The Who
Quadrophenia

Track Record    MCA2-10004  (1973)

Rock/Pop
LP, 2   Discs, 17   Tracks, 81:54  Length
Record 1 40:22
01 I Am The Sea Pete Townshend 02:08
02 The Real Me Pete Townshend 03:22
03 Quadrophenia Pete Townshend 06:15
04 Cut My Hair Pete Townshend 03:46
05 The Punk Meets The Godfather Pete Townshend 05:10
06 I'm One Pete Townshend 02:39
07 The Dirty Jobs Pete Townshend 04:30
08 Helpless Dancer Pete Townshend 02:32
09 Is It In My Head Pete Townshend 03:46
10 I've Had Enough Pete Townshend 06:14

Record 2

41:32
01 5:15 Pete Townshend 05:00
02 Sea And Sand Pete Townshend 05:01
03 Drowned Pete Townshend 05:28
04 Bell Boy Pete Townshend 04:56
05 Dr. Jimmy Pete Townshend 08:42
06 The Rock Pete Townshend 06:37
07 Love, Reign O'er Me Pete Townshend 05:48
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Gatefold
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Guitar Pete Townshend
Vocals Roger Daltrey
Bass John Entwistle
Drums Keith Moon
Musician The Who
Producer The Who; Kit Lambert; Chris Stamp; Pete Kameron
Engineer Ron Nevison
Personal Details
Index # 3800
Owner Dave
Tags Hard Rock, Mod, Rock Opera
User Defined
Purchased New
Packaging Notes Includes booklet
Notes
Pete Townshend revisited the rock opera concept with another double-album opus, this time built around the story of a young mod's struggle to come of age in the mid-'60s. If anything, this was a more ambitious project than Tommy, given added weight by the fact that the Who weren't devising some fantasy but were re-examining the roots of their own birth in mod culture. In the end, there may have been too much weight, as Townshend tried to combine the story of a mixed-up mod named Jimmy with the examination of a four-way split personality (hence the title Quadrophenia), in turn meant to reflect the four conflicting personas at work within the Who itself. The concept might have ultimately been too obscure and confusing for a mass audience. But there's plenty of great music anyway, especially on "The Real Me," "The Punk Meets the Godfather," "I'm One," "Bell Boy," and "Love, Reign o'er Me." Some of Townshend's most direct, heartfelt writing is contained here, and production-wise it's a tour de force, with some of the most imaginative use of synthesizers on a rock record. Various members of the band griped endlessly about flaws in the mix, but really these will bug very few listeners, who in general will find this to be one of the Who's most powerful statements.