My Bloody Valentine - Loveless play album
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The Who Greatest Hits The Who Best Songs. The Who - Won't Get Fooled Again. The music of The Who is filled with the vibrance of youth, the energy of youth and their lyrics speak to the listener from a youthful perspective (though at times also an "old soul" view of the world). Today's "young people music" will seem "old" to younger people 20, 30, 40, 50 years from now. But a young person with perspective will understand that this music comes from the mind and body of young people and that certain truths of the life experiences of young people will resonate in that music forever.
My Generation: The Very Best of The Who is one of The Who's many greatest hits collections, released by Polydor Records internationally and MCA Records in the United States in 1996. Its release coincided with the release of the remastered original albums (omitting My Generation for contractual reasons) and thus contained the newly remastered versions of the songs, and some also remixed. All songs written by Pete Townshend except where noted. I Can't Explain" – 2:04.
Who's Better Who's Best (LP, Comp, Mono). 버전 판매. 835 389-4, 185615. Who's Better, Who's Best (Cass, Comp, Club, Col). The Who. Who's Better, Who's Best (CD, Comp).
In third album ‘The Who Sell Out’, they delivered a perfectly on-point concept album structured like an illicit radio transmission, featuring fake commercial jingles between songs. For all the artsy japes, standouts like ‘I Can See for Miles’ emerged as instant classics. Over a decade before the Sex Pistols demonstrated that an anti-pop, anti-fashion, anti-everything aesthetic could be alarmingly marketable, The Who were teaching their own generation to flick off polite society’s expectations with their debut record
Not only the best from The Who, but a contender for best album ever. The story, the horns, the flow, it all works. Pete Townshend outdid himself with this one, and the band was clearly at their peak. Listen to "The Real Me" and find out why the John Entwistle/Keith Moon combination has no equal. You can't even call them a "rhythm section" as throughout the album either took the lead on many tunes. By far, best album by The Who. Absolutely undervalued. Top 3 best albums ever, possibly the best
The Who are rock legends who are widely considered among the best rock bands of all time. This Who discography is ranked from best to worst, so the top Who albums can be found at the top of the list. To make it easy for you, we haven't included The Who singles, EPs, or compilations, so everything you see here should only be studio albums.
With all of the compilations the Who have released over the years, it's easy to forget that their studio output boils down to a mere 11 albums. What makes it so remarkable is that the band's first six LPs – from 1965's The Who Sings My Generation to 1973's Quadrophenia – are all classics, essential records from rock's golden age. Very few artists rival their streak. But where should you start? And which records should you avoid? The following list of the Who Albums, Ranked From Worst.
The Who were always a very different band in the live arena and Live At Leeds captures them at their best. Rather than the tightly-disciplined studio entity, they’re a loose-limbed, tirelessly extemporising rock machine. 7. The Who Sell Out (1967). The Who’s third album - recorded soon after their pivotal appearance at the Monterey Festival - was even more ambitious in scope than A Quick One, yet while lauded as a pop art masterpiece on its initial release it hasn’t aged well.
In honor of the Who’s ongoing 50th anniversary tour, we have ranked their best songs. A crucial song from the abandoned Lifehouse project, "Pure and Easy" was originally designed to set the stage for that concept album's story about an eternal note of music that unites civilization. Once Townshend decided to scrap Lifehouse in favor of Who's Next, the majestic "Pure and Easy" wound up on the cutting-room floor, surfacing later on his 1972 solo LP Who Came First and the Who's 1974 compilation Odds and Sods. It was the kernel behind Who's Next," Townshend said. But it never made it onto that record.
| 1 | Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere |
| 2 | My Generation |
| 3 | Substitute |
| 4 | I'm A Boy |
| 5 | Happy Jack |
| 6 | Pictures Of Lily |
| 7 | I Can See For Miles |
| 8 | Pinball Wizard |
| 9 | Baba O'Riley |
| 10 | I Can't Explain |
| 11 | Won't Get Fooled Again |
| 12 | The Seeker |
| 13 | Let's See Action |
| 14 | Who Are You |
| 15 | You Better You Bet |
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