<tc>The Who – Who Are You (140g)</tc>
<tc>The Who – Who Are You (140g)</tc>
Rupture de stock
<tc>The Who – Who Are You (140g)</tc>
<tc>The Who – Who Are You (140g)</tc>

The Who – Who Are You (140g)

€200,00
worldwide-delivery
La TVA est incluse dans le prix pour les pays de l'Union Européenne, et ajustée sur la base du pays de destination au moment du paiement.
Temps moyen d'expédition : 2 à 4 jours ouvrés. L'expédition est gratuite au sein de l'Union Européenne au dessus de 99€ d'achat, sauf pour certaines destinations, et jusqu'à 50kg. Au dessus de 50kg, frais d'expédition sur demande à contact@audiosounmusic.com. Il n'y a pas de politique de retour pour les pays hors Union Européenne.



The Who [click here to see more vinyl featuring The Who]:

  • Lead Vocals – Roger Daltrey
  • Guitar, Piano, Synthesizer, Vocals – Pete Townshend
  • Bass, Vocals, Horns – John Entwistle (A2, A5)
  • Drums, Percussion – Keith Moon

Backing Vocals – Andy Fairweather-Low (A1-2, B2-4)

Rod Argent - Synthesizer (A2), Piano (B4)

Strings arranged by Ted Astley

Written by Pete Townshend (A1, A4-5, B2-4), John Entwistle (A2-3, B1)

 

1 LP, standard sleeve

Original analog Master tape : YES

Heavy Press : 140g

Record color : black

Speed : 33 RPM

Size : 12'’

Stereo

Studio

Record Press : unspecified

Label : Classic Records (now part of Analogue Productions)

Original Label : Polydor

Recorded September 1977 – April 1978 at Ramport Studio ; Olympic Studio ; RAK Studio ; John's Wood Studio ; Pete Townshend's own studio in Goring-on-Thames

Produced by Glyn Johns, Jon Astley

Originally released in August 1978

Reissued in 2009

 

Tracks:

Side A:

  1. New Song
  2. Had Enough
  3. 905
  4. Sister Disco
  5. Music Must Change

Side B:

  1. Trick of the Light
  2. Guitar and Pen
  3. Love Is Coming Down
  4. Who Are You


      Reviews:

      “On the Who's final album with Keith Moon, their trademark honest power started to get diluted by fatigue and a sense that the group's collective vision was beginning to fade. As instrumentalists, their skills were intact. More problematic was the erratic quality of the material, which seemed torn between blustery attempts at contemporary relevance ("Sister Disco," "New Song," "Music Must Change") and bittersweet insecurity ("Love Is Coming Down"). Most problematic of all were the arrangements, heavy on the symphonic synthesizers and strings, which make the record sound cluttered and overanxious. Roger Daltrey's operatic tough-guy braggadocio in particular was beginning to sound annoying on several cuts. Yet Pete Townshend's better tunes -- "Music Must Change," "Love Is Coming Down," and the anthemic title track -- continued to explore the contradictions of aging rockers in interesting, effective ways. Whether due to Moon's death or not, it was the last reasonably interesting Who record.” AllMusic Review by Richie Unterberger


      Ratings :

      AllMusic : 4.5 / 5 ; Discogs : 4.03 / 5

      Vu récemment