JOHN ENTWISTLE, 1944-2002
by Sean Rovaldi
I was as blindsided by the news as anyone: another
great musician has passed away. John Entwistle, the
rock-solid bassist for the Who, was found dead in his
hotel room in Las Vegas on June 27, a night before the
Who were to start their latest reunion tour. The
suspected cause was heart failure. He was 57. Yeah,
you can say that it's all been a bit of a cash-in ever
since Keith Moon, the band's legendary drummer and
wild man, died in 1978. But Entwistle always showed a
lot of class. Must be the English bass player thing.
John Paul Jones had much the same role in Led
Zeppelin: the quiet, classy one in a group full of
hooligans. Entwistle's seemingly calm influence on the
thunderous world hard-rock bass-playing is now
legendary, and his sudden passing is a shocking loss.
John Entwistle helped found the Who with Pete
Townshend and Roger Daltrey in 1964, after the trio's
original mod combo, the High Numbers, split up with
just one single under their collective belt, "I'm the
Face". They recruited Moon from a local R&B surf band
(!) and took on Kit Lambert's services as band
manager. They landed a record deal and Lambert set up
his own label, Track Records, to release the Who's
singles and albums exclusively. Their debut single, "I
Can't Explain" in 1965, is considered one of the
finest debuts in English rock. The pressure was so
great for the band to have a hit that Townshend was
only allowed to play the guitar solo break, which he
modeled after the Kinks' "You Really Got Me" solo
(Jimmy Page played the rhythm guitar on the track).
What stands out in the song, though, is Entwistle's
propulsive bass line, Moon's "machine-gun" drum fill
right before the choruses come in and Daltrey's
slurred vocal delivery.
Entwistle was perfect for the band in that he was
probably the only bassist who could adapt to
Moon's frenetic drumming style. Moon's playing was a
mixture of surf riffs, R&B back-beat and rock 'n' roll
agility. He would have been too "all over the place"
for Paul McCartney, not bluesy enough for Bill Wyman,
not jazzy enough for Jack Bruce. But "the Ox" (as he
was affectionately known) adapted perfectly to the
hyperactive drummer. Furthermore, Entwistle was one of
the first rock bassists to use bass chords, which was
unheard of in 1965. He would come up with complex
structures that would be found more in jazz than in
pop, but they sounded deceptively simple (just try
playing one of his lines if you don't agree). He also
owns the defining moment on the "My Generation"
single. They get to the middle eight for the solo, but
instead of Townshend ripping through one of his
feedback ridden excursions, Entwistle plucks out some
low bass notes then plays a descending fluid pattern
of notes after Townshend gives a bluesy break. Voilą:
rock's first bass solo!
Onstage, while Townshend would be smashing his guitar,
Moon kicking over his drum kit and Daltrey scraping
the microphone on one of Moon's dislodged cymbals,
Entwistle would stand in front of his bass cabinet
playing various scales right through the chaos around
him. He also provided some of the Who's more humorous
moments, such as the deep voice on "Boris the Spider"
(another tune defined by an excellent bass riff), or
the French horn on "Cobwebs And Strange" (which gives
it that marching band/oompah quality).
Of course, there's also his shining moment in the
Who's recorded output, "My Wife", from their
quintessential 1971 album, Who's Next. There's
a rumor that Daltrey fought with Entwistle over who
would get to sing on the track, but I'm glad Entwistle
won out. His woe-is-me down-on-me-luck yobbo voice
fits the lyrics (about a man running from his wife
after he got too drunk and caused some unpleasantness
-- I still can't figure out what he sings after
"All I did was have a bit too much to drink . . .") in a
way that a Daltrey version may have over-dramatized.
His bass lines are also up-front all over that album,
like the nice little riffs he provides in "Gettin' In
Tune" and "Goin' Mobile".
On the band's two major concept albums -- Tommy
(about a deaf, dumb and blind boy who becomes a modern
messiah) and Quadrophenia (about a mod named
Jimmy who journeys to Brighton to find
disillusionment), Entwistle was happy to sit back and
let Townshend and Daltrey take the glory. During this
time he just plugged in and played. His work on
Tommy is over-shadowed by the vocals and
guitars. Indeed he's often nearly buried in the mix,
except on a couple of tunes, such as "We're Not Gonna
Take It" and "Pinball Wizard". However, his bass is
given a more prominent position in the mix of
Quadrophenia. Indeed here he came up with some
of his best stuff, nearly getting fonky on "The Real
Me" and "5:15".
Entwistle made a solo record, Bang Your Head
Against the Wall, in 1971, and continued
sporadically to record and tour with his "solo" bands
Rigor Mortis and John Entwistle's Ox throughout the
early '70s. Meanwhile punk exploded in the UK in
1976, though the Who were one of the few '60s bands not
to be slagged off by the new pack of rebels. "No more
Beatles, Stones or Elvis in '77", I believe was the
rallying cry of the Clash. This was probably due to
the the Who's anti-establishment, working-class stance
from the beginning (though Daltrey and Moon were the
only two working-class lads in the group). Indeed, the
punk movement readily adopted the Who's trademark
Union Jack imagery in many of their fashion statements
and album covers.
When the Who regrouped to make Who Are You,
Moon's addictions were catching up to him and it's
been said that a session drummer played most of the
backing tracks on the album. Moon passed away in 1978,
ironically from an over-dose of the medication that
was supposed to curb his alcohol consumption. The
other three decided not to split, but to continue on
with an old friend, ex-Small Faces drummer, Kenny
Jones. The revamped Who made two studio records and a
live album, and endured one of rock's biggest
tragedies when several fans were killed in a stampede
before their 1979 Cincinnati show.
The Who split for good in 1982, after the It's
Hard record was released. Townshend continued the
solo career he had started in 1978, while Daltrey took
up acting for a bit. Entwistle, completely in
character, just chilled out for a while. He appeared
on a public television series in the late '80s, an
educational show aimed at kids to teach them the
fundamentals of music theory. The three remaining
members worked together in the studio in 1988, the
first time since 1981, for Townshend's Iron Man
record (on the tracks "Dig" and "Fire"). This led to a
full-on Who reunion and in 1989 they toured for the
first time in nearly 10 years, a tour that coincided
with the twentieth anniversary of both Tommy
and the 1969 Woodstock Festival, where the Who turned
in a classic performance. Entwistle was active in the
90s, doing both solo tours and a couple more with the
Who. They have been relatively quiet the past few
years, aside from Pete Townshend's various solo
efforts popping up here and there (the remastered
Scoop, the complete Lifehouse boxed
set). The Who announced earlier this year that they
would be touring in the summer. But sadly, another
original member is gone now. Still, the Who have
announced that they will continue with the tour
nonetheless. I had hoped Townshend and Daltrey
wouldn't even think they could carry on without
Entwistle. Alas.
Here's to John Entwistle, who most definitely expanded
the bass guitar's vocabulary in rock and roll. Sure,
he didn't have the jazz licks of say, Jaco Pastorius,
or the star quality of McCartney, but he remained a
pretty humble guy for being one of the best bass
players around.
* * *
Sean Rovaldi is a freelance writer and
self-described prog/psych geek from East Hartford,
Connecticut.
1 July 2002