John Entwistle

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
My Wife 03:32 Tools
Thinkin' It Over 03:07 Tools
My Size 03:46 Tools
Fallen Angel 04:39 Tools
Apron Strings 03:43 Tools
Dancing Master 03:43 Tools
I Wonder 02:58 Tools
Talk Dirty 04:05 Tools
Heaven And Hell 06:33 Tools
Lovebird 04:51 Tools
I Feel Better 04:43 Tools
Whiskey Man 04:19 Tools
Pick Me Up (Big Chicken) 03:44 Tools
Try Me 03:56 Tools
I Believe In Everything 03:07 Tools
Too Late The Hero 07:13 Tools
Made In Japan 03:47 Tools
What Are We Doing Here? 03:50 Tools
You're Mine 04:39 Tools
Ted End 02:34 Tools
What Kind Of People Are They? 02:44 Tools
The Window Shopper 03:24 Tools
Roller Skate Kate 04:14 Tools
Do The Dangle 04:03 Tools
Ten Little Friends 03:56 Tools
Who Cares? 06:05 Tools
I Found Out 03:46 Tools
Hound Dog 02:29 Tools
Nightmare (Please Wake Me Up) 06:14 Tools
I Was Just Being Friendly 03:31 Tools
I'm Coming Back 04:01 Tools
Lucille 02:52 Tools
Cinnamon Girl 00:00 Tools
Mad Dog 05:23 Tools
Big Black Cadillac 03:31 Tools
Peg Leg Peggy 03:37 Tools
Sleeping Man 03:37 Tools
Drowning 04:38 Tools
Life After Love 04:22 Tools
Gimme That Rock 'N' Roll 02:59 Tools
Country Hurricane 00:42 Tools
Mr. Bassman 01:30 Tools
Here Comes the Sun 02:47 Tools
No. 29 (Eternal Youth) 05:37 Tools
Cell Number 7 03:57 Tools
Lady Killer 03:24 Tools
Cousin Kevin 04:14 Tools
You Can Be So Mean 03:51 Tools
Suzie 04:29 Tools
Love Is A Heart Attack 05:51 Tools
I'm So Scared 03:58 Tools
Love Doesn't Last 03:41 Tools
Mr. Bass Man 02:49 Tools
Who In The Hell? 03:31 Tools
Boris the Spider 02:46 Tools
Last Song 03:49 Tools
I Fall To Pieces 03:51 Tools
Jungle Bunny 03:59 Tools
No. 29 (External Youth) 00:00 Tools
Heartache 05:06 Tools
Stranger In A Strange Land 04:31 Tools
Too Much Too Soon 03:30 Tools
It's Hard To Write A Love Song (Demo) 04:54 Tools
Back On The Road 04:08 Tools
Bridges Under The Water 04:04 Tools
Billy 03:45 Tools
My Size (Early Take) 03:51 Tools
No. 29 External Youth 00:00 Tools
Hurricane 04:24 Tools
Whiskey Man (Live) 04:12 Tools
The Haunted Can Be Free (Demo) 03:54 Tools
My Wife (Live) 03:32 Tools
Bogeyman 03:58 Tools
World Behind My Face (Demo) 04:56 Tools
The Real Me 04:33 Tools
Pick Me Up (Big Chicken) (Demo) 03:08 Tools
Ted End (Demo) 01:56 Tools
What Kind Of People Are They? (Demo) 02:54 Tools
No. 29 (Eternal Youth) (Demo) 04:38 Tools
Pet Leg Peggy 04:10 Tools
Not Fade Away 06:51 Tools
What Are We Doing Here 03:50 Tools
Overture 05:12 Tools
Boris The Spider (Live) 02:38 Tools
Gimmie That Rock 'N' Roll 02:58 Tools
Who Cares 04:22 Tools
905 04:57 Tools
Had Enough 05:06 Tools
Break Your Heart 03:25 Tools
Countryside Boogie 04:29 Tools
Endless Vacation 03:47 Tools
All Dressed Up 02:55 Tools
Sometimes 04:21 Tools
Under a Raging Moon 12:16 Tools
Success Story 04:11 Tools
The Real Me (Live) 01:16 Tools
Cinnamon Girl (Bonus Track) 03:05 Tools
Darker Side of Night 04:23 Tools
I'll Try Again Today 04:33 Tools
When The Sun Comes Up 04:13 Tools
Light In The Dark 04:14 Tools
Shakin' All Over 06:19 Tools
To The Chop 02:40 Tools
Young Man Blues 08:56 Tools
You 04:13 Tools
Don't Be A Sucker 04:17 Tools
I Wonder (demo) 00:00 Tools
Pick Me Up 03:43 Tools
Trick of the Light 06:12 Tools
Horror Rock 00:00 Tools
I'm Flash 03:16 Tools
Summertime Blues 03:45 Tools
Cell Number Seven 04:14 Tools
Space Pirates 03:13 Tools
Casualty 04:23 Tools
Cell Number 7 (Live) 03:57 Tools
What Are We Doing Here? [Alternate Version][*] 03:48 Tools
What Are We Doing Here? (alternate mix) 03:48 Tools
Give Me That Rock And Roll 04:31 Tools
Red Red Robin 01:11 Tools
It's Hard To Write A Love Song 04:55 Tools
Blast Off 04:42 Tools
905 (Live) 04:32 Tools
Had Enough (Live) 04:42 Tools
