Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 2523
Length: 5:37
Plays (last 30 days): 0
People forget
The spray flies as the speedboat glides
People forget
Forget they're hiding
The girls smile
People forget
The snow packs as the skier tracks
People forget
Forget they're hiding.
Behind an eminence front
Eminence front - It's a put-on.
It's an eminence front
It's an eminence front -- It's a put-on
An eminence front
Eminence front - put-on
Eminence front
It's an eminence front
It's an eminence front -- It's a put-on
It's a put-on
It's a put-on
It's a put-on
Come and join the party
Dress to kill
Won't you come and join the party
Dress to kill.
The drinks flow
People forget
That big wheel spins, the hair thins
People forget
Forget they're hiding
The news slows
People forget
The shares crash, hopes are dashed
People forget
Forget they're hiding.
Behind an eminence front
An eminence front - it's a put-on
It is an eminence front
Eminence front -- It's a put-on
An eminence front
An eminence front - put-on
Eminence front
It's an eminence front - it's a put-on
It's a put-on
It's a put-on
It's a put-on
Come and join the party
Dress to
Come and join the party
Dress to
Come on join the party
Dress to
Come and join the party
Dress to kill
Dress yourself to kill.
Wow, yeah. Here is a link for those interested. I don't play bass but my jaw dropped about 2 minutes in. Yes, indeed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6W5DSfHyUA4
Yes, yes, indeed...
To my mind one of the great (song) opening riff's in rock history. Right up there in the pantheon with Hendrix's All Along the Watchtower.and Beethovens 5th.
Highlow
American Net'Zen
add keith richards opening to Can't you hear me knocking?
For those who enjoy bass guitar (and even those who do not), have a listen to the isolated bass track on this one, skipping ahead ~2 minutes.
Entwistle was definitely one of a kind.
Wow, yeah. Here is a link for those interested. I don't play bass but my jaw dropped about 2 minutes in. Yes, indeed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6W5DSfHyUA4
Entwistle was definitely one of a kind.
LLRP
It's the front side of an M&M's, the side on which the 'm' is printed.
That's a "W", the "M" is next to it, out of the frame.
- Pete Townshend
Saw them play this in early '83 at The Checkerdome in St. Louis. I'd seen them before, in spring of '80 at Municipal in KC. They blew us all away, both times. Incredible, on every level! I also remember playing this in my new Honda while teaching in Shizuoka '88-'90, and rolling up to a big ex-pat patio party at English Jane's house in Fujieda with it cranking, and everyone saying, "--Leave it playing!"
The long gone Checkerdome and the Municipal in KC, saw my fair share of shows in both those venues (but not the Who). And how fun, people wanting you to keep jammin your car tunes as you pull up!
dmiklitz wrote:
I'm amused and feeling my age when reading the comments on this song. I heard this song live in September 1982 in the now-demolished JFK stadium in Philadelphia. Great lineup for that show, btw. but I don't count this album among their best work. It was the second one after Moon died and '82 was supposed to be a Farewell Tour. I think I have most of their catalog up through It's Hard, mostly on vinyl. They were my favorite band when I was coming of age. Entwistle will always be in my top 5 bass player list. This particular song has such a good hook. If you want to hear the bass burning it up, listen to Magic Bus on Live at Leeds. Pete's talent has always been writing material that showcases each band member's talent. The synth looping comes right out his home studio where he noodled around on every instrument, creating his great catalog. Scoop was a great way to discover influences and evolution of both the Who's and Pete's solo work.
The band is just not the same with the rhythm section passed on.
kurtster wrote:
Saw the same Farewell Tour at the now demolished Richfield Coliseum here in Cleveburg. Still have the stub. Think it was $7. But yes to the rest of the above. Live At Leeds, yes to that, too. Saw the USA leg of that tour at the now demolished Spectrum in Philly back in the day, too.
Just ordered a fresh vinyl copy of this album which should arrive here in a couple of days. Athena off of this album is also a really fun song.
Cheers !
Also, love this song. A solid 10.
They kicked off the Farewell tour in Toronto at the Maple Leaf Gardens and it was simulcast on either Chum-FM or Q107 and one of the Toronto TV stations. I had it on Beta Hi-fi for years. One of the many things that disappeared at the end of my marriage.
The band is just not the same with the rhythm section passed on.
