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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A decent sampler, but there are better Who CD's,
By A Customer
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
They got it right the first time they released a Who compilation in 1970, when they collected all their UK hits and singles on to "Meaty, Beaty, Big & Bouncy," but since then the Who has released more compilations, and each time it gets a bit worse. This latest compilation (and the only one in-print in the US) has the most music, packing in 79 minutes that covers their entire career with Keith Moon as well "You Better You Bet," a hit recorded after Moon's passing.For people who aren't big fans of the Who but like some of their biggest, most famous hits, this CD will do just fine, and for people who are want to start exploring the Who, this is a nice place to start. However, keep in mind this is really just a sampler. It covers almost all of their biggest hits, but it doesn't leave a complete picture of the band. For one thing, you can't boil down their career on to just one disc; their career goes through such a huge change that something like "Happy Jack" seems totally out of place with "Who Are You." There's also too much good material that has to be left off. Important early singles like "The Kids Are Alright" and "A Legal Matter" are essential, and while I'd prefer their inclusion over "Squeeze Box" and "You Better, You Bet," those two songs were still big hits, so you know someone would carp if they were missing. So, if you're looking to get a better idea of what the Who was about, you could start here, though I'd suggest starting out with "Meaty, Beaty, Big & Bouncy," Whatever you buy, you will want to supplement it with "Who's Next" (their best and a greatest hits album in its own way since every track is an FM classic), "Tommy," and if you want to go further, "Live At Leeds" and the flawed but still interesting "Quadrophenia." One final word about the sound: for some reason, they put some of these tracks in fake stereo. You don't have to be an audiophile to know how bad fake stereo is; it totally ruins the sound. Just listen to Pictures of Lily on this disc, then compare it to the true mono version on the box set (which doesn't even sound that great to begin with). The box set version is so much better. My Generation, I Can't Explain, Boris The Spider, Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere...fake stereo. The rest sound just fine, with some actually remixed, including Won't Get Fooled Again, which is featured in a great-sounding, faithful remix (the recent Who's Next reissue does not have it remixed). I imagine some you don't care, but some of you would probably be steamed if you bought this without knowing that.
26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Once Passable But Now Outdated Who Collection,
By Anthony Nasti "Tony" (Staten Island, New York United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
In my opinion, The Who are the greatest rock and roll band ever. With some of the most talented musicians in rock history (John Enthwistle is the greatest bassist ever) and a barrage of classic rock anthems. However, their legacy is slow being eaten away by a barrage of greatest hits collections that feature the same songs being released over and over again. There have been about nine Who greatest hits/best-of's/definitive collections/ultimate/box sets released over the years.
In 1996, the compilation "My Generation: The Very Best Of The Who" was released. This comoilation contains 20 of the band's biggest hits in both Britain and America. Nine years later, does this collection still hold up? Here are the positives and the negatives. Positives: -This collection includes almost all the hits the casual Who fan would want. "My Generation", "I Can See For Miles", "Pinall Wizard", "Baba O'Reilly", "Won't Get Fooled Again", "Who Are You", "You Better You Bet" and many other classics are on here. -Underrated gems like "I'm A Boy", "Pictures Of Lily", "The Seeker" and "Let's See Action" are all included. -It's affordable. That's good news for casual fans who only want one Who cd in this collection. Negatives: -Only one track from each from "Tommy" and "Quadrophenia"? These are easily The Who's best albums and yet we only get "Pinball Wizard" and "5:15". Those songs definitely deserve to be here, but where's "I'm Free", "Tommy Can You Hear Me", "We're Not Gonna Take It/See Me, Feel Me", "The Real Me" (Enthwistle's best bass work is on here), "Drowned" and especially the epic masterpiece "Love, Reign, O'Er Me"? -Where's is "Behind Blue Eyes"? This track is very popular. Let me explain how popular this track is. It is the Who equivalent to leaving "Stairway To Heaven" of a Led Zeppelin best of. That is how popular that song is. -For that matter, where's "The Kids Are Alright", "Pure And Easy", "Goin' Mobile", "Sister Disco" and "Eminence Front"? -"Who Are You" is edited from 6:20 down to 4:51. Arrgh! I hate it when they do that. -The sound isn't all that great. If you're just beginning to get into The Who, then you should skip this and get the two cd "The Ultimate Collection", or if you really must have evryhting they did, then get the expensive box set "Thirty Years Of Maximum R & B". If you're on a budget, then I suggest the more recent single disc collection "Then & Now". That collection, while not as good as the other two, have "Real Good Looking Boy" and "Old Red Wine", the band's first studio recording in nearly 15 years. Whatever it is, this collection, while good, is not needed anymore.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
