Stucky QOTD: Tommy (and others)

A bit of nostalgia (and interesting info) for those of us 60+.  Tommy turns 50!! My guess is that 95% of us in the 60+ age group would rank Tommy in their Top 10 favorite albums of all time.  Folks, we Boomers might suck ass but dammit, we had the Best Fucken Music ever.

Q:  What are your Top 5 favorite albums of all time?

———

Me?

  1.  Jesus Christ Superstar
  2. Dark Side of the Moon (Pink Floyd)
  3. In-A-Gadda-Davida (Iron Butterfly)
  4. Tommy
  5. Tapestry (Carol King)

Honorable Mention:  Green River (CCR)

====================================================

The Who’s game-changing rock opera ‘Tommy’ turns 50

Fifty years ago today, “that deaf, dumb and blind kid” who scored immortality in “Pinball Wizard” was born when “Tommy” — The Who’s game-changing rock opera — was released on May 23, 1969.

And the story of the boy who played “a mean pinball” still resonates a half-century later. In fact, The Who’s frontman, Roger Daltrey — who brought Tommy Walker to life on the double album and later in the star-studded 1975 movie — said it doesn’t take much of a stretch to imagine the character as he would be in 2019.

“In today’s world, Tommy would have been very good at computer games,” Daltrey, 75, told The Post. “But life is looking up at people — it’s not looking down at a pinball machine or a computer.” (Or a smartphone, for that matter.)

Speaking and giving voice to a generation of youth in 1969, The Who never looked back after dropping their groundbreaking fourth LP, featuring such classic tracks as “I’m Free” and “We’re Not Gonna Take It.” While the story about a seemingly disabled boy who goes on to become a religious leader may have required a suspension of disbelief from the listener, it captured some real truths about the time.

“It obviously hit a nerve with the youth of America, that’s for sure, or the youth all over the world,” said Daltrey. “And I think that had a lot to do with the Cold War at the time. Obviously, in America, you had the Vietnam War. That was a generation fighting for its identification and fighting for its spiritual path.”

No doubt, “Tommy” represented the universal struggle of the young, disaffected and lost. “It was at a time when our country was questing, was searching,” said Mark Goodman, an original MTV VJ and longtime Who fan who now co-hosts “Debatable” on SiriusXM Volume. “In terms of our culture, the youth culture, that’s where we were.”

`John Entwistle, Keith Moon, Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey, members of The Who, in 1971
John Entwistle, Keith Moon, Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey, members of The Who, in 1971Getty Images

The Who captured the spirit of a generation that needed someone to see them and feel them.

“There were kids who were essentially deaf, dumb and blind, wanting to be heard by their parents, wanting to be heard by their government,” said Keith Levenson, co-producer of the upcoming “Tommy Orchestral” live album, out June 14, and music director of The Who’s current “Moving On!” tour. “And that was just explosive.”

After notching previous hits such as “My Generation,” “Happy Jack” and “I Can See for Miles,” The Who — Daltrey plus guitarist and principal songwriter Pete Townshend, drummer Keith Moon (who died in 1978) and bassist John Entwistle (who died in 2002) — was ready to rewrite the playbook as the ’60s came to a close.

“It was a very adventurous time in music, where the bands ruled the waves, rather than the record companies ruling the waves,” said Daltrey. “It was Kit Lambert, our manager [and ‘Tommy’ producer], who was encouraging us to do a rock opera. He realized that music could be so much more than the three-minute pop single. And, indeed, he was correct.”

Meanwhile, Townshend had been following the teachings of Indian spiritual guru Meher Baba, which would factor into the “Tommy” narrative. Choosing the name “Tommy” because it was a nickname for World War I soldiers, Townshend wrote all but a few of the 24 tracks and also sang some lead vocals.

Townshend’s songs would tell the tale of a boy who is brainwashed by his mother into thinking he was a deaf and blind mute, and then going on to discover that he can feel vibrations well enough to become an expert pinball player. Ultimately, he recovers his senses and gains power.

Daltrey said that the story took shape throughout the recording process, which went from September 1968 to March 1969 at IBC Studios in London.

