Rough Mix


title: "Rough Mix" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1977-collaborative-albums", "pete-townshend-albums", "ronnie-lane-albums", "albums-produced-by-glyn-johns"] topic_path: "arts/music" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rough_Mix" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox album"]

FieldValue
nameRough Mix
typestudio
artistPete Townshend and Ronnie Lane
coverPeteTownshendRonnieLane_RoughMix.jpg
released
recordedWinter 1976 and Spring 1977
studioOlympic Studios (London)
genre* Rock
length41:34
labelMCA (US)
Polydor (UK)
producerGlyn Johns
chronologyPete Townshend
prev_titleWith Love
prev_year1976
next_titleEmpty Glass
next_year1980
misc{{Extra chronology
artistRonnie Lane
typestudio
prev_titleMahoney's Last Stand
(with Ron Wood)
prev_year1976
titleRough Mix
year1977
next_titleSee Me
next_year1979
::

| name = Rough Mix | type = studio | artist = Pete Townshend and Ronnie Lane | cover = PeteTownshendRonnieLane_RoughMix.jpg | alt = | released = | recorded = Winter 1976 and Spring 1977 | venue = | studio = Olympic Studios (London) | genre = * Rock

Rough Mix is an album by Pete Townshend, guitarist with the Who, and Ronnie Lane, former bassist with Small Faces and Faces. The album was released in September 1977 as Polydor 2442 in the UK and MCA 2295 in the US. It peaked at number 44 on the UK Albums Chart, and at number 45 on the US Billboard 200.

Content

On 21 October 1976, the Who closed a brief North American tour in Toronto at Maple Leaf Gardens, a show that would be the last with Keith Moon before a paying audience. The Who then took a hiatus as band members pursued various individual interests.

Pete Townshend had been initially contacted by Ronnie Lane to produce his next album. The project instead turned into a full-blown collaboration between the pair. Lane expressed an interest in a songwriting collaboration but Townshend, who has very rarely co-written songs, was unwilling. The instrumental title track is credited to both musicians, however.

During the recording of Rough Mix, Lane's multiple sclerosis was diagnosed but still not revealed generally. In one instance, Lane had an emotional issue related to his MS that caused an argument between him and an unknowing Townshend. Nonetheless, Lane toured, wrote and recorded (with Eric Clapton among others) and in 1979 released another album, See Me, which features several songs written by Lane and Clapton. Around this time Lane travelled the highways and byways of England and lived a 'passing show' modern nomadic life in full Gypsy traveller costume and accommodation.

The album featured songs written by both principals in a vein less like that of the Who or Faces but instead close to the British folk rock vogue of the early 1970s among various English bands. The band on the track "Annie" comprised members of Lane's Slim Chance group, which played in that very style. A number of more famous colleagues also appeared on the recording, among them Who bassist John Entwistle, Ian Stewart and Charlie Watts from the Rolling Stones, and Eric Clapton. Orchestral arrangements for the track "Street in the City" were provided by Townshend's father-in-law, noted British film and television theme composer Edwin Astley.

Rough Mix was remastered in 2006 and released by Hip-O Records, the reissue label for the Universal Music Group, in both 5.1 surround sound format on Dualdisc and standard stereo compact disc. The reissue featured three outtakes as bonus tracks.

The cover art for the gatefold sleeve, by designer Peter Joyce, features "all sorts of British pop culture images from cricket to cars to show biz" in the form of a collage of trading cards. The font for the title references that used for Rizla cigarette papers.

Critical reception

|rev1 = AllMusic |rev1score = | rev2 = Christgau's Record Guide | rev2Score = A− |rev3 = The Encyclopedia of Popular Music |rev3score = |rev4 = MusicHound Rock |rev4score = 3.5/5 |rev5 = The Rolling Stone Record Guide |rev5score = | rev6 = The Village Voice | rev6Score = B+ The Village Voice critic Robert Christgau wrote in his review of the album: "Meher Baba inspired psalmody so plain and sharply observed, maybe he was all reet after all. Three of Townshend's contributions—'Keep Me Turning,' 'Misunderstood,' and an unlikely song of adoration called 'My Baby Gives It Away'—are his keenest in years, and while Lane's evocations of the passing scene are more poignant on his Island import, One for the Road, 'Annie' is a suitably modest folk classic. Together, the two disciples prove that charity needn't be sentimental, detachment cold, nor peace boring. Selah."

Track listing

| headline = Side one | title1 = My Baby Gives It Away | length1 = 4:02 | writer1 = Pete Townshend | title2 = Nowhere to Run | writer2 = Ronnie Lane | length2 = 3:17 | title3 = Rough Mix | writer3 = | length3 = 3:12 | title4 = Annie | writer4 = | length4 = 2:56 | title5 = Keep Me Turning | length5 = 3:46 | writer5 = Townshend | title6 = Catmelody | writer6 = | length6 = 3:12 ; | headline = Side two | title1 = Misunderstood | length1 = 3:01 | writer1 = Townshend | title2 = April Fool | writer2 = Lane | length2 = 3:34 | title3 = Street in the City | length3 = 6:07 | writer3 = Townshend | title4 = Heart to Hang Onto | length4 = 4:29 | writer4 = Townshend | title5 = 'Til the Rivers All Run Dry | writer5 = | length5 = 3:54 | headline = 2006 CD bonus tracks | title12 = Only You | writer12 = Lane | length12 = 4:29 | title13 = Good Question | length13 = 3:34 | writer13 = Townshend | title14 = Silly Little Man | writer14 = Lane | length14 = 3:44

Personnel

Charts

::data[format=table] | Chart (1977) | Peak position | |---|---| ::

References

References

  1. Neill, Andy, and Kent, Matt. ''Anyway Anyhow Anywhere: The Complete Chronicle of The Who 1958–1978.'' 2009, {{ISBN. 978-1-4027-6691-6, p. 299.
  2. "Search | Official Charts". Official Charts Company.
  3. The Who. ''[[Thirty Years of Maximum R&B]]''. 1994, [[MCA Records]] CD-207146, [[liner notes]] booklet.
  4. Heinz Rudolf Kunze. ''Rough Mix''. 2006, SPV 304852, liner notes.
  5. "Ronald Frederick Lane". the-faces.com.
  6. (10 November 2014). "Pete Townshend & Ronnie Lane, 'Rough Mix' (10/03/77)".
  7. Athas, Peter Adrastos. (18 April 2018). "Album Cover Art Wednesday: Rough Mix".
  8. [{{AllMusic
  9. Christgau, Robert. (1981). "[[Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies]]". [[Ticknor & Fields]].
  10. (2007). "The Encyclopedia of Popular Music". Omnibus.
  11. (1999). "MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide". Visible Ink Press.
  12. (1979). "The Rolling Stone Record Guide". Random House.
  13. Christgau, Robert. (31 October 1977). "Christgau's Consumer Guide". [[The Village Voice]].
  14. Markee's surname is incorrectly listed as "Marquee" on most editions of the album.

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1977-collaborative-albumspete-townshend-albumsronnie-lane-albumsalbums-produced-by-glyn-johns