Posts Tagged ‘Roger Daltrey’

The Who Hits 50 and The Hits Just Keep on Coming

For many The Who are the greatest rock band in the world and their 50th anniversary year is shaping up to be very special. And to prove the point the band are set to release all eleven of their studio albums on 180gm vinyl along with a double vinyl version of their ultimate hits package, The Who Hits 50 on 23rd March.

All eleven studio albums will feature the original issue artwork and other highlights include Tommy with its original six-panel fold out / 12-page colour booklet and the four sides pressed as they were on the original 1969 vinyl. The Who Sell Out Includes a replica of the original 20″ x 30″ poster as an insert, while Quadrophenia has a gatefold sleeve with original 20-page booklet and Face Dances Includes a replica of the 24″ x 24″ poster of the album cover. The other studio albums are, My Generation (1965), A Quick One (1966), Who’s Next (1971), The Who By Numbers (1975),   Who Are You (1978),  It’s Hard (1982) and Endless Wire (double) (2006).

Two weeks later on 6th April the first in a series of 7” singles box sets is released covering their first seven 45 rpm releases as The Who as well as their one and only 7” as The High Numbers. The Brunswick Singles 1965 – 1966 is volume one of a four-part set of classic Who singles by labels (Brunswick, Reaction, Track and Polydor). Pressed on heavyweight vinyl with paper sleeves (reproducing the period graphics front and back with die-cut centre holes). The singles are housed in a rigid ‘lid-and-tray’ outer box and features a 7” sized colour booklet with liner notes about each release by Who biographer Mark Blake.

1. ‘I Can’t Explain’ 2.04
b/w ‘Bald Headed Woman’ 2.08
Brunswick 05926. Released 15 January 1965

2. ‘Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere’ 2.40
b/w Daddy Rolling Stone 2.46
Brunswick 05935. Released 21 May 1965

3. ‘My Generation’ 3.15
b/w ‘Shout and Shimmy’ 3.15
Brunswick 05944. Released 25 October 1965

4. Circles 3.10
Instant Party Mixture 3.26
(Bruns 05951) Unreleased at the time

5. ‘A Legal Matter’2.47
b/w ‘Instant Party’ AKA CIRCLES 3.10
Brunswick 05956. Released 7 March 1966

6. ‘The Kids Are Alright’ 3.03
b/w ‘The Ox’ 3.47
Brunswick 05965. Released 12 August 1966

7. ‘La-La-La Lies’ 2.13
b/w ‘The Good’s Gone’ 4.01
Brunswick 05968. Released 11 November 1966

And if all that’s not enough Record Store Day 2015 on 18th April will see a special blue vinyl 7” of The Who’s latest song, ‘Be Lucky’ from ‘The Who Hits 50’ album backed with the band’s very first single from 1965 ‘I Can’t Explain’. ‘Be Lucky’ is The Who’s first new material in eight years and in keeping with their ongoing support for Teenage Cancer charities, the band have donated their royalties from the song to Teen Cancer America, a charity founded in 2011 by Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dl3TG1icyjk

The new series of TFI Friday Channel 4 TV hosted by Chris Evans had a few musical guests  Joined by the Lightning Seeds’s Ian Broudie and Ringo Starr’s son Zak Starkey, the group played “My Generation” on the first show of the series 12th June.

Liam Gallagher and Roger Daltrey collaborated on a live version of The Who’s ‘My Generation’ as TFI Friday returned to TV screens this evening (June 12th).

The Channel 4 show, presented by Chris Evans, was revived for a two-hour episode this evening with guests including Jeremy Clarkson, Ewan McGregor, Lewis Hamilton, Amanda Seyfried, Rita Ora, Nick Grimshaw and Tom Daley.Music on the night was provided by, among others, Blur and a supergroup fronted by Liam Gallagher and Roger Daltrey. Blur performed ‘Coffee TV’ with Evans informing the audience that Damon Albarn has lost his voice. Gallagher and Daltrey played alongside The Lightning Seeds’ Ian Broudie and former Oasis members Bonehead and Zak Starkey.

As reported no 90s revival would be complete without at least one Gallagher brother on board. It’s just as well, then, that Liam Gallagher will join forces with the Who’s Roger Daltrey, the Lightning Seeds’s Ian Broudie and Ringo Starr’s son Zak Starkey for the return of TFI Friday on 12th June. At the request of Chris Evans, the supergroup will perform for the one-off episode, and are said to be covering the Who’s My Generation.

“Liam’s got a bit of time on his hands since Beady Eye called it a day last year, so he fancied trying his hand at something new,”.  “He’s told his mates he’s pretty bored. Other than Noel, you would be hard pushed to find a better set of bandmates than Roger, Ian and Zak. It’s a proper supergroup and the performance will be something to remember.”

The group, who are as yet unnamed, will celebrate the TV show’s return alongside Blur, Stone Roses, Rudimental and Years & Years.

daltrey

As a founding member of The Who, Roger Daltrey played a critical role in 1960s as well as 1970s music. While Pete Townsend wrote most of the band’s music and lyrics, it was Roger Daltrey’s powerful voice that brought the songs to fruition. Though, the Who’s early work was textually so different in contrast to their later work, they enjoyed hits as “I Can’t Explain” and “Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere.” However, it was the song “My Generation” that connected with the emerging counter culture and put the band on the Rock and Roll map. Arguably, The Who recorded the first concept album, “Tommy”. And when casting began for the film based on the record in 1975, Daltrey got the nod to play the lead role for which he won a Golden Globe. With his long golden locks and stunning good looks, he looked the part as a rock god. On stage the band was explosive as Roger Daltrey would whip his mic 10 feet in the air and catch it with ease. Considered by many to be the band’s swan song, Who’s Next, featured such memorable tracks as “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” “Bargain,” “The Song is Over” and the seminal track “Baba O ‘Riley.”

