Tommy Tour
The Tommy Tour was a concert tour by the English rock band the Who. It was in support of their fourth album, the rock opera Tommy (1969), and consisted of concerts split between North America and Europe. Following a press reception gig, the tour officially began on 9 May 1969 and ended on 20 December 1970. The set list featured the majority of the songs from Tommy, as well as originals and covers.
Tour by The Who | |
Location |
|
---|---|
Associated album | Tommy |
Start date | 9 May 1969[lower-alpha 1] |
End date | 20 December 1970 |
Legs | 6 |
No. of shows |
|
The Who concert chronology |
After multiple rehearsals and warm-up gigs, the band played a private show at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club, London in early May 1969 intended to preview Tommy to the press. Subsequently, the band toured North America playing the new album, which was well received by audiences. Following a UK tour, the band played the Tanglewood Music Shed and the Woodstock festival. After Woodstock, the band headlined the second Isle of Wight festival and played Tommy at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, one of the world's forefront opera houses. The band continued to tour North America, emphasized by eight shows done over the course of six days at the Fillmore East in New York City. The Who ended 1969 with tour of Europe that continued into 1970, including a show at the London Coliseum on 14 December, which was filmed for a possible future Tommy film.
The group began 1970 by bringing Tommy to various European opera houses. During their tour, the critically acclaimed live album Live at Leeds was recorded during a show at the University of Leeds Refectory, Leeds. After the European tour wrapped up, the band returned to the United States for a tour, starting with two shows at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York City in June. Following the tour, the band played several concerts in Europe, including a headlining appearance at the third Isle of Wight festival in August. The band ended the Tommy Tour with a benefit concert at the Roundhouse in London.
History
The Who's live set changed with the introduction of Pete Townshend's rock opera Tommy, which they had begun recording the previous autumn.[2] After a series of rehearsals and warm-up gigs, the band gave a preview concert to the press at London's Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club on 1 May.[3] Realising the opera's narrative was too difficult to comprehend, Townshend explained a synopsis of the story, before the Who played Tommy at roaring volume.[4] The next day, the band flew to New York to start the North American tour, commencing on 9 May at the Grande Ballroom in Detroit.[3] On 29 May, the band began a three-night residency at Chicago's Kinetic Playground. They noticed the audience would all stand up at the same time, and stay standing, indicating that live performances of Tommy had a positive reaction from audiences.[5] After finishing a series of tour dates in San Francisco during June,[5] the Who flew to London to do two shows for the Royal Albert Hall's Pop Proms concert series. The first show resulted into a fracas involving Teddy Boys who attempted to prevent the band from coming on stage, but the second show went smoothly as the Teds were satisfied with renditions of "Summertime Blues" and "Shakin' All Over".[6] On 10 August, the band suspended their UK tour to do two contracted appearances at the Tanglewood Music Shed and the Woodstock festival.[7]
After playing a show at Tanglewood on 12 August, the band flew to New York to play a set at Woodstock. Due to a fourteen-hour delay, the band became reluctant to play and demanded their $12,500 fee.[8] The Who were scheduled to perform the previous day, 16 August, but the festival ran late and they did not take to the stage until the early hours of the 17th. After playing "Pinball Wizard", Yippie founder Abbie Hoffman interrupted the show to protest the arrest of John Sinclair before getting kicked offstage by Townshend, and the sun rose almost as if on cue during "See Me, Feel Me".[9][10] After returning to England, the band headlined the second Isle of Wight festival on 30 August. Though most media attention focused on Bob Dylan making his first British appearance in three years, the Who stole the show. Townshend later said, "We know that the stage act we had, with Tommy in it, would work under any circumstances, because it had worked many times on tour."[11]
