Search - Roger Daltrey :: Daltrey

Daltrey
Roger Daltrey
Daltrey
Genres: Pop, Rock, Classic Rock, Metal
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

1998 reissue on Repertoire of The Who vocalist's 1973 solo debut featuring Dave Courtney and the bonus track 'There Is Love'. 12 tracks total, all completely remastered.

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Roger Daltrey
Title: Daltrey
Members Wishing: 5
Total Copies: 0
Label: Repertoire
Release Date: 10/15/2002
Album Type: Extra tracks, Import
Genres: Pop, Rock, Classic Rock, Metal
Styles: Soft Rock, Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 766484319624

Synopsis

Album Description
1998 reissue on Repertoire of The Who vocalist's 1973 solo debut featuring Dave Courtney and the bonus track 'There Is Love'. 12 tracks total, all completely remastered.

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CD Reviews

Daltrey's 1st Solo CD Displays a Pop Rock Side
Jeff Feezle | Indiana | 07/05/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Daltrey's First Solo CD Displays a Pop Rock Side





It was the year 1973, and a plethora of great albums were to come out of that period. Almost forgotten due to the long list of classics, was the first solo album of current Who lead vocalist: Roger Daltrey. '73 was also the year that the Who released `Quadrophenia' which had its own share of success. Daltrey was approached for a solo project that coupled him with Leo Sayer (single: Long Tall Glasses) and Adam Faith. It was the third solo album by a member of the Who.



Leo Sayer had a carnival rock approach to music: a bit tongue in cheek with a lively high energy uplift. Richard Perry often called Leo Sayer the Charlie Chaplin of rock. These were the types of songs that populated the Daltrey self-titled debut cd. Several hard rocker fans of the Who were highly disappointed in Daltrey converting to a more pop-rock style by his own personal choice. Others lauded the great songwriting and singing combination that Sayer and Daltrey made.



The highlights of the cd are: One Man Band, Giving it All Away and You Are Yourself. They allow Roger D to show this emotive vocal range. In one moment, he is jovial, another shouting rock, and the last is a pathos laden voice. If you love his singing voice, like I do, you will definitely enjoy the mastery of feeling that Daltrey is capable of: perhaps stymied a bit by his music partner's ability, Pete Townshend, and thus allowed the freedom on his solo cd to pursue more of his personal experiences translated into song.



It's an overall very satisfying effort, and is one of Daltrey better solo cds. If you are any Who fan at all, you must at least listen to this cd at least once, and hopefully you will enjoy its nuances outside the Who prison. Roger enjoys himself on this cd: that's for sure. I, for one, was glad to just go along with the ride!



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Jeff Feezle of Macafeez



"
Unusual first solo effort from Daltrey--worthwhile but very
Wayne Klein | My Little Blue Window, USA | 01/20/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Roger Daltrey's first solo album sounds little like The Who but that's to the album's advantage--this release features some top notch songs co-written by Leo Sayer(!) who was then a member of a duo called Patch. Daltrey like the material and decided to record it as a solo album produced by UK music legend Adam Faith. The album sounds extremely good in this re-release remastered by Jon Astley with one bonus track the gospel flavored b-side "There is One Love". The album proves Daltrey's versatility as a singer. Filled with music that has echoes of folk-rock, country rock the album still stands tall in the Who solo discography.



The reissued CD also features liner notes discussing the making of the album. This is one of Daltrey's finest solo albums with its hints of folk music (some of the tracks wouldn't have sounded out of place on a Fairport Convention album from the era), more traditional rock ballads and even gospel on the bonus track. A pity there's only one bonus track but it's still a terrific album. It's well worth checking out for Daltrey and Who fans just keep in mind that it sounds little to nothing like The Who.

"
A fun guilty pleasure
Anyechka | Rensselaer, NY United States | 01/10/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I admit that the only reason I got this album at my favorite used record store back in my college town was because it was only three dollars and Roger looks so beautiful on the cover, but I ended up finding the music not bad at all. It's not something I listen to on a regular basis (nor does it sound anything like The Who), but it is a fun guilty pleasure to listen to every so often. Not all music is meant to be deep, serious, timeless, great, and classic. If one isn't hung up on musical snobbery, it just might grow on one and come to seem fun, cute, and charming.



At first listen, it is obvious that these songs seem incredibly out of character for Roger, with a couple of notable exceptions (foremost among them the two-song suite "It's a Hard Life" and "Giving It All Away"). My other favorite songs are "You and Me" (though I wish it weren't so terribly short!), "You Are Yourself," "When the Music Stops," and "Thinking." How could anyone not love a song like "Thinking" when it has the line "Thinkin' about the love we made on the floor" as part of the refrain? It does seem a really bizarre choice that Roger teamed up with Leo Sayer of all people for his first solo album, but somehow it just seems to work. The time stamp of the early Seventies kind of adds to the charm and fun of this album. I don't have all of his solo albums yet, but I think my final verdict on his solo work will be that it's really not as awful as its reputation. Roger always seemed to do the best he could with uncharacteristic, weak, or below-par material. It is a shame that he wasted his amazing voice on so much less-than-stellar material, but I can kind of get past a lesser song just because he's the one singing it. And while this album is so far from most of what he did with The Who after they got really good and came into their own in the late Sixties, that's not necessarily a bad thing. It's not fair to pigeonhole an artist and hold it against him or her for trying a new style.



Though it's not an album I'd recommend to someone just getting into Roger's solo work (hands-down I'd recommend most strongly 'McVicar,' 'Under a Raging Moon,' and perhaps 'One of the Boys'), it isn't something I'd recommend be avoided till very last either. Sometimes it's fun to step out and try something a little different, and to hear what Roger might have sounded like had there been no Who, or had the band broken up much earlier and compelled him to only sing as a soloist."