Never one to rest on his laurels, he began his solo career in 1973 with the release of “Daltrey”. While the record was a hit in Europe, it failed to chart in the States. Since then, he has released seven solo projects and has appeared on recordings by Meat Loaf, Barry Gibb, Joe Strummer and Barbra Streisand. Roger Daltrey is a songwriter, singer, performer, actor and icon who has received countless awards including induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990.

In May 1971 The Who were in London’s Olympic Studios recording ‘Join Together’ which came out a year later as a single in both the UK and America. Pete Townshend’s lyrics include the line, “It’s the singer not the song that makes the music move along.” And that is so, so true of the way that Roger Daltrey has propelled the Who from his position out front of the band. He is arguably the greatest rock singer that has fronted any band in that same half century .

Roger_Daltrey-4
‘My Generation’ with Roger’s unique stuttering vocal that is one of the greatest singles to be released in the 1960s. Not far behind it is ‘Pinball Wizard’ from Tommy, which has Daltrey  in imperious form. Then the next single is ‘I Can See For Miles’, another great driving vocal. ‘Behind Blue Eyes’ comes from the Who’s fifth album, Who’s Next and it demonstrates the maturing of Roger’s voice; in fact it is one of his finest ever rock-god vocals. The same can be said of ‘Love Reign O’er Me’ from “Quadrophenia”. ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’ is another that is from the god-like rock locker. Can’t you just see Roger marching as he sings this powerful vocal and the scream towards the end is one of the finest moments in all rock.

One of Roger’s great gifts is that he seemed able to reproduce his powerful recorded vocals on stage, making it seem effortless in the process. ‘Summertime Blues’ from “Live At Leeds” is just perfection.Thirteen years earlier his rendition of ‘See Me, Feel Me/Listening To You’ from a Canadian concert is among the best versions of these moments from Tommy that the band has released.

‘Baba O’Reilly’ was a stand out from “Who’s Next” and the version from a concert at Shepperton, London in May 1978 is another outstanding example of Roger’s brilliance. The other non Pete Townshend song where Roger excelled is Bo Diddley’s ‘I’m A Man’ which harks’ back to the band’s early blues influences and it has Roger giving it his all in what is the greatest ever cover of this classic.

According to The Flaming Lips’ Wayne Coyne “You don’t realize how great a singer Roger Daltrey is until you try to do it yourself.” He’s talking generally about Roger’s singing but it could especially be applied to ‘The Real Me’ from “Quadrophenia”. In a similar voice ‘Who Are You’ from the album of the same name bears out Coyne’s assertion. It’s also one of those songs that converted many a non-believer into believing that The Who are the greatest rock band in the world.

‘We’re Not Going To Take It’ became one of the highlights of the Woodstock Festival but the “Tommy” original version which spotlights both sides of Daltrey’s voice, from bombast to beauty.

The Who
‘Long Live Rock’ is another incredible vocal, with Pete singing the verses, and yes he does, but it is Roger that lifts this song to the giddy heights of a rock anthem. ‘Slip Kid’ comes from the 1976 album, “The Who By Numbers” and might not be the most obvious song to include but it features Roger Daltrey showing how controlled his vocals can be.

‘I Can’t Explain’ is 20 year old Roger and while it may lack some of the power of our other selections, just listen to it in context. Try hearing it alongside other 1965 pop singles and you hear the vocal brilliance when compared to the kind of dull stuff that was being churned out by most bands.

“Quadrophenia’s” ‘5.15’ is another of Roger’s rock-god vocals – this is turbocharged! The same can be said of ‘Join Together’, but the absolute pinnacle of this number is just after the final verse. Roger hits a high note, while singing, “well everybody come on” that seems inhuman, it send him off into another place.

the later tracks is ‘Music Must Change’, a hidden gem of a track from “Who Are You”. Roger sings the verses in his lower register, saving his falsetto for later in the song before the final 30 seconds when vocally he just explodes.

WP-RogerDaltrey
Possibly there’s only one song that could end a list of the greatest of Roger Daltrey classics and it is ‘The Song Is Over’ from “Who’s Next”. It’s majestic, at times gentle, at others unbelievably tough and it has everything that makes Roger Daltrey brilliant. His voice is every bit as powerful as Pete’s guitar sound and his gift is to be whatever Pete has written for him to sing. He becomes Townshend’s characters and as Roger says, “That’s why I shut my eyes when I sing — I’m in another space, and the characters are living in me.”

 

from one of the first ever TV performances from the WHO on the Smothers Bros Television show the band have announced a tour of the UK and a new album, touring later this year with a number of dates around the UK. with a show at Nottingham Capital Arena on the 5th December with Daltrey who is now 70 years old and Townshend the younger at 69 years old the only original members the band will be touring as a 50th Anniversary show with the hits promised PINBALL WIZARD, WHO ARE YOU and BABA O’REILLY, in a retrospective look at their career.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bq-viJB9Zq8