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The Who, Thirty Years of Maximum R&B CD cover artwork

The Who, Thirty Years of Maximum R&B

Audio CD

Disk ID: 627279

Disk length: 1h 13m 39s (28 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 1994

Label: Unknown

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Tracks & Durations

1. Pete's dialog 0:23
2. I'm a face 2:29
3. Here it is 2:10
4. Zoot Suite 2:01
5. Leaving Here 2:49
6. I can explain 2:06
7. Daddy Rolling stone 2:52
8. My generation 3:19
9. The kids are alright 3:06
10. The ox 3:50
11. A legal matter 2:47
12. Pete's dialog II 0:59
13. Substitute 2:10
14. I'm a boy 2:39
15. Disguises 3:22
16. Happy Jack jingle 0:33
17. Happy Jack 2:13
18. Boris the spider 2:29
19. So sad about us 3:02
20. A quick one while he's away 9:42
21. Pictures of Lily 2:44
22. Early morning cold taxi 3:05
23. Coke 2 0:49
24. This could be the last time 3:03
25. I can't reach you 3:05
26. Girl's eyes 3:09
27. Bag o'nails 0:07
28. Call me lightning 2:20

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

This exemplary four-disc box takes the high road, attempting nothing less than an honest reconstruction of the Who's stormy, adventurous, uneven pilgrimage. While offering an evenhanded cross-section of single hits and classic album tracks, 30 Years garnishes the expected high points with B-sides, alternate and live versions of familiar tracks, and the quartet's earliest singles as the High Numbers. Reinforcing the package's documentary agenda are interview and stage-patter sound bites. What emerges is a fascinating chronicle of how the Shepherd's Bush mods journeyed from the giddy, explosive concision of their January 1965 debut single, "I Can't Explain," to the discursive, knotty sweep of creative architect Pete Townshend's "rock operas," Tommy, Quadrophenia, and the uncompleted, unreleased Lifehouse. The Who's swift evolution into rock visionaries is traced chronologically, meaning the band's original immersion in "maximum R&B," which forged their earliest club dates, doesn't surface on record until midway through the sequence, on key tracks from their thundering Live at Leeds album. Fans may quibble over the relative weight given specific albums, but the shape of the Who's career and their passionate identification with their audience are rendered faithfully. So, too, is Townshend's skill at mingling issues of faith and identity with generational manifestoes and sly broadsides. And there's ample evidence of the quartet's outsize musical power; the sheer volume and violence that earned them notoriety early on is matched by a lyricism that deepens by mid career. Given the candor of the presentation, it's not surprising that 30 Years reaches its zenith midway through the set or that the last song (a reunion of the surviving trio covering Elton John) can't help seeming anticlimactic. --Sam Sutherland

Other Versions

Albums are mined from the various public resources and can be actually the same but different in the tracks length only. We are keeping all versions now.

Thirty Years of Maximum R&B

Tracks: 16 (-12 tracks), Disk length: 1h 6m 17s (-8m 38s)

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