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1965
Some of that wildness made it into their next single, "Anyway Anyhow Anywhere" released May 21 with a middle instrumental section filled with runaway drums and piercing guitar feedback. The Who switched from being a Mod band to being a Pop-art band, wearing T-shirts with medals and Royal Air Force insignia and, most famously, a jacket made from the British flag. Pete, meanwhile, gave interview after interview making outrageous statements, his already existing tendency to verbosity egged on by managers Lambert and Stamp. From this point on The Who and particularly Pete were seen by the music press as a perpetual source for good copy.
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1966
Desperate for money, suffering under the terms of their contract with producer Shel Talmy and ignored by their American label Decca, The Who's managers decided to break the contract and, in January, signed The Who to Atlantic in the U.S. and Robert Stigwood's new label Polydor through the rest of the world. Talmy countered with a lawsuit that hampered the band throughout the year until it was settled in October with The Who remaining on Polydor but returning to Decca in the U.S.
Another innovation followed May 10 when Pete presented his manager Kit Lambert with a homemade parody track he referred to as a "rock opera." Lambert, with his family training in classical music, leapt upon the idea and encouraged Pete to start writing a real rock opera. Pete's first attempt became The Who's next single, "I'm A Boy," released August 26. The bizarre tale of a boy raised as a girl was a fragment of an opera called "Quads" that remained unfinished as Pete explored other concepts. "I'm A Boy" was The Who's biggest hit single in Britain, reaching #1 on the Melody Maker chart.
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1967
On March 16, The Who's managers launched a label of their own, Track Records, not only to publish The Who's records in Britain, but other artists as well. The label's first act signed was The Jimi Hendrix Experience and Track's success spurred other major British acts to consider starting their own labels.
The Who were back a month later to begin their first lengthy tour of North America opening for the teeny-bopper band Herman's Hermits. They ended up spending more than they made. The expenses of the instrument-smashing conclusion to their act were part of the reason but some of the cost came from destruction that was done offstage as Keith began his secondary career as a wild man. He may not have actually driven a car into a swimming pool at a Holiday Inn (Roger says yes, everyone else there says no) but he did more than enough damage to other hotels along the route, blowing up toilets and doors off hinges after he purchased firecrackers during the tour's Southern leg. From this point on, Keith would leave hotel rooms in shambles wherever The Who toured.
©copyright 2007 Brian Cady |