New_Song_(The_Who_song)

New Song (The Who song)

New Song (The Who song)

1978 song by the Who


"New Song" is the first track from the Who's eighth studio album Who Are You (1978). It was written by Pete Townshend.

Quick Facts Song by the Who, from the album Who Are You ...

Lyrics

The lyrics of "New Song" are about FM radio's demand for bands to clone their previous hits.[1] Pete Townshend, the author of the song, once said, "This is a diatribe against the requirements of FM radio (at the time) for every band of the day to produce 'clones' of their earlier successful airplay hits. This was my signal to everyone that I had decided to deal a wonky deck full of theatrical parodies and anachronisms. Needless to say, the song didn't get airplay and neither did it make the critics happy. Great sounding cut, such a pity it is full of such cynical sentiment."[2]

Music

Like many of Who Are You's songs, "New Song" features a slick production sound, as well as the use of synthesizers.[1] "'New Song' was the first song I ever wrote on a polyphonic synthesizer," Townshend said. "It was blocked out on an ARP OMNI, that company's first polyphonic machine. It may have been the first multi-voice synth ever. But I cheated quite a lot; it had only one filter and envelope-shaping amplifier."[2]

Release and critical reception

"New Song" was first released on the Who Are You album. It was not released as a single.

AllMusic critic Richie Unterberger called the song one of Who Are You's "blustery attempts at contemporary relevance", despite noting the track as a highlight from said album.[3] Greil Marcus of Rolling Stone said, "'New Song,' the first cut, rams home the guilt of having taken a free ride: 'I write the same old song, with a few new lines/And everybody wants to cheer me.'"[4]


References

  1. Grantley/Parker, Steve/Alan. The Who by Numbers: The Story of The Who Through Their Music. Helter Skelter.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article New_Song_(The_Who_song), and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.