“The record was put together with no conception of the end product. It kind of built as it went along,” he said. “It was all a great adventure. For the first time in our lives, we had a longer time in the studio to experiment. Most of my memories are us sitting around the piano, working out the harmonies, layer upon layer of harmonies. We were forming four- or five-part harmonies. And, of course, Keith Moon’s joking around was always enjoyable.”

But whereas in the studio “it was the sum of individual songs,” said Daltrey, it became a greater whole when they practiced the album live before taking it on the road.

The movie poster for 'Tommy'
The movie poster for ‘Tommy’Courtesy Everett Collection

“It was only when we got it out into the rehearsal hall for the first time and started to play it together as one piece of music that I suddenly realized, as a singer, this has got to be more than it is on the record,” he said. “My singing, indeed, had to radically change to get the light and shade into it. It needed to be accented onstage more than what was on the record at the time.”

On the recording, though, “Tommy” took Daltrey to another level as a vocalist, according to Goodman. “One of the things that made this album as great as it was is that Daltrey really came into his own,” he said. “This is where he really found his voice, literally and figuratively . . . His style, I think, really sort of set the tone for a lot of other singers in rock and roll after that.”

Although “Tommy” was generally hailed as The Who’s breakthrough, some initial reviews were mixed. Still, the album was an instant hit, going gold in a few months — and eventually selling more than 20 million copies worldwide.

Goodman — who, as a 16-year-old, picked up “Tommy” the first week it was in stores — remembers the excitement that led up to the album’s release. “ ‘Pinball Wizard’ had been out for a few weeks, as I recall, and so everybody was freaked about that,” he said. “There was a lot of anticipation about it. We were all curious to see what this incredible piece of work was.”

At just 10, Levenson bought the album on its actual release day at Manhattan’s now-defunct King Karol record store at East 86th Street and Third Avenue. “I stood in line; that’s what we used to do for records,” he said. “You would stand in line and wait for the next Who album or the next [Rolling] Stones album or the next Pink Floyd album. It was a thing.”

While Goodman would see The Who perform “probably 30 or 40 minutes” from the 75-minute “Tommy” at Philadelphia’s Electric Factory later that year — “It was huge,” he said — the band’s 1969 Woodstock show in support of the album was memorable mostly for the wrong reasons.

“Everything by that time was falling apart,” recalls Daltrey of their second-day appearance. “It was 5 o’clock in the morning when we went onstage. The thing that saved it for me was the sun peeping over the horizon on ‘See Me, Feel Me’ at the end. It was extraordinary after the three days of rain.”

Daltrey performed near the original Woodstock site for last year’s Bethel, NY, show, captured on “Tommy Orchestral.”

“So there I was 49 years later, back at Woodstock playing ‘Tommy,’ ” he said. “Now that it’s orchestrated, I think it’s really brought out the musicality of it.”

Beyond its live performances, “Tommy” got another life when it was turned into the 1975 film with Daltrey playing the title role alongside an all-star cast that included Elton John, Tina Turner, Eric Clapton and Jack Nicholson. Daltrey laughs now at the fact that Ann-Margret, who received a Best Actress Oscar nomination, played his mother when she was only three years older than him. “That was a bit of an acting job trying to pretend that she was my mother,” he said, “but I seemed to stick with it.”

You can still hear the impact of “Tommy” — inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame as the godfather of all rock operas — 50 years later. “Before there was a ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’ or a ‘Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat’ . . . this was defining,” said Levenson of the “epic” work. “I think it allowed people to go beyond sort of bubble-gum rock to a piece that was really dealing with serious issues.”

Still, Goodman believes that “Tommy” “has diminished a bit in the way that people look at it” over the years.

Elton John in 'Tommy'
Elton John in ‘Tommy’Courtesy Everett Collection

“It’s a little pompous, a little ponderous,” he said, favoring a subsequent Who rock opera, from 1973, instead. “For me, I think ‘Quadrophenia’ is a far better work. But, you know, ‘Tommy’ is ‘Tommy.’ ”

As The Who tours and works on their first new studio album since 2006, which is due this fall, Daltrey said that “Tommy” has always been bigger than him and his band.

“For me, ‘Tommy’ has always been about all of us,” he said. “We are all Tommy. Tommy is the human condition. All those things within Tommy . . . it’s in all of us.”
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“For me, ‘Tommy’ has always been about all of us,” he said. “We are all Tommy. Tommy is the human condition. All those things within Tommy . . . it’s in all of us.”

