![]() Note that the US and UK singles have several label variations in terms of color, and one of the US releases shows the distributor as Track rather than Decca. Join together The Who hits 50 deluxe edition nov 2014 Live in Hyde Park + bonus dvd nov 2015 Boozy jul 1977 The best rock album in the world. Released on 7-inch single on Jin the UK, France, the Netherlands and Portugal (Track, 2094-102), on Jin the US (Decca, 32983) and in 1972 in Australia and Germany (Polydor 2058 259) with regional picture sleeve reached #9 on the UK charts and #17 on the US charts (charted on Jfor 10 weeks). Produced by The Who associate producer: Glyn Johns. Roger Daltrey (lead vocals, harmonica), John Entwistle (bass, backing vocals), Keith Moon (drums), Pete Townshend (guitar, synthesizer, jew’s harp, backing vocals). Baby Don’t You Do It (Brian Holland/Lamont Dozier/Eddie Holland) (6:17) The Players Join Together (Peter Townshend) (4:22)ī1. If you enjoyed the outtakes from Led Zeppelin’s Coda, you’ll get a kick out of hearing The Who tear through this one for six scorching minutes. I thought their original versions were impressive, but this version takes it to a whole new level in a great mix that splits Entwistle’s brilliant basswork and Townshend’s guitar into different channels and leaves Moon’s cymbals ringing in your head for minutes after the song is over. The song had actually been a part of The Who’s live act since the early days. Lyrics > In times of uncertainty love and friendship see you through Join together, join together one by one These times of uncertainty joy and humour see. The flip side is a fire-breathing version of Marvin Gaye’s “Baby Don’t You Do It” from the same lads who brought you Live At Leeds, recorded live in 1971. When the concept collapsed (like Lifehouse before it), “Join Together” joined “Relay” and “Long Live Rock” as singles from an album that never materialized. I’m not sure what its original purpose was in Rock Is Dead – Long Live Rock, but I don’t know that Townshend had all those pieces stitched together in his head either. “Join Together” is one of those anthemic songs that seeks to make a connection between the band and its audience. That it works despite the strange pairing is a testament to the songwriting skill of Pete Townshend. This is the only song I’m aware of that features both the synthesizer and the jew’s harp. Kronomyth 7.6: Singles going ready steady who. this verse F F Its the singer not the song that makes the music move along. ![]() If you weren’t already a member of Tommy’s army, here was your invitation to join the band.
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