Beatles.ru
Войти на сайт 
Регистрация | Выслать пароль 
Новости Книги Мр.Поустман Барахолка Оффлайн Ссылки Спецпроекты
Главная / Мр.Поустман / Форум Music General / The Who

Поиск
Искать:  
СоветыVox populi  

Мр. Поустман

Поздравляем с днем рождения!
Dizzy Miss Uliana (28), Танёнок (32), \\\Жук/// (33), r_might (34), Shady (38), One cool cat (40), McAnnie (43), Ольховский (43), ale_ (46), francisrossi (47), БитлВорон (48), Старiй Бiтломан (48), Старый Битломан (48), lp-cd-club (52)

Поздравляем с годовщиной регистрации!
кеслер (9), Nancy Boyd (12), jerom2003 (13), cooperfield (13), algedi (13), manticore (15), twasini (15), Gil-Galad (18), Mind_Game (19), the_Lizard_King (20), McSim (20), Jupiterian (21), EleanorRigby (21), Serb (21), Кирр Зах (22)

Последние новости:
09.05 Билли Джоэлу исполнилось 75 лет
09.05 Ринго Старр выпустил ограниченным тиражом ЕР «February Sky»
09.05 На продажу выставлена «исключительно редкая» копия сингла «Love Me Do»
09.05 Дети Адриенны из Бруклина ответили на обращение Пола Маккартни
09.05 Новый клип Битлз выйдет 10 мая
09.05 Группа Blur анонсировала документальный фильм о своем воссоединении
09.05 Режиссер Баз Лурман выпустит концертный фильм Элвиса Пресли
... статьи:
30.04 История группы Grand Funk Railroad
23.04 Пит Тауншенд о неопределенном будущем The Who и наследии "The Who Sell Out"
14.04 Папы битлов
... периодика:
18.03 Битловский проект "Яллы"
12.03 Интервью с Алексеем Курбановским, переводчиком книг Джона Леннона
12.03 Юлий Буркин, автор книги "Осколки неба, или Подлинная история Битлз" - интервью № 2

   

The Who

Тема: The Who

Страницы (170): [<<]   18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |  Еще>>
Ответить Новая тема | Вернуться в MG
Улыбка  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 30.08.06 17:24:46   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
2tommy:

30 октября. Я ж на предыдущей странице еще писал.
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: tommy   Дата: 30.08.06 17:33:47   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
ту Primal Scream - даты выхода альбома просто мифически переносятся каждый раз
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 01.09.06 13:23:36   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
The Who - Music Video Box Documentary (2006)The Who - Music Video Box Documentary (2006)
DVD Release Date: September 5, 2006

The MUSIC BOX COLLECTION presents the true and complete story of Who, from their inception to their rise to legendary status. Featuring rare and archive footage courtesy of numerous private collectors from around the world, this documentary provides a fascinating insight into their remarkable career.
Здорово!  
Re: The Who
Автор: Olga Palna   Дата: 01.09.06 16:27:42   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
2 tommy:
"Wire & Glass" лично меня приятно удивил. Думала, будет что-нибудь в стиле нынешних экзерсисов Пита с Рэчел Фуллер... а оказалось все очень даже ХУдожественно :)
Лишний раз убедилась в том, что если РОДЖЕР согласен это исполнять, значит это достойно THE WHO.
Сообщение  
Re: The Who 1
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 09.09.06 19:13:58   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
Rockers back on the roadRockers back on the road

The Who, with original members Pete Townshend (left) and Roger Daltrey, will open their North American tour in Philadelphia Tuesday with a sold-out show.

Friday, September 8, 2006

By CHUCK DARROW
Courier-Post Staff

The Who kicks off its first North American tour in four years Tuesday with a sold-out show at Philadelphia's Wachovia Center. The band returns to the region for a Nov. 24 date at Atlantic City's Borgata Hotel, Casino & Spa, and another sold-out Wachovia Center show the following evening.

As was the case in 2002, charter members Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey will be joined by drummer Zak Starkey, bassist Pino Palladino, keyboardist John "Rabbit" Bundrick and guitarist Simon Townshend, Pete's brother.

According to a band publicist, Towshend, the group's guitarist and composer, spends a good deal of his time online. Which is why it wasn't surprising that he consented to an interview only if it was conducted via e-mail:

Q: According to your Web site, this tour is showcasing new material -- the first time that's happened in many years. Does performing new songs make touring more enjoyable?

A: It makes it less predictable. So many of the classic Who songs we play affect our audiences in the same way every time. New stuff challenges us, and our audience, to connect on a different level. We have to make space for each other.

