THE WHO collection, double album, gatefold, SMR 570

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THE WHO collection, double album, gatefold, SMR 570

THE WHO collection, double album, gatefold, SMR 570

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Find sources: "List of double albums"– news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( August 2018) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) InfoDisc: Tous les Titres par Artiste" (in French). InfoDisc. Select "The Who" from the artist drop-down menu. Archived from the original on 20 September 2013 . Retrieved 2 July 2013. Wolff, Sander (12 July 2013). "Scott Devours: From Here to the Who - Part 3". Long Beach Post. Archived from the original on 27 June 2019 . Retrieved 27 June 2019.

a b c Dukes, Billy (November 11, 2020). "Morgan Wallen Announces New 'Dangerous' Double Album, Featuring Chris Stapleton". Taste of Country . Retrieved November 21, 2020. Eder, Bruce. "Tommy – As Performed by the London Symphony Orchestra". AllMusic . Retrieved 18 August 2014. In November 2012, the Who started a U.S. tour of Quadrophenia, dubbed " Quadrophenia and More". The group played the entire album without any guest singers or announcements with the then regular Who line-up (including Starkey and bassist Pino Palladino, who replaced Entwistle following his death in 2002) along with five additional musicians. The tour included additional video performances, including Moon singing "Bell Boy" from 1974 and Entwistle's bass solo in "5:15" from 2000. [77] After Starkey injured his wrist, session drummer Scott Devours replaced him for part of the tour with minimal rehearsal. [78] [79] [80] The tour progressed, with Devours drumming, to the UK in 2013, ending in a performance at Wembley Arena in July. [81] Muddy Waters- Hoochie Coochie Man: The Complete Chess Masters Volume 2, 1952–1958 (2004) – 2CD remast. compilation, deluxe edition

The Who performed the songs " Fire" and "Dig" from Pete Townshend's solo album The Iron Man: The Musical by Pete Townshend, which was released in 1989. Kisselgoff, Anna (9 February 1981). "Dance: Ballets Canadiens". The New York Times . Retrieved 16 October 2014. Cawthorne, Nigel (2005). The Who and the making of Tommy. Unanimous Ltd (Vinyl Frontier 5). pp.224. ISBN 1-903318-76-9

So let's take a moment to celebrate — and debate, because these lists are always debate starters, not the last word — the greatest achievements in popular music's most ambitious format. The double album is dead. Long live the double album. Bill Graham’s historic Fillmore West Concert Hall in San Francisco closed its doors forever as a music venue on July 4, 1971 – just a few months after Aretha Franklin’s show-stopping concerts. Thankfully, Franklin’s shows were captured for posterity and remain a lasting testament to the grace and power of a singer. The opening side of the original album was all covers, revealing the adroit way Franklin, who was 29 at the time, could be effervescent on a fast song such as Otis Redding’s “Respect” and slow and soulful on her delivery of Paul Simon’s “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” Franklin was also a talented pianist, as she shows on an achingly beautiful version of the Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby.” Franklin is also accompanied by a first-class band that included King Curtis on saxophone, Bernard Purdie on drums, and Billy Preston on keyboards. Franklin has never sounded more emotional, and Live at Fillmore West remains an essential soul album. 21: Grateful Dead: Live/Dead (1969)Live at Fillmore East is, without a doubt , the best live album ever. Not even debatable.. Glad to see high ranking for JB live at the Apollo. Wheels of Fire should be top 10 (awesome version of Spoonful). Glaring omissions : Dylan 1966 at Royal Albert Hall He grabbed me and said, I like you. You've got a lot of nerve": ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons on the night his teenage band supported Jimi Hendrix, and closed their set with Foxy Lady and Purple Haze Decca USA vinyl 45 single of ‘Magic Bus’ (US/UK mono) b/w ‘Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde’ (original US Decca single mix)

In 1991, Townshend broke his wrist in a cycling accident and could not play guitar. Looking for alternative work while recuperating, he responded to a request from the PACE Theatrical Group for the rights to a Broadway musical adaptation of Tommy. The group introduced him to La Jolla Playhouse director Des McAnuff, and the pair began to develop the musical together. It opened at La Jolla in summer 1992 and was an immediate commercial success. [124] Townshend wrote a new song, "I Believe My Own Eyes", to explain the relationship between Tommy's parents, but otherwise tried to be faithful to the music on the original album. [125] Kaye, Lenny (20 December 1973). "The Who Quadrophenia Album Review". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 18 February 2015 . Retrieved 11 February 2015. Missing is 24 Nights by Eric Clapton unique and very live put together with 4 different bands/groups/orchestras recorded at the same venue…a must have in any library. Other incarnations 1970 Les Grands Ballets Canadiens 1971 Seattle Opera production London Symphony Orchestra version 1975 film Broadway musical Roger Daltrey live orchestral version John Mayall & Eric Clapton & The Bluesbreakers- Blues Breakers John Mayall and Eric Clapton (2009) – 2×CD reissue

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Townshend now considers Quadrophenia to be the last great album that the Who recorded. In 2011, he said the group "never recorded anything that was so ambitious or audacious again", and implied that it was the last album to feature good playing by Keith Moon. [58] Live performances [ edit ] 1973–1974 tour [ edit ]

Furthermore, the list has a strong North American bias. I miss Supertramp’s Paris, Wings over America, Seconds Out by Genesis, any live album by Pink Floyd, Bowie, my all-time favourite: John Cale’s Fragments of a Rainy Season, any album of Brel in l’Olympia, Townshend, Pete (1993). Tommy: The Musical. Pantheon. 173 pp. + a CD w/ the song I Can't Believe My Own Eyes. ISBN 0-679-43066-0. Also titled The Who's Tommy: The Musical. Morgan Wallen's 'Dangerous' Spends 10th Week at No. 1 on Billboard 200 Chart". Billboard . Retrieved 2021-10-09.

Tommy (Media notes). The Who. MCA. MCAD-10801. {{ cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) ( link) Top 100 Album-Jahrescharts" (in German). GfK Entertainment Charts. 1974. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 . Retrieved 2 April 2022.



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