The Who are one of the most influential groups in rock music. Their progressive approach to the writing of albums and their exciting live shows are matched by few. The hard-rock style they brought to England's music scene was one that set the stage for other bands ranging from
Led Zeppelin to
The Clash.
During their earliest Mod genesis, The Who provided inspiration for most, if not all, of the major bands during the
Britpop wave in Britain during the mid-1990s. Bands such as
Blur, Oasis, Stereophonics and
Ash draw a heavy influence from the band's work, which, especially with the Mod counter-culture, provided a quintessentially "
Cool Britannia" ideal.
The Who have also been called "The Godfathers of Punk" in numerous
publications,
as well as in
Spike Lee's film,
Summer of Sam. Part of
the foundation of
punk rock lies in The Who's onstage aggression,
violence and snotty attitude. The
MC5, Ramones, Sex Pistols, the Clash, Generation X, Green Day, and many other
punk rock and
protopunk rock bands, point to The Who as a
major influence.
The group has been credited with devising the "
rock opera" and it made one of the first notable concept albums. Following in the footsteps of
Tommy were
David Bowie's The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust,
The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway by
Genesis, Jethro Tull's Thick as a Brick and
Pink Floyd's The Wall, among others. Recently, the idea was adopted by
The Flaming Lips in
Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots and Green Day with
American Idiot.
In 1967 Pete Townshend coined the phrase "
power pop" to describe The Who's sixties singles sound. The guiding lights of the seventies power pop movement, from the
The Raspberries to
Cheap Trick, take much of their inspiration from The Who.
The Who's influence can also be seen in their early incorporation of synthesizers into rock music, with
Who's Next featuring the instrument prominently and the single "Won't Get Fooled Again" becoming the first hit single to be driven by a synthesizer track.
"My Generation" is perhaps the band's most covered song.
Iron Maiden, Oasis, Pearl Jam, Patti Smith, Green Day, McFly and
Hillary Duff have recorded it. Oasis used it as their set closer during their 2005 world tour.
The Zimmers, known as "the world's oldest rock band," made a tongue-in-cheek version and used it as their first single, which became a hit in Britain.
David Bowie covered "I Can't Explain", "Pictures of Lily" and "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere". The Sex Pistols covered "Substitute" in their early concerts.
The Ramones covered "Substitute" too, not only by recording it, but for making a videoclip as well.
The Jam covered "
So Sad About Us" and so did
The Breeders in the 90s .The Clash referred to the "I Can't Explain" riff in "Clash City Rockers" and "Guns on the Roof".
Pearl Jam performed "Baba O'Riley" and "The Kids Are Alright" during their tours in the 1990s and 2000s. Pearl Jam have also played many other Who songs such as "Leaving Here", "Blue, Red, & Grey", "Love, Reign O'er Me" and "Naked Eye". German band
Scorpions covered "I Can't Explain" while shock metal band
W.A.S.P. covered "The Real Me".
Van Halen covered "Won't Get Fooled Again" on their 1993 live album
Live: Right Here, Right Now, explicitly describing it as "a tribute to The Who" and in 1995,
Phish covered
Quadrophenia for their second annual
Halloween concert tradition of performing another band's album in its entirety, which was later released as
Live Phish Volume 14.
The Grateful Dead also covered "Baba O'Riley" in the early 1990s, as did
Nirvana. Rush covered "
The Seeker" and "
Summertime Blues", both on their 2004 "
Feedback" EP and live during their
R30 tour that same year.
Limp Bizkit also did a cover of "
Behind Blue Eyes" in their 2004 album
Results May Vary.
McFly covered "
Pinball Wizard" for the B-side to their 2004 single "
I'll Be Ok", and played the song live in their 2005 tour.
Fish (ex
Marillion) covered "The Seeker" during his
Songs from the Mirror period. Many other artists, ranging from
Buddy Rich to
Richard Thompson to
U2 to
Petra Haden (who covered
The Who Sell Out in its entirety), have covered Who songs.
The music of The Who is still performed in public by many
tribute bands, such as The Wholigans, Who's Next USA, BARGAIN, The Relay, and The OHM, in the USA, Who's Next UK, Who's Who UK, and The Whodlums in the UK.
All three versions of the American forensic drama
CSI (
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,
CSI: Miami, and
CSI: NY) feature songs written and performed by The Who as their theme songs, "
Who Are You", "
Won't Get Fooled Again" and "
Baba O'Riley" respectively.