Boston Herald on TD Banknorth Garden
Brian Cady
brianinatlanta2001 at yahoo.com
Sun Dec 3 19:26:32 CST 2006
http://theedge.bostonherald.com/musicNews/view.bg?articleid=170326
Who offers only glimpse of rock greatness
By Brett Milano/ Music Review
Monday, December 4, 2006
Everybody knows The Who has dozens of great songs in its catalog.Everybody, that is, except The Who itself.
You couldnt fault much about The Whos show this weekend - not the obvious chemistry between founders Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey, or the appreciation they expressed for their fans. You couldnt fault Daltreys voice (craggier but on target), or Townshends revitalized guitar playing.
You couldnt even fault the new
lineup, with bassist Pino Palladino and drummer Zak Starkey replacing the late John Entwistle and Keith Moon. After a few years to jell, they sound like a proper band instead of a substitute.
But you could definitely fault the predictable set list. Unlike many rock vets, they havent been digging up many deep tracks or fan favorites - in fact, theyve been playing most of the same songs since their return to active touring in the late 90s. Its the classic-rock radio version of The Who, heavy on later commercial tracks and light on the real nuggets.
Some of their peak albums werent even represented - no Tommy until the encore; no Sell Out or Quadrophenia at all. The mythical Mod era was also passed over, with only three mid-60s songs (including the opening Cant Explain and the obligatory My Generation). Instead there were early-80s tracks such as Eminence Front and You Better You Bet, which got plenty of airplay but were hardly The Whos greatest. The sets second half seemed like a countdown to Wont Get Fooled Again - which had a good jam going before the taped synthesizers kicked in.
The one new wrinkle was a stack of songs from the current Endless Wire album. Though the disc is spotty, the material had more impact live; and the mini-opera Wire & Glass truly soared. The last encore, Tea & Theatre, found Daltrey and Townshend alone, looking and sounding like grizzled survivors in a movingly stripped-down moment.
The Pretenders opening set was simply flawless, mixing hits with a few catalog surprises, a warm cover of Dylans Forever Young and a hellbent Precious to slam it home. Chrissie Hynde looked impossibly sexy in top hat and tails; her voice and Martin Chambers manic drumming seemed untouched by time.
THE WHO, with THE PRETENDERSAt TD Banknorth Garden, Saturday night.
-Brian in Atlanta
The Who This Month!
http://www.thewhothismonth.com
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