Rahul Sharma (Editor)

The Song Is Over

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Length
  
6:13

Producer(s)
  
The Who, Glyn Johns

Writer(s)
  
Pete Townshend

Released
  
14 August 1971 (1971-08-14)

Recorded
  
11 May 1971 at Olympic Studios

Label
  
Decca (US) Polydor (UK)

"The Song Is Over" (or "Song Is Over") is a song by the English rock band The Who, appearing on Who's Next. It was originally to be the ending song on Lifehouse. It takes place after the police invade the Lifehouse Theatre and the concert goers disappear.

Contents

Lyrics and music

"The Song Is Over" is one of the tracks on Who's Next with lead vocals by both Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey and piano work by Nicky Hopkins. According to Pete Townshend the song provides "a mixture of being sad and wistful but at the same time a high point." The mixture of the song is achieved by Pete Townshend's vocals taking a sense of the end: "The song is over, It's all behind me", and Roger's taking a sense of continuing: "I sing my songs to the wide open spaces..." Who biographer John Atkins remarks that the two singers' "contrasting voices" "work wonderfully well. Atkins considers Daltrey's vocals to be the song's strongest feature, but he also praises Keith Moon's "superbly controlled" drumming, John Entwistle's "expressive" bass and the "beautiful, rich synthesizer chords on verses. The music is based on an E flat major 7 chord progression, that Segretto is "sad and hopeful" and "guaranteed to jerk tears."

According to Mike Segretto, with metaphors about singing his farewell song to "wide open spaces," "sky high mountains" and "the infinite sea," the song "poetically indicates that a heart may break but it will endure as nature does." Atkins interprets the song as being about the "concept of song" itself, and forming the climax of the Lifehouse concept by being about "the power of song being finally harnessed as a unifying strength." Indeed, Atkins identifies "The Song Is Over," "Getting in Tune" (also released on Who's Next) and "Pure and Easy" (later released on Odds and Sods) as being the three songs that are most central to the Lifehouse concept in that they "reflect the central idea of music as a source of social and spiritual power." The song also features quotes from "Pure and Easy" in its final bars.

Critical reception

Rolling Stone Magazine critic John Mendelsohn rates "The Song Is Over" as being among Daltrey's and Townshend's best work, describing it as "an unutterably beautiful song in which Townshend sings exquisitely over a gentle piano background before and in between Daltrey charging in exhilaratingly over a hard part with breathtaking chord changes in the manner of the "Listening to you I hear the music . . ." refrain from Tommy. Music critic Chris Charlesworth calls "The Song Is Over" "among the most gorgeous ballads Pete [Townshend] has ever written." Allmusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine similarly describes it as a "gorgeous" ballad. Rolling Stone Magazine critic Dave Marsh describes it as an "exceptionally fine song." Segretto considers it "one of the Who's most beautiful songs" and Rolling Stone Record Guide, 2nd edition editor John Swenson concurred that it was one of Townshend's most beautiful songs. In the 4th edition of the Rolling Stone Album Guide, critic Mark Kemp described it as a "great Daltrey vocal vehicle." Atkins describes it as "a mature composition, structured with an almost baroque tidiness and order."

References

The Song Is Over Wikipedia