Showing posts with label Pete Townshend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pete Townshend. Show all posts

04 April, 2023

From Uncle Pete

A new Pete Townshend tune! It's a lockdown lament called "Can't Outrun The Truth". Perhaps not super timely but it's a really fine little country-blues shuffle.

01 July, 2022

We still got the ball and chain

(Photo by Matt Kent.)
 
Sadly, Pete Townshend's solo recording career has more or less been in hibernation since c.1993 when he released his last solo album of all new material, Psychoderelict. It's certainly not the case that he's been sitting around resting on his laurels, though. Since then he's appeared on the recordings of other musicians, done 2 albums with The Who, toured with them as well as on his own. He's done lots of charity work, written a book, contemplated a musical, and, no doubt, tried to resurrect the ideas behind Lifehouse in some manner or other. So Townshend has managed to keep the creative juices flowing. Plus, he has taken time to be a family man.
 
Back in 2012 he sold the publishing rights to his work, past and future, so I have read and those people want to get their money's worth out of the deal. In addition to attempting to have songs like "Won't Get Fooled Again" and "Pinball Wizard" used in TV shows and movies, there's always the greatest hits album to keep an artist not currently making music in the public's view. And so in 2015 we got Truancy: The Very Best of Pete Townshend.
 
It's a fine single disc overview of Townshend's solo career with a couple tracks each from most of his albums with the last couple being represented by a single song. In classic style, the record company tacked a couple new songs on the end of the album to entice existing fans into purchasing a bunch of material they already own in order to hear the new stuff.
 
Those new songs were "How Can I Help You" and "Guantanamo". The former is a fine tune that, for me, has an Iron Man vibe to it with a steady beat and some clean-sounding guitar. But the latter is a classic.
 
I don't know when these songs were written and recorded but, as far as subject matter goes, "Guantanamo" was not exactly timely. Had it come out 10 years earlier, it would have been a needed reflection of our War on Terror™. But in 2015, Barack Obama's pledge to close the detention camp (a.k.a.- prison) there had never been carried out and most people had forgotten about the place and the people held within its walls. As far as I know, here in 2022 there are still prisoners at Guantanamo who have not been charged with a crime or given any kind of trial. So, in that sense, the song is still topical even if the subject is not popular.

The song begins with an acoustic guitar and an undulating keyboard sound that recalls Townshend's organ & synthesizer experiments from the Who's Next era. A drum beat enters and canters along as Townshend angrily intones "Down in Guantanamo/We still got the ball and chain". He layers more synth sounds but they're not intrusive and let the beat and acoustic guitar continue churning forward. Plus he adds some great backing vocals. Sometimes they repeat and emphasize the main vocal line but there's also a chorus of "Oooo's" has he laments "There's a long road to travel/For justice to make its claim".

"Guantanamo" harkens back to The Who's glory days but also sounds fresh. The mix is crisp with the drums up front and the snare having a loud snap to it. Townshend is in fine form vocally as he alternates between a clean tone and a raspy one for emphasis. This is great stuff.

Townshend re-recorded the song with The Who on their 2019 album Who as "Ball and Chain". Roger Daltrey gave a bluesier vocal performance and the song has a more muscular arrangement with Townshend's trademark electric guitar. Both are worth your time but Pete's solo version is the one I heard and came to adore first.

03 January, 2004

Oh, This Is Just Rich


From the AP:

NAPLES, Fla. - The lead guitarist for the rock band Rush skirmished with sheriff's deputies, spat blood on one and was arrested on New Year's Eve after his son refused to leave the stage at a fancy hotel, authorities said.

Deputies said they had to use a stun gun on 50-year-old Alex Zivojinovich — known on stage as Alex Lifeson — for what they described as drunken, violent behavior at the Naples Ritz-Carlton hotel.

Christ! They had to use a stun gun - classic!! I've seen Rush a few times and Alex Lifeson is not a big guy. There's a lesson here: don't fuck with drunk Canucks in a rage.

I'm sorry I never post much about rock stars that are popular today - either they just don't interest me or I haven't any idea who the fuck they are. Britney Spears and OutKast don't appeal to me and who the fuck are Filter and Evanesence? From E!Online:

Pete Townshend says he was deadly serious about the child-pornography charges leveled against him in January.

In fact, he now says he even contemplated suicide during the heaviest media and legal onslaught following the disclosure of his name on an FBI (news - web sites) list of Internet kiddie porn suspects.

"If I had had a gun, I would have shot myself," he told London's Observer newspaper Sunday. "And if I had shot myself, it would have been fucking awful because it would have confirmed what everybody thought."


Wasn't a guy from King Missile busted on child pr0n charges? Or was it someone from Massive Attack? Too much to keep track of. Not to condone child pornography, but what the hell are the cops doing to catch the people making it? Sure, Townshend's escapade garnered a lot of press but has that sting operation actually netted any producers of the stuff he saw? And what was he looking at? Was it pictures of a 6 year-old girl or pictures of a 16 year-old girl from a country where one can give permission to be photographed in the buff at that age?

I guess it's nothing really new for Pete. Wasn't it back in '95 or so that he said something in an interview which caused everyone to point a finger at him that he was homosexual? They brought up the lyrics of "Rough Boys" and "And I Moved" as evidence. I forgot his explanation for "Rough Boys" but I do remember that "And I Moved" was originally written for Bette Midler ergo the woman's POV. It just irritates me that people make dumb arguments. But so what if he were gay or bi? In what way would this lessen the impact of his work? I guess that's what you get for having a view of sexuality that isn't black & white but a very nebulous gray and daring to tell people about it.