The Who Tour 1967
Tour by The Who | |
Associated album | "A Quick One" |
---|---|
Start date | 6 January 1967 |
End date | 30 December 1967 |
Legs | 12 |
No. of shows | 211 (approximately) |
The Who concert chronology |
The Who Tour 1967 was a series of performances and tours by The Who, supporting releases such as A Quick One, "Pictures of Lily", and The Who Sell Out. 1967 was the first year the group performed in North America.
History
The group continued to perform in the United Kingdom and Europe in the early part of the year, promoting A Quick One and "Happy Jack", both released in late 1966; one performance at the Saville Theatre in London saw the group share the bill with The Jimi Hendrix Experience, who had been performing in England since the previous September. In March, the band made their first trip to North America to play two to three short performances per day at New York City's 58th Street Theater as part of shows promoted by disc jockey Murray the K, packaging the group with several other artists. After the release of "Pictures of Lily", a return trip saw the band tour the United States and Canada coast-to-coast over three months while supporting Herman's Hermits, highlighted by their six-song set at the Monterey Pop Festival in June as well as an appearance on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, both which showcased the requisite instrument smashing ritual that usually closed their performances (and produced memorable footage for The Kids Are Alright biopic). The group also booked studio time during the tour to record material for The Who Sell Out and tracks like "Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand" whenever possible. In between more performances in the United Kingdom, the band returned for another two-week stint in America late in the year, with The Who Sell Out seeing release in December.
Live Releases
Live material from 1967 (excluding TV appearances where the band mimed to pre-recorded material) has appeared on a number of different releases:
- The version of "So Sad About Us" on the Thirty Years of Maximum R&B Live video and DVD comes from the band's performance at the Marquee Club in London on 2 March.
- The version of "My Generation" on the Who's Better, Who's Best video comes from the same Marquee Club show.
- The group's complete set from the Monterey Pop Festival appears on Disc 3 of the Rhino Records 30th anniversary box set commemorating the event.
- The finale of "My Generation" at the Monterey Pop Festival appears in both the Monterey Pop and The Kids Are Alright films.
Tour band
- Roger Daltrey - lead vocals
- Pete Townshend - lead guitar, vocals
- John Entwistle - bass guitar, vocals
- Keith Moon - drums, vocals
Typical set lists
January-Early April: UK, Italy, and First US Shows
With A Quick One released in late 1966, shows during the early part of the year saw performances of songs like "So Sad About Us", "Run Run Run", and "Don't Look Away", none of which would feature in the group's act for very long. Meanwhile, other new numbers such as "Happy Jack" (released in late 1966 as a single) and John Entwistle's "Boris the Spider" were also incorporated into the show and would become fan favourites. Older singles such as "Substitute", "I'm a Boy", and "My Generation" continued to feature heavily in the act.
Songs documented as being played at this stage are as follows (all written by Pete Townshend unless otherwise specified):
- "I Can't Explain"
- "So Sad About Us"
- "Barbara Ann" (Fred Fassert)
- "Run Run Run"
- "Don't Look Away"
- "Substitute"
- "I'm a Boy"
- "Happy Jack"
- "Boris the Spider" (John Entwistle)
- "My Generation"
April–June: Europe and UK
The band's new single, "Pictures of Lily", was added to the act at this point, as the group did short tours of Germany and Scandinavia as well as a few dates in England. Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues", which would be a staple in the group's act and arguably their most well-known cover tune, also began appearing around this time. The band even reportedly played their cover of Jan and Dean's "Bucket T." while in Sweden, the track having charted well in that country after being released as a single (it appeared on the Ready Steady Who EP in England). Drummer Keith Moon missed several shows in late May and early June while recovering from a hernia.
June–September: First North American Tour
A long, three-month North American tour was the group's first, supporting Herman's Hermits and highlighted by their appearance at the Monterey Pop Festival. They began playing the "mini-opera" "A Quick One, While He's Away" at this time and also appeared on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour at the very end of the tour, miming to both the newly recorded "I Can See for Miles" and a specially-recorded version of "My Generation" culminating in an instrument smash-up that Pete Townshend and Tommy Smothers played into a comedy routine, later seen at the beginning of The Kids Are Alright.
