THE WHO
QUADROPHENIA SOUNDTRACK (1979)
320 KBPS
REMASTER
During the '70s, Tommy went from being the Who's finest hour to excessive pop-culture cliché--precisely the sort of bloated musical albatross that fueled the decade's punk and new wave reactionaries. Consequently, director Frank Roddam imbued his 1979 version of Quadrophenia (Pete Townshend's 1973 introspective ode to teen angst set against the English mod versus rocker clashes of the early '60s) with a conscious sense of scale and humanity. Unlike the often embarrassing Tommy film spectacle, the band's musical presence on Quadrophenia is both concise and surprisingly fresh. They contribute three new songs ("Get Out and Stay Out," "Four Faces," "Joker James") that help flesh out the story and cut much of the original material down to its musical and emotional essence. Credit Who bassist/film musical director John Entwistle (who'd no doubt perceived the sharp musical changes just then happening around him) with stripping Quadrophenia down to size, in the process underscoring his thunderous, cascading bass lines; Pete Townshend's slashing power chords; Keith Moon's maniacal drum fills; and Roger Daltrey's vocal power. After Tommy, less was indeed more.
1. I Am the Sea - The Who
2. Real Me, The - The Who
3. I'm One - The Who
4. 5:15 - The Who
5. Love Reign O'er Me - The Who
6. Bell Boy - The Who
7. I've Had Enough - The Who
8. Helpless Dancer - The Who
9. Doctor Jimmy - The Who
10. Zoot Suit - The High Numbers
11. Hi Heel Sneakers - Cross Section
12. Get Out and Stay Out - The Who
13. Four Faces - The Who
14. Joker James - The Who
15. Punk and the Godfather, The - The Who
16. Night Train - James Brown
17. Louie Louie - The Kingsmen
18. Green Onions - Booker T. & The MG's
19. Rhythm of the Rain - The Cascades
20. He's So Fine - The Chiffons
21. Be My Baby - The Ronettes
22. Da Doo Ron Ron - The Crystals
23. I'm the Face - The High Numbers
2 comments:
The original 2CD version of Quadrophenia with the B/W cover is essential. This only has 10 of the original 17 tracks (badly remixed) + some older Who material + some other songs from the sixties. The whole flow of the original album is lost. This is piss poor in comparison. Get the original.
It's not the album, it's the soundtrack to the movie.
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