eMusic Review 0
Pete Townshend continued to think expansively for his next large scale project post-Tommy, a film treatment called Lifehouse that ultimately foundered on its heavyweight premise, a bleak vision of England's future in a time when most of the urban population is forced to live in special protective suits. These encasements serve the dual purpose of providing a shield from the extreme pollution and keeping the public under the diabolic control of a universal "grid" that provides them with food, sleeping gas, and a myriad of simplistic dreamlike entertainments — a science fictional all-too-true scenario that presages our fashionable "web-o-net" (thanks Phast Phreddie) by nearly a quarter of a century. "Bobby" hacks into the grid to present a musical festival/concert called Lifehouse, destined to free humankind from the tyranny of their enablers. And, yes, there is a surprise ending.
Actually, the biggest surprise was that the album that resulted from this concept, the songs shorn of their shared genesis, is one of the Who's most accomplished works, held together by consciousness rather than plot. "Baba O'Reilly" takes Pete's newest textural discovery, the ARP synthesizer (one of the first to put Moog's processed square and sine waves into a desktop friendly keyboard instrument)… read more »