The List

5 Must-Listen Deep Cuts by The Who

The Who has released many classic songs that made an impact the charts and also became staples on rock radio. However, the British rock legends also have many great deep cuts that, unless youโ€™re familiar with their studio albums and rarities compilations, may have flown under your radar.

For a band thatโ€™s been around 60 years, itโ€™s not easy to compile a short list of noteworthy, memorable songs. That being said, hereโ€™s a selection of five standout deep cuts by the band with which you may not be familiar:

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โ€œSo Sad About Usโ€ (1966)

โ€œSo Sad About Usโ€ is a power-pop gem that appeared on The Whoโ€™s second U.K. studio, A Quick One, and its U.S. counterpart, Happy Jack. Those albums were released, respectively, in December 1966 and April 1967.

The Whoโ€™s Pete Townshend originally wrote the melodic breakup song for the U.K. group The Merseys, which released it as a single in 1966.

The Whoโ€™s version of โ€œSo Sad About Usโ€ is sung by frontman Roger Daltrey, and is highlighted by the bandโ€™s sweet harmonies, Townshendโ€™s sometimes-slashing, sometimes-jangly guitars, and Keith Moonโ€™s frenetic drumming.

The song was later covered by The Jam, Primal Scream, and The Breeders.

Earlier this week, on March 24, ex-Jam frontman Paul Weller teamed up with Daltrey to perform โ€œSo Sad About Usโ€ during the star-studded โ€œOvationโ€ concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London.

โ€œI Canโ€™t Reach Youโ€ (1967)

โ€œI Canโ€™t Reach Youโ€ appeared on The Whoโ€™s third studio effort, the 1967 concept album The Who Sell Out. The song, which was written and sung by Townshend, is about a man yearning for a woman who seems unattainable to him.

The piano-driven song showcases Townshendโ€™s plaintive lead vocals, and the bandโ€™s falsetto harmonies.

โ€œNaked Eyeโ€ (1969)

โ€œNaked Eyeโ€ was a song The Who recorded in 1969, and intended release as part of an EP that was shelved. It finally got its official release in 1974 on the bandโ€™s Odds & Sods rarities compilation.

โ€œThis number was written around a riff that we often played on stage at the end of our act around the time we were touring early Tommy,โ€ Townshend explained in the Odds & Sods liner notes. โ€œIt came to be one of our best stage numbers.โ€

The song features Daltrey crooning, then belting Townshendโ€™s enigmatic lyrics. Townshend also takes over on vocals for a middle verse. The song ends with an extended psychedelic jam.

The Who have continued to play โ€œNaked Eyeโ€ fairly regularly in concert. Most recently, they included in their sets throughout their 2022 fall U.S. tour.

โ€œPure and Easyโ€ (1971)

โ€œPure and Easyโ€ was written by Townshend in 1971 for The Whoโ€™s aborted Life House multimedia project. When that expansive project fell apart, the band decided to release a single-disc album. That record became the classic Whoโ€™s Next. โ€œPure and Easyโ€ was one of the tracks that didnโ€™t make the cut.

Interesting, Daltrey is heard singing the first verse of โ€œPure and Easyโ€ at the end of the Whoโ€™s Next track โ€œSong Is Over.โ€

Townshend recorded his own version of โ€œPure and Easyโ€ for his 1972 solo debut album, Who Came First. The Whoโ€™s studio recording of the song is featured on Odds & Sods.

โ€œPure and Easyโ€ is an uplifting melodic rock anthem about the mystical, unifying powers of music.

โ€œBeads on One Stringโ€ (2019)

Itโ€™s not a stretch to say that The Whoโ€™s 2019 studio album, WHO, exceeded a lot of fans expectations. The bandโ€™s first new studio effort in 13 years reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and was filled with strong songs, including โ€œBeads on One String.โ€

Townshend came up with the lyrics and melody for the song after finding the music, which was written by American film-score composer Josh Hunsaker, on SoundCloud. The songโ€™s humanistic, antiwar theme is based on the writings of Townshendโ€™s late guru, Meher Baba. Baba once wrote, โ€œI want to bring the religions of the world together like beads on one string.โ€

In a 2020 Zoom interview to promote the WHO album, Daltrey revealed that โ€œBeads on One Stringโ€ was his favorite song from the record.

โ€œ[T]hereโ€™s something about the message that I really, really like. I think itโ€™s a masterful piece of songwriting,โ€ Daltrey said. โ€œ[T]he world at the moment, there are so many people pulling it apart. โ€ฆ Music can always pull us together. That song is a pulling-us-together song.โ€

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