The Who
Meaty Beaty Big And Bouncy

MCA Records    MCA-37001  (1971)

Rock/Pop
LP, 14   Tracks, 42:45  Length
01 I Can't Explain Pete Townshend 02:05
02 The Kids Are Alright Pete Townshend 02:42
03 Happy Jack Pete Townshend 02:14
04 I Can See For Miles Pete Townshend 03:55
05 Pictures Of Lily Pete Townshend 02:37
06 My Generation Pete Townshend 03:15
07 The Seeker Pete Townshend 03:12
08 Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere Roger Daltrey; Pete Townshend 02:35
09 Pinball Wizard Pete Townshend 03:00
10 A Legal Matter Pete Townshend 02:47
11 Boris The Spider John Entwistle 02:26
12 The Magic Bus Pete Townshend 04:28
13 Substitute Pete Townshend 03:47
14 I'm A Boy Pete Townshend 03:42
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Standard LP sleeve
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Pete Townshend
Vocals Roger Daltrey
Bass John Entwistle
Drums Keith Moon
Musician The Who
Producer Kit Lambert; Shel Talmy; The Who
Personal Details
Index # 3799
Owner Dave
Tags Beat, Mod
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy has the distinction of being the first in a long line of Who compilations. It also has the distinction of being the best. Part of the reason why it is so successful is that it has an actual purpose. Meaty was designed as a collection of the group's singles, many of which never appeared on albums. The Who recorded their share of great albums during the '60s, but condensing their highlights to just the singles is an electrifying experience. "The Kids Are Alright" follows "I Can't Explain," "I Can See for Miles" bleeds into "Pictures of Lily" and "My Generation," "Magic Bus" gives way to "Substitute" and "I'm a Boy" -- it's an extraordinary lineup, and each song builds on its predecessor's power. Since it was released prior to Who's Next, it contains none of the group's album rock hits, but that's for the best -- their '60s singles have a kinetic, frenzied power that the louder, harder AOR cuts simply couldn't touch. Also, there is such a distinct change in sound with Who's Next that the two eras don't quite sound right on one greatest-hits collection, as My Generation and Who's Better, Who's Best proved. By concentrating on the early years -- when the Who were fresh and Pete Townshend was developing his own songwriting identity -- Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy is musically unified and incredibly powerful. This is what the Who sounded like when they were a great band. -- Stephen Thomas Erlewine (allmusic.com)