Who, The MFSL Gold CD Neu

Who, The MFSL Gold CD Neu
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Art.Nr.: 19493/MF



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Produktbeschreibung

The Who Who`s Next MFSL Gold CD Neu OVP Sealed UDCD 754 Ultradics II mit J-Card


Erscheinungsdatum:  20. September 1999
Label: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab
Import aus: USA
Format: Audio CD

     Tracks


1. Baba O'riley (5:08)
2. Bargain (5:34)
3. Love Ain't For Keeping (2:10)
4. My Wife (3:42)
5. The Song Is Over (6:15)
6. Getting In Tune (4:50)
7. Going Mobile (3:44)
8. Behind Blue Eyes (3:42)
9. Won't Get Fooled Again (8:33)
10. Pure And Easy (4:21)  (Alt. Version)
11. Baby Don't You Do It (5:15)  (Alt. Version)
12. Naked Eye (5:30)
13. Water (6:25)
14. Too Much Of Anything (4:25)
15. I Don't Even Know Myself (4:56)
16. Behind Blue Eyes (3:27) (Alt. Version)

Produktbeschreibungen
Audio
Nach "Tommy" laborierten The Who am ähnlich ehrgeizigen Projekt "Lifehouse". Als die vier damit nicht zu Rande kamen, veröffentlichten sie 1971 Teile davon schlicht als "Who's Next". Mit dem Synthie-Opener "Baba O'Riley" und dem rockigen Kracher "Won't Get Fooled Again" wurde das Album eines der erfolgreichsten der Band. Digital remastert glänzt es nun mit mehr Transparenz und Dynamik. Dazu gibt's eine informative Booklet-Story von Pete Townshend und sechs Bonustracks, teils live und bislang unveröffentlicht.
© Audio

Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Much of Who's Next derives from Lifehouse, an ambitious sci-fi rock opera Pete Townshend abandoned after suffering a nervous breakdown, caused in part from working on the sequel to Tommy. There's no discernable theme behind these songs, yet this album is stronger than Tommy, falling just behind Who Sell Out as the finest record the Who ever cut. Townshend developed an infatuation with synthesizers during the recording of the album, and they're all over this album, adding texture where needed and amplifying the force, which is already at a fever pitch. Apart from Live at Leeds, the Who have never sounded as LOUD and unhinged as they do here, yet that's balanced by ballads, both lovely ("The Song Is Over") and scathing ("Behind Blue Eyes"). That's the key to Who's Next — there's anger and sorrow, humor and regret, passion and tumult, all wrapped up in a blistering package where the rage is as affecting as the heartbreak. This is a retreat from the '60s, as Townshend declares the "Song Is Over," scorns the teenage wasteland, and bitterly declares that we "Won't Get Fooled Again." For all the sorrow and heartbreak that runs beneath the surface, this is an invigorating record, not just because Keith Moon runs rampant or because Roger Daltrey has never sung better or because John Entwistle spins out manic basslines that are as captivating as his "My Wife" is funny. This is invigorating because it has all of that, plus Townshend laying his soul bare in ways that are funny, painful, and utterly life-affirming. That is what the Who was about, not the rock operas, and that's why Who's Next is truer than Tommy or the abandoned Lifehouse. Those were art — this, even with its pretensions, is rock & roll.
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