios during the spring of 1970, ‘Water’ is an overlong, rather heavy-handed rocker;
another Lifehouse reject that mixes a rather lascivious hook line
(‘water’ rhymes with ‘daughter’ throughout) with an allegory suggesting water
as the cure to quench spiritual thirst. Often played on stage in 1970 and ’71,
it seemed destined for inclusion on whatever album would follow Tommy.
Eventually Pete came up with several far better songs, and despite several
stage comments at various shows during 1970/71 announcing it as an imminent Who
single, ‘Water’ was abandoned, only to resurface as the B-side of ‘5.15’.
6 comments:
My first Who purchase was the single Legal Matter / Instant Party. It was in the newsagent's "ex-jukebox" rack. I seem to remember such things were common place back then, and we all bought the plastic centers to clip in where the original had been pushed out. Still sounded awesome to me.
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