Most Viewed Articles
  • Freddy King
  • Cesaria Evora (Elektra Nonesuch)
  • Juke Joint Johnny Brings You a Bonanza of Great Guitar Solos
  • Behind The Sound - Allen Toussaint
  • The Legacy of Leiber and Stoller
  • Search
    Lost and Found: Quadrophenia Part II
    by Ric Stewart

    The Record -- Greyly Outrageous

    As a 28 year-old writing these songs Townshend peaked as a guitarist, lyricist and bandleader-- Quadrophenia is his finest hour. Similarly, Moon, Entwistle and Daltrey hit cohesive heights on the album. Townshend's probing social observations put him in a class with Dylan and Lennon. Stylistically different, Townshend romped on stage and courted hero worship-- responding to the mod thirst for heroes or "faces." "I'm The Face If You Want It," he screams on "Sea and Sand" quoting a High Numbers single he wrote as a teenager.

    The album was well received going gold and reaching number two in the U.S. and England. Yielding radio hits such as "Love Reign O'er Me," "5:15" and "The Real Me" the album could never commercially outdo Tommy but did heavily influence Pink Floyd's The Wall, and spawn Frank Roddam's 1978 film version of Quadrophenia which in turn incited a substantial mod revival. Quadrophenia stands apart from The Wall in that it offers a way out for the underdog. Jimmy the mod has an ocean of endless possibilities before him. Townshend provides hope for the underdog as the guy with a beak and limited vocal range who develops the windmill, auto-destruction ending, Union Jack Jacket, Marshall Stack and Rock Opera to draw attention from an audience which may otherwise not have noticed. The same type of hope is offered in "I'm One" where the narrator (so many Townshend songs are first person) looks at his clothes, his lack of grace, and his loneliness as a strength-- an epiphany of a unique identity.

    The Themes -- Number 4

    The opera has four major motifs connoting the four bandmembers: Roger "The Helpless Dancer"; Keith "The Bell Boy"; John thinks "Is it me for a moment?"; and Pete reserves "Love Reign O'er Me." All the while the number four keeps showing up (4 sides of the record, the temporary craze for a 4 speaker Quadrophonic mix and Soundtrack cut "Four Faces"). Townshend's uncanny ability to write parts for the other members of the group came to light with the release of his recorded demos as Scoop (1983) and Another Scoop (1987) which he presented to the band in complete arrangements. Casting identities onto the other players caused a bit of friction; however, Moon did relish the gruff Bell Boy-- a cockney character he loved to play on stage. Quadrophenia is, as Townshend put it even after the release of Who Came First (1972) and Rough Mix (1977), his "first solo album"-- he employs the band for sessions more to inhabit these characters than to reconvene the quartet of the early years. It was the end of an era. The band had great difficulty recreating the complexity of the arrangements live and their creative spirit was on the wane.

    Glam Rock -- The End of Rock

    The Who were no strangers to Glam Rock, the fad of cross-dressing, sexual ambiguity, flash and pomp that strutted across Rock's stage circa 1969-75. After all, Ken Russell's Tommy catapulted the opus into Elton John's bag. Other glammers such as Bowie, Marc Bolan of T. Rex, The New York Dolls, Lou Reed (who paid tribute to Townshend in 1994 with a cover of Psychoderelict's "Now and Then"), Gary Glitter and the "It's Only Rock And Roll" era Rolling Stones carried the make-up, long hair and myopia of this music to excess. Now revived by bands such as Space Hog, REM and Oasis this sound still resonates in the 90's. As Townshend put it in 1972's "Put The Money Down": "There are bands killing chickens, My hero's gettin' pushed around." Glam is all about the fall of the hero into treachery of his own art, an overaccumulation of surface. The best example of the pomp and glam on Quadrophenia is 5:15.

    5:15

    He man drag
    In the glittering ballroom,
    Greyly outrageous
    In my high heeled shoes.
    Tightly undone,
    Know what they're showing
    Sadly ecstatic
    That their heroes are news.

    Who?

    By 1973, The Who had little artistic headroom left as did Rock overall. While more bombastic acts were derided by Seventies punks as ponderous overcompensated old farts and deserters of power chord rock, the same DIY punks now suffer the paradox of mature rock. "Punk Meets The Godfather" addresses this "Before I Grow Old" dilemma on Quadrophenia as the Godfather tells the Punk "I've lived your future out, by pounding stages like a clown."

    Perhaps (as ever) to cement an identity for a band named "Who", Quadrophenia looked back to revise the image of the old days-- but where to head next was murky. The movie appeared to end in a suicide, the album by the sea in a glorious nervous breakdown, and from 1975-82 the band played oldies for arena and stadium audiences while offering sporadic releases of uneven material with recurring themes like "aren't we too old for this?" Townshend's dabblings in Sufism, excellent solo LP's and Moon's '78 demise at age 31 indicated that The Who were no longer his best vehicle. In the Eighties Townshend edited for Faber and Faber at T.S. Elliot's old post, while his passion for theater resulted in two musicals: The Iron Man in 1989 and a Tony winning Broadway rendition of Tommy in 1993. In 1996, Townshend has seen fit to revive his magnum opus combing theatrical and literary elements into the record's elaborate song cycle. Despite the many hats he has worn, Townshend does his best work on stage with an acoustic guitar. As he sang convincingly to the front rows on the Sunday show in San Jose, "And I can see that this is me, I will be, You'll all see that I'm the one."

    Quadrophenia

    I Am The Sea

    Cut My Hair
    The Punk And The Godfather
    I'm One
    The Dirty Jobs
    Helpless Dancer
    Is It In My Head?
    I've Had Enough
    5:15
    Sea and Sand
    Drowned
    Bell Boy
    The Rock
    Love, Reign O'er Me

    all songs by Pete Townshend ? 1973 Fabulous Music Ltd. except "Love, Reign O'er Me," ? 1972 Fabulous Music Ltd.



    home disc a day magazine root store interviews info
    © 1995-2009 There Productions, LLC, all rights reserved. THERE&trade is a registered trademark.
    Order music, dvd's, games and books.