The "world premiere" of Tommy took place on 29 September at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, one of the most prestigious opera houses in the world. During the band's entrance, drummer Keith Moon suffered an injury after knocking down two speaker cabinets.[11] The show later became a bootleg recording.[12] The band started another North American tour on 10 October at the Commonwealth Armory in Boston, emphasized by a six-night stand at the Fillmore East in New York City. One show at the Fillmore was attended by Leonard Bernstein, who praised the band for their new music.[13] The Who ended 1969 with a tour of Europe that continued into 1970, including a show at the London Coliseum on 14 December, which was filmed for a possible future Tommy feature.[14]
1970 began with the group bringing Tommy to various European opera houses, a trend they had begun in December 1969 when they performed at the London Coliseum. Included were January stops at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris, the Royal Danish Theatre in Copenhagen, and three opera houses in West Germany.[15] The band then focused again on recording a live album. While performances on 14 February at the University of Leeds Refectory and 15 February at Hull City Hall were both recorded, only the Leeds recording was deemed suitable for release, as the bass track was inadvertently not captured during the first few songs at the Hull show. The result was the legendary Live at Leeds, which became a hallmark live rock album.[16]
After beginning recording sessions for a planned new album, the group returned to the United States for a 30-day tour in June and July to support Tommy. In the year since the release of Tommy, the group had become rock superstars and now commanded considerably larger venues than on previous stints in the country, when they played mostly in theatres and colleges. The tour began with the band's final opera house date, as they performed two shows at New York City's Metropolitan Opera House.[17] Following the American tour, the band was one of the headlining acts at the third Isle of Wight festival and embarked on a short European tour shortly afterward.[18] A series of concerts in the United Kingdom followed, the last being a Christmas benefit concert at the Roundhouse in London where they included what was intended to be the last complete performance of Tommy, although it would be played again a few times in 1989.[19] Townshend would lead the group into his Lifehouse vision when they began performing in 1971.
Personnel
- Roger Daltrey – lead vocals, harmonica, tambourine
- Pete Townshend – guitar, vocals
- John Entwistle – bass guitar, vocals
- Keith Moon – drums
Repertoire
The band performed the entirety of Tommy, with the exception of "Cousin Kevin", "Underture", "Sensation" and "Welcome" because they weren't considered suitable for live performance.[20] Aside from the new material, songs such as "Happy Jack", "A Quick One, While He's Away", "Young Man Blues", "Summertime Blues", "My Generation", and "Magic Bus" were featured heavily in the group's stage show, among others.[21] In the autumn, they elected to expand the stage presentation of Tommy further, adding songs like "Overture" and "Sally Simpson" that had been skipped in earlier performances;[22] additionally, show-ending performances of "My Generation" were stretched out to reprise certain parts of the rock opera along with other instrumental passages, such as the chord progression that eventually evolved into "Naked Eye".[21]
While the rock opera remained the focal point of the set into 1970, the band also featured their latest single, "The Seeker" on the 1970 U.S. tour, although it was dropped after two weeks. They also added some material from their in-progress album (eventually abandoned in favour of Townshend's Lifehouse project), performing "Water" and "I Don't Even Know Myself" regularly;[14][23] "Naked Eye", although unfinished in the studio, was performed in various arrangements on the tour as well, generally during the long show-ending jams during "My Generation".[21]
During the final leg, the set list was the same as on the previous leg, with the exception of "Shakin' All Over" now segueing into the rock standard "Twist and Shout";[24] the band also stopped including Tommy themes in their long versions of "My Generation" and often moved it into "Naked Eye" and "Magic Bus". They continued to play the same basic set as in August and September, occasionally adding loose versions of Free's "All Right Now" towards the end of the show.[25]
Films and albums
Over the years, several films and albums have been released of the band's concert performances during the Tommy Tour (all are albums, except where noted).
