“Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close
of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the
night.”
Dylan Thomas
wrote those words in 1947 as a plea to his dying father, but it seems to me
that he could have been writing them as a plea to what remains of The Who in
2019. The past few weeks have seen Pete Townshend tell, or at least imply to, a
Rolling Stone writer that he was glad
Keith Moon and John Entwistle had died, then do an about turn and say he didn’t
mean it really, only that their absence makes life easier in The Who, on and
off stage. Roger Daltrey, probably unaware of what his long-time partner had
said, put in his own fourpenneth by having a go at Townshend for being
unwilling to vary the set they nowadays play on stage, so nothing much has
changed in all the years they’ve been sparring with each other.
The reason for this latest outbreak of
warfare was a round of interviews designed to promote the release of this new
album, and old hands like Townshend and Daltrey know that the best way to grab
headlines is to be controversial. The record, the first new product from The
Who since 2006’s Endless Wire, is imaginatively
titled WHO, though I’d have added a question mark myself. Who are The Who now?
They’re certainly not the group that thrilled me to my bones at the end of the sixties
and continued doing so until their drummer quit the world in 1978. Thereafter
they’ve entertained me, which is a different thing from thrilling me but not
something to complain about.
And they’re still entertaining me in
all sorts of ways, not necessarily with their music. ‘Man In A Purple Dress’
aside, I didn’t much like Endless Wire,
I adored Live At The Fillmore 1968,
passed on watching them this year with their orchestra, felt short-changed by
Daltrey’s autobiography but found Pete’s novel The Age Of Anxiety pleasingly gripping. And this morning I read on
the internet that The Who will be appearing at the Las Vegas Colosseum for two
years following Elton John’s equally lengthy season at the venue that ends next
May. What on earth would Keith Moon have made of that, I wonder?
Now we have WHO, which has been
received warmly by critics on both music magazines and national newspapers, but
so was Endless Wire which didn’t help
it sell. Nowadays new albums by acts like The Who stand a strong chance of becoming
victims of Legends Can’t Sell New Music syndrome, a common strain that sees
rock heroes from the past, from Paul McCartney on downwards, selling tickets by
the fistful for shows that feature music from half a century ago, which fans
love, but passing over more recent work in the knowledge that this fosters
people talking amongst themselves or going to the bathroom.
Perhaps that’s why WHO radiates a
strong sense of nostalgia even before the CD hits the deck. The word Detour
features prominently on the cover, there’s that famous picture/poster/t-shirt
of Townshend about to smash a guitar with the words ‘This Guitar Has Seconds To
Live’ alongside, there’s a target, Union Jack and Honda Juno scooter, and a
photograph of Goldhawk Road tube station taken long ago, all designed pop art-style
by Peter Blake in best Mod tradition.
When the CD did hit the deck and I
pressed play I was half expecting an early Kinks riff restyled by Townshend in
the manner of ‘Explain’ or ‘Anyway’ but instead we hear Daltrey, his voice much
deeper and more growly now, telling us that he doesn’t care if we like this song,
sung over a choppy guitar. Ever the optimist, I suspect he had a few words with
his lyricist before deciding to sing it. This opener, ‘All This Music Must
Fade’, sounds to these ears like a superior re-write of ‘Music Must Change’
from Who Are You, without the tricky
time signature, and therefore far more accessible. As a statement of intent, it’s safe
ground, a lively rocker with a catchy chorus that resolves into the fade with
Townshend – not Daltrey – intoning the words ‘who gives a fuck?’ It’s a
sentiment that surely reflects his sporadically dismissive attitude towards The
Who that Daltrey doesn’t share, and there are hints of it elsewhere on the
record, along with oblique references to the group’s history and earlier,
well-known songs. A promising start.
Like ‘Baba O’Riley’, ‘Ball And Chain’
is prefaced by a lengthy instrumental passage, a piano loop joined by electric
guitar, before it settles into a 12-bar in the style of what used to be called
heavy, or hard, rock, a bit hulking, about the Guantanamo Bay detention camp on
Cuba where America imprisoned ‘enemy combatants’ from 2002 onwards. Honourable
of sentiment, there’s nothing new here but the down-to-earth feel bodes well,
not just for the album’s point of view but its reliance on rock over research. File
under ‘reliable’.
If the songs on Who By Numbers exposed Townshend’s fears about The Who’s relevance
as they entered their second decade, ‘I Don’t Want To Get Wise’ sees their
principal composer looking back on it all as one big regression from the moment
they stopped being ‘snotty young kids’ and viewed rock’n’roll as a good career
move. The song features one of those tempo-shift middle-eight refrains – see
‘Don’t cry…’ in ‘Baba’…, ‘I sit looking round..’ in ‘Bargain’ and ‘I have to be
careful…’ in ‘Punk Meets Godfather’ – that I always loved in Who songs, albeit
this time sung by Daltrey rather than Townshend, before it tumbles back into
the groove. “We tried hard to stay young,” Daltrey sings towards the end. File
under ‘excellent’.
