Roger Daltrey and The Who’s Successful Sound

Vinyl Bay 777
2 min readMar 1, 2017

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In honor of his 73rd birthday, Vinyl Bay 777, Long Island’s top music outlet, takes a look at Roger Daltrey’s role in The Who’s success.

The Who @ Indigo2, London UK, Dec. 15, 2008. Flickr user Mike Kubacheck. Found on Wikipedia Commons.

As the voice of The Who, Roger Daltrey’s vocals became synonymous with rock and mod culture in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Though Pete Townshend wrote the music and lyrics to most of the band’s songs, Daltrey helped bring them to life in a way no other singer ever could.

With a powerful range and dynamic stage presence, Daltrey helped lead The Who to worldwide stardom. On “My Generation,” one of the band’s most recognizable songs, he elevates it beyond just another teenage youth anthem. An ode to the generation gap, Daltrey’s biting quickness and the mocking tone he takes when talks about how the previous generation doesn’t understand them adds an extra layer to the song’s already extremely cutting lyrics. On “Baba O’Riley,” with its big, ambling guitar introduction and minimal lyrics, Daltrey sings with the bravado intended by the lyrics. When the song shifts gears into “teenage wasteland,” his vocals soften too, only to be broken by the screamed release of “they’re all wasted.”

Daltrey’s vocal’s also shine on the band’s more reflective songs. At the beginning of “Behind Blue Eyes,” he bears his soul to the world with sincerity akin to being naked. On “Love, Reign o’er Me,” Daltrey displays precision vocal control between the demurely sung verses and the powerful scream he switches to during the chorus.

Not only has Daltrey’s vocals become some of the most revered in rock music, but his stage presence also helped set the stage for generations to come. He took command of the stage when performing, often strutting around bare-chested. The way he played with his microphone, using the chord as a lasso, has been adopted by several punk and rock bands in The Who’s wake.

Without Roger Daltrey’s stunning vocal acrobatics and the power and dynamics with which he sings and commands the stage, The Who would not be the same band. To this day, whether performing with The Who or solo, Daltrey still rocks the stage with much of the same vigor as he did when the band just started out, showing why he is one of the greatest frontmen in rock music.

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This article was originally published on vinylbay777.blogspot.com.

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