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Pages in category "Songs written by Pete Townshend" The following 144 pages are in this category, out of 144 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
The following is the solo discography of British rock musician and recording artist Pete Townshend. Townshend's career as a published musician and songwriter began in 1964 as a member of rock band the Who , before branching out as a solo artist in the 1970s.
It should only contain pages that are Pete Townshend songs or lists of Pete Townshend songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Pete Townshend songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes is the fourth solo studio album by English rock musician Pete Townshend, released on 14 June 1982 by Atco Records. Chris Thomas produced the album (who had also produced Townshend's previous studio album, Empty Glass) and it was recorded by Bill Price at three separate recording studios in London, England, which were Eel Pie, AIR and Wessex.
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. [62] 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. [63]
The compilation included songs from Pete Townshend's solo career as well as two songs from the album Rough Mix with Ronnie Lane. It also included the single edit of English Boy" and the first appearance of "Let My Love Open the Door (E. Cola Mix)" and the Psychoderelict outtake, "Uneasy Street".
Townshend Townshend My Generation: 1965 [4] "A Little Is Enough" (cover, live) Townshend Townshend Join Together: 1990 [5] [6] "A Man in a Purple Dress" Townshend Daltrey Endless Wire: 2006 [7] "A Man Is a Man" Townshend Daltrey It's Hard: 1982 [8] "A Quick One, While He's Away" Townshend Daltrey Entwistle Townshend A Quick One: 1966 [9] "The ...
The Village Voice critic Robert Christgau wrote in his review of the album: "Meher Baba inspired psalmody so plain and sharply observed, maybe he was all reet after all. . Three of Townshend's contributions—'Keep Me Turning,' 'Misunderstood,' and an unlikely song of adoration called 'My Baby Gives It Away'—are his keenest in years, and while Lane's evocations of the passing scene are more ...