The Iron Man: The Musical by Pete Townshend

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The Iron Man: The Musical
Theironmanamusical.jpg
Studio album by
Released27 June 1989
Recorded1986–1989
StudioEel Pie Studios, London
Genre Rock
Length45:36
Label Atlantic (US)
Producer Pete Townshend
Pete Townshend chronology
Another Scoop
(1987)
The Iron Man: The Musical
(1989)
Psychoderelict
(1993)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg [1]
Hi-Fi News & Record Review A*:1/2 [2]
Rolling Stone Star full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg [3]

The Iron Man: The Musical by Pete Townshend, released in 1989, is an adaptation of Ted Hughes' story The Iron Man , produced and largely composed and performed by Pete Townshend of The Who. It also stars Roger Daltrey, Deborah Conway, John Lee Hooker, and Nina Simone. It is Townshend's fifth studio album.

Contents

The three then-surviving original members of The Who (Daltrey, John Entwistle, and Townshend) performed as a group in two songs, "Dig" and "Fire", although the latter was a cover of The Crazy World of Arthur Brown's hit. (The Who would later perform "Dig" live during their 1989 reunion tour.)

"A Friend Is a Friend" and "I Won't Run Anymore" were commercially released as singles; "Fire" was issued as a promo-only single in the United States. Cash Box said that "A Friend is a Friend" "finds Pete in an uplifting vein, with falsetto vocals and strummed guitar." [4]

A stage version was mounted at the Young Vic theatre in London in 1993. On the strength of this, Warner Bros. optioned the story for a movie which, with a very different adaptation of the story, became The Iron Giant ; Townshend received an Executive Producer credit.

Characters

Track listing

All songs written by Pete Townshend except where noted.

  1. "I Won't Run Any More" – 4:51 Vocals by Pete Townshend with Deborah Conway
  2. "Over the Top" – 3:31 Vocals by John Lee Hooker
  3. "Man Machines" – 0:42 Vocals by Simon Townshend
  4. "Dig" – 4:07 Performed by The Who
  5. "A Friend Is a Friend" – 4:44 Vocals by Pete Townshend
  6. "I Eat Heavy Metal" – 4:01 Vocals by John Lee Hooker
  7. "All Shall Be Well" – 4:02 Vocals by Pete Townshend with Deborah Conway and Chyna
  8. "Was There Life" – 4:19 Vocals by Pete Townshend
  9. "Fast Food" – 4:26 Vocals by Nina Simone
  10. "A Fool Says..." – 2:51 Vocals by Pete Townshend
  11. "Fire" (Arthur Brown, Vincent Crane, Mike Finesilver, Peter Ker) – 3:47 Performed by The Who
  12. "New Life/Reprise" – 6:00 Vocals by Chyna with Pete Townshend and Nicola Emmanuel. Contains small extract of a live performance of "Magic Bus"

Bonus tracks from the 2006 US Hip-O Records release

  1. "Dig" (Simon Townshend vocal version) – 4:09
  2. "Man Machines" (long version) – 4:34
  3. "I Eat Heavy Metal" (demo) – 4:04

Bonus tracks from the 2006 Japanese Imperial release

  1. "A Friend Is a Friend" (live at the Fillmore West, 1996)
  2. "All Shall Be Well" (live at the Fillmore West, 1996)

Non-album tracks

  1. "Real World" (instrumental released on 12" and CD singles of "A Friend Is a Friend", a different mix of it was on Scoop 3 in 2001)
  2. "Penny Drop" (appeared on the Timothy White Radio Show; promo copies of the interview were pressed on vinyl by DIR Broadcasting)
  3. "Dig" (demo released on the 1989 UK CD single of "I Won't Run Anymore")
  4. "Iron Man Recitative", "Can You Really Dance?", and "Man and Machines (demo)" appeared on Scoop 3 in 2001
  5. "Dig" (concert version appeared on The Who's 1989 reunion tour concert album Join Together )

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References

  1. The Iron Man: The Musical by Pete Townshend at AllMusic
  2. Dellar, Fred (September 1989). "Review: Pete Townshend — The Iron Man" (PDF). Hi-Fi News & Record Review (magazine). Vol. 34, no. 9. Croydon: Link House Magazines Ltd. p. 103. ISSN   0142-6230. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 September 2021. Retrieved 2 September 2021 via World Radio History.
  3. "Pete Townshend: Album Guide | Rolling Stone Music". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 5 February 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2012.
  4. Wednesday, Oscar (17 June 1989). "Pure Pop for Now People" (PDF). Cash Box. p. 22. Retrieved 21 December 2022.