Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1982


Eminence Front

Buy Eminence Front 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




"'Eminence Front'" is a song written and sung by Pete Townshend of the Who. It appears as the sixth track on the group's 1982 studio album, 'It's Hard'. The single reached number 68 on the 'Billboard' Hot 100.[http://www.thewho.com/index.php?module=discography&discography_item_id=72 Discography] - thewho.com

Background and recording



In the song, Townshend sings about the delusions and drug use of the wealthy and hedonistic. The lyrics describe a party in which people hide from their problems behind a faade. Townshend has introduced the song in live performances with: "This song is about what happens when you take too much white powder; it's called 'Eminence Front.The Archivist (11 October 2011). [http://wnew.radio.com/2011/10/11/video-classics-eminence-front/ "Video Classics: Eminence Front"] . Wnew.com. Retrieved 29 October 2012. In an interview, Townshend explained:

In the originally released version, there is a timing flaw or a syncopation in the first chorus, where Townshend sings "behind an eminence front" at the same time Daltrey sings "it's an eminence front", with Townshend one syllable behind. A more linear-sounding remixed version appears on the 1997 re-release of 'It's Hard' (a live version, recorded on the band's final stop on their 1982 tour in Toronto, appears as a bonus track on the re-release). Additionally, the remix has Townshend's vocals panned centrally rather than hard right in the stereo field.

Release



"Eminence Front" was scheduled to be released as a single in the UK by Polydor Records in 1982; the catalog number was WHO 7 but the single was never released. The picture sleeve, by Richard Evans, depicted a 1930s Art Deco house in Miami. The single in its picture sleeve was finally released in 2017 as part of The Who's 'The Polydor Singles 1975-2015' box set.

A promotional video was produced, shot at a rehearsal in Landover, Maryland, during their 1982 US tour. Footage from the Who's 1982 concert at Shea Stadium was also used in the video.

Critical reception



In a wholly negative review of 'It's Hard', Robert Christgau gave faint praise to "Eminence Front" as the album's high point, sarcastically noting how the aging Townshend "discovers funk. Just in time. Bye." 'Cash Box' said that it "rides along on Pete Townshends cleanly slicing guitar and the bands patented synth sound" as well as a "strong bottom" from the drums and bass guitar." 'Rolling Stone' ranked the song as the Who's tenth best song, stating, Eminence Front' showed they could connect Townshend's new wave-influenced solo work with the classic sound of 'Who's Next'."

In popular culture



The song was played during the opening scene of 'Miami Vice', Season 3, Episode 3 "Killshot", which premiered October 10, 1986.

The song has been used as the intro music for Dallas Mavericks games since it was adopted during the 200001 NBA season, the team's final season at the Reunion Arena. The song was chosen by Mavericks marketing executive Matt Fitzgerald, who stated that he was looking for a song with an instrumental introduction which builds to a crescendo in the same manner as the Alan Parsons Project's "Sirius", which is used in the same way by the Chicago Bulls: "We tried many different songs during our last season in Reunion Arena... Then one day in my car, I was listening to a Who CD and 'Eminence Front' came on. We tried it, the Mavs fans responded in a very positive way, so it became our signature player introduction song". In a 2019 interview, Townshend said that its adoption by the Mavericks was "a wonderful use of the song... I must have known [the team used it], because I must have given permission, but I had forgotten".

Personnel



* Peter Townshend guitar, Lowrey organ, synthesizer, lead vocals

* Roger Daltrey backing vocals

* John Entwistle bass guitar

* Kenney Jones drums

* Tim Gorman electric piano

Charts



Weekly charts



References




Buy Eminence Front now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1982



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1101438027.