- The Who at Kilburn: 1977 (DVD disc 2: London, 14 December 1969, released 2008)[26]
- Live at Leeds (album containing entire Leeds, 14 February 1970 show, released 1970)[27]
- Live at Hull (Hull, 15 February 1970, released 2012)[27]
- Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 (album Isle of Wight Festival, 29 August 1970, released 1996)[27]
- Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 (film Isle of Wight Festival, 29 August 1970, released 1996)[27]
- Woodstock – Back to the Garden: The Definitive 50th Anniversary Archive (Woodstock, 17 August 1969, released 2019)
Additionally, songs recorded during the tour have been released along with other live and/or studio material:
- Woodstock (1970): "We're Not Gonna Take It", "See Me, Feel Me", "My Generation", "Summertime Blues" (Woodstock, 17 August 1969)[10]
- Woodstock: Music from the Original Soundtrack and More (1970): "See Me, Feel Me" (Woodstock, 17 August 1969)[10]
- The Story of The Who (1976): "My Generation", "Summertime Blues" (Leeds, 14 February 1970)[28]
- The Kids Are Alright (soundtrack, 1979): "Sparks", "Pinball Wizard", "See Me, Feel Me" (Woodstock, 17 August 1969),[10] "Young Man Blues" (London, 14 December 1969),[26] "Happy Jack" (Leeds, 14 February 1970)[29]
- The Kids Are Alright (film, 1979): "Sparks", "Pinball Wizard", "See Me, Feel Me" (Woodstock, 17 August 1969),[10] "Young Man Blues" (London, 14 December 1969),[26]
- Hooligans (1981): "Summertime Blues" (Leeds, 14 February 1970)[30]
- Thirty Years of Maximum R&B (1994): "Sparks", "Abbie Hoffman Incident"[lower-alpha 2] (Woodstock, 17 August 1969),[22] "Substitute", "See Me, Feel Me", "Young Man Blues", "Summertime Blues", "Shakin' All Over" (Leeds, 14 February 1970),[31]
- Thirty Years of Maximum R&B Live (1994): "Happy Jack", "I Can't Explain" (London, 14 December 1969),[26] "Heaven and Hell", "I Can't Explain", "Water" (Lenox, 7 July 1970),[32] "Young Man Blues", "I Don't Even Know Myself" (Isle of Wight Festival, 29 August 1970)[33]
- Message to Love (1997): "Young Man Blues", "Naked Eye" (Isle of Wight Festival, 29 August 1970)[33]
- View from a Backstage Pass (2007): "Fortune Teller" (Detroit, 12 October 1969), "Happy Jack", "I'm a Boy", and "A Quick One, While He's Away" (Hull, 15 February 1970)[34]
- Greatest Hits Live (2010): "Magic Bus" (Leeds, 14 February 1970), "Happy Jack", "I'm a Boy" (Hull, 15 February 1970)[35]
Tour dates
Preview concert in the U.K. and North American leg (1 May – 19 June 1969)
U.K. leg, U.S. contracted appearances, and European tour (5 July – 29 September 1969)
Date | City | Country | Venue | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 July 1969[lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 5] | London | England | Royal Albert Hall | [6] |
19 July 1969 | Birmingham | Mothers | [7] | |
20 July 1969 | Hastings | Pier Ballroom | [22] | |
27 July 1969 | Redcar | Redcar Jazz Club | [22] | |
28 July 1969 | Sunderland | Fillmore North | [7] | |
2 August 1969 | Eastbourne | Winter Garden | [7] | |
3 August 1969 | Carlisle | Cosmopolitan | [22] | |
4 August 1969 | Bath | Bath Pavilion | [7] | |
7 August 1969 | Worthing | Assembly Hall | [22] | |
9 August 1969[lower-alpha 6] | Plumpton | Plumpton Racecourse | [7] | |
12 August 1969 | Lenox | United States | Tanglewood Music Shed | [7] |
17 August 1969[lower-alpha 7] | Bethel | Yasgur Farms | [10] | |
22 August 1969 | Shrewsbury | England | Music Hall | [10] |
29 August 1969 | Bournemouth | Pavilion Theatre | [11] | |
30 August 1969[lower-alpha 8] | Isle of Wight | Woodside Bay | [11] | |
6 September 1969 | Dunfermline | Scotland | Kinema Ballroom | [11] |
