This section contains 321 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |
[From the start the Who] established themselves as original talents and unflagging propagandists, visually and lyrically, of pop culture…. [They] began to record a string of Townshend-written songs which wittily and savagely (in both music and lyrics) dealt with generational hatred, masturbation, and other previously unarticulated subjects lurking in the back of teen-age minds yet ignored by previous rock songwriters. (pp. 53-4)
The Who were tougher and could be more distasteful than the Rolling Stones, even though their music and lyrics were rather more intellectual, because they knew how to use sonic brutality as a musical device. (p. 54)
The Who were talented and thoughtful enough to use some of rock's most unpleasant characteristics—its coarseness and primitivism, for example—in order to make sensitive and moving musical statements. As early as 1965 they were the heralds of rock's musical maturation, perhaps even more so than the Beatles. While the...
This section contains 321 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |