The Who

The Who


  • Vinyl Essentials, Part 3

    Claude Lemaire continues his series on records that transformed the pop and rock music landscape, organized by year of release.

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  • One Small Throw for Townshend, One Giant Fall for Moon

    Rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll is full of nights that teetered on the edge of disaster, but few reached the level of legendary mayhem that erupted in Flint, Michigan, on August 23, 1967. It was the night Pete Townshendโ€™s guitar took flight, Keith Moon got himself banned from the entire Holiday Inn chain, and The Who cemented…

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  • โ€œNo, I have the best system in the world!โ€: Great Sound From Down Under (No, Not Hell)

    Nick from Sydney blends Aussie-made classics like ME amplification and Serhan Swift Mu2 speakers with Naim digital gear, showing that thoughtful system synergyโ€”and not priceโ€”creates holographic sound thatโ€™s pure, personal, and meditative.

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  • The Vinyl Frontier: A Spin Through Record Store Day

    Record Store Day 2024 spins into action with exclusive releases from Elton John, Frank Zappa, Queen, and the Pixies, as vinyl lovers worldwide celebrate analog culture, indie shops, and community-centered music discovery.

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  • The 1985 Effect

    J. Coleโ€™s โ€œ1985โ€ casts a long shadow over hip-hopโ€™s younger generation, warning of fleeting fame in an era dominated by SoundCloud rebels. This deep-dive traces the turbulent rise and haunting legacy of rapโ€™s new wave.

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  • The DUALITY of Sinรฉad O’Connor

    In this moving tribute, Sinรฉad Oโ€™Connorโ€™s battles with trauma, fame, and faith are laid bareโ€”yet itโ€™s her transcendent voice and fierce vulnerability that ultimately defined a life lived beyond the grasp of convention.

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  • Boogie With Canned Heat: Thank You Henry

    Reflecting on his first Fillmore East show in 1968, Twisted Sister’s Jay Jay French recalls how Canned Heatโ€™s Henry Vestine provided the inspiration he neededโ€”a blue-collar blues guitarist whose tone and style were accessible enough to emulate and transformative for a budding player.

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  • Tri-Cellโ€™s new mega-showroom is a feast for the eyes and ears

    Tri-Cellโ€™s Vince Scalzitti, a self-proclaimed headbanger, has built a mega-showroom outside Toronto to support dealers, not sell directโ€”showcasing stunning gear, hosting seminars, and proving audio is still all about relationships.

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  • Rock Chronicles, Part 8 โ€” Paul McCartney saves the Poisoned Iveys (temporarily)

    George Harrison championed them, Paul McCartney produced their debut hit, and Apple Records signed themโ€”yet the Iveys (soon to be Badfinger) nearly vanished before they began, victims of internal rifts and corporate reshuffling.

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  • MoFiโ€™s In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida and Truth reviewed, Pt 2

    MoFiโ€™s 45rpm reissue of Jeff Beckโ€™s Truth delivers seismic bass and analogue warmth that outshines many rock classics; released just before Zepโ€™s debut, it remains a blues-rock benchmark for sound and influence.

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  • The night Jeff Beck was there for me

    In a gritty Montreal summer, a parking lot attendantโ€™s despair is upended by Jeff Beck and Rod Stewartโ€™s โ€œPeople Get Readyโ€โ€”a song that, in one haunting night, turns danger and dead-end dreams into deliverance.

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  • Rock Chronicles, Part 2 โ€” The adventures of Delaney & Bonnie

    Delaney & Bonnieโ€™s fallout with Stax over their debut LP โ€œHomeโ€ triggered a musical detour to L.A., where they recorded the fiery โ€œAccept No Substituteโ€ for Elektraโ€”an album so compelling, it captivated George Harrison himself.

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