And on ‘Detour’, with its variation on
a Bo Diddley beat, he doesn’t sound old at all. Short by the standards of the
record as a whole, this chugs along at a lively pace, referencing ‘Explain’
during another stand-back refrain. Unlike Endless
Wire, no lyrics are included in the package, so identifying what Daltrey is
singing about is a bit hit and miss. If there’s an autobiographical element to
this, the lyrics seems to imply that The Who went off course, on a ‘detour’ I
guess, but here they’re back of course, with a bass line from Pino Paladino
that is certainly reminiscent of John Entwistle at his twangy best and Zak
Starkey channelling Moon on the floor toms. The closing 30 seconds sound like
some bit of recording tape discarded from the Who’s Next sessions, or maybe ‘Join Together’. File under ‘best
yet’.
The pace relaxes for ‘Beads On One
String’, a bit of a lighter-waving power ballad that sounds like a plea for
harmony in our acrimonious world, with beads on a string as an analogy for how
we’re all (strung) together in this, before roaring off again on ‘Hero Ground Zero’, the
much-trumpeted song named after the area of New York where the Twin Towers once
stood. Daltrey roars against the passing of time in a song that would not have
been out of place on Quadrophenia,
with its tumbling drums and orchestral backdrop. File under ‘pretty damn good’.
‘Street Song’, inspired the Grenfell
Tower disaster, is a rallying cry for the victims of injustice, lyrically if
not melodically reminiscent of ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’, leaving no doubt on
who’s side Townshend pins his colours. It all grinds to an abrupt, deliberately
messy halt before a peculiarly nostalgic French banks-of-the-Seine-style
harmonica heralds ‘I’ll Be Back’, the only song on which Townshend sings lead. With
the kind of heartfelt vocals that he utilises in his more tender moments, it’s
the nearest thing on the album to a ballad, with lush orchestration and words
that again dwell on what happens when we reach pensionable age and the
possibility of reincarnation. “I’ll be back, I’ll reborn, and I know I’ll
always want to be your friend,” he concludes, sincerely. File under ‘pleasantly
satisfying’.
In a change from scheduled programming,
‘Break The News’ is a Simon Townshend song, sung in folksy style by Daltrey
against acoustic guitar picking by Andrew Synowiec, a highly decorated session
guitarist from Los Angeles. The least-Who sounding track on the album, it rolls
along like a dose of Mumford & Son, certainly inoffensive but hardly
something that the group who recorded ‘My Generation’ would have countenanced
back when Kit Lambert was doing his best to produce them. File under ‘superfluous
but safe’.
The penultimate track, ‘Rockin’ In
Rage’, opens with a whiff of the arpeggios from ‘Behind Blue Eyes’ and bits of Quadrophenia, before settling into
another Who-style rave up wherein Daltrey faces down the tide, “Rockin’ in rage
well past my prime”. File under ‘conventional but satisfactory’, and settle down comfortably for the closer, a jazzy little
shuffler called ‘She Rocked My World’, which I’ll file under ‘experimental but
enjoyable’. A mid-tempo song driven largely by acoustic chords from Gordon Giltrap,
all about a girl who left the protagonist hot but unfulfilled, is not what I’d
have expected as a closing statement, and in the scheme of things I’d have expected this to
be sung by Townshend rather than Daltrey, who was rarely unfulfilled in this department. Neither
was I expecting such a low key conclusion.
The edition
of WHO that I bought on Amazon contained three extra tracks, all sung by
Townshend. ‘This Gun Will Misfire’ is a melodramatic, big production, drama-ridden
rocker, about unrest in world affairs (I think); on ‘Nothing To Prove’ he somehow
sounds like he was 21 again, making demos for A Quick One, but it’s marred by orchestral support that sounds like
a James Bond soundtrack; and ‘Danny And The Ponies’ is a solo gem with
intricately picked acoustic, quite lovely in fact.
In an interview
preceding the release of WHO Townshend described the new
music on the record as “dark ballads, heavy rock stuff, experimental
electronica, sampled stuff and clichéd Who-ish tunes that begin with a guitar
that goes yanga-dang.” He’s not wrong, summing up in 20 words what took me around 1,700, but whatever else WHO – unexpected as
it is – proves that even with only half a band left now, they’re not going
gentle into the night. And it certainly doesn’t deserve to suffer from the
dreaded Legends Can’t
Sell New Music syndrome.
Thanks for this review, Chris. I was going to leave it until after Xmas, but you have sold me!
ReplyDelete(BTW - I LOVED Endless Wire!)
:-)
41 years later, I still find myself regularly singing the melody and clever internal rhymes of Music Must Change. Doubtful that This Music Must Fade will have that sort of staying power. And, yes, I recognize the irony of that statement.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the review!
ReplyDeleteI like your M&S reference ;-) that's what I thought first when I heard Simon's song. Although it's not a Who song...I really like it!!! (Maybe because I also like M&S...)
Thanks again for the review.
Best wishes from Germany,
Christine
I was hoping you'd weigh in!
ReplyDelete1. Agreed on Purple Dress vs. rest of Endless Wire.
2. Roger sounds great to me.
3. What's with the Autotune?
4. I'll bet "Got Nothing To Prove" actually is a mid-'60s demo given a Ted Astley-type orchestral overdub.
5. I need some more time with this album, and while I don't expect to love it, I suspect it will be a grower.
Also, per the Uncut review that called it "their best since Quadrophenia..." Considering they've only made six albums since Quad and one of them was By Numbers, I call lousy journalism.