1961–1964: the Detours In late 1961, Entwistle joined the Detours, a
skiffle/
rock and roll band, led by Roger Daltrey. The new bass player then suggested Townshend join as an additional guitarist. In the early days of the Detours, the band's repertoire consisted of instrumentals by
the Shadows and
the Ventures, as well as pop and trad jazz covers. Their lineup coalesced around
Roger Daltrey on rhythm guitar, Townshend on lead guitar, Entwistle on bass,
Doug Sandom on drums, and Colin Dawson as vocalist. Daltrey was considered the leader of the group and, according to Townshend, "ran things the way he wanted them". Dawson quit in 1962 after arguing too much with Daltrey, who subsequently became lead vocalist. As a result, Townshend, with Entwistle's encouragement, became the sole guitarist. Through Townshend's mother, the group obtained a management contract with local promoter Robert Druce, who started booking the band as a support act for bands including
Screaming Lord Sutch,
Cliff Bennett and the Rebel Rousers,
Shane Fenton and the Fentones, and
Johnny Kidd and the Pirates. In 1963, Townshend's father arranged an amateur recording of "It Was You", the first song his son ever wrote. The Detours became aware of a group of the same name in February 1964, forcing them to change their name. Townshend's roommate
Richard Barnes came up with "The Who", and Daltrey decided it was the best choice.
1964–1982: The Who in
Ludwigshafen, Germany on 12 April 1967 Not long after the name change, drummer
Doug Sandom was replaced by
Keith Moon, who had been drumming semi-professionally with the Beachcombers for several years. The band was soon taken on by a
mod publicist named
Peter Meaden who convinced them to change their name to the High Numbers to give the band more of a mod feel. After bringing out one failed single ("I'm the Face"/"Zoot Suit"), they dropped Meaden and were signed by two new managers,
Chris Stamp and
Kit Lambert, who had paired up with the intention of finding new talent and creating a documentary about them. The band wanted a name that all felt represented the band best, and dropped the High Numbers name, reverting to the Who. In June 1964, during a performance at the Railway Tavern, Townshend accidentally broke the top of his guitar on the low ceiling and
proceeded to destroy the entire instrument. The on-stage destruction of instruments soon became a regular part of the Who's live shows. With the assistance of Lambert, the Who caught the ear of American record producer
Shel Talmy, who had the band signed to a recording contract. Townshend wrote a song, "
I Can't Explain", as a deliberate sound-alike of
the Kinks, another group Talmy produced. Released as a single in January 1965, "I Can't Explain" was the Who's first hit, reaching number eight on the British charts. A follow-up single, "
Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere", credited to both Townshend and Daltrey, also reached the top 10 in the UK. However, it was the release of the Who's third single, "
My Generation", in November that, according to Who biographer Mark Wilkerson, "cemented their reputation as a hard-nosed band who reflected the feelings of thousands of pissed-off adolescents at the time." The Townshend-penned single reached number two on the UK charts, becoming the Who's biggest hit. The song and its famous line "I hope I die before I get old" was "very much about trying to find a place in society", Townshend stated in an interview with
David Fricke. To capitalise on their recent single success, the Who's debut album,
My Generation (
The Who Sings My Generation in the US), was released in late 1965, containing original material written by Townshend and several
James Brown covers that Daltrey favoured. Townshend continued to write several successful singles for the band, including "
Pictures of Lily", "
Substitute", "
I'm a Boy", and "
Happy Jack". Lambert encouraged Townshend to write longer pieces of music for the next album, which became "
A Quick One, While He's Away". The album was subsequently titled
A Quick One and reached No. 4 in the charts upon its release in December 1966. In their stage shows, Townshend developed a
guitar stunt in which he would
swing his right arm against the guitar strings in a style reminiscent of the vanes of a windmill. He developed this style after watching
Rolling Stones guitarist
Keith Richards warm up before a show. The Who commenced their first US tour on 22 March 1967. Townshend took to trashing his hotel suites, though not to the extent of his bandmate Moon. He also began experimenting with
LSD, though stopped taking the drug after receiving a potent hit after the
Monterey Pop Festival on 18 June. Released in December, their next album was
The Who Sell Out—a
concept album based on pirate radio, which had been instrumental in raising the Who's popularity. It included several humorous jingles and mock commercials between songs, and the Who's biggest US single, "
