other titles...

the WHO

Tommy OST (RSD 25)

Record Store Day 2025 - Colour 2LP in Gatefold Sleeve - £39.99 | Buy
This year’s offering for Record Store Day by The Who is the original soundtrack album used in the 1975 Tommy film.
The Who

Live in London, Paris and…Felixstowe 1965-66-67

CD - £11.99 | Pre Order
This CD documents the Who’s transition from r’n’b to pop-art, collating material that is unavailable officially, albeit sometimes in sound quality that re...
the WHO

Tube Map

A4 PRINT - £12.00 | Buy
A5 Greetings Card - £6.00 | Buy
Innovative Representation of Music History: Band Maps by Mike Bell Mike Bell's band maps transform the rich tapestry of music history into a visual narrativ...
The Who

Live At Leeds

Heavyweight Audiophile 3LP - £46.99 £32.99 | Buy
The Who

My Generation

LP W/ Obi Strip - £32.99 £22.99 | Buy
the WHO

The Who Sell Out (2021 reissue)

2cd - £15.99 | Buy
Its glorious blend of classic powerful Who instrumentation, melodic harmonies, satirical lyrical imagery crystallised for what was only the group’s third ...
Live at the Oval 1971
  1. So Glad To See Ya
  2. Summertime Blues
  3. My Wife
  4. Love Ain’t For Keeping
  5. I Can’t Explain
  6. Substitute
  7. Bargain
  8. Behind Blue Eyes
  9. Won’t Get Fooled Again
  10. Baby Don’t You Do It
  11. Pinball Wizard
  12. See Me, Feel Me / Listening To You
  13. My Generation
  14. Naked Eye
  15. Magic Bus

the WHO

Live at the Oval 1971

UMR
  • Limited Black 2LP (pre-order)

    Expected Release: 22nd Aug 2025

    £36.99
    Preorder
  • CD (pre-order)

    Expected Release: 22nd Aug 2025

    £13.99
    Preorder

With 35,000 in attendance, on September 18, 1971 The Who headlined "Goodbye Summer": A Rock Concert in aid of Famine Relief for the People of Bangladesh at The Oval cricket ground in Kennington, south London.

Newly mixed from the original 8-track analogue multi-track tapes, this concert shows The Who continuing their dominance as the top live rock band of the era. The outstanding performance culminates in Pete Townshend and Keith Moon destroying their equipment in a grand finale.