Songs documented as being played at this stage are as follows (all written by Pete Townshend unless otherwise specified):
- "Substitute"
- "Pictures of Lily"
- "Summertime Blues" (Eddie Cochran, Jerry Capehart)
- "So Sad About Us"
- "Barbara Ann" (Fred Fassert)
- "Boris the Spider" (John Entwistle)
- "A Quick One, While He's Away"
- "Happy Jack"
- "I'm a Boy"
- "My Generation"
There were some set list substitutions, variations, and order switches during the tour. Some other songs were played which are not in the above lists:
- "Love Hurts" (Boudleaux Bryant)
- Performed on 23 July.
- "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" (Lee Hazlewood)
- Performed on 1 August.
- "Jackson" (Jerry Leiber, Billy Edd Wheeler)
- Performed on 1 August.
October–December: UK Dates and Return to America
The group continued to perform in both the United Kingdom and United States while finishing The Who Sell Out. Songs from the album such as "I Can See for Miles", "Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand", "Odorono", "Relax", "Tattoo", and "Rael" were reportedly played at this stage, but no recordings of these shows exist. The band began playing the Johnny Kidd and the Pirates hit "Shakin' All Over", which would be a mainstay of their sets in 1969–1970, around this time as well.
Songs documented as being played at this stage are as follows (all written by Pete Townshend unless otherwise specified):
- "I Can't Explain"
- "Substitute"
- "Pictures of Lily"
- "A Quick One, While He's Away"
- "Run Run Run"
- "Summertime Blues" (Eddie Cochran, Jerry Capehart)
- "Happy Jack"
- "My Generation"
There were some set list substitutions, variations, and order switches during the tour. Some other songs were played which are not in the above lists:
- "Rael"
- Performed on 6, 7, 8 and 21 October.
- "Shakin' All Over" (Johnny Kidd)
- Performed on 22 October.
- "Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand"
- Performed on 17 and 22 November.
- "I Can See For Miles"
- Performed on 18 November.
- "Love Hurts" (Boudleaux Bryant)
- Performed on 25 November.
- "Boris the Spider" (John Entwistle)
- Performed on 25 November.
- "Odorono"
- Performed on 29 November.
- "Tattoo"
- Performed on 29 November.
- "Relax"
- Performed on 29 November.
"Boris the Spider" and "I'm a Boy" were likely part of the act at this time as well.
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
Europe | |||
6 January 1967 | Morecambe | England | Central Pier |
13 January 1967 | Kirkby-in-Ashfield | Festival Hall | |
14 January 1967 | Coventry | ||
18 January 1967 | London | Orchid Ballroom | |
21 January 1967 | Leeds | Leeds University | |
25 January 1967 | London | Kingsway Theatre (2 shows) | |
26 January 1967 | Bristol | Locarno | |
28 January 1967 | Folkestone | Toft's Club | |
29 January 1967 | London | Saville Theatre (2 shows) | |
31 January 1967 | Ilford | Palais des Danse | |
2 February 1967 | Coventry | Locarno | |
4 February 1967 | Portsmouth | Birdcage | |
5 February 1967 | Southampton | Waterfront | |
10 February 1967 | Grimsby | Gaiety Ballroom | |
11 February 1967 | Cromer | Royal Links Pavilion | |
12 February 1967 | Greenford | Starlite Ballroom | |
20 February 1967 | Cardiff | Wales | (unconfirmed) |
23 February 1967 | Turin | Italy | Palazzetto dello Sport (2 shows) |
24 February 1967 | Bologna | Palazzetto dello Sport (2 shows) | |
25 February 1967 | Milan | Palalido | |
26 February 1967 | Rome | Palazzetto dello Sport (unconfirmed) | |
Piper Club | |||
2 March 1967 | London | England | Marquee Club |
4 March 1967 | Dunstable | California Ballroom | |
10 March 1967 | Cardiff | Wales | Top Rank Suite |
11 March 1967 | Stoke-on-Trent | England | Kings Hall |
13 March 1967 | Leicester | Granby Halls | |
17 March 1967 | Devon | Exeter University | |