7 September 1969 | Carlisle | England | Cosmopolitan | [11] |
13 September 1969 | Sutton Coldfield | The Belfry | [11] | |
21 September 1969 | Croydon | Fairfield Halls | [22] | |
29 September 1969 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Concertgebouw | [11] |
North American leg (10 October – 16 November 1969)
Date | City | Country | Venue | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
10 October 1969 | Boston | United States | Commonwealth Armory | [11] |
11 October 1969 | Detroit | Grande Ballroom | [11] | |
12 October 1969 | [11] | |||
14 October 1969 | Toronto | Canada | CNE Coliseum | [13] |
15 October 1969 | Ottawa | Capitol Theatre | [39] | |
17 October 1969 | Worcester | United States | Holy Cross Field House | [39] |
18 October 1969 | Stony Brook | Pritchard Gymnasium | [13] | |
19 October 1969[lower-alpha 3] | Philadelphia | Electric Factory | [39] | |
20 October 1969 | New York City | Fillmore East | [13] | |
21 October 1969 | [40] | |||
22 October 1969 | [40] | |||
23 October 1969 | [40] | |||
24 October 1969[lower-alpha 3] | [40] | |||
25 October 1969[lower-alpha 3] | [40] | |||
26 October 1969 | Pittsburgh | Syria Mosque | [40] | |
31 October 1969 | Chicago | Kinetic Playground | [13] | |
1 November 1969 | Columbus | Veterans Memorial Auditorium | [41] | |
2 November 1969 | Washington, D.C. | McDonough Gymnasium | [41] | |
3 November 1969 | White Plains | Westchester County Center | [41] | |
4 November 1969 | Hartford | Bushnell Memorial Hall | [41] | |
6 November 1969[lower-alpha 9] | Granville | Livingston Gymnasium Indoor Track | [13] | |
7 November 1969 | Athens | Convocation Center | [41] | |
8 November 1969 | St. Louis | Kiel Opera House | [41] | |
10 November 1969 | Albany | Palace Theatre | [41] | |
11 November 1969 | Boston | Boston Tea Party | [13] | |
12 November 1969 | [13] | |||
13 November 1969 | New Paltz | Elting Gymnasium | [41] | |
14 November 1969 | Cleveland | Music Hall | [41] | |
15 November 1969 | Buffalo | Kleinhans Music Hall | [26] | |
16 November 1969 | Syracuse | Onondaga County War Memorial | [26] |
European leg (4 December 1969 – 16 May 1970)
Date | City | Country | Venue | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 December 1969 | Bristol | England | Bristol Hippodrome | [26] |
5 December 1969 | Manchester | Palace Theatre | [26] | |
12 December 1969 | Liverpool | Liverpool Empire Theatre | [26] | |
14 December 1969 | London | London Coliseum | [14] | |
19 December 1969 | Newcastle upon Tyne | Newcastle City Hall | [26] | |
16 January 1970 | Paris | France | Théâtre des Champs-Élysées | [15] |
17 January 1970 | [15] | |||
24 January 1970 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Royal Danish Theatre | [15] |
26 January 1970 | Cologne | West Germany | Opernhaus | [15] |
27 January 1970 | Hamburg | Opernhaus | [15] | |
28 January 1970 | West Berlin | Deutschland Stadt Opera House | [15] | |
30 January 1970 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Concertgebouw | [15] |
14 February 1970 | Leeds | England | University of Leeds Refectory | [42] |
15 February 1970 | Kingston upon Hull | Hull City Hall | [42] | |
18 April 1970 | Leicester | University of Leicester | [43] | |
25 April 1970 | Nottingham | Portland Building | [43] | |
27 April 1970 | Dunstable | Dunstable Civic Hall | [43] | |
1 May 1970 | Exeter | Great Hall | [43] | |
2 May 1970 | Sheffield | University of Sheffield | [43] | |
8 May 1970 | Kent | Eliot College | [43] | |
9 May 1970 | Manchester | Manchester University | [43] | |
15 May 1970 | Lancaster | Lancaster University | [43] | |
16 May 1970 | York | Derwent College | [43] |
U.S. leg (7 June – 7 July 1970)