Q: What can you tell us about the new album? What will it be called? Were the songs written in a relatively short time period, or have you been working on the material for many years?

A: The album I called Endless Wire and all the songs have been written in a four-year period. The majority of the material for the "Mini-Opera" segment of the album, that comprises about 50 percent, was written this year.

Q: What are the subjects (for songs) that interest you nowadays? Are they essentially the same as they've always been, or do you find yourself drawn to topics you didn't address in the past?

A: I have been stuck in a groove since I was 19 years old and got a hit with The Who with one of my first songs, "Can't Explain." This song was inspired by "Young Man Blues" by the jazz singer Mose Allison (Chrissie Hynde told me that the Kinks first big hit, "You Really Got Me" by Ray Davies was inspired by the same song).

That groove begins with the strange, bleak mood of post-war Britain. There was a lot of pride in what we'd done, but for us younger ones trying to see what had happened there was a lot of denial. So I suppose my entire work is dedicated to trying to overcome that denial, to break out and help our fans -- and me too -- to face what happened, and how we should go forward.

Who are my targets? Many of them are now my age, old men and women from 50 to 70 years old. And yet in all of them I see children with unanswered questions. I don't blame parents or grandparents. They were heroes. In any case without the "Great Silence" of the post-war years, rock music as we know it today would never have been born. We'd still be dancing to saxophones and living in romance.

Q: Has getting older affected you as a composer?

A: Hardly at all. I've always been ambitious -- sneered at for my pretensions -- and don't regret trying new things. But I've always known that I can do several things better than almost anyone else on the face of the earth, so I am less of a willing Polymath (Renaissance man) than some of my ex-art school buddies.

On our new album I've based many of the songs on a story about three young kids from my childhood neighbourhood who would have been the ages of my own first children -- so about 25 years younger than me. They are from different backgrounds, and religions, but meet and share dreams and secrets and later form a band that becomes successful.

They then grow older, become decadent, powerful and finally get very old indeed. I write songs for all of them. So I get to cover all the bases.

For myself (and thus for Roger Daltrey) I write songs from the hip -- I try not to think too much about it. We are both happy to sing songs about being older. I'm not quite sure why we in rock should worry about this so much, but we do.
Сообщение  
Re: The Who 2
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 09.09.06 19:14:57   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
Q: What goes into putting a Who tour together -- beyond the logistics of having everyone available?Q: What goes into putting a Who tour together -- beyond the logistics of having everyone available?

A: Logistically we just haul ourselves around. I jet in and out from whichever major city I choose to base myself in. You know, I leave the details to my people, we have great managers. It is all so easy these days, we are treated with such generosity and grace. It feels dignified. But the moment we walk on stage we pick up the old baton -- and try to answer some of those unanswered questions, try to help our audience forget themselves for a couple of hours.

Q: How is the set list determined?

A: Roger decides how it flows and he uses old-school showman's instinct that usually work very well. We get advice and ideas from fans too. Ending the show with the prayer from the end of Tommy ("Listening To You") was an obvious idea that we had stopped using.

Q: What do you do to keep yourself in the kind of shape it takes to go out and jump around for the better part of two hours four or five nights a week?

A: It's more about what I don't do. I don't drink. I don't smoke. I don't have a lot of sex. I don't take risks. I eat carefully (with enjoyment). I sleep quite long hours. I try to stay calm whatever I'm faced with. I work a lot to help other people face their troubles, that keeps my mind of my own.

Truth is, my mother is in her 80s and broke her hip at Christmas and we thought she was done for. She healed up in a month and is back out there causing trouble again. She'll probably show up with a new boyfriend soon. So a lot of it is genetic. My father died of colon cancer when he was 69, so I am aware I need to be careful.

Roger would have a very different answer to this question. We are very different in our approach to health, but we very much respect the simple fact that whatever each of us got wrong, or right, we are still here.

Q: Any time an act of your stature and longevity hits the road, the "this could be the last time" conversation takes place among fans. How much longer do you see The Who touring, assuming health is not an issue?

A: That's right. I was happy to quit back in 1982. Happy not to tour. Now I'm happy to be back. I may come and go all over again. But this is a big tour because we've made a new album and I want people to hear it, so we're going everywhere we can.

Prior to making that album, and sensing it might not land, Roger and I agreed we might never tour again, but we agreed we would always be friends, always support each other in charity events, and always be ready to play old Who songs whenever it felt appropriate. With Sept. 11 coming up you have to know that for us coming to New York and playing to our friends in the Northeast meant more to us than it did to the folks who saw us. (The Concert for New York City in October 2001) was one of our last big shows with John Entwistle.

