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The Who performed at Grona Lund Amusement Park in Stockholm, Sweden on June 2nd 1966.
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The Who
Song: A Legal Matter (album: My Generation - 1965);
Grona Lund Amusement Park (Stockholm, Sweden);
06/02/1966;
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Line up:
Pete Townshend - Vocal, Guitar;
Keith Moon: Drums;
John Entwistle: Bass;
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The Who Live in Stockholm, Sweden (2nd June 1966):
• The Who Live in Stockholm, Sweden (2n...
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The Who - A Legal Matter (Stereo Version):
• A Legal Matter (Stereo Version)
Pete Townshend - It's a Legal Matter (Live) at Chicago HOB on 06/14/1997:
• Pete Townshend - It's a Legal Matter ...
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56 YEARS OF THE WHO
2 June 1966. The first of The Who's Swedish shows kicked off at Gröna Lund, an amusement park in Stockholm. Here below is the newspaper report from local reporter Lennart Clerwall. The set list ran as follows: 'I Can't Explain', 'Anyway Anyhow Anywhere', 'Heat Wave', 'Dancing In The Street', 'Barbara Ann', 'Daddy Rolling Stone', 'Uptight' (Steveie Wonder song), 'Daddy Rolling Stone' (reprise), 'A Legal Matter', 'Substitute' and 'My Generation'. Here too is a recording of part of the set and apologies for the poor quality of the sound. But its was 50 years ago and long before the age of iPhones!
Destructive Pop art – that is expensive. At least when the English pop group The Who are performing it. Yesterday at Gröna Lund, the solo guitarist Pete Townshend smashed a guitar. The cost: 4,000 Crowns!
"Everything for the sake of art" said Pete.
Aggression? No, smashing instruments is part of the ritual when The Who is performing. And yesterday evening, this was particularly appropriate. In spite of heavy rain, Gröna Lund was packed.
The Who has two gimmicks. First of all, they are known as troublemakers. If any of the other members of the band thinks that the drummer Keith Moon is playing too loud, they beat him up.
The second gimmick concerns so-called destructive pop art. The Who’s interpretation of pop art is to destroy instruments.
Yesterday, The Who had only played half a song when what so many had come to see happened. Pete Townshend, solo guitarist and the man behind Who’s hits 'My Generation' and 'Substitute', ripped off a string on his guitar. Ripped of the guitar lead. Threw the guitar, worth 4,000 Crowns to the floor and then inspected the completely cracked instrument with an artful smile!
That one guitar went down the drain didn’t matter much. Pete had another two in reserve. However, they were only worth 2,000 Crowns each. But even so…
The Who as a musical attraction? The answer to that can only be one – weak. It is all about screams and yelling. To provide as much noise as possible by standing with their guitars exactly in front of the P.A. system. And by throwing down microphone stands and, as mentioned above, wrecking their instruments.
There’s only difference with other electrical bands: The Who have a unique bass sound. A lovely sound that is similar to that of a heavily tuned-down guitar.
But then the bass player John Entwistle is using two amplifiers and 16 speakers to achieve that sound!"
Lennart Clerwall
Watch video The Who - A Legal Matter | Stockholm - Sweden | 2nd June 1966 (Rare Bootleg) online, duration hours minute second in high quality that is uploaded to the channel Yann Fernandes 11 November 2022. Share the link to the video on social media so that your subscribers and friends will also watch this video. This video clip has been viewed 997 times and liked it 21 visitors.