Date | City | Country | Venue | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
7 June 1970[lower-alpha 3] | New York City | United States | Metropolitan Opera House | [17] |
9 June 1970 | Denver | Mammoth Gardens | [23] | |
10 June 1970 | [23] | |||
13 June 1970 | San Diego | Golden Hall | [23] | |
14 June 1970 | Anaheim | Anaheim Stadium | [23] | |
15 June 1970 | Berkeley | Berkeley Community Theatre | [23] | |
16 June 1970 | [23] | |||
19 June 1970 | Dallas | Dallas Memorial Auditorium | [23] | |
20 June 1970 | Houston | Hofheinz Pavilion | [23] | |
21 June 1970 | Memphis | Ellis Auditorium | [23] | |
22 June 1970 | Atlanta | Municipal Auditorium | [44] | |
24 June 1970 | Philadelphia | Spectrum | [44] | |
25 June 1970 | Cincinnati | Cincinnati Music Hall | [44] | |
26 June 1970 | [44] | |||
27 June 1970 | Cleveland | Public Auditorium | [44] | |
29 June 1970 | Columbia | Merriweather Post Pavilion | [44] | |
1 July 1970 | Chicago | Auditorium Theatre | [44] | |
2 July 1970 | Kansas City | Freedom Palace | [44] | |
3 July 1970 | Minneapolis | Minneapolis Auditorium | [44] | |
4 July 1970 | Chicago | Auditorium Theatre | [44] | |
5 July 1970 | Detroit | Cobo Arena | [44] | |
7 July 1970 | Lenox | Tanglewood Music Shed | [44] |
European leg (25 July – 20 December 1970)
Date | City | Country | Venue | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
25 July 1970 | Dunstable | England | Dunstable Civic Hall | [44] |
8 August 1970 | Sutton Coldfield | The Belfry | [44] | |
24 August 1970 | Wolverhampton | Wolverhampton Civic Hall | [33] | |
29 August 1970[lower-alpha 10] | Isle of Wight | East Afton Farm | [33] | |
12 September 1970 | Münster | West Germany | Halle Münsterland | [33] |
13 September 1970 | Offenbach am Main | Stadthalle Offenbach | [33] | |
16 September 1970 | Rotterdam | Netherlands | De Doelen | [33] |
17 September 1970 | Amsterdam | Concertgebouw | [33] | |
18 September 1970 | Rotterdam | De Doelen | [45] | |
20 August 1970 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Falkoner Teatret | [45] |
21 August 1970 | Aarhus | Vejlby-Risskov Hallen | [45] | |
6 October 1970 | Cardiff | Wales | Sophia Gardens Pavilion | [45] |
7 October 1970 | Manchester | England | Free Trade Hall | [46] |
8 October 1970 | London | Orchid Ballroom | [46] | |
10 October 1970 | Brighton | Old Refectory | [46] | |
11 October 1970 | Birmingham | Birmingham Odeon | [46] | |
13 October 1970 | Leeds | Locarno Ballroom | [33] | |
18 October 1970 | London | Lewisham Odeon | [47] | |
22 October 1970 | Stockton-on-Tees | ABC Cinemas | [47] | |
23 October 1970 | Glasgow | Scotland | Green's Playhouse | [47] |
24 October 1970 | Sheffield | England | University of Sheffield | [47] |
25 October 1970 | Liverpool | Liverpool Empire Theatre | [47] | |
26 October 1970 | Stoke-on-Trent | Trentham Ballroom | [47] | |
27 October 1970 | Norwich | University of East Anglia | [25] | |
29 October 1970 | London | Hammersmith Palais | [47] | |
21 November 1970 | Leeds | University of Leeds Refectory | [25] | |
28 November 1970 | Coventry | Lanchester Polytechnic | [25] | |
5 December 1970 | Norwich | Lads' Club | [48] | |
15 December 1970 | Newcastle upon Tyne | Mayfair Ballroom | [48] | |
16 December 1970 | Scarborough | Futurist Theatre | [48] | |
20 December 1970 | London | Roundhouse | [19] |
Notes
- The concert on 1 May 1969 was a private event intended to preview Tommy to the press and is not included in the total number of shows for the tour.[1]
- The "Abbie Hoffman Incident" is dialogue of Townshend removing Hoffman from the stage when he attempted an impromptu speech during the middle of the band's set.[22]
- 2 shows have been played.
