Pete Townshend
- Music Artist
- Music Department
- Actor
Born in Chiswick, London just ten days after the German surrender in
1945, Townshend grows up in a typical middle-class home. His parents,
Cliff and Betty Townshend, are both musicians, and as a child he
accompanies them on dance band tours. Townshend starts playing guitar
at 12. He goes to art school and, after several stints in local
semi-professional bands, forms the rock group
The Who in 1963 with singer
Roger Daltrey, bass player
John Entwistle and drummer
Keith Moon.
The Who start out as the ultimate, violent
anti-establishment band; they soon gain notoriety for ear-splitting
live performances, smashing their equipment on stage and wrecking hotel
rooms, leaving havoc everywhere they go. As the group's mastermind and
main songwriter, Townshend later establishes himself as an eminent
musical auteur and the thinking man's rock guitarist after penning such
now legendary concept albums as "Tommy", the abandoned "Lifehouse" and
"Quadrophenia", which combine the energy of rock'n'roll with the
orchestral and thematic ambitions of opera. After
Keith Moon's accidental death in 1978
and a few unconvincing farewell tours with new drummer
Kenney Jones,
The Who break up. The 80's find Townshend
struggling with his identity as an aging rock godfather, fighting drug
problems and increasing hearing troubles. In 1989, he roars back with a
25th anniversary tour of The Who, later a
Broadway revival of "Tommy" (an eventual Tony winner) and several other
ambitious musical, theater and film projects. Widely known as the
windmilling, leaping about guitarist for
The Who, Townshend is also a premier songwriter,
accurately self-reflective lyricist and inspired multi-media
entrepreneur. Both "Tommy" and "Quadrophenia" were made into energetic
films.
The Kids Are Alright (1979),
the band's biography movie, is interesting not only for
The Who fans, but also from a filmmaker's point
of view. Townsend's haunting songs have been used on the soundtrack of
countless pictures. He stands out as one of rock music's most gifted
and influential artists who has, despite being forever tied to the
rebellious image of his youth, decided to somehow grow old with
dignity.