my generation, your generation, all generations,
By
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
Despite the fact that the members of The Who (still living) are all well into thier fifties, thier music is just as imortant and fundamental to young music fans as it was in the sixties. My Generation does a superd job of displaying just how essential the music of this band is to rock. Working chronologicly through it's decades spanning career, this greatest hits album culls works from all of the Who's major releases from '65 to the 80's. This compiliation is the definition of the phrase "jam-packed". Over 70 min. and 22 tracks, My Generation is teeming with some of rock and roll's most quintessential numbers. Begginning with four of the sixties greatest rock songs ("I can't explain","Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere,", "My Generation", and "Substitute") the album wastes no time in blowing listeners away. The album's interior contains the thematic trilogy of "The Seeker", "Baba O'Riley" and "Won't Get Fooled Again". The rest of My Generation is fleshed out with several other Who gems like "I can see for Miles", "Pinball Wizard" "Magic Bus" and "Who are You". However while it may seem that all of the essential Who classics are here, there is the nearly unforgivable absence of "Behind Blue Eyes" which easily could have been put in place of one of the weaker songs. Lightweights like "Let's See action" and "I'm a Boy" really don't stack up to the albums highpoints. Overall though, My Generation is a nearly perfectly molded look at one of rock's most influential bands. Yet any true Who fan really dosent' need to buy this since there isn't anything new. But it is a perfect first time album for anyone wanting to get aquinted with the Who. Any generation should be able to enjoy it.
15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Okay for Who newbies (Whobies?),
By A Customer
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
Given the limitations inherent in a single-CD "best of" (you can cram just so much music into one CD), I wasn't expecting an overly deep song selection. But I was expecting a more attractive overall package than this. Unlike the original album reissues, this CD has no liner notes, something that any "definitive" compilation should have, if only for the sake of those unfamiliar with the band who want a little bit of history behind the music they're being introduced to. And that hideous cover; surely they could've done better? (How about the alternate version of the WHO'S NEXT cover, for instance, or the cover from the now-out-of-print MEATY BEATY BIG AND BOUNCY compilation?)The music itself is great, of course, although I would've sacrificed "Squeeze Box" and "You Better You Bet" for a couple more early cuts. As for the sound quality, the Shel Talmy-produced material (comprising the first eight cuts on the disc) has not been remixed and has been taken from second- or maybe even third-generation masters; Talmy is involved in a long-standing legal dispute with the Who and won't allow the band to use his original master tapes. "Magic Bus" wasn't remixed for some reason, athough the multi-track tapes are available; presumably the compilers thought the original single mix had more of that "punch" the reviewers below were talking about. All of the other material from "See For Miles" through "You Better..." has been remixed--a fact which will probably delight and infuriate equal numbers of fans. All in all, this is an okay "starter kit" for Who neophytes and for those who only want the Top 40 radio hits. I'd recommend that others avoid it, but then this is currently the only Who CD that includes the original single version of the all-time classic "Substitute." Aaaaargh!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An essential collection of a great singles band,
By brad lonard (Sydney, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
In the beginning (or 1968, at least) came Direct Hits: the very first Who compilation. Since then the band's catalogue has been ruthlessly strip-mined with glee. This one-disc "hits" collection is basically a reissue of the 1987 Who's Better Who's Best anthology, using tracks newly remastered for the Maximum R&B box set. It doesn't collect all of the best of the band's output, but it does manage to gather the cream of the Who's music from the 'single' years (1965-1970). Any disc which contains "I Can't Explain", "Substitute", "Pictures Of Lily", "I Can See For Miles" and "Pinball Wizard", for starters, can't be all bad. Add to that the later album tracks such as "Baba O'Riley" and "Won't Get Fooled Again", with no filler or fat, and you've got an essential collection from one of the greatest rock bands of all. If you're new to the Who and wondering what all the fuss was about, start here, then explore such works of genius as The Who Sell Out and Who's Next.
