'The Who - Live At The Isle of Wight Festival 1970' - The Album
Created | Updated Sep 20, 2012
'Ladies and gentlemen, a nice rock 'n' roll band from Shepherds Bush, London; The 'Oo.'
– Jeff Dexter, Isle of Wight Festival Master of Ceremonies
The Who, one of the greatest British bands of all time are particularly famed as one of the best bands to have seen live1. 1969-71 is considered the period when they were at the peak of their career.
The Who Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 captures an evocative performance of them at their best, in front of an audience of 700,000, their largest ever crowd. Although they performed noteworthy appearances at the 1969 Isle of Wight Festival, Woodstock and Live Aid, it is the 1970 Festival that is often considered to have been their greatest live appearance.
The Isle of Wight Festivals
In the early and mid-1960s, despite the rise in popular music, there were no rock or pop festivals held2. In August 1967 the first popular music festival in Britain took place3, followed in 1968 by Britain's second popular music festival, the first Isle of Wight Festival4.
In 1969 the second Isle of Wight Festival took place, this time organised by Fiery Creations, and thus the Isle of Wight became Britain's first recurring popular music festival. The Who had performed at the 1969 Isle of Wight Festival5, billed second behind Bob Dylan6. The Isle of Wight paved the way for all other recurring British music festivals that have sprung up since, including Glastonbury and Reading.
The 1970 Isle of Wight Festival
The 1970 Isle of Wight Festival was the biggest music festival in the world. More people attended the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival than Woodstock, with over 700,000 people in attendance. Sadly, the festival was a victim of its own success; many of the attendees chose to sit on Afton Down7, a hillside that overlooked the 1970 festival site, watching the festival for free at a distance. Others, who refused to pay, rioted and broke into the festival site itself. In the end the Festival was declared to be free, and the investors lost a fortune. Although a great musical and artistic success, the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival was a financial and political8 disaster. Parliament responded by passing the 1971 Isle of Wight Act, making it illegal for more than 5,000 people to gather in one place on the Isle of Wight without permission, in an attempt to prevent another Isle of Wight Festival ever taking place9.
The Who at the Isle of Wight Festival
Having been one of the highlights of the 1969 Isle of Wight Festival, The Who were quickly signed up to return in 1970. Although Jimi Hendrix was the overall star of the Festival, they were a second headline act. After all, they were the most popular band never to have had a UK number one single. Advertised and billed as performing in the evening of Saturday 29 August, 1970, after The Doors, due to severe delays and overrun they did not actually appear on stage until after 2am on Sunday morning.
Line Up
- Roger Daltrey – Vocals and harmonica
- John Entwistle – Bass and vocals
- Keith Moon10 – Drums and vocals
- Pete Townshend – Guitar and vocals, songwriter
Performance
They played a similar set to their 1969 appearance. This not only included their own work, both a mixture of their established hits and back catalogue and songs from their Tommy concept album, it also involved material showing their rock'n'roll roots. Other artists' songs like 'Summertime Blues', 'Shakin' All Over' and 'Young Man Blues' were performed live on stage.
Renowned for their theatrical performances, built on dramatic instrument destruction performed live on stage. At Woodstock they had benefitted from a dramatic sunrise during their climax of Tommy. For the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival11 The Who wanted to create something equally dramatic, but were unwilling to leave things to chance. They secretly smuggled some airport lights to the festival, which they planned to use to create a similar dramatic moment. At 4:15am these powerful floodlights were switched to illuminate both the stage and the audience. Unexpectedly, this attracted a vast cloud of moths, which flitted like snowflakes over the audience's heads, creating an outstanding visual accompaniment and natural ovation to the music. For the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival John Entwistle performed dressed as an illuminous skeleton.
The Who played more songs than they had at Woodstock. The last song they performed was 'Magic Bus', one of their weaker songs and perhaps an odd choice for the grand finale. However, this had not been intended to be the last song. Ray Manzarek, organist with The Doors12 who had left the stage before The Who came on to perform, recalled,
'The Who were just amazing. They seemed to be on for two hours or more, and they would have kept on playing but Pete Townshend's guitar13 broke. I remember he came off stage furious that he couldn't keep playing.'
