Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Who were one year and three months into their Tommy tour when they played their second engagement at the Isle of Wight Festival.As in 1969, they played most of their famous rock opera Tommy, which by this time was quite familiar to the festival crowd.
Live at the Royal Albert Hall is a three-CD live album set by The Who, released in 2003. [2]Discs one and two were recorded on 27 November 2000 and consist of John Entwistle, Roger Daltrey, Pete Townshend, Zak Starkey, and John "Rabbit" Bundrick performing a concert at the Royal Albert Hall for the Teenage Cancer Trust along with several guests.
The album was reissued on CD in 1995. It included most of the Leeds concert, missing most of the performance of "Tommy" except for one song. [25] A further expanded edition of the album was released in 2001, this time with the complete concert, although not in the original running order. [26]
A British Tommy (plus hits) 7-date concert tour. [112] 2017: 13 July 2017 – 1 October 2017 (North America, South America) 19 A 19-date North & South American concert tour. 2019–2021: 7 May 2019 – 29 March 2021 (North America, United Kingdom) 56 A 56-show symphonic concert tour of North America and the U.K., partially supporting their ...
The Who at Kilburn: 1977 is a film of two live performances by British rock band the Who released as a two-disc DVD set on 17 November 2008 by Image Entertainment.The first disc included the band's performance at the Gaumont State Cinema on 15 December 1977, while the second disc featured the band's performance at the London Coliseum on 14 December 1969.
The Who played concerts in the UK in early 2002 in preparation for a full US tour. On 27 June, the day before the first date, [279] Entwistle, 57, was found dead of a heart attack at the Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas. Cocaine was a contributing factor. [280]
2012 issue of the concert originally released in 2010 as part of the Live at Leeds (40th Anniversary Ultimate Collectors' Edition) box set. Original recording produced by The Who at Hull City Hall on 15 February 1970.
The Who Tour 1979 was The Who's first concert tour after the death of original drummer Keith Moon.The tour supported their 1978 album Who Are You, and consisted of concerts in Europe and the United States and acknowledged the band's return to live performance.