Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1969


I'm Free (The Who song)

Buy I'm Free (The Who song) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




"'I'm Free'" is a song written by Pete Townshend and performed by the Who on the album 'Tommy'. The song has since been released as a single, becoming one of the best known tracks from 'Tommy.'

Background



Pete Townshend has claimed that the song was partly inspired by the song "Street Fighting Man" by the Rolling Stones.

On "I'm Free," drummer Keith Moon only played on the breaks of the song. According to bassist John Entwistle, Moon was unable to perform the intro the way Townshend wanted, resulting in Townshend and Entwistle having to perform part of the drums. During live performances, Townshend and Entwistle were forced to signal Moon to play the song by making giant steps.

Within the plot of the album, "I'm Free" tells of Tommy's vision to spiritually enlighten others due to his sudden and immense popularity. The "Pinball Wizard" riff (earlier on the album) appears at the end of the song during the "How can we follow?" part. Townshend has since noted "I'm Free" and "Pinball Wizard" as "songs of the quiet explosion of divinity. They just rolled off the pen."

"I'm Free" was later released as a single in most of Europe (backed with "Tommy, Can You Hear Me?") as well as America (where it was backed with "We're Not Gonna Take It"). The single reached number 37 in the US on the 'Billboard' Hot 100. It also reached number 20 in the Netherlands, and number 26 in Canada. 'Billboard' described the single as an "easy beat rocker" with "much sales potency" that represented a "change of pace" from the Who's previous single "Pinball Wizard."

Film and film soundtrack versions



The versions of Im Free recorded for the 1975 film and its soundtrack album feature The Who accompanied by Nicky Hopkins on piano and Kenney Jones playing drums.

Live history



This song was used in the 1969-1970 concert classic set list. It is often switched with "Sensation" on setlists, including in the movie and in the Broadway musical as Tommy rejoices at regaining his sight, voice and hearing after the shock provided by his mother.

In 1975-1976, the song was reintegrated into The Who's set list. The version played at these shows featured more raucous vocals and a reworked guitar riff.

In 2002, The Who played this for a stretch on their 2002 UK Tour, with a similar arrangement to the versions played on the 1975-1976 tour. However, it was dropped again by the time bassist Entwistle died.

Covers and other uses



*In 1973, a single version sung by Roger Daltrey from the London Symphony Orchestra reached #13 in Britain.

*In 1988, WIYY-FM disc jockey Bob Rivers played the song to commemorate the Baltimore Orioles getting their first victory 9-0 over the Chicago White Sox after a record-setting streak of losing their first 21 games of the season, during the last ten days of which saw Rivers do a publicity stunt where he vowed to stay on the air non-stop until the Orioles won their first game, taking naps only between songs.

*In 1997, the Christian rock band Geoff Moore and the Distance covered this song, on the album Threads.

*In 2004, a cover version (combined with the instrumental "Sparks") was recorded by Neal Morse with the participation of Randy George and Mike Portnoy, it was originally released as the last track on the special edition of Neal's 'One' album. It was re-released on the 2006 album 'Cover to Cover'.

*In 2009, The Smithereens included the song on their tribute album, 'The Smithereens Play Tommy'.

*The song was used in commercials for Saab in the mid-2000s.

Personnel



*Roger Daltrey  lead vocals

*Pete Townshend  backing vocals, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, keyboards, drums

*John Entwistle  backing vocals, bass guitar, drums

*Keith Moon  drums

References



Category:The Who songs

Category:1969 singles

Category:Songs written by Pete Townshend

Category:Decca Records singles

Category:Track Records singles

Category:Song recordings produced by Kit Lambert

Category:1969 songs

Buy I'm Free (The Who song) now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1969



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1089700436.