Showing posts with label The Who. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Who. Show all posts

Thursday, March 30, 2023

The Who - Rael


 #The Who #Pete Townshend #Roger Daltrey #hard rock #heavy blues rock #psychedelic rock #art pop #classic rock #1960s #1970s

Rael was Pete Townshend’s first rock opera. A lot of the themes in it were apparently recycled into Tommy and Lifehouse based on musical evidence. The story was set in 1999, where China was the world power. They were conquering lands and destroying the religious cultures in their conquest. China was overthrowing Israel and an Israeli hero travels back to his homeland on a mission against all odds to save his people. There isn't much more information than that as Pete hasn't release many notes or demos from the opera.
According to the book “Who Are You: The life of Pete Townshend” it was intended to be done with a full orchestra written as a genuine opera starring Arthur Brown in the lead. There were to be 20 scenes. We have a prelude song that's easily found on the internet called Motherland Feeling. Rael part 1 has the scene of him leaving on the boat, a storm scene (which is the sparks part) and the scene of him arriving. We also know there was an organ Fugue which may be the organ part of the demo. There is also a lyric floating around for a song called Party Piece from Rael where we learn that the hero’s wife had died years earlier and was buried in the homeland.
Following a visit to Caesarea, Israel in 1966 with his first wife, Karen Astley, and the subsequent outbreak of the Six-Day War, Townshend began work on Rael, a song cycle loosely based on Israel’s struggle to survive despite being massively outnumbered by its enemies. Rael — short for Israel — got sidetracked, partly due to the demands of the Who’s record company for faster delivery of more hit singles, and Rael was consigned to the shelf. The only song that has surfaced from that project is called Rael and appears on the late 1967 album, The Who Sell Out.
In recent years, Townshend’s thoughts have once again turned back toward the concerns he expressed in Rael. As he told an interviewer for Rolling Stone in 2006: Last week, I was reading about this book that’s just come out. It’s about the Polish Jews who got out of concentration camps and went back to their homes, which had been taken over by Christians who assumed the Jews weren’t coming back. What happened was another wave of anti-Semitism in which dozens were slaughtered by Christians in Warsaw. The premise for it was that there was witchcraft going on. The Jews, of course, drank the blood of children. Been there, done that. Fucking hell. And I asked myself, ‘Why am I so heated up about this fucking story?’ But it’s because, as a kid, my best friend, Mick Leiber, was a Jew. We grew up in a community that was about a third Polish. We lived in a house that divided in two, and in the top part lived a Jewish family who were quite devout. Polish Jews were the kids I played with. They were my people. I remember saying to my mother, ‘Aren’t Polish people from Poland?’ And she said, ‘Yes, they were Britain’s first ally in the war.’ I’d say, ‘But they’re not like foreigners. They’re just like we are.’ And she said, “Yes, they’re just like we are.”
From: https://www.reddit.com/r/TheWho/comments/slb4mo/can_somebody_explain_rael/ 

Sunday, August 14, 2022

The Who - Tattoo


 #The Who #Pete Townshend #Roger Daltrey #hard rock #heavy blues rock #psychedelic rock #art pop #classic rock #1960s #1970s

Pete Townshend originally planned The Who Sell Out as a concept album of sorts that would simultaneously mock and pay tribute to pirate radio stations, complete with fake jingles and commercials linking the tracks. For reasons that remain somewhat ill defined, the concept wasn't quite driven to completion, breaking down around the middle of side two (on the original vinyl configuration). Nonetheless, on strictly musical merits, it's a terrific set of songs that ultimately stands as one of the group's greatest achievements. "I Can See for Miles" is the Who at their most thunderous; tinges of psychedelia add a rush to "Armenia City in the Sky" and "Relax"; "I Can't Reach You" finds Townshend beginning to stretch himself into quasi-spiritual territory; and "Tattoo" and the acoustic "Sunrise" show introspective, vulnerable sides to the singer/songwriter that had previously been hidden. "Rael" was another mini-opera, with musical motifs that reappeared in Tommy. The album is as perfect a balance between melodic mod pop and powerful instrumentation as the Who (or any other group) would achieve; psychedelic pop was never as jubilant, not to say funny (the fake commercials and jingles interspersed between the songs are a hoot). [Subsequent reissues added over half a dozen interesting outtakes from the time of the sessions, as well as unused commercials, the B-side "Someone's Coming," and an alternate version of "Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand.”].  From: https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-who-sell-out-mw0000652659