The next
thing that I want to talk about is who I think the Godfather actually is. It
has to be member of The Who, but I’ve never read anything that says which
member it is. I think that it is Pete Townshend. During the 60’s people thought
of The Who as the premier Mod band, and Pete Townshend wrote all these great
Mod songs, which would make him the Godfather of the Mods. I think that
situations like this probably happened all the time, where some kid would yell
at them after concerts, and sometimes people just snap. The last verse is sung
by Pete Townshend and I think that it is the Godfathers thoughts, that he saw
something in Jimmy that reminded him of himself and he has this thought.
I love how,
musically, The Punk and the Godfather has a real argument vibe to it. Roger
Daltrey sings all but the last verse and it still sounds like two different
people, there are two distinctive voices, one young and angry, and one annoyed
and mocking. I also love how The Who was never afraid to mix vocals in a song.
Roger was the singer, but sometimes a different quality was needed to drive a
point or idea home. In this song you need Roger’s harsh tough guy tone for the argument
and Pete’s smoother style for the introspective section. It’s an interesting
mix and the voices work really well with each other.