Q: Bob Dylan recently had some harsh remarks about the current music scene. Do you agree there is nothing of value out there today? If not, what contemporary artists do you think are making quality music?

A: I didn't read that. I have heard some tracks from his new record and I like them. I had a good experience being one of the hosts on In the Attic, the Webcast music and chat show (www.intheattic.com). My partner, Rachel Fuller, is the principal host and we got to meet a whole bunch of relatively new musicians. Kooks, Editors, Fratellis, Ed Harcourt, Zutons, Regina Spektor, The Magic Numbers and many others with chart success in the U.K.

They all seemed to me to be playing music just for the sake of it, with enjoyment and passion. They were all great people, content, hard-working and grateful to have made it. Some of the older acts that appeared, like Flaming Lips, Martha Wainwright, Shack, Eels and Chris Difford, were mind-blowing. Right now I listen to Sufjan Stevens and Sigur Ros. These two artistic projects on their own will last me a lifetime.

http://www.courierpostonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060908/ENT/609080301/1043
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 09.09.06 19:16:32   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
Endless Wire

After 24 years, the wait is almost over and October 31st will see the release of Endless Wire, the keenly-anticipated first new Who studio album since 1982's It's Hard.

The album features extended versions of the various sections that formed the Wire & Glass mini-opera as well as exploring other themes from Pete's novella The Boy Who Heard Music.

Opening track, Fragments, utilises the pioneering Method music software developed by Pete in conjunction with mathematician/composer Lawrence Ball and software-designer Dave Snowdon.

More details to follow soon but, for now, here's the full track-listing.

Hamish

1. Fragments
2. Man In A Purple Dress
3. Mike Post Theme
4. In The Ether
5. Black Widow Eyes
6. Two Thousand Years
7. God Speaks To Marty Robbins
8. It's Not Enough
9. You Stand By Me
10. Sound Round
11. Pick Up The Peace
12. Unholy Trinity
13. Trilby's Piano
14. Out On The Endless Wire
15. Fragments Of Fragments
16. We Got A Hit
17. They Made My Dreams Come True
18. Mirror Door
19. Tea & Theatre

http://www.petetownshend.co.uk/diary/display.cfm?id=383&zone=pr
Улыбка  
Re: The Who
Автор: McCar   Дата: 14.09.06 19:49:35   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
http://delit.net/articles/article.phtml?id=4361

Тут эта статья о новом альбоме на русском
Улыбка  
Re: The Who
Автор: Лена me mine   Дата: 16.09.06 04:59:55   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
предполагаемая обложка нового альбома  однако, странно общие с обложкой Tommy элементы %))предполагаемая обложка нового альбома

однако, странно общие с обложкой "Tommy" элементы %))
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Лена me mine   Дата: 16.09.06 05:08:45   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
Thought you'd like a look at the Endless Wire cover - Design & Art Direction is by long-time Pete/Who collaborator Richard Evans (http://www.rdevans.com/), utilising elements created with the Visual Harmony software designed by Dave Snowdon and Lawrence Ball.
Улыбка  
Re: The Who
Автор: Лена me mine   Дата: 16.09.06 05:16:51   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
Last Sunday's Observer newspaper listed Endless Wire as one of it's '10 Albums You Must Hear This Autumn' (http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1868683,00.html).Last Sunday's Observer newspaper listed Endless Wire as one of it's '10 Albums You Must Hear This Autumn' (http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1868683,00.html).
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Лена me mine   Дата: 16.09.06 05:17:15   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
Generation Terrorists



It seemed like it was all over for the Who, one of rock’s defining acts. But with their first studio album for 25 years, and a series of blistering live shows, Pete Towshend and Roger Daltrey are back and as vital as ever. From Live8, the internet and Pete Doherty to the dramas and tragedies that they’ve survived and their own explosive relationship – the Sixties icons talk candidly to Simon Garfield about what drives them forward.



About three years ago, Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey had a conversation that went -something like this.


Daltrey: ‘Whatever you do, Pete, I’ll support you!’


Townshend: ‘Great, because I’ve got this idea that I want to do this musical in Las Vegas called The Boy Who Heard Music.’


Daltrey: ‘Where?’


Townshend: ‘Las Vegas.’


Daltrey: ‘I’m not going there.’


Townshend: ‘But you said you would support me in whatever I want to do.’


Daltrey: ‘Except Las Vegas.’


