@ daq & lars_erik: Liker. F.., hvorfor tom så tidlig?
mvh
Du må lære deg å beherske deg, vet du. Ikke sløse bort "liker" på hva som helst!
Som du godt vet, er det å hive rundt seg med "liker" ikke noe som er sosialt akseptert!
Townshend originally wrote "Baba O'Riley" for his
Lifehouse project, a
rock opera that was to be the follow-up to The Who's 1969 opera,
Tommy. The song was derived from a nine minute demo, which the band reconstructed.
[3] "Baba O'Riley" was going to be used in the
Lifehouse project as a song sung by Ray, the Scottish farmer at the beginning of the album as he gathers his wife Sally and his two children to begin their exodus to London. When
Lifehouse was scrapped, many of the songs were released on The Who's 1971 album
Who's Next. "Baba O'Riley" became the first track on
Who's Next. The song was released as a single in several European countries, but in the United States and the United Kingdom was only released as part of the album.
Pete Townshend later claimed in an interview that, at least in part, "Baba O'Riley" was about what he witnessed during the Who's performance at
Woodstock. He stated in an interview that "'Baba O' Riley' is about the absolute desolation of teenagers at Woodstock, where everyone was smacked out on acid and 20 people had brain damage. The contradiction was that it became a celebration: "Teenage Wasteland', yes! We're all wasted!'"
[4]