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Live At The Oval 1971

Label: Universal Music Group
Released: 2025
Track listing: So Glad To See Ya; Summertime Blues; My Wife; Love Ain’t For Keeping; I Can’t
Explain; Substitute; Bargain; Behind Blue Eyes; Won’t Get Fooled Again
Baby Don’t You Do It; Pinball Wizard; See Me, Feel Me / Listening To You; My
Generation; Naked Eye; Magic Bus
The Who: Live At The Oval 1971

by Doug Collette
The Who were at the peak of their performing powers by the time they embarked upon an extensive touring schedule in 1971. Having honed their chemistry as a performing unit during the nearly two years of performing Tommy (Decca, 1969), the quartet had relegated equipment smashing to an occasional sidelight. And, having distilled guitarist/composer ...
Heartbreaker: A Memoir by Mike Campbell

by Doug Collette
Heartbreaker: A Memoir Mike Campbell with Ari Surdoval 464 Pages ISBN: #978-0306833199 Grand Central Publishing2025 In what may be the sole expression of explicit ego he ever really displayed during his history with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Mike Campbell has written A Memoir describing his time as guitarist, ...
Roger Daltrey: Thanks A Lot Mr Kibblewhite - My Story

by Doug Collette
Thanks A Lot Mr Kibblewhite Roger Daltrey 272 Pages ISBN: #978-1250296030 Henry Holt and Co. 2018 Unlike most rock and roll memoirs, Roger Daltrey's is not a tell-all. Far from it, because, like most interviews the author conducts, Thanks A Lot Mr Kibblewhite is based on the 'less said ...
Michael Landau: The Guitarist's Guitarist

by Jim Worsley
"He is the best guitarist in the world," states guitarist and Grammy winner Steve Lukather. Indeed, Michael Landau is an important figure in the modern era and one of the most widely respected guitar players on the planet. Landau made his mark as an A list session player in the '80s and '90s. He ...
Olli Ahvenlahti: Thinking, Whistling

by Anthony Shaw
When Mose Allison wrote in 1958 that 'a young man ain't got nothing in the world these days' he was probably not intending to make a philosophical statement--more a question of power politics. But now(adays) the line now suggests something else to me. I think neither Roger Daltrey nor I thought about it this way, at ...