11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
No Substitute for Meaty Beaty Big & Bouncy,
By Brian O'Marra (Little Rock, AR USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
This was supposed to be the one definitive greatest hits package on The Who replacing all the ones that had gone before (MBB&B, Who's Greatest, Who's Better Who's Best, Hooligans). Though it is a pretty decent sampler it just misses being the definitive package it was intended to be.Originally Jon Astley planned for it to contain most but not all of the well known singles. The Kids Are Alright had long been planned to be included. Then the original multitracks of Won't Get Fooled Again were found and the long version was used on this disc. This used up eight minutes of disc space that could have been used for additional singles. While most of the songs deserve to be on this (it's great to have the original Substitute), Baba O'Riley's inclusion is debatable. It is certainly a classic track off of Who's Next, and its presence isn't a detractor, but we have that already available on the Who Next reissue. What we don't have is the complete single The Relay remastered. It is only found on the box set in a crossfade with Join Together. That means that the fade of Join Together obscures the intro of The Relay. Fans who want this song in hot house isolation remastered can't find it. Also one has to invest in the box to get the full version of The Kids Are Alright. This should have been included as well. And speaking of deleting previous anthologies, why is Who's Greatest still in print, while Meaty Beaty is not? Superb remastering make this a nice sampler, but not a definitive best-of. Oh, and the other reviewers are right to complain about the ugly cover. Why not use the imaginative MBB&B cover with the Who and their children look-a-likes.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great but it's another opportunity missed.,
By Jules (Birmingham, England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
If you bought any of the recent Who remasters you probably noticed that certain key singles were conspicuous by their absence in the bonus tracks added onto the end of the CDs - neither Substitute nor Happy Jack on "A Quick One"; no Pictures of Lily on "Sell Out"; no Let's See Action on "Who's Next" - this was done on purpose so you'd have to buy this latest hits compilation. Brian O'Marra (see below) is quite right to criticise the omission of (The) Relay and the needlessness of including album tracks like Baba O'Riley. But, yes, it's the only place you can find the remastered Substitute 45 - so you'll probably get it anyway. MCA/Polydor have had numerous attempts at doing the definitive Who hits album, and every one just misses out on being definitive. So it's 4 stars for being close but cigarless.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Collection Of The WHo's Greatest Hits!,
By Barron Laycock "Labradorman" (Temple, New Hampshire United States) - See all my reviews (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
The Who was there at the creation of sixties rock, or so it seems in retrospect. Certainly this very talented band, with Peter Townshend, John Entwhistle, and Roger Daltry all contributing artistically to the strength of the group, was in the spotlight most of the time by the late 1960s, and their creative juices were often exercised in pursuit of a number of artistic activities. This album of their greatest hits is a reflection of just some of those accomplishments, ranging from some trend-setting efforts such as "Substitute", "The Seeker", "You Better You Better you Bet'and "The magic Bus", as well as more experimental forms as were included in the rock opera "Tommy" with songs like "Pinball Wizard" arising from it. Also featured are songs such as the classic "Won't Get Fooled Again", "Squeeze Box", and "5:15". My single favorite is, of course, "Who Are You?", with its expletive-included mid-song. Who are you, indeed? This is a nice, tight collection, nowhere near comprehensive, but fairly representative of both their range and genius. Enjoy!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good starting point for future diehards...,
By
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
Finally, an affordable collection of the cream-of-the-crop tunes from one of rock's greatest all-time bands: The Who. Sure, there is some re-mixing and remastering on a few of the songs, but no matter what, there's no way to ruin a song like "Baba O'Riley". The Who possess that certain 60s and 70s sound that you can find today only once in a blue moon (Blind Melon, for example). If you're a long-time fan, there isn't much for you here (unless you don't own any of their albums). If you've never heard The Who at length before but are interested, do yourself a favor and pick this one up!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Introduction to THE WHO.,
By Trevor Thatcher (St. Paul, MN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My Generation: Very Best of (Audio CD)
This is the album that introduced me to THE WHO, no it dosen't contain all the "Hits" and "singles" that the Who are known for, but it does not need to! because its an INTRO to The Who, and not anything else. Who cares about different mixes, its an INTRO! Potential fans that buy this will be motivated to buy all The WHO albums(like me), not just THE Ultimate Collection. The purpose of an introduction is to give you a feel for the topic so you can decide whether you like or not. That is exactly what this album does, so screw all that nay-saying, and go back to listening to your favorite Who album.
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My Generation: Very Best of by The Who (Audio CD - 1996)
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