The Seeker (The Who song)

"The Seeker"
Single by The Who
B-side "Here for More" (Daltrey)
Released 21 March 1970 (UK)
25 April 1970 (US)
Format 7"
Recorded January 1970 at IBC Studios, London
Genre Hard rock
Length 3:10
Label Track 604036 (UK)
Decca 7-32670 (US)
Writer(s) Pete Townshend
Producer(s) Kit Lambert, The Who
The Who singles chronology
"I'm Free"
(1969)
"The Seeker"
(1970)
"Summertime Blues"
(1970)

"The Seeker" is a song written by Pete Townshend and performed by English rock band The Who, and featured on their 1971 compilation album Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy.

Background

Around the time of song's release, Townshend explained its meaning in an interview with Rolling Stone: "Quite loosely, "The Seeker" was just a thing about what I call Divine Desperation, or just Desperation. And what it does to people. It just kind of covers a whole area where the guy's being fantastically tough and ruthlessly nasty and he's being incredibly selfish and he's hurting people, wrecking people's homes, abusing his heroes, he's accusing everyone of doing nothing for him and yet at the same time he's making a fairly valid statement, he's getting nowhere, he's doing nothing and the only thing he really can't be sure of is his death, and that at least dead, he's going to get what he wants. He thinks!"[1]

"I suppose I like this least of all the stuff", wrote Townshend the following year. "It suffered from being the first thing we did after Tommy, and also from being recorded a few too many times. We did it once at my home studio, then at IBC where we normally worked then with Kit Lambert producing. Then Kit had a tooth pulled, breaking his jaw, and we did it ourselves. The results are impressive. It sounded great in the mosquito-ridden swamp I made it up in, Florida at three in the morning drunk out of my brain with Tom Wright and John Wolff. But that's always where the trouble starts, in the swamp. The alligator turned into an elephant and finally stampeded itself to death on stages around England. I don't think we even got to play it in the States."[2]

This is not entirely true, as the band did perform it for about two weeks on their 1970 American tour.[3][4][5][6] The Who revived the song briefly in 2000 and then extensively starting on the 2006–2007 tour for Endless Wire.

The lyrics name-check several people who had high profiles in contemporary pop culture: musicians Bob Dylan (as "Bobby Dylan") and The Beatles, and advocate of psychedelic drugs Timothy Leary. Townshend was a devotee of the teachings of Meher Baba, a Persian mystic whose 1966 treatise God in a Pill? famously lambasted drug use as a means of consciousness expansion. Similarly, Townshend was an opponent of drug abuse throughout this period.

Release

Released in the UK as Track 604036 on 21 March 1970, "The Seeker" reached number 19 in the charts. Released in the US as Decca 7-32670, it hit the Billboard charts on 11 April 1970, eventually peaking at number 44. The B-side, "Here For More", is one of the few Who songs by lead singer Roger Daltrey.

Cover

Canadian progressive rock group Rush included a version of "The Seeker" in their album Feedback and again on their live album/DVD R30: 30th Anniversary World Tour.

Appearances

Charts

Chart (1970) Peak position
Canadian RPM Top Singles 21
UK Singles Chart 19
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 44

References

  1. Cott, Jonathan (14 May 1970). "A Talk with Pete Townshend". Rolling Stone (Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc.) (58): 33.
  2. Townshend, Pete (9 December 1971). "Meaty, Beaty, Big and Bouncy: Pete Townshend on 'Tommy'". Rolling Stone (Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc.) (97): 72.
  3. "The Who Concert Setlist at Memorial Auditorium, Dallas on June 19, 1970". setlist.fm. Retrieved 2011-01-14.
  4. "The Who Concert Setlist at Berkeley Community Theatre, Berkeley on June 16, 1970". setlist.fm. Retrieved 2011-01-14.
  5. "The Who Concert Setlist at Berkeley Community Theatre, Berkeley on June 15, 1970". setlist.fm. Retrieved 2011-01-14.
  6. "The Who Concert Setlist at Anaheim Stadium, Anaheim on June 14, 1970". setlist.fm. Retrieved 2011-01-14.