5 Stars
After being booked as headliners for the two great rock ‘n’ roll festivals of 1969, The Who were immediately re-booked as headliners for the 1970 Isle of Wight festival. Over the previous 18 months, The Who released two milestone double concept albums, “Tommy” and the fantastically raw “Live At Leads.”
“Tommy” took on a life of its own and is still on Broadway as a stage musical. The film version starring Roger Daltrey by Ken Russel is a classic of its kind.
“Live At Leeds” showed the world for the first time what they were, a full-throttled, full-ahead rock ‘n’ roll band. “Live At Leeds” has to be in any true rock fan’s top 3 live albums of all time, and was released in expanded version on CD, stretching it from its original 40 minutes to the whole show at nearly two hours.
So why would you want to get yourself a copy of a set recorded a year later? Well, simple, really; it’s longer, better, faster, funnier and, by the way, more furious, which, if you review the circumstances, is quite surprising. Everything that could go wrong at the Isle Of Wight had gone wrong. Fences were broken down to let the audience in free and there were terrible fights between the heavies of the seventies and the peace-loving hippies of the sixties, firmly marking the end of an era. John Entwistle had changed into his brand-new stage gear of a black body stocking with a human skeleton painted on it, only to find it so tight he couldn’t sit down. He had to remain standing for 4 hours before hitting the stage. This delay was caused by the band schedule running 4 hours late, so not going on at 11.00 p.m. as expected “The Who” didn’t get on to play until 3.00 a.m. on Sunday.
Under these circumstances, it’s incredible that they turned on such a show. Bursting straight into John Entwistle’s “Heaven & Hell,” The Who immediately demonstrated what magnificent musicians they were, and after a year on the road, there wasn’t a tighter band in the world. Although you may be buying material you have purchased before in one form or another, never will you have heard it in such magnificence. Don’t think twice about shelling out for this.
No other recording shows The Who in the entirety of their talents. Pete Townshend, at his most explosive after the tragic loss of Hendrix and Eric Clapton going into voluntary seclusion, was probably carrying the mantle of most innovative rock ‘n’ roll guitarists in the world. Listening to him leading the band through the shattering rock ‘n’ roll medley at the end of the set is nothing short of jaw-dropping.
John Entwistle holds the whole band musically together with maximum Ox-ness. Keith Moon, at the peak of fitness after a year on the road, plays with an exuberance only he could summon up and few drummers then or since have hit the drums harder.
Roger Daltrey had become the ultimate showman, and his long-fringed jacket had become The Who’s trademark. He sang every song as if he’d lived every one of them. How his voice was still in tune after two hours is a true wonder.
After this set, The Who went back into the studio to record “Who’s Next.” The live set was completely revamped, and this was the last time the original Who could play the whole of Tommy live. What a monster the rather sterile studio recording became on the stage, Daltrey and Townshend bringing it to a shattering conclusion with, “We’re Not Going To Take It.”
After this, it’s a toss-up between who is having a better time, the audience or the band, as they go into a 25-minute encore swapping between classic rock ‘n’ roll and their own compositions, brought to a conclusion by the sound of the band self-destructing and destroying all their equipment. A great end to a great concert. Probably after six hours, allowing “The Ox” to strip off and sit down. Rock music at its ultimate best.
Musicians
Roger Daltrey – Vocals & Harmonica
Pete Townshend – Guitar & Vocals
Keith Moon – Drums & Jokers
John “The Ox” Entwistle – Bass
Track Listing
Disc One
1. Heaven And Hell
2. I Can’t Explain
3. Young Man Blues
4. I Don’t Even Know Myself
5. Water
6. Overture
7. It’s A Boy
8. 1921
9. Amazing Journey
10. Sparks
11. Eyesight To The Blind (The Hawker)
12. Christmas
Disc Two
1. The Acid Queen
3. Do You Think It’s Alright
4. Fiddle About
5. Tommy Can You Hear Me?
6. There’s A Doctor
7. Go To The Mirror
8. Smash The Mirror
9. Miracle Cure
10. I’m Free
11. Tommy’s Holiday Camp
13. Summertime Blues
14. Shakin’ All Over
15. Substitute
16. My Generation
17. Naked Eye
18. Magic Bus
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