I Can See for Miles". Despite the success of "
I Can See for Miles", which reached No. 9 on the American charts, Townshend was surprised it was not an even bigger hit, as he considered it the best song he had written up to that point. By 1968, Townshend became interested in the teachings of
Meher Baba. He began to develop a musical piece about a deaf, dumb, and blind boy who would experience sensations musically. The piece would explore the tenets of Baba's philosophy. The result was the
rock opera Tommy, released on 23 May 1969 to critical and commercial success. In support of
Tommy, the Who launched a tour that included a memorable appearance at the
Woodstock Festival on 17 August. While the Who were playing,
Yippie leader
Abbie Hoffman jumped the stage to complain about the arrest of
John Sinclair. Townshend promptly knocked him offstage with his guitar, shouting, "Fuck off my fucking stage!" In 1970, the Who released
Live at Leeds, which several music critics cite as the best live album of all time. Townshend began writing material for another rock opera. Dubbed
Lifehouse, it was designed to be a multi-media project that symbolised the relationship between a musician and his audience. The rest of the band were confused by its convoluted plot and simply wanted another album. Townshend began to feel alienated, and the project was abandoned after he suffered a nervous breakdown. Much of the material intended for
Lifehouse was released as a traditional studio album, ''
Who's Next''. It became a commercial smash, reaching number one in the UK, and spawned two successful hit singles, "
Baba O'Riley" and "
Won't Get Fooled Again", that featured pioneering use of the synthesizer. "Baba O'Riley" in particular was written as Townshend's ode to his two heroes at the time, Meher Baba and composer
Terry Riley. Townshend began writing songs for another rock opera in 1973. He decided it would explore the mod subculture and its clashes with
rockers in the early 1960s in the UK. Entitled
Quadrophenia, it was the only Who album written entirely by Townshend, and he produced the album as well due to the souring of relations with Lambert. It was released in November, and became their highest charting cross-Atlantic success, reaching No. 2 in the UK and US.
NME reviewer
Charles Shaar Murray called it "prime cut Who" and "the most rewarding musical experience of the year." On tour, the band played the album along to pre-recorded backing tapes, causing much friction. The tapes malfunctioned during a performance in Newcastle, prompting Townshend to drag soundman
Bob Pridden onstage, scream at him and kick over all the amplifiers, partially destroying the malfunctioning tapes. On 14 April 1974, Townshend played his first solo concert, a benefit to raise funds for a London community centre. A
film version of Tommy was directed by
Ken Russell, and starred
Roger Daltrey in the title role,
Ann-Margret as his mother, and
Oliver Reed as his step-father, with cameos by
Tina Turner,
Elton John,
Eric Clapton, and other rock notables; the film premiered on 18 March 1975. Townshend was nominated for an Academy Award for scoring and adapting the music in the film.
The Who by Numbers came out in November of that year and peaked at No. 7 in the UK and 8 in the US. It featured introspective songs, often with a negative slant. The album spawned one hit single, "
Squeeze Box", that was written after Townshend learned how to play the accordion. After a 1976 tour, Townshend took a year-long break from the band to focus on spending time with his family. The Who continues despite the deaths of two of the original members (
Keith Moon in 1978 and
John Entwistle in 2002). The band is regarded by many rock critics as one of the best live bands from the 1960s to the 2000s. The Who continues to perform critically acclaimed sets into the 21st century, including highly regarded performances at
The Concert for New York City in 2001, the 2004
Isle of Wight Festival,
Live 8 in 2005, and the 2007 and 2015
Glastonbury Festival. Townshend remained the primary songwriter and leader of the group, writing over 100 songs which appeared on the band's twelve studio albums. Among his creations is the rock opera
Quadrophenia. Townshend revisited album-length storytelling throughout his career and remains associated with the rock opera form. Many studio recordings also feature Townshend on piano or keyboards, though keyboard-heavy tracks increasingly featured guest artists in the studio, such as
Nicky Hopkins,
John ”Rabbit” Bundrick, or
Chris Stainton. Townshend is one of the key figures in the development of feedback in rock guitar. When asked who first used feedback,
Deep Purple guitarist
Ritchie Blackmore said: Similarly, when
Jimmy Page was asked about the development of guitar feedback, he said: Many rock guitarists have cited Townshend as an influence, among them
Slash,
Alex Lifeson, and
Steve Jones.