Townshend: ‘But it’s only in Las Vegas that we’d get the 200 million dollars that I’d need to make my exploding Mirror Door moment.’


Daltrey: ‘Yes, but whatever else you want to do, I will completely support you.’



A short while later, Townshend gave him some early chapters of his novella about three kids in a band.



Townshend: ‘Well, could you read the story, because I want to write some songs about it?’


Daltrey (after reading it): ‘It’s the same old shit, isn’t it? Come up with something new!’


Townshend: ‘But this is it. This is me. I only have one story, one thesis. I’m a cracked record, and it’s going to go round and round and round until I die.’



Such, at least, is Townshend’s recollection of the conversation. He had endured these sorts of dispiriting exchanges with Daltrey before, and decided to press on regardless. One of the first songs he wrote was called ‘In the Ether’, which, like many of his compositions, appears to be about spiritual awakening and the expiation of pain. Townshend considers it, without question, one of the best things he has ever done, proclaiming, ‘I am writing better Stephen Sondheim songs than even Stephen Sondheim is writing!’ Initially, Daltrey was less convinced. ‘I played it to Roger,’ Townshend recalls, ‘and about a month passed. In the end, I got on the phone and said, “So, what did you think?”’


Daltrey: ‘It’s a bit music-theatre. Maybe if you didn’t have piano but just had guitar…’


Townshend: ‘Yeah, and maybe if it was three guitars and was rock’n’roll and sounded like “Young Man Blues” it would be OK.’ And then Townshend put the phone down. ‘I was really, really hurt,’ he says.


But three years later, and 25 years since the last one, we have a new studio album by the Who. Endless Wire contains 19 tracks, 10 of them comprising what Townshend calls a ‘full-length mini-opera’ entitled Wire & Glass. Its creator is 61. He looks his age as he walks into his recording studio in Richmond at the end of August with the latest mix of the CD in a bag over his shoulder, but he looks good with it, not excessively ravaged, grey in a dignified way. He puts the CD into the mixing desk, and Daltrey’s voice fills the air: ‘Are we breathing out/ Or breathing in/ Are we leaving life/ Or moving in/ Exploding out/ Imploding in/ Ingrained in good/ Or stained in sin.’ It sounds like they’ve never been away.


‘In the Ether’ soon follows, as do several love songs, several songs of yearning, and several very angry songs.
The angriest is called ‘A Man in a Purple Dress’, an attack on the trappings of organised religion written after watching Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ. ‘It is the idea that men need to dress up in order to represent God that appals me,’ Townshend explains. ‘If I wanted to be as insane as to attempt to represent God, I’d just go ahead and do it; I wouldn’t dress up like a drag queen.’


The song ‘Mirror Door’ imagines a place where legendary musicians gather after their death to drink and discuss the value of their work. Elvis and Buddy Holly are mentioned, alongside Howling Wolf and Doris Day. It was only after the recording was finished that someone mentioned to Townshend that Doris Day was still alive. ‘I was absolutely convinced she was dead,’ he admits. ‘But I went to the internet and there she was – a fucking -happening website!’


When the album is over, Townshend offers me tea in an upstairs room overlooking pleasure boats and rowers on the Thames. It is time for something he does better than almost any rock star of any age – the analysis of his craft, the opening of a vein in the process of confession. It is hard to imagine that anyone has thought deeper about their role in popular music, or produced such honest appraisals of triumphs and failures.

Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 16.09.06 18:54:31   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 23.09.06 15:09:56   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
Pete performing Endless Wire from his solo set at the Joe's Pub Attic Jam on September 14thPete performing Endless Wire from his solo set at the Joe's Pub Attic Jam on September 14th
http://www.petetownshend.co.uk/diary/display.cfm?id=395&zone=pr
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 23.09.06 15:11:52   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
19 September 2006  Boston Who party   119 September 2006
Boston Who party

1
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 23.09.06 15:12:17   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
The Who2
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 23.09.06 15:12:49   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
The Who3
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 23.09.06 15:13:23   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
The Who4
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 23.09.06 15:13:58   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
The Who5
Сообщение  
Re: The Who
Автор: Primal Scream   Дата: 23.09.06 15:14:46   
Сообщить модераторам | Ссылка
The Who6
Страницы (170): [<<]   18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |  Еще>>
Ответить Новая тема | Вернуться в MG
Главная страница Сделать стартовой Контакты Пожертвования В начало
Copyright © 1999-2024 Beatles.ru.
При любом использовании материалов сайта ссылка обязательна.

Условия использования      Политика конфиденциальности


Яндекс.Метрика