Pete Townshend has claimed that the band recorded practically every song he had written for
The Who by Numbers, partially due to the
writer's block that he was experiencing at the time. The songs on the album were, for the most part, more introspective and personal than many other songs that the band had released. Townshend's 30th birthday occurred in May 1975; he was troubled with thoughts of being too old to play rock and roll and that the band was losing its relevance. He began to feel disenchanted with the music industry, a feeling that he carried into his songs. He said of the songs on the album: After concluding the tour for the
Quadrophenia album in June 1974, the Who took an extended hiatus and did not perform live for more than a year.
John Entwistle kept himself occupied by playing solo gigs. In addition, the band spent this time filming
Tommy, based on their
rock opera of the same title. This was the band's first album on Polydor. The sessions for
The Who by Numbers began in April 1975 and continued through early June. The album was released in October and the band supported it with a
tour, which spanned some 70 concerts before concluding in the autumn of 1976. For the album's recording, the band recruited producer
Glyn Johns. The band had worked previously with Johns on the 1971 album ''
Who's Next. Compared to previous Who albums, The Who by Numbers'' took an unusually long time to complete (nearly three months) and was marred by numerous breaks and interruptions due to the band members' growing boredom and lack of interest. It features some of the darkest songs ever recorded by the band. Only the songs on the first side of
The Who by Numbers were performed live, and only "Squeeze Box" became a concert staple. "Imagine a Man" was performed live for the first time by the band in May 2019, nearly 44 years after its release (although Roger Daltrey had featured the song in a solo concert in February 1994). Townshend said of the album's recording sessions: ==Album cover==