"The Real Me" | ||||||||||||
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Single by The Who | ||||||||||||
from the album Quadrophenia | ||||||||||||
B-side | "Doctor Jimmy" | |||||||||||
Released | 12 January 1974 | |||||||||||
Format | 7" single | |||||||||||
Recorded | May 1972 | |||||||||||
Genre | Hard rock | |||||||||||
Length | 3:20 (Album version) 3:30 (Quadrophenia soundtrack version/single version) |
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Label | Track Records/MCA | |||||||||||
Writer(s) | Pete Townshend | |||||||||||
Producer(s) | The Who | |||||||||||
The Who singles chronology | ||||||||||||
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17 tracks |
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"The Real Me" is a song written by Pete Townshend on The Who's second full-scale rock opera, Quadrophenia in 1973. This is the second track on the album, although it is the first with lyrics. It concerns a boy named Jimmy, a young English Mod with four distinct personalities. The song describes how he angrily deals with several individuals to identify "the real me".
The song features a virtuoso bass performance by John Entwistle. According to a 1996 interview with Entwistle by Goldmine Magazine, the bass part was recorded on the first take. Entwistle claimed he was "joking around" when he played the part, but the band loved it and used it in the final version.
Aside from the verses about the psychiatrist, mother and preacher, Townshend's original demo of the song on his solo album Scoop 3 includes another verse about rock and roll in general. The arrangement of the song is also much slower than what it would end up as in Quadrophenia.
Townshend has always referred to it as "Can You See the Real Me", rather than the more accepted abbreviated title.
The band first performed "The Real Me" on their 1973 tour promoting the Quadrophenia album, as a medley with the tape track "I Am the Sea", and it was played up until the end of their next French tour the following year, this time without "I Am the Sea". It was not played again until the 1979 tour, where it frequently used to close concerts. It remained a fixture of The Who's concerts until 1981, and was again played on their 1989 reunion tour. It was included in every concert of the 1996-1997 tour, on which Quadrophenia was played in its entirety. The Who continued to play the song until John Entwistle's death in 2002. After not performing it for several years, the band began including it in their live shows again in 2007 with the bass part, now performed by Pino Palladino, being less prominent than in the original version. The most recent performance of the song by was on the 2012-2013 "Quadrophenia and More" tour, which again featured the entire album.