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"Street Song" Townshend Daltrey Who: 2019 [12] "Substitute" Townshend Daltrey Non-album single 1966 [67] "Success Story" Entwistle Daltrey Entwistle The Who by Numbers: 1975 [23] "Summertime Blues" (cover) Cochran Capehart Daltrey Entwistle Live at Leeds: 1970 [63] "Sunrise" Townshend Townshend The Who Sell Out: 1967 [16] "Tattoo" Townshend ...
The Who performed the songs "Fire" and "Dig" from Pete Townshend's solo album The Iron Man: The Musical by Pete Townshend, which was released in 1989. Videography
The American forensic drama CSI (CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, CSI: Miami, CSI: NY, CSI: Cyber and CSI: Vegas) feature Who songs as theme music, "Who Are You", "Won't Get Fooled Again", "Baba O'Riley" and "I Can See for Miles" respectively.
The band Pearl Jam regularly plays a cover of the song during concerts, and a readers' poll in Rolling Stone awarded this cover as #8 in their "Greatest Live Cover Songs". [11] In 2012, Paste ranked the song number two on their list of the 20 greatest Who songs, [ 12 ] and in 2022, Rolling Stone ranked the song number six on their list of the ...
I Believe in Everything (song) I Can See for Miles; I Can't Explain; I Can't Reach You; I Don't Mind (James Brown song) I Feel Better (John Entwistle song) I'm a Boy; I'm Free (The Who song) I'm One; I've Been Away; I've Had Enough (The Who song) I've Known No War; In the Ether; It's a Boy (The Who song) It's Hard (song)
A modified version was used in the opening of the television series Two and a Half Men, in the 2008 fifth season episode "Fish in a Drawer", which had several references to CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. [16] The subsequent shows in the CSI franchise used other The Who songs as their theme songs.
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, [6] [7] nearly 44 years after its release. Roger Daltrey had featured the song in a solo concert in February 1994. [8]
The album was a commercial success, going 2× platinum in the US and Canada, gold in UK, and peaking at number 2 on the Billboard 200. [22] The soundtrack to Grease prevented Who Are You from achieving number 1 status in the US.