1972–present: solo career In addition to his work with the Who, Townshend has been sporadically active as a solo recording artist. Between 1969 and 1971 Townshend, along with other devotees to
Meher Baba, recorded a trio of albums devoted to his teachings:
Happy Birthday,
I Am, and
With Love. In response to bootlegging of these, he compiled his personal highlights (and "Evolution", a collaboration with
Ronnie Lane), and released his first major-label solo title, 1972's
Who Came First. It was a moderate success and featured demos of Who songs as well as a showcase of his acoustic guitar talents. He collaborated with
the Faces' bassist and fellow Meher Baba devotee
Ronnie Lane on a duet album (1977's
Rough Mix). In 1979 Townshend produced and performed guitar on the novelty single "Peppermint Lump" by Angie on
Stiff Records, featuring 11-year-old Angela Porter on lead vocals. Townshend made several solo appearances during the 1970s, two of which were captured on record:
Eric Clapton's Rainbow Concert in January 1973 (which Townshend organized to revive Clapton's career after the latter's heroin addiction), and the
Paul McCartney-sponsored Concerts for the People of Kampuchea in December 1979. The commercially available video of the Kampuchea concert shows the two rock icons duelling and clowning through
Rockestra mega-band versions of "Lucille", "Let It Be", and "Rockestra Theme"; Townshend closes the proceedings with a characteristic split-legged leap. Townshend's solo breakthrough, following the death of Who drummer
Keith Moon, was the 1980 release
Empty Glass, which included the top-10 single "
Let My Love Open the Door", and lesser singles "
A Little Is Enough" and "
Rough Boys". This release was followed in 1982 by
All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes, which included the popular radio track "
Slit Skirts". While not a huge commercial success, music critic Timothy Duggan listed it as "Townshend's most honest and introspective work since Quadrophenia." Through the rest of the 1980s and early 1990s Townshend would again experiment with the
rock opera and related formats, releasing several story-based albums including
White City: A Novel (1985),
The Iron Man: A Musical (1989), and
Psychoderelict (1993). Townshend also got the chance to play with his hero
Hank Marvin for
Paul McCartney's "
Rockestra" sessions, along with other rock musicians such as
David Gilmour,
John Bonham, and
Ronnie Lane. Townshend recorded several concert albums, including one featuring a
supergroup he assembled called
Deep End, with David Gilmour on guitar, who performed just three concerts and a television show session for
The Tube, to raise money for his Double-O charity, supporting drug addicts. In 1993, he and
Des McAnuff wrote and directed the Broadway adaptation of the Who album
Tommy, as well as a less successful
stage musical based on his solo album
The Iron Man, based upon the book by
Ted Hughes. McAnuff and Townshend later co-produced the animated film
The Iron Giant, also based on the Hughes story. A production described as a Townshend rock opera and titled
The Boy Who Heard Music debuted as part of
Vassar College's Powerhouse Summer Theater program in July 2007. On 2 September 2017 at
Tanglewood in
Lenox, Massachusetts, Townshend embarked with fellow singer and musician
Billy Idol, tenor
Alfie Boe, and an orchestra on a short (5-date) "Classic Quadrophenia" US tour that ended on 16 September 2017 in Los Angeles, California. The 13 September 2017 performance at the Rosemont Theater in Chicago, Illinois included a guest appearance by Eddie Vedder.
1996–present: latest Who work From the mid-1990s through the present, Townshend has participated in a series of tours with the surviving members of the Who, including a 2002 tour that continued despite Entwistle's death. In February 2006, a major world tour by the Who was announced to promote their first new album since 1982. Townshend published a semi-autobiographical story
The Boy Who Heard Music as a serial on a blog beginning in September 2005. The blog closed in October 2006, as noted on Townshend's website. It is now owned by a different user and does not relate to Townshend's work in any way. On 25 February 2006, he announced the issue of a mini-opera inspired by the novella for June 2006. In October 2006 the Who released their first album in 24 years,
Endless Wire. The Who performed at the
Super Bowl XLIV half-time show on 7 February 2010, playing a medley of songs that included "Pinball Wizard", "
Who Are You", "Baba O'Riley", "
See Me, Feel Me", and "Won't Get Fooled Again". In 2012, the Who announced they would tour the rock opera
Quadrophenia. The Who were the final performers at the
2012 Summer Olympics closing ceremony in London, performing a medley of "Baba O'Riley", "See Me, Feel Me", and "My Generation". On 22 March 2018, Townshend stated that a new Who album should feature original songs by
Roger Daltrey as well as him. That album, simply titled
Who, was released on 6 December 2019. It was the band's second album as a duo, and their first in thirteen years.
Unfinished work The Age of Anxiety, formerly
Floss the Musical, is the name given to a work-in-progress by Townshend. The musical has been a work in progress at least since 2009 with an original estimated release of 2011. On 24 January 2012 Townshend sold the rights to all of his back catalog and much of his future work including
Floss The Musical if it is ever completed. He summarized the work in an interview with
Sirius Satellite Radio published February 2010. In a 2015 interview Townshend stated that the work was intended to be an art installation. In March 2019 it was announced that a work titled
The Age of Anxiety would be published as a novel, with an opera to follow. == Musical influences ==