Heaven & Hell 04:50 Tools
Bogeyman (Intro Walk-On) 00:42 Tools
Shake Rattle and Roll 03:22 Tools
Baba O'riley Isolated Bass 00:30 Tools
Boris The Spider - Live 04:04 Tools
The Haunted Can Be Free 03:54 Tools
World Behind My Face 04:56 Tools
Interview 13:40 Tools
Horror Rock (Nightmare) 03:32 Tools
Success Story (Live) 03:24 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle ('100 Miles Of Motorway) 00:35 Tools
Cinnamon Girl (Previously Unreleased Out-take) 03:05 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle ('100 Miles Of Motorway) (with voiceover) 00:34 Tools
Left For Dead 03:53 Tools
Shake Rattle and Roll - live 04:38 Tools
Made In Japan (early take) 03:54 Tools
Mess Of Blues 04:04 Tools
Rebel without a Car 03:37 Tools
Darker Side Of The Night 03:53 Tools
That's All Right Mama - live 00:42 Tools
Face the Fear 03:38 Tools
When You See the Light 04:01 Tools
Nightmare 06:13 Tools
Good and Evil 05:31 Tools
Roadrunner / My Generation 04:38 Tools
Mess Of Blues - live 04:38 Tools
Roadrunner / My Generation - live 04:38 Tools
Cinnamon Girl - Bonus Track - Unreleased Outtake 04:38 Tools
My Size (Album Version) 04:38 Tools
That's All Right Mama 03:07 Tools
What Are We Doing Here? [Alternate Mix] 03:48 Tools
Horror Rock [Van-Pires Theme/Instrumental] 02:55 Tools
Cinnamon Girl (Out-Take) 03:32 Tools
Peg Leg Peggy (early take) 03:54 Tools
Sleeping Man (Demo) 04:05 Tools
Dancing Master (Demo) 03:28 Tools
Overture (Unreleased Out-Take) 05:13 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle ('100 Miles Of Motorway) - Previously Unreleased Demo 00:34 Tools
Peg Leg Peggy (Early Take - Previously Unreleased) 03:54 Tools
I`m Coming Home 04:03 Tools
Sax Tracking Ent-7 00:33 Tools
My Wife [Live] 03:54 Tools
The Real Me [Live] 03:54 Tools
Made In Japan (Early Take - Previously Unreleased) 03:53 Tools
Bogie Man 03:53 Tools
905 [Live] 03:53 Tools
Cinnamon Girl [out-take] 03:53 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle ('100 Miles Of Motorway) (Previously Unreleased Demo) 00:33 Tools
Countryside Boogie / Suicidal Rock And Roll 00:33 Tools
Heaven And Hell (Live) 04:29 Tools
Success Story [Live] 03:21 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle ('100 Miles Of Motorway) (with voiceover) - Previously Unreleased Demo 00:33 Tools
Made In Japan - Early Take - Previously Unreleased 03:54 Tools
Window Shopper, The 00:32 Tools
My Size (Live) 03:43 Tools
The Haunted Can Be Free [demo] 04:29 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle ('100 Miles Of Motorway) (with voiceover) (Previously Unreleased Demo) 00:32 Tools
It's Hard to Write a Love Song (Demo Version) 00:32 Tools
Sleepin' Man 03:55 Tools
Rolleskate Kate 03:54 Tools
Love is a Hear Attack (Demo) 02:57 Tools
Peg Leg Peggy - Early Take - Previously Unreleased 03:54 Tools
World Behind My Face [demo] 03:54 Tools
Cinnamon Girl (Bonus Track - Unreleased Outtake) 03:02 Tools
I`m Coming Back (Demo) 04:13 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle (with voice over) 00:33 Tools
Love Is A Heart Attack (Demo Version) 03:02 Tools
I 'm Coming Back 02:55 Tools
I Wonder [#][*][Demo Version] 02:57 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle 02:57 Tools
You’re Mine 04:13 Tools
Not Fade Away (live) 06:41 Tools
Give Me That Rock And Roll LIVE 03:55 Tools
Bogey Man 03:55 Tools
Dancin' Master 04:23 Tools
Cell Number Seven (Live) 04:14 Tools
Sleeping Man (Demo Version) 06:41 Tools
No. 29 (Eternal Youth) [#][*][Demo Version] 02:57 Tools
World Behind My Face [#][*][Demo Version] 04:14 Tools
What Kind Of People Are They? [demo] 02:57 Tools
I Belive In Everything 02:57 Tools
bass solo live 02:57 Tools