Saw the same Farewell Tour at the now demolished Richfield Coliseum here in Cleveburg. Still have the stub. Think it was $7. But yes to the rest of the above. Live At Leeds, yes to that, too. Saw the USA leg of that tour at the now demolished Spectrum in Philly back in the day, too.
Just ordered a fresh vinyl copy of this album which should arrive here in a couple of days. Athena off of this album is also a really fun song.
Cheers !
Also, love this song. A solid 10.
Sure, let's just turn our S.S. and retirement over to the Wall St. vultures. We all saw how that worked out in '08.
2008 will happen again, not if but when. I'd rather pay into a system that can't be gambled with and exploited by profiteers.
Not to get off the subject of a great Who song but Dow Dec 2008 -8,776.39 now July 2018 25,175.31. Looks like triple the value to me. Much better than the Gov 3% and running in the red and much better return than Mohegan Sun Casino
Long live Keith
Sure, let's just turn our S.S. and retirement over to the Wall St. vultures. We all saw how that worked out in '08.
2008 will happen again, not if but when. I'd rather pay into a system that can't be gambled with and exploited by profiteers.
So government bureaucrats and elected politicians are not corrupted profiteers. Got it.
I have heard this argument presented many times in many ways, and I must admit I don't get it. If you are forced to pay into a socialist program all of your life, how is it somehow a socialist action to then want your piece back? Taking social security payments and thinking that other people should not be forced to pay into a system they do not want or need are not incompatible actions.
Sure, let's just turn our S.S. and retirement over to the Wall St. vultures. We all saw how that worked out in '08.
2008 will happen again, not if but when. I'd rather pay into a system that can't be gambled with and exploited by profiteers.
And as such, I am sure you will pass on social security and/or medicare when it is your time. My guess you're already sucking on that teat. If not, you will be soon enough. Socialism is as socialism does.
I have heard this argument presented many times in many ways, and I must admit I don't get it. If you are forced to pay into a socialist program all of your life, how is it somehow a socialist action to then want your piece back? Taking social security payments and thinking that other people should not be forced to pay into a system they do not want or need are not incompatible actions.
Highlow
American Net'Zen
Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.
Winston Churchill
And as such, I am sure you will pass on social security and/or medicare when it is your time. My guess you're already sucking on that teat. If not, you will be soon enough. Socialism is as socialism does.
50 (as of May 2015) changes have been made since Obamacare was signed into law after being drafted behind close doors by the democrats without republican input. 31 were made by unilaterally by the Obama administration, 17 that Congress passed and the president signed into law, and two by the Supreme Court. The law was a huge monstrosity to begin with, thank you Madame Pelosi and Mr Reid, and this glorious shitpile is owned by Obama and the democrat party. https://www.galen.org/newsletters/changes-to-obamacare-so-far/
Actually, the glorious shitpile known as ACA was a conservative plan from a conservative think tank that Romneycare came from, which Obama & Dems then copied with some of their own adjustments.
BOTH parties can take the blame for it, just as both will be to blame for whatever disaster comes from Trumpcare if some version of it passes, but most of that will be on the GOP.
What we need is single-payer/Medicare for All with corporations and for-profits cut out of the equation, period.
The band is just not the same with the rhythm section passed on.
Mooney & The Ox?
Simply irreplaceable.
The band is just not the same with the rhythm section passed on.
Give me a fucking break. They made it, they own, they're free to do with it what they want to.
My comment wasn't meant for you
Pete is singing
I disagree with your entire post, but especially the bit I put in bold. So not correct.
I don't know what you expected Obama's administration to pass, but he very likely got the most he could. Single payer was not going to happen then and it likely won't for at least another 15 years, despite Bernie's vague promises of a political revolution. The cost of switching to single payer and then paying for it would be prohibitive. Opposition from the Republicans and the healthcare industry killed the public option, which likely wouldn't have been that widely used or disruptive.
The ACA isn't terrific, but it's a start. Certainly it's better than the state of healthcare before it—denial due to pre-existing conditions, termination of a policy due to a customer's severe illness, spiraling premiums, a shrinking pool of coverage, etc.
Sure, it would've been nice had the Republicans come up with their own health care reform idea—OH WAIT, THEY DID. It's called Obamacare. Mitt Romney could tell you all about that.
Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.
Winston Churchill
I disagree with your entire post, but especially the bit I put in bold. So not correct.