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Author: Stucky

I'm right, you're wrong. Deal with it.

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225 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
May 24, 2019 1:17 am

My paper route top 5 from 1983-1984:
1. Spandau Ballet – True
2. Missing Persons – Rhyme and Reason
3. Rush – Distant Early Warning
4. Men Without Hats – Rhythm of Youth
5. Naked Eyes – Naked Eyes

PleasureOhm
PleasureOhm
May 24, 2019 1:23 am

My top 5 best engineered albums of all time:
1. Donald Fagen – The Nightfly
2. Roxy Music – Avalon
3. Dire Straits – Brothers in Arms
4. AC/DC – Back in Black
5. Def Leppard – Hysteria

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
May 24, 2019 2:33 am

My list is simple:
All albums by the Beatles.
Followed by all albums by Led Zeppelin.

Sisofia
Sisofia
May 24, 2019 4:57 am

Gram Parsons…..Grievious Angel.

KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
May 24, 2019 8:48 am

Roxy Music and Brian Ferry Fans just lost some of my respect…
And mygirl keeps stealing from my playlists.

What? no negro music? I gotta add some soul. Stevie Wonder. When I saw him on American Bandstand when he was 13 or so, I thought the Ray Charles wannabe was a cheap upstart. I changed my mind over the years.

And all these ‘angry at your dad’ bands for youse Beavis and Butthead headbangers, you can keep em. ‘cept for a few. Like the AC/DC version of It’s a Long Way To the Top with bagpipes.

wishes
wishes
  KeyserSusie
May 24, 2019 9:30 am

one of my favs
how do you insert a video? the link is to YouTube, Stevie Wonder <3

mistico
mistico
  wishes
May 24, 2019 9:52 am
wishes
wishes
  mistico
May 24, 2019 9:56 am
Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  wishes
May 24, 2019 9:26 pm
KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
  KeyserSusie
May 24, 2019 12:55 pm

This Stevie Wonder Montage is worth the 7 minutes imo,

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  KeyserSusie
May 24, 2019 9:53 pm

“Roxy Music and Brian Ferry Fans just lost some of my respect…”

Why?

niebo
niebo
  ILuvCO2
May 24, 2019 11:08 pm

Fuck all y’all dis’ing Roxy . . . bitches!!!

S18-1000
S18-1000
May 24, 2019 10:03 am

1. 2112 – Rush (the only CD my Dad kept in his truck, and we would listen to it driving to the gun range and back)
2. Aqualung – Jethro Tull
3. The Wall – Pink Floyd
4. Ted Nugent – Ted Nugent (his debut album)
5. The Outlaws – Outlaws

With the exception of 2112 at number one, the rest of the list is in no specific order. You could hook me up to 2112 on repeat, especially the first 20 minutes and 21 seconds… what a song…

niebo
niebo
  S18-1000
May 24, 2019 11:10 pm

Awesome top five!! i’D GIVE MORE THUMBS UP BUT I ONLY GOT TWO

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  Stucky
May 24, 2019 11:45 am

That is kind of a glaring omission, now that you mention it. I had only one of their albums. A Question of Balance. I listened to it over and over. I think I burned myself out on them.

mistico
mistico
  Mary Christine
May 24, 2019 12:24 pm
mistico
mistico
  mistico
May 24, 2019 12:25 pm
mistico
mistico
  Stucky
May 24, 2019 11:47 am

They cloistered themselves in a farmhouse to write songs and only came up with one great song, THE SONG that put us all in a mood.

Love your comments, wish there were more. I mean, this is for a grade, no?

mistico
mistico
  mistico
May 24, 2019 12:07 pm
niebo
niebo
  mistico
May 24, 2019 11:11 pm

really? Tuesday aftersnooooooooze . . . snore. . . .snore. . . .snore

Yancey_Ward
Yancey_Ward
  Stucky
May 24, 2019 12:29 pm

I love The Moody Blues. If I had extended out to top 20, Long Distance Voyager would have made the list- it was a No.1 album the Summer after my freshman year of high school.

