[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Press Article On The New Album



==========
The Who 'Hearing' new music
By Jonathan Cohen, Reuters

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Years of discussion about a new studio album from 
the surviving members of the Who appears to be finally giving way to action.

A post on guitarist Pete Townshend's official Web site
(http://www.petetownshend.co.uk) reveals that he and frontman Roger Daltrey
will begin demoing new material "before the end of the year" and plan to hit
the studio in March.

Songs intended for the group's first studio album in 21 years "will be based
on Townshend's story, now complete, 'The Boy Who Heard Music."' The set is
being targeted for a summer 2004 release date on an as-yet-undetermined
label and will be supported with a U.S. and U.K. tour. "Other regions" will
be visited in 2005, according to the site.

The Who's last studio album was 1982's "It's Hard," which featured the
singles "Eminence Front" and "Athena." Ever since, Townshend has wrestled
with the notion of writing new material for the group, as he told
Billboard.com this summer.

"What made me stop making Who albums is very much the same thing that
happened to Led Zeppelin. Somebody in the band died," he said, noting the
1978 passing of drummer Keith Moon. "And unlike them, I was very slow to 
get the message."

Townshend, Daltrey and bassist John Entwistle had made some tentative steps
in the direction of new music in the summer of 2002, having run through one
song each from Townshend and Daltrey during rehearsals for a tour. "That 
was as far as we got because two, three weeks later we were in L.A. waiting
to tour and then found that John had died," Townshend said.

With Moon and Entwistle dead, Townshend admitted he has wrestled with
potentially releasing new music under the Who name. "Roger and I on a stage
-- whatever we call ourselves -- can't avoid the fact that in some
illusionary way we bring down the mysterious mantle of the Who around us," 
he said. "It will always happen. So we might as well call it the Who."

Townshend is currently assembling a team to remix the Who's 1973 classic
album "Quadrophenia" in 5.1 surround sound. Plans are in the works to re-
lease the set in expanded form, much in the vein of this summer's "Who's
Next" upgrade and the impending double-disc edition of "Tommy," due Oct. 28
from Universal.

Reuters/Billboard

09/23/03 13:28 ET
==========

- SCHRADE in Akron

The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists -
that is why they invented hell.
	- Bertrand Russell (1872 - 1970)