I don't know what you expected Obama's administration to pass, but he very likely got the most he could. Single payer was not going to happen then and it likely won't for at least another 15 years, despite Bernie's vague promises of a political revolution. The cost of switching to single payer and then paying for it would be prohibitive. Opposition from the Republicans and the healthcare industry killed the public option, which likely wouldn't have been that widely used or disruptive.
The ACA isn't terrific, but it's a start. Certainly it's better than the state of healthcare before it—denial due to pre-existing conditions, termination of a policy due to a customer's severe illness, spiraling premiums, a shrinking pool of coverage, etc.
Sure, it would've been nice had the Republicans come up with their own health care reform idea—OH WAIT, THEY DID. It's called Obamacare. Mitt Romney could tell you all about that.
Amen kcar!
When you hear the opening bars of a Who song your mind no longer soars and your heart sinks.
Give me a fucking break. They made it, they own, they're free to do with it what they want to.
When you hear the opening bars of a Who song your mind no longer soars and your heart sinks.
It's a good thing people don't apply this standard to modern bands since they sell their hits immediately for commercial purposes (and even see some songs become hits because they were in commercials).
Perhaps we should stop applying the old "sell-out" standard to older acts since selling out is the new normal.
Besides... didn't the Who Sell Out waaay back in the 60's:
Yeah, I was really surprised this was The Who! Would never have guessed that.
When you hear the opening bars of a Who song your mind no longer soars and your heart sinks.
The problem is that Obama and the democrats wasted a golden opportunity and an enormous amount of political capital to produce something that is worse than what we started with (for the majority of Americans). And we now know from Jonathon Gruber's own testimony that Obamacare was set up to deceive the American people from the very beginning. So even the "intentions were good" defense falls flat on its face.
I disagree with your entire post, but especially the bit I put in bold. So not correct.
I don't know what you expected Obama's administration to pass, but he very likely got the most he could. Single payer was not going to happen then and it likely won't for at least another 15 years, despite Bernie's vague promises of a political revolution. The cost of switching to single payer and then paying for it would be prohibitive. Opposition from the Republicans and the healthcare industry killed the public option, which likely wouldn't have been that widely used or disruptive.
The ACA isn't terrific, but it's a start. Certainly it's better than the state of healthcare before it—denial due to pre-existing conditions, termination of a policy due to a customer's severe illness, spiraling premiums, a shrinking pool of coverage, etc.
Sure, it would've been nice had the Republicans come up with their own health care reform idea—OH WAIT, THEY DID. It's called Obamacare. Mitt Romney could tell you all about that.
The problem is that Obama and the democrats wasted a golden opportunity and an enormous amount of political capital to produce something that is worse than what we started with (for the majority of Americans). And we now know from Jonathon Gruber's own testimony that Obamacare was set up to deceive the American people from the very beginning. So even the "intentions were good" defense falls flat on its face.
This is going to have to be one of those "agree to disagree" things.
Nothing personal. I appreciate the civility of your posts.
Yep, health care for poor people. Damn those commies!
The problem is that Obama and the democrats wasted a golden opportunity and an enormous amount of political capital to produce something that is worse than what we started with (for the majority of Americans). And we now know from Jonathon Gruber's own testimony that Obamacare was set up to deceive the American people from the very beginning. So even the "intentions were good" defense falls flat on its face.
. . . this glorious shitpile is owned by Obama and the democrat party. (edit)
Yep, health care for poor people. Damn those commies!
Obama did try. Once the repubs (and drug corporations) were done with it, it was so watered down as to be a joke. Meanwhile, as you pointed out, people are dying. Because health care = Communism!
50 (as of May 2015) changes have been made since Obamacare was signed into law after being drafted behind close doors by the democrats without republican input. 31 were made by unilaterally by the Obama administration, 17 that Congress passed and the president signed into law, and two by the Supreme Court. The law was a huge monstrosity to begin with, thank you Madame Pelosi and Mr Reid, and this glorious shitpile is owned by Obama and the democrat party. https://www.galen.org/newsletters/changes-to-obamacare-so-far/
Obama did try. Once the repubs (and drug corporations) were done with it, it was so watered down as to be a joke. Meanwhile, as you pointed out, people are dying. Because health care = Communism!
That's what I keep singing along....
Jesus mate, you are such a bell-end. Your mate died because he didn't have health Insurance? Cock.
