
Who's Next is the fifth studio album by English rock band The Who, released in August 1971. The album has origins in a rock opera conceived by Pete Townshend called Lifehouse. The ambitious, complex project did not come to fruition at the time and instead, many of the songs written for the project were compiled onto Who's Next as a collection of unrelated songs.[13] Who's Next was a critical and commercial success when it was released, and has been certified 3× platinum by the RIAA.[14]
The album has its roots in the Lifehouse project, which Pete Townshend has variously described as intended to be a futuristic rock opera, a live-recorded concept album and as the music for a scripted film project. The project proved to be intractable on several levels and caused stress within the band as well as a major falling out between Townshend and The Who's producer Kit Lambert. Years later, in the liner notes to the remastered Who's Next CD, Townshend wrote that the failure of the project led him to the verge of a suicidal nervous breakdown.[15]
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The album was immediately recognised for its dynamic and unique sound. The album fortuitously fell at a time when great advances had been made in sound engineering over the previous decade, and also shortly after the widespread availability of synthesisers.
Townshend used the early synthesisers and modified keyboard sounds in several modes: as a drone effect on several songs, notably "Baba O'Riley" and "Won't Get Fooled Again", and as a playful noisemaker, sounding almost like a tea kettle whistle on "Song Is Over". Townshend also used an envelope follower to modulate the spectrum of his guitar on "Going Mobile", giving it a distinctive squawking sound that degenerates into a bubbling noise at the end of the song.
The album opened with "Baba O'Riley," featuring piano by Townshend and a violin solo by Dave Arbus.[1] The violin solo was drummer Keith Moon's idea. The song's title pays homage to Townshend's guru Meher Baba and influential minimalist composer Terry Riley (and is informally known by the line "Teenage Wasteland"). Other signature tracks include the rock ballad "Behind Blue Eyes", and the album's epic closing song, "Won't Get Fooled Again."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who%27s_Next
Probably my favorite Who album. It stands as a proto-rock-opera of thematically related interconnected tracks. About what? Life. Love. Relationships.You name it. Politics. Marriage. Craziness. Stupidity.
The conceptual style is darkly humorous. Satirically ironic. Set way too close to the 60s for glum Limey seriousness.
"My Wife" is a song by British rock band The Who, written by bassist John Entwistle. It was originally released in 1971 on Who's Next, and later as the b-side of the popular single "Baba O'Riley" on November 6, 1971 in the United States by Decca Records.[1]
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The song is about a man who went out and got drunk and was gone for a period of time (due to being locked up in the drunk tank) and is in fear of his wife because she thinks he was spending time with another woman. The song describes all the things he needs or needs to do to protect himself from her wrath.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Wife

My Wife
My life's in jeopardy
Murdered in cold blood is what I'm gonna be
I ain't been home since Friday night
And now my wife is coming after me
Give me police protection
Gonna buy a gun so
I can look after number one
Give me a bodyguard
A back belt Judo expert with a machine gun
Gonna buy a tank and an aeroplane
When she catches up with me
Won't be no time to explain
She thinks I've been with another woman
And that's enough to send her half insane
Gonna buy a fast car
Put on my lead boots
And take a long, long drive
I may end up spending all my money
But I'll still be alive
All I did was have a bit too much to drink
And I picked the wrong precinct
Got picked up by the law
And now I ain't got time to think
Gonna buy a tank and an aeroplane
When she catches up with me
Won't be no time to explain
She thinks I've been with another woman
And that's enough to send her half insane
Gonna buy a fast car
Put on my lead boots
And take a long, long drive
I may end up spending all my money
But I'll still be alive
And I'm oh so tired of running
Gonna lay down on the floor
I gotta rest some time so
I can get to run some more
She's comin'!
She's comin'!
--song written by John Entwistle
1. "Baba O'Riley"
2. "Bargain"
3. "Love Ain't for Keeping"
4. "My Wife" (John Entwistle)
5. "The Song Is Over"
Side two
6. "Getting in Tune"
7. "Going Mobile"
8. "Behind Blue Eyes"
9. "Won't Get Fooled Again"
1995 reissue bonus tracks
No. Title Length
10. "Pure and Easy" (Original Version)
11. "Baby Don't You Do It" (Holland-Dozier-Holland)
12. "Naked Eye" (Live at the Young Vic 26/4/71)
13. "Water" (Live at the Young Vic 26/4/71)
14. "Too Much of Anything"
15. "I Don't Even Know Myself"
16. "Behind Blue Eyes" (Original Version)