Five Fifteen Bass Solo 02:57 Tools
My Size (1971) 00:00 Tools
I'm Coming Back (Demo) 04:13 Tools
Love is a Heart Attack (Demo) 02:57 Tools
Back On The Road (demo) 04:31 Tools
Give Me That Rock And Roll (Live) 04:31 Tools
Cinnamon Girl [Neil Young cover] [bonus track] 04:14 Tools
Gimme That Rock N' Roll 04:31 Tools
All Dressed Up [#][*][Demo Version] 02:55 Tools
My Wife (Album Version) 03:32 Tools
Horror Rock (Van-Pires Theme) 03:32 Tools
Countryside Boogie (demo) 00:00 Tools
Ted End [#][*][Demo Version] 00:00 Tools
I'm Coming Back (Demo Version) 00:00 Tools
Pick Me Up (Big Chicken) (Demo - Previously Unreleased) 00:00 Tools
That's All Right Mama (Live) 03:48 Tools
What Kind of People Are They? [#][*][Demo Version] 02:55 Tools
Dancing Master (Demo Version) 02:55 Tools
What Are We Doing Here? [bonus track] 02:55 Tools
Cell No. 7 04:31 Tools
Ted End (Demo Version) 02:55 Tools
John Entwistle -- Ain't Too Proud To Beg / Going To A Go-Go / Conract On Love 02:55 Tools
Thunderfingers: A Tribute 02:55 Tools
Ain't Too Proud To Beg/Going To A Go-Go/Contract On Love 02:55 Tools
World Behind My Face (Demo Version) 02:55 Tools
What Are We Doing Here? [Alternate Version] 03:48 Tools
Back on the Road [#][*][Demo Version] 02:55 Tools
It's Hard to Write a Love Song (Demo - Previously Unreleased) 04:54 Tools
Pick Me Up (Big Chicken) [#][*][Demo Version] 04:31 Tools
Twist and Shout 03:48 Tools
No. 29 (Eternal Youth) (Demo - Previously Unreleased) 04:31 Tools
Who Cares? (Live) 04:05 Tools
Behind blue eyes 03:48 Tools
World Behind My Face (Demo - Previously Unreleased) 04:31 Tools
Success Story(Live) 03:48 Tools
The Haunted Can Be Free (Demo Version) 04:31 Tools
Mess Of Blues (live) 04:05 Tools
All Dressed Up (demo) 03:48 Tools
It's Hard To Write A Love Song - Bonus Track - Unreleased Demo 04:31 Tools
Roadrunner / My Generation (live) 03:28 Tools
I Wonder (Demo Version) 02:52 Tools
All Dressed Up (Demo Version) 02:53 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle ('100 Miles Of Motorway) [Previously Unreleased Demo] 02:53 Tools
smash your head against the wall 04:28 Tools
My Size (Early Take - Previously Unreleased) 03:50 Tools
Countryside Boogie (Demo Version) 04:28 Tools
bass solo 04:28 Tools
The Haunted Can Be Free (Demo - Previously Unreleased) 03:54 Tools
Dancing Master(Demo) 03:28 Tools
Ted End (Demo - Previously Unreleased) 01:57 Tools
Sleeping Man(Demo) 04:05 Tools
Mad Dog (Single Mix) 03:48 Tools
Cell Number 7 [Single Mix] 04:05 Tools
It's Hard To Write A Love Song (Bonus Track - Unreleased Demo) 04:53 Tools
Mad Dog [Single Mix] 04:05 Tools
who in the hell 04:05 Tools
Dancing Master [*][Demo Version] 03:28 Tools
Cinnamon Girl (Neil Young cover) 03:28 Tools
Love doesn't last (Demo) 03:32 Tools
Shake Rattle and Roll (live) 03:32 Tools
Back on the Road (Demo Version) 03:53 Tools
BP Big Gallon Jingle ('100 Miles Of Motorway) (with voiceover) [Previously Unreleased Demo] 03:53 Tools
What Are We Doing Here? [*][Alternate Version] 03:48 Tools
Love Is A Heart Attack(Demo) 03:48 Tools
The Haunted Can Be Free (Bonus Track - Unreleased Demo) 03:48 Tools
I'm Coming Back(Demo) 04:13 Tools
What Kind of People Are They? (Demo Version) 03:48 Tools
Gimme That Rock And Roll 04:13 Tools
My Wife - 1975/ Live in Philadelphia 04:13 Tools
It's Hard to Write a Love Song [Demo Version] 04:54 Tools
Cell Number 7 (Single Mix) 04:05 Tools
Peg Leg Peggy [Album Version] 04:54 Tools
My Generation 04:53 Tools
Pick Me Up (Big Chicken) (Bonus Track - Unreleased Demo) 04:53 Tools
nightmare-please wake me up 04:53 Tools
No. 29 (Eternal Youth) (Bonus Track - Unreleased Demo) 04:53 Tools
What Kind Of People Are They? (Bonus Track - Unreleased Demo) 04:53 Tools
