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The Who Sings My Generation

The Who

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from The Who

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Out in the Street (Mono Version) The Who 2:31 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 I Don't Mind (Mono Version) The Who 2:36 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 The Good's Gone (Mono Version) The Who 4:02 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 La-La Lies (Mono Version) The Who 2:17 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Much Too Much (Mono Version) The Who 2:47 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 My Generation (Original Mono Version) The Who 3:18 $1.29 View In iTunes
7 The Kids Are Alright (Edit Mono Version) The Who 2:46 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Please, Please, Please (Mono Version) The Who 2:45 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 It's Not True (Mono Version) The Who 2:31 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 The Ox (Original Mono Version) The Who 3:50 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 A Legal Matter (Mono Version) The Who 2:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Instant Party (Circles) The Who 3:14 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

An explosive debut, and the hardest mod pop recorded by anyone. At the time of its release, it also had the most ferociously powerful guitars and drums yet captured on a rock record. Pete Townshend's exhilarating chord crunches and guitar distortions threaten to leap off the grooves on "My Generation" and "Out in the Street"; Keith Moon attacks the drums with a lightning, ruthless finesse throughout. Some "Maximum R&B" influence lingered in the two James Brown covers, but much of Townshend's original material fused Beatlesque hooks and power chords with anthemic mod lyrics, with "The Good's Gone," "Much Too Much," "La La La Lies," and especially "The Kids Are Alright" being highlights. "A Legal Matter" hinted at more ambitious lyrical concerns, and "The Ox" was instrumental mayhem that pushed the envelope of 1965 amplification with its guitar feedback and nonstop crashing drum rolls. While the execution was sometimes crude, and the songwriting not as sophisticated as it would shortly become, the Who never surpassed the pure energy level of this record.

Recent Customer Reviews

boy did they rock
     
by ponybob

I'm a believer that most rock bands do their best work early, when they're young, punk and full of spunk. The Who are a band I always cite as an example of this. I love (and loved) their first few LPs, when they basically created pop-punk. As LPs go they're kind of uneven, a mixed bag of great, towering, iconic songs and... some filler and throwaways. But those great songs, oh my god. (Early Kinks LPs are similar in this regard.) But I gotta say they lost me with Tommy, and kinda never got me back, except for a song here and there along the way. Rock operas were a terrible idea. They didn't rock and they weren't operas. The more "mature" (aka "pompous") Pete's songwriting got, the less I liked the Who. But this debut LP was and is one of the great ones, pure, punky, rockin, snarlin and wonderful.

Best Debut Album Ever?
     
by DaltreyEntwistleMoonTownshend

I don't know about that due to my extreme bias towards the Who, but it's probably up there. I don't know what happened to the Deluxe Edition of this album on iTunes because that version has far superior sound quality than this album. However, the strength of the songs make this album great regardless.

One of the best
     
by awesome man 1

This one of the best albums ever, especially for a debut, but I would recommend buying the deluxe edition instead. It's worth the extra money. The Who is the best band ever, so you should buy all of their albums that feature Keith Moon on the drums. Don't buy the stuff with Ringo Starr's kid or Kenny Jones on the drums. It is obvious that neither of them can even compete with Keith Moon's drumming.

Biography

Formed: 1964 in London, England

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

Few bands in the history of rock & roll were riddled with as many contradictions as the Who. All four members had wildly different personalities, as their notoriously intense live performances demonstrated. The group was a whirlwind of activity, as the wild Keith Moon fell over his drum kit and Pete...
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