Lager
Lager
  Yancey_Ward
May 24, 2019 2:52 pm

Always liked this uptempo one.

Yancey_Ward
Yancey_Ward
  Stucky
May 24, 2019 12:30 pm

And I love a lot of ABBA’s music, but not the individual albums. I own the CD of their greatest hits, however.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Stucky
May 24, 2019 9:49 pm

abba dabba doo, they suck!

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
May 24, 2019 11:30 am

Lol! People are all over the place. It is a matter of taste and mood. I don’t like everyone’s choices but I can acknowledge the talent. Except for Stevie Nicks. Her voice sucks and she ruined Fleetwood Mac. They were a mess before her. Dysfunctional, I mean. She just made them self destruct faster.

I almost went with Dark Side of the Moon. I bet if someone counted it up, it might be the one most chosen. It was the only Pink Floyd album I had. I bought it because I saw them perform some of the songs before they released it. Sept 11, 1972. I was having trouble nailing down the date because it was not released until 1973 but I was sure I saw them in ’72. Someone gave a me and a friend free tickets 5 rows back. My ears rang for quite a while after that concert. It’s one of those things I will never forget. It’s also the only time I ever saw them.

Here is a list of concert dates for their entire career. It helped me nail down the date.

https://www.songkick.com/artists/400904-pink-floyd/gigography?page=11

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mary Christine
May 24, 2019 3:11 pm

Gigography. what a fitting word.

niebo
niebo
  Mary Christine
May 24, 2019 11:14 pm

i wasn’t quite born yet when you had your PF flashback, BUT . . . I do believe Stevie Nicks was She was the Yoko of the late 70’s/early 80’s . . .

mistico
mistico
May 24, 2019 12:26 pm
Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  mistico
May 24, 2019 10:33 pm

That was a five minute hit. You know it took him five minutes to write the lyrics.

Mistico (EC)
Mistico (EC)
  Mary Christine
May 24, 2019 10:59 pm
BubblePuppy7
BubblePuppy7
May 24, 2019 1:46 pm

1. Alone Together (Dave Mason)
2. The Street Giveth, and the Street Taketh Away (Cat Mother and the all Night Newsboys)
3. Metamorphosis (Iron Butterfly)
4. Boston (Boston)
5. Led Zeppelin (Led Zeppelin)

RiNS
RiNS
May 24, 2019 3:37 pm

Albums being a different beast…

1- New Gold Dream – Simple Minds
2- Neruda – Red Rider –
3- The Wall – Pink Floyd
4- Black Sabbath – Black Sabbath
5- Physical Graffiti – Led Zeppelin

Honourable Mention:

Fair Warning – Van Halen

Starts kinda like the declass today..

Vakrinn
Vakrinn
May 24, 2019 8:06 pm

I’m so glad I’m not a Boomer…

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  Vakrinn
May 24, 2019 10:34 pm

Me, too!

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
May 24, 2019 11:51 pm

As you can tell, the Beatles and Led Zep are my two favorite bands and I like everything both bands did. It’s too hard to pick after that because I like too many bands and and from too many genres.

But does anybody remember Wishbone Ash? They didn’t seem real popular to me but I always like them
Here’s “Warrior” from their 72 album “Argus.”

Nelson Muntz
Nelson Muntz
May 25, 2019 12:40 am

1. Ten Years After, A Space in Time
2. Doors, Morrison Hotel
3. Leon Russell, Carney
4. The Band, Northern Lights Southern Cross
5. Waylon Jennings, Dreamin’ My Dreams

Ok I can’t stop there. Gotta keep going.

6. Marshall Tucker Band, Searchin’ for a Rainbow
7. Big Head Todd, Sister Sweetly
8. Sublime, 40 oz to Freedom
9. Social Distortion
10.Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass, The Lonely Bull

I could go all night, but I’m already five over. Just one more.

11. Commander Cody and the Lost Planet Airmen, Lost In The Ozone
12. Pure Prairie League, Bustin’ Out

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
May 25, 2019 9:55 am

Thanks for starting this post, Stucky. Lots good music that I had forgotten about. I think I will hook it up to my Bose Wave and page through the posts to listen to while I work in the kitchen.

KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
May 25, 2019 12:09 pm

this is for Musket. Your comment brought this to mind.