Search - Who :: It's Hard

It's Hard
Who
It's Hard
Genres: Pop, Rock, Classic Rock, Metal
 
  •  Track Listings (16) - Disc #1

Digitally remastered Japanese reissue of The Who's 1982 album in a miniaturized LP sleeve with the original packaging intact. Limited to the initial pressing only, it also features all four of the bonus tracks included on ...  more »

     
2

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Who
Title: It's Hard
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Polygram Int'l
Release Date: 4/25/2000
Album Type: Limited Edition, Original recording remastered, Import
Genres: Pop, Rock, Classic Rock, Metal
Styles: British Invasion, Album-Oriented Rock (AOR), Supergroups
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1

Synopsis

Album Description
Digitally remastered Japanese reissue of The Who's 1982 album in a miniaturized LP sleeve with the original packaging intact. Limited to the initial pressing only, it also features all four of the bonus tracks included on MCA's U.S. reissue in the '90s! The extra songs are live versions of 'It's Hard', 'Eminence Front', 'Dangerous' and 'Cry If You Want'. 16 tracks total. 1999 reissue of 1997 reissue.

Similar CDs

 

CD Reviews

Magnificent in context
genx66 | 05/01/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"People forget that no good rock records were recorded after December 1978 (when Led Zeppelin finished In through the Out Door). Okay, not quite true. Back in Black, driven by a unanimous feeling of awe towards Bonn Scott was probably the last good rock record. So the Who's releasing two epilogue-style records in 1981 and 1982 was a gift, to say the least. No one understood the album rock era as Pete Townshend did. If he didn't start it (Sgt. Pepper did, or maybe Pet Sounds), his Tommy sealed it. Sad that it was played out in ten years. But that's what happened. Face Dances and It's Hard are excellent because they show the Who at full power but with no more reason to do any of this. Their cultural moment was over and it was frustrating but real. (Like a thirty-five-year-old former stud combing the high schools in his muscle car.) I listen to these albums as a forty-year-old to indulge in this mismatch between capability (huge) and what's wanted by the public (something else). So get these albums if you have a large collection. They will complete it. (And if it's just too depressing, start stocking Beethoven et al.; before the idea of album covers, age and "the cultural moment" [i.e., timing and youth] had little to do with anything [the music was all that mattered], and the best generally got better until they became sick and died.)"