White City: A Novel is a solo concept album by Pete Townshend of The Who, released in 1985 on Atco.
The title refers to a story (called a “novel” in the album title) that accompanies the album, and which takes place in a low-income housing estate in the West London area of White City, near where Townshend grew up.
The story tells of cultural conflict, racial tension and youthful hopes and dreams in the 1960s — a world of “prostituted children”, “roads leading to darkness, leading home” and despairing residents living in “cells” with views of “dustbins and a Ford Cortina”.
The song “White City Fighting”, which features David Gilmour’s guitar work, tells listeners that the White City was “a black, violent place” where “battles were won, and battles were blown, at the height of the White City fighting”.
The album opens with crashing guitar chords that capture a feeling of urban chaos, leading into “Give Blood”, a song with Townshend’s trademark, moral lyrics demanding listeners to “give blood, but you may find that blood is not enough”.
White City: A Novel is a solo concept album by Pete Townshend of The Who, released in 1985 on Atco.
The title refers to a story (called a “novel” in the album title) that accompanies the album, and which takes place in a low-income housing estate in the West London area of White City, near where Townshend grew up.
The story tells of cultural conflict, racial tension and youthful hopes and dreams in the 1960s — a world of “prostituted children”, “roads leading to darkness, leading home” and despairing residents living in “cells” with views of “dustbins and a Ford Cortina”.
The song “White City Fighting”, which features David Gilmour’s guitar work, tells listeners that the White City was “a black, violent place” where “battles were won, and battles were blown, at the height of the White City fighting”.
The album opens with crashing guitar chords that capture a feeling of urban chaos, leading into “Give Blood”, a song with Townshend’s trademark, moral lyrics demanding listeners to “give blood, but you may find that blood is not enough”.
Wikipedia