[Product_Table id=’54458′ name=’soundcloud 8211 reposts’]
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The post The Who Releases “My Generation” appeared first on The Buzz Roll Media.
On Oct 13th, 1965, The Who recorded “My Generation”, at Pye Studios, London. It reached No.2 on the UK chart. Roger Daltrey would later say that he stuttered the lyrics to fit them to the music. The BBC in the UK initially refused to play the song because it did not want to offend people who stutter. They released the song today, in 1965.
The song went through various stages as they tried to perfect it. Written by a 20-year-old Pete Townshend, it began as a slow song with a bluesy feel, and at one point had handclaps and multiple key changes. The final product was at a much faster tempo than they conceived the song. The Who’s manager Kit Lambert came up with the idea to speed it up.
Townshend who reportedly wrote the song inspired by the Queen Mother who allegedly had Townshend’s 1935 Packard hearse towed off a street in Belgravia, London because the sight of it offended her during her daily drive through the neighborhood.
The stutter in the song was coincidental. Producer Shel Talmy insisted it was “one of those happy accidents” that he thought they should keep.
“My Generation” features one of the first bass solos in Rock history. John Entwistle used a new-on-the-market Danelectro bass to play it, but after he kept breaking strings trying to record it, the bassist ended up recording his parts on his trusted Fender Jazz bass.
Entwistle was the least visible member of the band, and his bass solos on this song threw off directors when The Who would perform the song on TV shows. When it got to his part, the cameras would often go to guitarist Pete Townshend, and his fingers wouldn’t be moving.
Watch this video on YouTube.
The post The Who Releases “My Generation” appeared first on The Buzz Roll Media.