- The concert on 13 June 1969 was a part of Magic Circus.[5]
- The concerts on 5 July 1969 were a part of Pop Proms.[6]
- The concert on 9 August 1969 was a part of the National Jazz and Blues Festival.[22]
- The concert on 17 August 1969 was a part of the Woodstock festival. The band was scheduled to perform Saturday night, 16 August. However, due to the festival running late, they actually performed Sunday morning, 17 August.[10]
- The concert on 30 August 1969 was a part of the Isle of Wight Festival 1969.[11]
- The concert on 6 November 1969 was a part of the Raccoon Creek Rock Festival.[13]
- The concert on 29 August 1970 was a part of the Isle of Wight Festival 1970.[33]
Footnotes
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 156–157
- Neill & Kent 2002, p. 135
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 160–161
- Marsh 1983, p. 340
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 163–164
- Neill & Kent 2002, p. 165
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 166–167
- Marsh 1983, p. 348
- Marsh 1983, p. 350
- Neill & Kent 2002, p. 168
- Neill & Kent 2002, p. 169
- Erlewine
- Neill & Kent 2002, p. 170
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, pp. 96–97
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 176–178
- Neill & Kent 2002, p. 179
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 101
- Neill & Kent 2002, p. 174
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 110
- Atkins 2000, p. 136
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, pp. 82–83
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, pp. 88–92
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, pp. 102–103
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 106
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 109
- Neill & Kent 2002, p. 171
- Marshall, Townshend & Daltrey 2015, p. 314
- The Story of The Who (liner notes)
- The Kids Are Alright (liner notes)
- Hooligans (liner notes)
- Thirty Years of Maximum R&B (liner notes)
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 186
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 187–188
- View from a Backstage Pass (liner notes)
- Marshall, Townshend & Daltrey 2015, p. 315
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 85
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 86
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 87
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 93
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 94
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 95
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, pp. 98–99
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 100
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, pp. 104–105
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 107
- McMichael & Lyons 1997, p. 108
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 189
- Neill & Kent 2002, pp. 191
References
- Neill, Andy; Kent, Matt (2002). Anyway Anyhow Anywhere: The Complete Chronicle of The Who 1958–1978. Barnes & Noble. ISBN 978-1-40276-691-6.
- Marsh, Dave (1983). Before I Get Old: The Story of The Who. Plexus. ISBN 978-0-8596-5083-0.
- Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Live in Amsterdam – The Who". AllMusic. Retrieved 22 March 2020.
- McMichael, Joe; Lyons, "Irish" Jack (1997). The Who Concert File. Omnibus. ISBN 0-7119-6316-9.
- Atkins, John (2000). The Who on Record: A Critical History, 1963–1998. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-0609-8.
- Marshall, Ben; Townshend, Pete; Daltrey, Roger (2015). The Who: 50 Years: The Official History. Harper Design. ISBN 978-0-06-239636-5.
- The Story of The Who (liner notes). The Who. Polydor. 1976.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - The Kids Are Alright (liner notes). The Who. Polydor. 1979.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - Hooligans (liner notes). The Who. MCA. 1981.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - Thirty Years of Maximum R&B (liner notes). The Who. 1994.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - View from a Backstage Pass (liner notes). The Who. 2007.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
External links
- The Who Past Shows 1969 at the Who's official website
- The Who Past Shows 1970 at the Who's official website