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Showing posts with label Pete Townshend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pete Townshend. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

The Beatles, The Rolling Stones or The Who?

The age old question can never be answered properly.  My answer changes daily, depending on the music on my iPod or the band that's toured most recently. I'll never be able to decide.  Why?

Sears or Roebuck?

Eastman or Kodak?

Ben or Jerry?

Avis or Hertz?

Wilt Chamberlain or Bill Russell?

Magic or Bird?

Chamberlain, Russell, Magic, Bird, MJ, Dr. J, West or Oscar?

Orr or Potvin?  - I digress.  That's a no-brainer (Yes, Peter May and Brian, it's Orr).

After a double dose of The Who, first at the stunning new Barclays Center in Brooklyn, then at my local TD Boston Garden, my focus was on The WHO and the Quadrophenia Tour.  But, then a good buddy sent me a clip of The Fab Faux doing Abbey Road and another bud sent an interesting medley of Stones, complete with a cameo by Sheryl Crow.  In his pair of clips, one included a NYC show from MSG that I was lucky enough to attend.

Here we go, for a little Tuesday entertainment.





Sunday, April 1, 2012

The set of all-time

While there have been many incredible performances by Rock n' roll bands who've played Madison Square Garden, I believe everyone can agree that there's NEVER been a better performance than "The Who" at The Concert for New York City.

DVD of The CFNYC
About a month after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, (October 20, 2011 to be exact), organizers hyped a special NYC concert to feature Paul McCartney and The Who.  That was supposed to be it. As word made its way around the music industry, everyone, and I do mean EVERYONE, wanted to do their part and play for the people of New York.  The concert organizers decided to provide free tickets to first responders of NY/NJ and their families while charging other fans to raise money for the very beginning of the funding to help the families devastated by the unfathomable attacks.

The cops, fire-fighters, EMS guys and other turned out in the 1000s.

Not to be lost or ever forgotten - Adam Sandler did his greatest "Opera Man" ever. Richard Gere made one of the biggest mistakes of his career and Harrison Ford was totally trashed.  But, that's not why I write.

The reason, of course, is that many a rock star had enjoyed their best night as performers and maybe their best night ever as a band at the famed Garden, but The Who shined brightest on that great night which helped bring NYC back to its feet.  In the past, performers like Bono of U2, Elton John, Bruce Springsteen and others confessed on stage that their best performances had come at MSG.

So, while Woodstock has its place in history, as does The Last Waltz, The Concert for George, Knebworth '90, Pink Floyd doing The Wall in Berlin, the Filmore East and the ABB, Shea Stadium and The Beatles, Bruce at The Stone Pony or the NC on New Year's Eve '79/'80, countless Rolling Stones Shows, Live Aid in '85, No Nukes, Clapton at the Royal Albert Hall along with so many more shows that can be tagged as "one" of the best shows of all-time, The Who at The Concert for New York City - blew 'em all away.

It was the last time I saw John Entwhistle in person and a little-known fact - that his gig, previously scheduled for months at BB Kings on 42nd Street, had the event organizers put "The Who" on stage pretty early in the night.  It proved to take the night to heights many had never thought would come as NYC recovered from devastation, exhaustion and a deep funky depression.



In 2002, one NYC cop wrote:

I am a NYC Police Officer who found comfort and catharsis at this concert. I am grateful to those performers and to the Americans celebrating this music. Seeing the faces of my fellow Americans who gave themselves over to Rock and Roll for a mercurial moment made me proud yet overwhelmingly sad. I know that a lot of my fellow civil servants often have trouble reaching certain levels of emotion and, through good old fashioned Rock and Roll, we were able to let go. Listening again to those first few crashing chords from THE WHO still gives me chills. I know how every one of us was feeling at that moment.
This is not just great classic music -- this music defines us. We grew up on it. Billy Joel, Elton John, Paul McCartney, Mick Jagger, James Taylor --this music fueled our youths and made us who we are. After September 11, 01 we found new meaning to these lyrics just as we had discovered more about ourselves. We should be proud to celebrate this music, in a country that lets us play it freely and with the volume all the way up. It reminds us how powerful music can be and how healing. I replay this concert over and over. I recall the images of every wife and girlfriend, wearing their hero's hat and clutching them with all of their might, grateful for that precious moment together. I have new-found love for life, for life's simple pleasures.
Perhaps the concert's newest artist summed it as well as the veteran acts that night. In a song I have loved since I first heard it last summer, though I never fully knew what it meant until that night: "Five For Fighting", SUPERMAN -- "I wish that I could cry. Fall upon my knees. Find a way to lie. About a home I'll never see. It may sound absurd but don't be naive. Even heroes have the right to bleed. I may be disturbed but don't you concede? Even heroes have the right to dream. It's not easy to be me...."

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Ramble On ... Super... Not for ST John's.

Winning by 16, they lose to West Va. by 19.  It is officially over for St, John's and the Norm Roberts era.

***

Some interesting thoughts relayed to Billboard Magazine from Pete Townshend of The Who as he prepares to play the Super Bowl with Roger Daltry.  See:  http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory?id=9704660

Pete says: "This show, for us, is an example of what he and I can do together, waving the Who flag, carrying the flag for the boomer generation, just as Paul McCartney, Tom Petty and the Stones have done previously."

***

A post in the Washington Post... about Whom?

Why is the media so interested in someone who has nothing to propose and who is unprepared to take on any major political role?
There is so much to instruct the public about in terms of national and international news. Why is so much space given to the minor players? It's toying with the people - it's spam on the front page. An article, yes - a huge headline? No.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Valentine's Day Preview: Love Reign...and the Chuckster



Tribute to Pete and The Who...

A little pre-Valentine's Day mood music, courtesy of the music maven - Howie MSG...



***

In the Thank God department, see:

Charles Barkley will return to the TNT network as an NBA analyst soon after its airing of the All-Star Game on Sunday, the Sports Business Journal has reported.

Barkley, who faces a drunken-driving charge after a Dec. 31 arrest, took a leave of absence last month. Test results revealed Barkley had a blood-alcohol level at .149, nearly twice the legal limit of .08 in Arizona.

The leave was for a minimum of several weeks, and Turner spokesman Jeff Pomeroy confirmed Monday that it will continue through All-Star weekend, when TNT usually draws some of its best ratings.

"It wasn't a hard decision for me to give him some time off to get his legal matters straight and to get his personal life in order," Turner Sports president David Levy said, according to the report. "The question is, when is the right time to bring him back? There is no magic answer to that. It's just a gut feel."


I only wish Chuck would be re-instated BEFORE the All-Star Weekend. I wish him well and I am rooting for him to get back with legal/personal issues met straight on.