This was an ironic end to the largest performance for a band famous for deliberately breaking their instruments to create a dramatic spectacle.
Message To Love, The Isle Of Wight Festival Film
As it was known that the festival would be a historic occasion, it was planned to film and record the entire 1970 Isle of Wight Festival, using high-spec film cameras and then state-of-the-art 8-track tape. Peter Harrigan, the Press Officer for Fiery Creations, the company that had organised the Isle of Wight Festival, announced,
'It won't be another "Woodstock", this will be something entirely new in cinema'.
The festival would be filmed by Murray Lerner, an Academy Award-winning documentary film director. Murray Lerner was an experienced festival director; in 1967 he had released Festival, a documentary of the Newport Folk Festivals between 1963 and 1966 that had been nominated for an Academy Award. Murray Lerner would later win an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 198014.
Sadly the financial fall out from the festival caused the liquidation of Fiery Creations, and the film and soundtrack of the festival, originally intended to be called The Last Great Event, was at first delayed and later trapped in the legal wrangling. Murray Lerner's feature length film summarising the festival finally emerged in 1995, on the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival's 25th Anniversary, named Message To Love: The Isle of Wight Festival 1970, along with an accompanying album. This contained two Who songs: 'Young Man Blues' and 'Naked Eye'.
The Who - Live At The Isle of Wight Festival 1970 Release
With the legal red tape trapping the Isle of Wight Festival material finally unravelled in 1995, the following year, in 1996, The Who's full performance at the Isle of Wight Festival was at long last released as an album15, The Who - Live At The Isle of Wight Festival 1970. The album captures the energy and excitement of the band in the Live At Leeds era.
Album Songlist
All songs were written by Pete Townshend except where stated.
'Heaven And Hell' – a song by John Entwistle frequently used to introduce their live act in 1969 and 1970. It was the B-Side to their July 1970 single 'Summertime Blues', released at the time of the Festival.
'I Can't Explain' – The Who's first single which reached number 8 in the UK on release in 1965.
'Young Man Blues' – A song by Mose Allison that also appeared on the Live At Leeds album. This performance also appeared on Message To Love.
'I Don't Even Know Myself' – A new song for the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival.
'Water' – 'Water' frequently was sung in 1970 and later would be the B-side on two singles, '5:15' and 'Love Reign O'er Me'. During 'Water', Keith Moon threw his drum stick as high as he could and actually caught it. He was rewarded with a loud burst of spontaneous applause from the audience.
'Tommy' – The Who's fourth album was a phenomenal innovation and the world's first rock opera. Recorded in 1969, it would later inspire a film in 1975. For their festival appearance, they performed almost the entire double album, leaving out only 'Cousin Kevin', 'Underture', 'Sensation', and 'Welcome'. All tracks were by Pete Townshend except 'Fiddle About', by John Entwistle, 'Tommy's Holiday Camp', by drummer Keith Moon and 'Eyesight To The Blind (The Hawker)', which was a pre-existing song by Sonny Boy Williamson, first released- in 1951.
- 'Overture'
- 'It's A Boy'
- '1921'
- 'Amazing Journey'
- 'Sparks'
- 'Eyesight To The Blind (The Hawker) '
- 'Christmas'
- 'The Acid Queen'
- 'Pinball Wizard'
- 'Do You Think It's Alright? '
- 'Fiddle About'
- 'Tommy Can You Hear Me? '
- 'There's A Doctor'
- 'Go To The Mirror'
- 'Smash The Mirror'
- 'Miracle Cure'
- 'I'm Free'
- 'Tommy's Holiday Camp'
- 'We're Not Gonna Take It '
'Summertime Blues' – A rock classic by Eddie Cochran released in 1958, written by Cochran and his manager Jerry Capehart. This had been part of the band's set since 1968 and a live performance from their Live At Leeds album was released in July 1970, out at the time of the Isle of Wight Festival. At the 2004 Isle of Wight Festival The Ordinary Boys performed 'Summertime Blues' in tribute to The Who.
