Smash Your Head Against The Wall | ||||
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Studio album by John Entwistle | ||||
Released | May 1971 | |||
Recorded | During November 1970 and January 1971 | |||
Studio | Trident Studios, London, England | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 37:34 | |||
Language | English | |||
Label | Track | |||
Producer | John Entwistle | |||
John Entwistle chronology | ||||
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Smash Your Head Against the Wall is the debut solo album by John Entwistle, the bassist for English rock band the Who. The album was released on Track Records in the UK and Decca Records in the US. Though the first solo album by any member of the Who, the record includes notable playing and backing vocals by fellow Who member Keith Moon as well as strong musical influences from the group's work.
The macabre cover artwork was concocted by Entwistle and photographer Graham Hughes, cousin of the Who's vocalist Roger Daltrey. It depicts Entwistle's face wearing a death mask, transposed against an X-ray picture of the lungs of a terminal heart patient, obtained from Entwistle's doctor. The gatefold cover features the X-ray of a pregnancy test, maintaining the "life vs. death" theme.
The album features a remake of Entwistle's Who live classic "Heaven and Hell" with the Who's on and off roadie Dave "Cyrano" Langston, who had encouraged Entwistle to make the album and provided some acid-drenched guitar. Langston was even thought to be Pete Townshend under a pseudonym.
When Entwistle was asked about his first single, "I Believe in Everything", in comparison with 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.