THE COOLNESS OF JOHN
by Nicole Pensiero
Now there are only two left. Just like the Beatles.
The Who minus two. It feels odd, and makes me feel . . .
old. Odd to think that John Lennon, George Harrison,
Keith Moon and now John Entwistle didn't even make it
to age 60. Heck, Moonie didn't even make it to 35. The
Who somehow soldiered on without him in the nearly 25
years since, but without John Entwistle? It's hard to
imagine.
I saw Entwistle perform live twice; two concerts more
than 25 years apart. The first time was back in 1975,
during the Who's Who By Numbers world tour at
the Spectrum in Philadelphia. The second time was just
a year ago, when Entwistle took part in Alan Parson's
Beatles tribute, "A Walk Down Abbey Road", playing a
high school auditorium/performing arts center down the
road from my South Jersey home.
Back in November of 1975, I was a 17-year-old high
school senior, newly obsessed with the Who via the
outlandish Ken Russell flick, Tommy. More
specifically, I was obsessed with Roger Daltrey in the
way only a music-loving high school girl can be. The
blond, tanned rock god propelled me to explore the
Who's entire musical catalog, working backward from
Who By Numbers, which, fans may remember,
features a funny cartoon illustration by John
Entwistle. By the time I heard the Who was playing
Philadelphia to plug the new record, their show was
already sold out. But I was not deterred, traveling by
train into the city, and buying two decent tickets
outside the venue from a scraggly scalper –- the first
and only time I've ever done so.
Billed as the quintessential London "mod" band, the
Who –- in their early years, at least -– seemed to
personify swingin' London itself. Not particularly a
handsome brood (remember Daltrey in that awful wig?),
the group was decidedly English –- I still think
Townshend's Union Jack jacket was the coolest –- and
sounded a lot more pissed off than, say, the Beatles.
When Daltrey sputtered out "hope I die before I get
old", in "My Generation", no one assumed he was
joking.
While Who records like Magic Bus and Tommy
were less than a decade old when I discovered them,
they were, to me, "old" Who albums with a decidedly
dated '60s feel -– the "modern age" of the band's music
being ushered in with 1971's still fresh-sounding
Who's Next. (For those who doubt that album's
durability just check out the snazzy new Nissan Sentra
radio ads, complete with the Who belting out
"Bargain").
With a full decade of fame already behind them, the
Who I saw that night back in 1975 were young men -–
Keith Moon was still in his twenties; Entwistle all of
31. But in my teenaged mind, the Who itself was an
"old" rock band, right up there with the Stones and
the Kinks, competing successfully against young
upstarts like the Average White Band and the new
Buckingham-Nicks Fleetwood Mac configuration.
They played with ferocious energy that night, covering
the entire span of their records, and plowing through
half of Tommy in the process. They lived up to
their reputation as rock's madmen, too: Keith Moon
kicked over his drum kit; Daltrey leapt and bounded
around the stage, using his microphone as a lasso; and
Townshend took great delight in smashing his guitar
(two, to be exact). As for Entwistle, well, he spent
most the show out of the spotlight with his back
almost to the audience. Twice, however, he moved to
the edge of the stage and a spotlight drenched him in
light for his two numbers, "My Wife" and "Boris the
Spider". Without any of the flash and frenetic energy
that his bandmates displayed, Entwistle drove the
audience wild. The sound of 20,000 fans bellowing
"Boris the Spider" in unison with the unassuming
bassist still brings a smile to my face.
At the time, I wasn't much interested in bass players
as they didn't seem to do all that much –- and I
wasn't yet in tune with the "bass-as-musical-backbone"
concept. Yet, at that instant, I understood the value
of John Entwistle's rock-solid strength amid the
pinball-bouncing craziness of his bandmates' fierce
energy. If they were the sizzle, "The Ox", as he was
affectionately known, was the steak.
More than 25 years went by before I saw Entwistle
perform live again. Last June, he took part in "A Walk
Down Abbey Road", which, surprisingly, was one of the
best concerts I'd seen in years. A seemingly disparate
mix of musicians on the stage –- Todd Rundgren and
Heart's Ann Wilson among them –- the little supergroup
played more than a dozen Beatles tunes, with each
member then selecting a few numbers from their own
catalog. Entwistle, of course, stood in the sidelines
until it was his time to belt out his numbers: "My
Wife" -– which has got to be one of the weirdest, most
sardonic rock songs ever –- and "Boris the Spider". The
crowd, as expected, went crazy. The guy still had it.
I knew more about John Entwistle by that point, and
had a great appreciation for his musicianship -– he
could even play French horn, and he did, sporadically,
throughout his Who career. As a journalist, I had
access to the front of the stage, so I wandered down,
planted myself about a foot away from Entwistle,
looked up and took his photo. He saw me, smiled, and
kept right on singing. Cool as a cucumber, I
thought.
He's gone now, suddenly and without warning, hopefully
hanging out in that mythical rock 'n' roll heaven with
Keith Moon, John Lennon and so many others who took
rock from its R&B roots and moved into a modern era.
We lost him too soon, but John Entwistle died doing
what he loved. The rest of us should be so lucky.
1 July 2002