Medley:
'Shakin' All Over' – Another rock staple, written by Johnny Kidd and a Number One for Johnny Kidd and The Pirates in 1960.
'Spoonful' – A song written by Willie Dixon and first recorded in 1960 by Howlin' Wolf.
'Twist And Shout' – written by Phil Medley and Bert Russell, this song shot to fame after being covered by The Beatles16 and had appeared briefly in the 1964 Cliff Richard film A Wonderful Life.
'Substitute' – One of their most popular songs, it was a UK Number 5 in 1966 and has been performed at most of their appearances.
'My Generation' – The most successful of The Who's singles, a number 2 hit in the UK in 1965 that also appeared on their 1965 debut album of the same title.
'Naked Eye' – a fairly new song that had first been performed during the 1970 American tour. This was also released on Message To Love, the Isle of Wight Festival summary album and film.
'Magic Bus' – a frequently heard Who song dating from the mid 60s that was released as a single in 1968, getting to number 26. It had also been performed on the Live At Leeds album.
Chris Charlesworth, the reporter for Melody Maker, said on the album's release,
'This is The Who as they never were before or again, at the height of the triumph of Tommy before it became a millstone around the group's neck. This is The Who, a group that could have big hits and still be cool, sell millions and still be 'underground'.'
Listening To You: The Who Live At The Isle of Wight Festival 1970 - The Film
The lengthy-titled Listening To You: The Who Live At The Isle of Wight Festival 1970 film of this performance was finally released in 1996 on VHS and later re-released on DVD. It is credited as being directed by Murray Lerner, who recorded the entire festival.
Curiously the song order has been re-arranged to have all non-Tommy material at the beginning, and does not contain all the songs performed, lasting only 85 minutes. The concert is rated 15.
The inside cover of the DVD contains the classic 1970 Isle of Wight Festival poster design by Dave Roe17 and contains a contemporary press cutting review of the festival from Melody Maker and NME.
Performances on the Listening To You: The Who Live At The Isle of Wight Festival 1970 film are:
- 'Heaven And Hell'
- 'I Can't Explain'
- 'Young Man Blues'
- 'I Don't Even Know Myself'
- 'Water'
- Medley:
- 'Shakin' All Over'
- 'Spoonful'
- 'Twist And Shout'
- 'Summertime Blues'
- 'My Generation'
- 'Magic Bus'
- Tommy:
- 'Overture'
- 'It's A Boy'
- 'Eyesight To The Blind (The Hawker) '
- 'Christmas'
- 'The Acid Queen'
- 'Pinball Wizard'
- 'Do You Think It's Alright? '
- 'Fiddle About'
- 'Go To The Mirror'
- 'Miracle Cure'
- 'I'm Free'
- 'We're Not Gonna Take It'
- 'Tommy Can You Hear Me? '
When John Entwistle died in 2002, it was this film footage wearing the black jumpsuit with an illuminous skeleton outline that was most-used to accompany the television news reports of his death.
Epilogue: 2004 Isle of Wight Festival
In 2004 The Who again headlined the Isle of Wight Festival, for the third and, to date, final time. The Who's set included nine songs that they had played at the 1970 Festival; 'I Can't Explain', 'Substitute', 'Naked Eye', 'My Generation', 'Pinball Wizard', 'Amazing Journey', 'Sparks', 'See Me, Feel Me' and 'Magic Bus'. Six of these had also been played at the 1969 Isle of Wight Festival18.
Roger Daltrey, when interviewed and asked about his previous Isle of Wight Festival appearances, simply said,
'It feels good to be back on the Island, it doesn't seem like anything has changed...
All I can remember about playing in '70 is getting drunk with Jim Morrison19, but [he] died and never bought his round.'