My Wife [Album Version] 03:32 Tools
pick me up(big chicken) 03:32 Tools
Made In Japan [Album Version] 03:32 Tools
My Size (Bonus Track - Unreleased Early Take) 03:32 Tools
Love Is a Heart Attack [*][Demo Version] 03:32 Tools
Big Black Cadillac [Album Version] 03:32 Tools
All Dressed Up - Bonus Track - Previously Unreleased Demo 03:32 Tools
Light In The Dark (Bonus Track - Outtake) 03:32 Tools
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John Alec Entwistle was born in Chiswick, a London suburb, in 1944. In the early 1960s, he played in several traditional jazz and dixieland outfits with schoolmate Pete Townshend, and later joined Roger Daltrey's band the Detours. This band later became The Who. He was nicknamed "The Ox" because of his amazing consitution (e.g. drinking). Bill Wyman described him as "the quietest man in private but the loudest man on stage." He was also known as "Thunderfingers" by his bandmates and fans. John Entwistle was a talented songwriter and artist. He wrote several well-known Who songs including: "Cousin Kevin" "My Wife" "Boris The Spider" "Heaven and Hell" "Success Story" "Whiskey Man" "905" These songs, along with his solo material, reveal a dark sense of humor which was often incompatible with Pete Townshend's more introspective work. Though he continued to contribute material to all of The Who's albums, his frustration with having his material recorded by the band (largely with having to relenquish singing duties to Roger Daltrey) led him to release Smash Your Head Against The Wall in 1971. He was the first member of The Who to release a solo record. Entwistle also contributed many backing vocals and horn performances to the group, most notably on Quadrophenia, where he layered several horns to create the impressive brass as heard on songs such as 5:15, among others. Rarely captured well in the studio, his style and sound was fully developed by the time of The Who's performance of "A Quick One While He's Away" for the Rolling Stones' 1968 Rock and Roll Circus, as well as the seminal 1970 Live at Leeds concert recording. In concert, Entwistle and guitarist Pete Townshend frequently exchanged roles, with Entwistle providing rapid melodic lines and Townshend anchoring the song with rhythmic chord work. Indeed, Pete Townshend was often quoted that it was Entwistle who was the lead guitarist in the band, while he, being the rhythmic timekeeping element, was in effect the drummer. Moon, on the other hand, with all his flourishes round the kit, was considered by Townshend to be the equivalent of a keyboard player. Entwistle himself stated in many interviews (including one with Guitar Player's Chris Jisi in 1989) that, according to modern standards, "The Who haven't a proper bass player." Entwistle helped uncover the potential of the bass guitar as a lead instrument, using aggressive pentatonic lead lines, and a trebly sound virtually unheard of in the early 1960s. He pioneered the use of roundwound steel bass strings, developed for him by the Rotosound company. Indeed, his search for a sound to cut through The Who's sonic onslaught led him to experiment with more and different basses, leading him to amass a collection of over 200 instruments by the time of his death. His search for the perfect sound led him to experiment most notably with Alembic's basses in the 1970s, Warwick in the 1980s, and Status all-graphite basses in the 1990s. In the mid '60s, Entwistle was one of the first to make use of Marshall stacks. Pete Townshend later remarked that John started using Marshalls in order to hear himself over Moon's drums, and Townshend himself also had to