18 March 1967 | Devonport | Forum Cinema | |
20 March 1967 | Bath | Bath Pavilion | |
North America | |||
25 March 1967 (3 shows) | New York City | United States | RKO 58th Street Theater |
26 March 1967 (3 shows) | |||
27 March 1967 (2 shows) | |||
28 March 1967 (2 shows) | |||
29 March 1967 (2 shows) | |||
30 March 1967 (2 shows) | |||
31 March 1967 (2 shows) | |||
1 April 1967 (3 shows) | |||
2 April 1967 (3 shows) | |||
Europe | |||
4 April 1967 | Germany | (unconfirmed) | |
5 April 1967 | Offenburg | Oberrheinhalle | |
8 April 1967 | Nuremberg | Messehalle | |
9 April 1967 | Wuppertal | Thalia Theater | |
10 April 1967 | Herford | Jaguar Club | |
11 April 1967 | Düsseldorf | Rheinhalle | |
12 April 1967 | Ludwigshafen | Friedrich-Ebert Halle | |
13 April 1967 | Munich | Circus Krone Building (2 shows) | |
14 April 1967 | Münster | Halle Münsterland | |
15 April 1967 | Siegen | Siegerlandhalle | |
Wiesbaden | Rhein-Main Halle | ||
16 April 1967 | Ravensburg | Overschwabenhalle | |
Ulm | Donauhalle | ||
18 April 1967 | (unconfirmed) | ||
19 April 1967 | Bremen | Stadthalle Bremen | |
21 April 1967 | Brighton | England | Brighton Dome |
24 April 1967 | Bath | Bath Pavilion | |
25 April 1967 | High Wycombe | Town Hall | |
30 April 1967 | Helsinki | Finland | Helsinki Ice Hall |
2 May 1967 | Oslo | Norway | Njårdhallen |
3 May 1967 | Gothenburg | Sweden | Cirkus Lorensbergsparken (2 shows) |
4 May 1967 | Norrköping | Mässhallen | |
Jönköping | Rigoletto | ||
5 May 1967 | Eskilstuna | Sporthallen | |
6 May 1967 | Stockholm | Kungliga tennishallen | |
7 May 1967 | Kristianstad | Sommarlust | |
Malmö | Malmö Stadion | ||
10 May 1967 | Swansea | England | Top Rank Ballroom |
11 May 1967 | Belfast | Northern Ireland | |
13 May 1967 | Bognor Regis | England | Shoreline Hotel |
17 May 1967 | Stevenage | Locarno Ballroom | |
20 May 1967 | Brussels | Belgium | Woluwe Festival |
27 May 1967 | Oxford | England | Pembroke College |
Grand Marquee | |||
29 May 1967 | Glasgow | Scotland | Locarno Ballroom |
3 June 1967 | Southport | England | Floral Hall |
8 June 1967 | Belfast | Northern Ireland | Ulster Hall (2 shows) |
9 June 1967 | Magilligan | Ireland | Golden Slipper Ballroom |
10 June 1967 | Douglas | England | Palace Ballroom |
12 June 1967 | Cambridge | Christ's College | |
North America (supporting Herman's Hermits) | |||
14 June 1967 | Ann Arbor | United States | Fifth Dimension Club |
15 June 1967 | Arlington Heights | Cellar | |
16 June 1967 | San Francisco | Fillmore Auditorium | |
17 June 1967 | |||
18 June 1967 | Monterey | Monterey Pop Festival – Monterey County Fairgrounds | |
7 July 1967 | Lido Beach | Malibu Beach and Shore Club | |
8 July 1967 | New York City | Village Theatre | |
14 July 1967 | Portland | United States | Memorial Coliseum |
15 July 1967 | Seattle | Seattle Center Coliseum | |
16 July 1967 | Sacramento | Memorial Auditorium (2 shows) | |
17 July 1967 | Vancouver | Canada | Agrodome |
19 July 1967 | Salt Lake City | United States | Lagoon Terrace Ballroom (2 shows) |
21 July 1967 | Oklahoma City | Oklahoma State Fair Arena | |
22 July 1967 | Houston | Sam Houston Coliseum | |
23 July 1967 | Dallas | Dallas Memorial Auditorium | |
26 July 1967 | Baton Rouge | Redemptorist High School Football Stadium | |
28 July 1967 | Montgomery | Garrett Coliseum | |
29 July 1967 | Birmingham | Boutwell Memorial Auditorium (3 shows) | |
30 July 1967 | Miami Beach | Miami Beach Convention Hall | |
31 July 1967 | St. Petersburg | Bayfront Center | |
1 August 1967 | Jackson | Mississippi State Coliseum | |
3 August 1967 | Madison | Dane County Coliseum | |
4 August 1967 | Omaha | Rosenblatt Stadium | |
5 August 1967 | Chicago | International Amphitheatre | |
8 August 1967 | Boston | Boston Garden (unconfirmed) | |
9 August 1967 | Toronto | Canada | Maple Leaf Gardens |