Richlister, you evidently don't know much about America's free market approach to health care. Everyone here is equally free to get just as much health care as they can pay for. After all, if you were to provide free health care to the poor, that would just give them an incentive to get sick.
Me likey like, very much!
Jesus mate, you are such a bell-end. Your mate died because he didn't have health Insurance? Cock.
Yeah, man... Buster's fingers were quick and nimble on the guitar— one of the fastest you'd ever see... he made me look good while I played, and I am just a hack... he couldn't afford his insulin, so he had to switch to some really cheap stuff, and he went downhill from there... he was living in a house in the mountains in Virginia by himself, and all of the sudden, he quit talking to everybody on the phone... his mother drove for 10 hours to his house, and the house smelled so bad she couldn't go inside... she had to call the police, and they sent dudes into the house who were practically wearing space suits... Buster had been dead for five days... his blood sugar level had dropped and he had passed out and died...
now the tragedy is that people are still dying today in the USA from no health insurance and poor health care... you folks in the Kingdom are so lucky to have a single-payer system... you are much more civilized than we barbarians in the USA, and I am not kidding...
by the way, this is a great song... everybody in my homeless camps loves this song, and this entire album...
hope life is grand for you right this minute, richlister... time flies when we're having fun...
Jesus mate, you are such a bell-end. Your mate died because he didn't have health Insurance? Cock.
Hello!?!
It's Your Turn, One At A Time, and Dangerous are 3 of Entwistle's best efforts. Athena showed that Roger still had the pipes. I've Known No War was a poignant track that captured the mood of the late cold war so well. A Man Is a Man? Cry If You Want? This album had MUCH to offer.
Maybe you should give it another listen or 10.
True in so many ways.
No doubt - this was one where he got to shine.
edit: Echo this from stevetheshoe: "Oh my, Entwhistle was a bad mofo bass player!"
Great song... love it... here is a photo that my dead best friend's younger brother's girlfriend took at a recent show, in Manchester, NH, on February 24 (my dead best friend died on October 10, 2002 because he had diabetes and he didn't have health insurance... he was a great guitar player.. miss you, Buster)—
It's a fluff piece to have them play 'something' while the techs check everything.
Anyone else heard this?
(ObBounce - I still love it :)
This is true - I was backstage in Orlando at the Citrus Bowl when they did their sound check - most awesome!!
...Im old, but not THAT old!
Def. '82 +/-
Hey Linzie, I am THAT old and '72 was awesome. Nearly as awesome as '68; just turned 14 and seeing the Doors and Jefferson Hairpie in London. Now I have RP and life is good.
You're right; this song is post Keith Moon who died in '78. Look at the It's Hard album cover and it's obvious early 80's with Roger's hair being much shorter as well as Townsend's. I think '82 is correct or at least close.
82 is correct. Saw the tour that went a long with the release. It was advertised as there "last" tour.
IT'S AN EMINENCE FRONT!
and People forget
forget they're hiding
The girls smile
People forget
The boat glides
the spray flies...
People forget...
It's a put-on...YET!
...Im old, but not THAT old!
Def. '82 +/-
You're right; this song is post Keith Moon who died in '78. Look at the It's Hard album cover and it's obvious early 80's with Roger's hair being much shorter as well as Townsend's. I think '82 is correct or at least close.
I do like the song. Just like I like the Peter Gabriel song "She's so Funky, Eh?" (Jeux Sans Frontiers = Games Without Frontiers)
Good times....
I used to think he was singing "She's so popular."
...Well, I'm not always right, but I was this time; according to wikipedia, this DID come out in '82 on the album "It's Hard".....
...OK, so I see someone else already posted the info from wiki... oops didnt see that
...Im old, but not THAT old!
Def. '82 +/-
...Well, I'm not always right, but I was this time; according to wikipedia, this DID come out in '82 on the album "It's Hard".....
...Im old, but not THAT old!
Def. '82 +/-
I've learned that my days of "Yes or nothing" were perhaps a little misguided... :-)
Couldn't have been '72.
'82 maybe.... as Eminence Front was released on It's Hard around '81 or '82
that is, if my memory is working today
Absolutely agree!!
When I was a kid, there was an old retired couple next door who once lived on the street where the Who practiced in a garage. They said the noise was terrible and it seemed like they were fighting all the time but they were all such polite boys whenever they passed on the street. They were amazed that the Who became famous. Totally cute old couple.