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John Entwistle - Smash Your Head Against The Wall (Original Us Decca Pressing Needledrop)(Jgster6969)

Track listing:
  1. My Size 3:48
  2. Pick Me Up (Big Chicken) 3:46
  3. What Are We Doing Here 3:53
  4. What Kind Of People Are They 2:47
  5. Heaven And Hell 5:07
  6. Ted End 2:36
  7. You're Mine 4:41
  8. No.29 (External Youth) 6:12
  9. I Believe In Everything 3:11

Notes


John Entwistle Smash Your Head Against the Wall Original U.S Decca Pressing Vinyl Rip Flac
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Smash Your Head Against The Wall
Studio album by John Entwistle
Released May 1971
Genre Rock, hard rock
Length 37:34
Label Track
Producer John Entwistle


Smash Your Head Against the Wall is the debut solo album by John Entwistle of The Who, released on Track Records in the UK and Decca Records in the US. Its bizarre cover strangely resembles an Egyptian sarcophagus - but it is in fact Entwistle wearing a death mask while looking through the chest X-ray of a lung cancer patient, a parody of anti-smoking advertisements of the era.

The album itself offers a more downbeat and aggressive view of life than even the Who had to offer at their most pessimistic, as witnessed in the title track (aka "My Size"), and the closing track, "I Believe in Everything", which ends with a seemingly impromptu chorus of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer", to end a sometimes uncompromising album on an unexpectedly happy note. The album also features a remake of Entwistle's Who classic "Heaven and Hell" with Who roadie Cyrano Langston providing some acid-drenched guitar.

When Entwistle was asked about the song "I Believe In Everything" in comparison to the rest of the album he said:

I've been saying a lot of stuff that I didn't really believe in. I sort of wrote it for the heads, really, the people thinking, "ah, so that's where Entwistle's brain's at, he really sort of believes in the devil and hell and all that sort of business." So I wrote a number that touches on reincarnation, then goes into the absurd, with Father Christmas and the whole bit and right at the end just to prevent the heads from thinking that I did believe in everything like I was saying, 'cause they always seem to believe that you actually believe in your own words. I believe in some of them but not all of them, so I just wrote the joke in to throw them off, and it's done it.[1]

Who bandmate Pete Townshend once said about the album, "We learned more about John from him making an album than we did in all the years he'd ever played bass with us", a reference to both his quiet demeanor and his then-mostly unknown capabilities as a songwriter.

The demo of the song "It's Hard to Write a Love Song" that is included as a bonus track on the 2005 reissue, would later develop into the song "Drowning" on the 1975 album, Mad Dog.

Keith Moon, Vivian Stanshall and Neil Innes all make guest appearances.
Professional ratings
Review scores
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Allmusic 4.5/5 stars link
Contents
Track listing

All tracks composed by John Entwistle, except where indicated.

"My Size"
"Pick Me Up (Big Chicken)"
"What Are We Doing Here?"
"What Kind of People Are They?"
"Heaven and Hell"
"Ted End"
"You're Mine"
"No. 29 (External Youth)"
"I Believe in Everything"

Personnel

John Entwistle - lead and backing vocals, bass guitar, brass, percussion, piano, keyboards
Dave "Cyrano" Langston - electric and acoustic guitar, percussion, backing vocals
Jerry Shirley - drums, percussion
Keith Moon - percussion, backing vocals
Neil Innes - percussion, backing vocals

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