11 August 1967 | Baltimore | United States | Baltimore Civic Center |
12 August 1967 | Asbury Park | Asbury Park Convention Hall (2 shows) | |
13 August 1967 | Washington, D.C. | DAR Constitution Hall (2 shows) | |
14 August 1967 | Providence | Rhode Island Auditorium | |
15 August 1967 | Nashville | Bradley's Barn | |
17 August 1967 | Chattanooga | Memorial Auditorium (2 shows) | |
20 August 1967 | Fargo | Fargo Civic Center | |
Minneapolis | Minneapolis Auditorium | ||
21 August 1967 | Edmonton | Canada | Edmonton Gardens |
22 August 1967 | Winnipeg | Winnipeg Arena | |
23 August 1967 | Flint | United States | Atwood Stadium |
24 August 1967 | Philadelphia | Philadelphia Civic Center | |
25 August 1967 | St. Louis | Kiel Opera House (2 shows) | |
26 August 1967 | Thunder Bay | Canada | Fort William Gardens |
Duluth | United States | Duluth Arena Auditorium | |
27 August 1967 | Cincinnati | Cincinnati Music Hall (2 shows) | |
28 August 1967 | Sioux Falls | Sioux Falls Arena | |
29 August 1967 | Atlanta | Municipal Auditorium (2 shows) | |
30 August 1967 | Rochester | Rochester War Memorial | |
31 August 1967 | Cleveland | Public Hall (2 shows) | |
1 September 1967 | Indianapolis | Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum | |
2 September 1967 | Columbus | Ohio State Fairgrounds (2 shows) | |
3 September 1967 | Ohio State Fairgrounds (2 shows) | ||
Pittsburgh | Civic Arena | ||
4 September 1967 | Columbus | Ohio State Fairgrounds (2 shows) | |
8 September 1967 | Anaheim | Anaheim Convention Center | |
9 September 1967 | Honolulu | Hawaii International Center | |
Europe | |||
6 October 1967 | Nairn | Scotland | Ballerina Ballroom |
7 October 1967 | Aberdeen | The Beach Ballroom | |
8 October 1967 | Dunfermline | Kinema Ballroom | |
21 October 1967 | Manchester | England | New Century Hall |
22 October 1967 | London | Saville Theatre (2 shows) | |
28 October 1967 | Sheffield | Sheffield City Hall (2 shows) | |
29 October 1967 | Coventry | Coventry Theatre (2 shows) | |
30 October 1967 | Newcastle upon Tyne | Newcastle City Hall (2 shows) | |
1 November 1967 | Liverpool | Liverpool Empire Theatre (2 shows) | |
3 November 1967 | Kingston upon Thames | Granada Cinema (2 shows) | |
4 November 1967 | Walthamstow | Granada Cinema (2 shows) | |
5 November 1967 | Nottingham | Theatre Royal (2 shows) | |
6 November 1967 | Birmingham | Birmingham Town Hall (2 shows) | |
8 November 1967 | Kettering | Granada Cinema (2 shows) | |
9 November 1967 | Maidstone | Granada Cinema (2 shows) | |
10 November 1967 | Slough | Adelphi Cinema (2 shows) | |
11 November 1967 | Nelson | Imperial Ballroom | |
North America | |||
17 November 1967 | Overland Park | United States | Shawnee Mission South High School |
18 November 1967 | Daly City | Cow Palace | |
19 November 1967 | Los Angeles | Hollywood Bowl | |
21 November 1967 | Fargo | Civic Auditorium | |
22 November 1967 | Southfield | Southfield High School | |
23 November 1967 | Muncie | New Barn, Lions Delaware County Fairgrounds | |
24 November 1967 | Fort Wayne | The Swingin' Gate | |
25 November 1967 | New York City | Village Theatre (2 shows) | |
26 November 1967 | Village Theatre | ||
29 November 1967 | Scotch Plains | Union Catholic High School | |
1 December 1967 | Commack | Long Island Arena | |
Europe | |||
6 December 1967 | Kingston upon Hull | England | Hull University |
8 December 1967 | Durham | Durham University | |
18 December 1967 | Bath | Bath Pavilion | |
30 December 1967 | Hastings | Pier Ballroom | |
See also
References
- Neill, Andy; Matt Kent (2002). Anyway Anyhow Anywhere: The Complete Chronicles of The Who 1958–1978. Barnes & Noble. ISBN 1-58663-133-0.
- McMichael, Joe; 'Irish Jack' Lyons (1997). The Who Concert File. Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-6316-9.