best-selling albums ever on the 50th anniversary of its release with this beautifully produced and authoritatively written slipcased edition.
Veteran rock critic
Martin Popoff leaves no stone unturned in taking apart
The Who's generation-spanning masterpiece, Quadrophenia, while exploring each of the album's 17 tracks and their themes of identity, anxiety, and mental health. Chapters cover:
- The state of The Who as of 1973, including their role in Mod culture
- The recording sessions at famed Olympic Studios and the band's own Battersea location, including techniques used
- Song-by-song studies of each album side, including analyses of lyrics and the guitars, drums, keyboards, and synthesizers employed by members Pete Townshend, Roger Daltrey, John Entwistle, and Keith Moon
- The 1979 motion picture based on the album's song cycle
- The continent-hopping tours that supported the album
- The rock group's trajectory post-Quadrophenia, including notable albums and tours
Popoff also takes you on side journeys examining each band member,
mod vs. rocker culture, the
album's famous graphic design, manager/producers
Chris Stamp and Kit Lambert,
Quadrophenia collectibles, and more. There's even a brief
discography and complete LP
tour dates.
Presented in a 10" × 10"
slipcased book,
The Who & Quadrophenia is illustrated with
stunning performance and candid off-stage photography as well as
rare memorabilia.
The result is a richly presented celebration and your ultimate tribute to the rock opera masterpiece.