Oops! Looks like we're having trouble connecting to our server.
Refresh your browser window to try again.
About this product
Product Identifiers
Record LabelPolf, Polydor Import
UPC0602577635311
eBay Product ID (ePID)22046038185
Product Key Features
Release Year2019
FormatRecord
GenreRock
ArtistDaltrey, Roger
Release TitleWho's Tommy Orchestral
Dimensions
Item Weight1.24 lb
Additional Product Features
Number of Tracks24
Tracks1.1 Overture (Live from Bethel, New York / 2018 5: 45 1.2 It's a Boy 0: 41 1.3 1921 2: 57 1.4 Amazing Journey 5: 10 1.5 Sparks 2: 12 1.6 Eyesight to the Blind 2: 21 1.7 Christmas 4: 41 1.8 Cousin Kevin 3: 51 1.9 The Acid Queen 3: 51 1.10 Do You Think It's Alright? 0: 26 1.11 Fiddle About 1: 40 2.1 Pinball Wizard 3: 19 2.2 There's a Doctor 0: 25 2.3 Go to the Mirror 3: 51 2.4 Tommy, Can You Hear Me? 1: 39 2.5 Smash the Mirror 1: 26 2.6 Chorus - It's a Boy 0: 29 2.7 I'm Free 2: 46 2.8 Miracle Cure 0: 14 2.9 Sensation 3: 08 2.10 Sally Simpson / Gospel Piano Interlude 4: 53 2.11 Welcome 4: 04 2.12 Tommy's Holiday Camp 1: 11 2.13 We're Not Gonna Take It 8: 34
Number of Discs2
NotesThe Who singer Roger Daltrey announced the release of a live album, The Who's Tommy Orchestral, on June 14, 2019. It was recorded in Budapest, Hungary and Bethel Woods, N.Y., during a 2018 tour in which Daltrey performed the classic rock opera with the collaboration of local orchestras. "Pete [Townshend]'s music is particularly suited to being embellished by the sounds that an orchestra can add to the band, " Daltrey said in a statement. "Tommy can mean whatever you want it to mean; I use the characters in it as metaphors for parts of the human condition, so it's a kind of a story of the human spirit. Even though it is 50 years on, I approach it as though I'm singing it for the first time." Even though the Who include significant parts of Tommy in their new orchestral tour, guitarist and composer Townshend said their full performance in London last year was their last. "I have real trouble with Tommy, " he told Rolling Stone. "We did it recently at the Royal Albert Hall for the Teenage Cancer shows. And I sort of had a bit of a breakdown halfway through it. I get very triggered by it. When I wrote it, I wasn't aware of a lot of the issues that I have personally."