use them just to be heard over John. They both continued expanding and experimenting with their rigs, until (at a time when most bands used 50-100w amps with single cabinets) they were both using twin Stacks with new experimental prototype 200w amps. This, in turn, also had a strong influence on the band's contemporaries at the time, with Cream and the Jimi Hendrix Experience both following suit. Ironically, although they pioneered and directly contributed to the development of the "classic" Marshall sound (at this point their equipment was being built/tweaked to their personal specifications), they would only use Marshalls for a couple of years. Entwistle eventually switched to using a Sound City rig in search of his perfect sound, with Townshend also switching later on. Entwistle also experimented throughout his career with "bi-amping," where the high and low ends of the bass sound are sent through separate signal paths, allowing for more control over the output. At one point his rig became so loaded with speaker cabinets and processing gear that it was dubbed "Little Manhattan." His "full treble, full volume" approach to bass sound was originally supposed to be captured in the bass solo to "My Generation". According to Entwistle, his original intention was to feature the distinctive Danelectro bass, which had a very twangy sound, in the solo. After repeatedly breaking strings on the instrument. And even purchasing two more Danelectros in an attempt to capture the sound (Danelectro strings apparently being unavailable separately at the time). He ended up recording a simpler solo using a stock Fender Jazz Bass and a pick. This solo bass break is important as it is one of the first (if not the first) bass solo captured on a rock record. A live recording of The Who from this period (c1965) exists with Entwistle playing a Danelectro on "My Generation," giving an idea of what that solo would have sounded like. Entwistle developed what he called a "typewriter" approach to playing the bass. It involved positioning the right hand over the strings so all four fingers could be used to tap percussively on the strings, causing them to strike the fretboard with a distinctive twangy sound. This gives the player the aility to play three or four strings at once. Or to use several fingers on a single string. It allowed him to create passages that were very percussive and melodic. He used this approach to mimic the fills used by his drummers in band situations, sometimes sending the fills back at the drummers faster than the drummers themselves could play them. This method is unique and should not be confused with the hammer-on tapping techniques of Eddie Van Halen and Stu Hamm or the slapping technique of Larry Graham, and in fact pre-dates these other techniques. A demonstration of this approach to bass playing can be seen on a video called John Entwistle - Master Class, part of Arlen Roth's Hot Licks instructional series. Entwistle identified his influences as a combination of his school training on French horn, trumpet, and piano (giving his fingers impressive strength and dexterity). Along with rock & roll guitarists Duane Eddy and Gene Vincent, and American soul and R&B bassists such as James Jamerson. Like Jamerson, he is credited as a pioneer on the bass guitar. In turn, Entwistle has been a massive influence on the playing styles and sounds used by generations of bass players that have followed him and continues to top 'best ever bass player' polls in musicians magazines. In 2000, Guitar magazine named him "Bassist of the Millennium" in a readers' poll. Late career Toward the end of his career, he formed "The John Entwistle Band" with longtime friend, drummer Steve Luongo. Godfrey Townsend ("no 'h', no relation" to Pete) played guitar and sang lead vocals. In 1996, the band went on the "Left for Dead" tour with Alan St. Jon on keyboards. After Entwistle toured with The Who for Quadrophenia in 1996-97, the Entwistle band set off on the "Left for Dead - the Sequel" tour in late 1998 now with Gordon Cotten on keyboards. After this second venture, the band released an album of highlights from the tour, called Left for Live. In 1999 and 2000 John played as part of The Who. In 2001 he played in Alan Parson's Beatles tribute show "A Walk Down Abbey Road". Along with John and Mr. Parsons the show featured Ann Wilson of Heart, Todd Rundgren, David Pack of Ambrosia, Godfrey Townsend on guitar, Steve Luongo on drums, and John Beck on keyboards. In January-February 2002 John played his last concerts in The Who in a handful of dates in England, the last being February 8 in London's Royal Albert Hall. In late 2002, an expanded 2-CD Left for Live Deluxe was released, further highlighting The John Entwistle Band performances. Death John Entwistle died in Las Vegas on June 27, 2002 one day before the scheduled first show of The Who's 2002 US tour. The Las Vegas medical examiner determined that death was due to a heart attack induced by an undetermined amount of cocaine. Though the amount in his bloodstream was not great, the drug caused his coronary arteries — already damaged by a pre-existing heart condition — to contract, which led to the fatal heart attack. Entwistle, like Townshend, battled cocaine addiction through much of his adult life. John's funeral was held at Saint Edward's Church in Stow-On-The-Wold, Gloucester, England, on July 10. He was cremated and his ashes buried privately. A memorial service was held the following October 24 at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Trafalgar Square, London. Entwistle's massive collection of guitars and basses was auctioned at Sotheby's in London by his son Christopher Entwistle to meet anticipated duties on his father's estate. Of the auction, Christopher was quoted as saying his father would have hated it. Joy Division/New Order bassist Peter Hook is amongst those who acquired some of Entwistle's basses at the auction. Entwistle's enormous mansion in Stow-On-The-Wold in the Cotswolds and a large number of his very personal effects were also later sold off to meet the demands of the Inland Revenue. Ironically, Entwistle was a former employee of that department, only quitting his job there when The Who became successful. Welsh-born bassist Pino Palladino, who played on several of Pete Townshend's solo records, replaced Entwistle on stage when The Who resumed their postponed U.S. tour following John's funeral. Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey spoke at length about their reaction to John's death. Their comments can be found on the "The Who Live in Boston" DVD. They explained that John's death, while very sad, gives the music a new lease on life. A new bass player means a whole new approach to some of those parts. Townshend and Daltrey also said that they accept the fact that they are now members of a cover band who play songs of The Who - the only real difference is that they don't have to pay royalties. Solo discography Smash Your Head Against the Wall (1971) Whistle Rymes (1972) Rigor Mortis Sets In (1973) Mad Dog(1975) Too Late The Hero{1981) The Rock{1996) King Biscuit Flower Hour Presents In Concert (1996) Left For Live (1999) So Who's the Bass Player? The Ox Anthology (2005) Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.