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A Band with Built-In Hate: The Who from Pop Art to Punk

  • Author: Stanfield, Peter
A Band with Built-In Hate: The Who from Pop Art to Punk
There's some very perceptive writing on the influence the Who had on the wider scene. . . . Essential reading for anyone who's ever loved the Who, or wants an insight into the Sixties' music...

A Band with Built-In Hate: The Who from Pop Art to Punk

  • Author: Stanfield, Peter

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There's some very perceptive writing on the influence the Who had on the wider scene. . . . Essential reading for anyone who's ever loved the Who, or wants an insight into the Sixties' music...

About

‘Ours is music with built-in hatred.’ Pete Townshend A Band with Built-In Hate pictures The Who from their inception as the Detours in the mid-sixties to the late seventies, post-Quadrophenia. It is a story of ambition and anger, glamour and grime, viewed through the prism of pop art and the radical levelling of high and low culture that it brought about – a drama that was aggressively performed by the band. Peter Stanfield lays down a path through the British pop revolution, its attitude and style, as it was uniquely embodied by The Who: first, under the mentorship of arch-mod Peter Meaden, as they learnt their trade in the pubs and halls of suburban London; and then with Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp, two aspiring filmmakers, at the very centre of things in Soho. Guided by contemporary commentators – among them George Melly, Lawrence Alloway and most conspicuously Nik Cohn – Stanfield describes a band driven by belligerence, and of what happened when Townshend, Daltrey, Moon and Entwistle moved from back-room stages to international arenas, from explosive 45s to expansive concept albums. Above all, he tells of how The Who confronted their lost youth as it was echoed in punk.

Awards and reviews

There's some very perceptive writing on the influence the Who had on the wider scene. . . . Essential reading for anyone who's ever loved the Who, or wants an insight into the Sixties' music scene that goes beyond greatest hits compilations and easy generalizations

Eloquently framing their success as the only successful 1960s UK pop/rock group that didn't want to be either the Beatles or the Rolling Stones, Stanfield locates the Who (and crucially their peak years, during which they were, he writes 'not copyists but innovators') at a boundary-breaking intersection of pop and art-rock." -- Tony Clayton-Lea
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