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1[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/quadrophenia_lp_cover_584.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:320:Schizophrenic? I'm bleeding [[TitleDrop Quadrophenic]].]]
3->''"Can you see the real me,\
4Can ya? Can ya?"''
5-->--"I Am the Sea"
6
7''Quadrophenia'' is the sixth studio album by Music/TheWho, released in 1973. The group's second RockOpera, ''Quadrophenia'' concerns itself with the story of Jimmy, a young Mod living in 1960s England who undergoes something of a spiritual revelation, thanks to {{the power of rock}}. Or more specifically, loud, progressive-influenced Who songs. The story, such as it is, is really an analysis of the trials and tribulations the British youth of the early 1960s had to endure: girlfriends, fighting to be popular and to fit in, being out of work, drugs, etc.
8
9The plot follows Jimmy's quest for identity as he struggles with life. The opera opens as he sits marooned on a rock in the middle of the English Channel, contemplating [[HowWeGotHere what led him there]]. A large part of the plot is Jimmy looking at the past few days of his life, in particular the Rocker-Mod conflicts that he was a part of, and attempting to reconcile his four different identities-the [[SplitPersonality quadrophenia]] of the title.
10
11The album was adapted into a [[Film/{{Quadrophenia}} 1979 cult film]] starring Phil Daniels, Leslie Ash, and Music/{{Sting}}, featuring the music from the album (touched up with horns and synthesizers), along with a number of Creator/{{Motown}} tunes.
12
13----
14!! Tracklist:
15[[AC:Side One]]
16# "I Am the Sea" (2:09)
17# "The Real Me" (3:21)
18# "Quadrophenia" (6:14)
19# "Cut My Hair" (3:45)
20# "The Punk and the Godfather" (5:11)
21
22[[AC:Side Two]]
23# "I'm One" (2:38)
24# "The Dirty Jobs" (4:30)
25# "Helpless Dancer (Roger's Theme)" (2:34)
26# "Is It in My Head?" (3:44)
27# "I've Had Enough" (6:15)
28
29[[AC:Side Three]]
30# "5:15" (5:01)
31# "Sea and Sand" (5:02)
32# "Drowned" (5:28)
33# "Bell Boy (Keith's Theme)" (4:56)
34
35[[AC:Side Four]]
36# "Doctor Jimmy" (8:37)
37** "Is It Me? (John's Theme)"
38# "The Rock" (6:38)
39# "Love, Reign O'er Me (Pete's Theme)" (5:49)
40
41----
42!!Principal Members:
43
44* Roger Daltrey - lead vocals, percussion
45* John Entwistle - bass, backing and co-lead vocals, horns
46* Keith Moon - drums, percussion, co-lead vocals
47* Pete Townshend - guitar, backing and lead vocals, synthesizer, piano, violin, banjo, percussion, sound effects
48
49----
50!! Tropeless Dancer:
51* AdultsAreUseless: Though as this is about youth, [[{{Deconstruction}} it may be more that Jimmy can't accept help]].[[note]]The liner notes feature a humorous disclaimer from the band that their own parents are [[GoodParents all lovely people]] who "live in big houses that we bought for them."[[/note]]
52* AlbumIntroTrack: "I Am the Sea".
53* AlliterativeTitle: "'''B'''ell '''B'''oy", "'''S'''ea and '''S'''and". "5:15" is downplayed, being not spelled out.
54* AllThereInTheManual: While ''Quadrophenia'' may be more straightforward than ''Music/{{Tommy}}'', it has much less dialogue and narration. Most people will have read the synopsis included in the liner notes, or seen the movie, before they even begin to figure out the plot.
55** This would present a problem with performing the record live. During the original 1973-74 tour promoting the album, Roger Daltrey would often take time between songs to describe what was going on in the story. For the early dates on the 1996-97 tour, they had Phil Daniels (the actor who played Jimmy in [[Film/{{Quadrophenia}} the film]]) as a live narrator onstage. For the rest of the tour, the narration segments were pre-filmed, with Alex Langdon as Jimmy.
56* AntiHero: Jimmy is actually quite an unpleasant person, being somewhat racist and homophobic (though this may be a case of DeliberateValuesDissonance, particularly as the album's storyline is set in the early-to-mid-1960s[[note]]For what it's worth, Townshend himself has said he is "probably bisexual", noting a liaison with a male journalist and a physical attraction to Music/MickJagger[[/note]]), and at one point he makes comments about desiring to rape a girl. However, the fact that he is likely saying these things because of his depression and drug addiction keep him from being irredeemable for most fans.
57* ArcWords: Being a rock opera, it carries a few recurring themes and motifs, each one supposedly referring to a member of the band.
58** Roger's theme: "Helpless Dancer"
59** Pete's theme: "Love Reign o'er Me"
60** John's theme: "Is It Me, for a Moment?"
61** Keith's theme: "Bell Boy"
62** "Why should I care?" also appears often.
63** A small bit repeats in both "5:15" and "Drowned".
64** This stanza, sung whenever Jimmy tries to reaffirm his Mod identity:
65--->''My jacket's gonna be cut slim and checked''
66--->''Maybe a touch of seersucker with an open neck''
67--->''I ride a GS scooter with my hair cut neat''
68--->''I wear my wartime coat in the wind and sleet.''
69*** Gets expanded in "Sea and Sand", during one of the most conflicting moments of the album.
70* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: "Doctor Jimmy":
71-->''I'm going back soon\
72Home to get the baboon\
73Who [[EyeScream cut up my eye]]\
74[[ClothingDamage Tore up my Levis]]''
75* BeYourself: This is what Jimmy's epiphany at the end amounts to. One of the more mature uses of this trope (interesting, considering its about the trials of youth, and the trope is mostly "for kids").
76* BrokenPedestal: Jimmy finds a mod he used to look up to ("Ace Face") working as a bell boy in a hotel he'd previously smashed the windows at.
77* BuryYourGays: Invoked in "Helpless Dancer":
78-->''If you complain you disappear\
79Just like the lesbians and queers''
80* CallAndResponseSong: The first three lines of "5:15"'s chorus:
81-->"(inside, outside) Leave me alone\
82(inside, outside) Nowhere is home\
83(inside, outside) Where have I been?\
84Out of my brain on the five-fifteen!"
85* CarefulWithThatAxe: At the very end of "I've Had Enough"
86--> I've had enough of trying to '''''LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE'''''
87* ConceptAlbum: See the introduction above.
88* ContinuityNod: Several earlier Who/High Numbers songs are referenced lyrically:
89** "Zoot Suit", "Out in the Street", "I Can't Explain" ("Cut My Hair")
90** "My Generation" ("The Punk and the Godfather", "5:15")
91** "I'm the Face" ("Sea and Sand")
92* CrapsackWorld: Helpless Dancer paints the setting into this, at least to Jimmy.
93* CreatorCameo: Jimmy visits a Who show partway into the plot, as portrayed in "The Punk and the Godfather", which consists of him telling Pete Townshend off, and Townshend replying in kind. Very self-deprecating.
94** There's also Jimmy's Who jacket [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall on the album cover]].
95* DarkReprise: "The Rock" recaps all four of the four themes before going into "Love, Reign O'er Me".
96* DeliberatelyMonochrome: The front and back cover photos, along with the photo book that came with the album, are all in black and white.
97* DrugsAreBad: Jimmy's stash gets him kicked out by his parents, and he spends most of the plot drunk, tripping, or spun. They are also one cause of his severe mood swings. Not explicit, but it's not hard to make a case for either.
98--> ''...leaping along" (slang for amphetamine/speed is "leapers")''
99--> ''But my mother found a box of blues''
100--> ''And there doesn't seem much hope they'll let me stay''
101--> ''Out of my brain on the 5:15/ Out of my brain on the train''
102--> '' (...) Uppers and downers/ Either way blood flows''
103--> ''(...) What is it? I'll take it.../Maybe something stronger could really hold me down''
104--> ''(...) When i'm pilled I don't notice him, he only comes out when I drink my gin''
105* ElevenOClockNumber: "The Rock" is possibly the most energetic of the songs on the album, making way for the finale, "Love, Reign o'er Me".
106* EpicRocking: "Quadrophenia" is 6:14 long, "I've Had Enough" 6:15, not to mention "Doctor Jimmy" (8:37), "The Rock" (6:38) and "Love, Reign o'er Me" (5:49). In live performances, "5:15" could last 10 minutes or longer, courtesy of John Entwistle's bass solo.
107* FadingIntoTheNextSong: A lot of the album is gapless, which is par for the course with {{Rock Opera}}s. There are, of course, gaps for LP side divisions.
108* {{Foreshadowing}}: "Helpless Dancer," "Bell Boy," "Is It Me?" and "Love, Reign O'er Me" are foreshadowed in the {{title track}} and "I Am the Sea".
109* FormerTeenRebel: "Bell Boy", where Jimmy finally realizes how stupid his former rebellious phase actually was.
110* HowWeGotHere: The bulk of the story takes place on a rocky outcropping in the middle of the English Channel, with Jimmy {{flashback}}ing to how he ended up there, taking stock of his life in the process.
111* IAmSong: "The Real Me" and "I'm One"
112* {{Instrumentals}}: The TitleTrack and its reprise, "The Rock". If you ignore the foreshadowing lyrics, "I Am the Sea" can count as one, at least until the end (though that can actually be considered as part of "The Real Me": [[SiameseTwinSongs it's very hard to draw the line]]).
113* InVinoVeritas[=/=]JekyllAndHyde: "Dr. Jimmy" is all over these tropes. The song makes reference to reckless gambling and raping women, but it isn't clear if he actually does this or is [[MadnessMantra just rambling or hallucinating]].
114** "Doctor Jimmy and Mister Jim/When I'm pilled you don't notice him/He only comes out when I drink my gin"
115* ItRunsInTheFamily: When Jimmy asks his mom about his problems in "The Real Me" this is the only thing she tells him.
116* JourneyToFindOneself: Interesting is that Jimmy does this mostly in his head; he sits in the middle of nowhere and takes stock of the past parts of his life.
117* LastNoteNightmare: "I've Had Enough", the last song on the first disc. Out of nowhere comes a loud, distraught "[[BigNo LOOOOOOOOOOVE]]", which fades into cacophonous dockside noise.
118** "Love, Reign o'er Me" has two: the first is Roger Daltrey's explosive "LOOOOOOOOVE!!!" followed by Keith Moon's drum solo finally climaxing in a booming horn sting, accompanied by the sound of shattering glass.
119* LeadBassist: John Entwistle's performance on "The Real Me" has been described as "a bass solo with words". In addition, from 1996 until his death in 2002, he would take a lengthy bass solo (accompanied only by drummer Zak Starkey) during live performances of "5:15".
120* LighterAndSofter: Okay, so the identity crisis, emotional turmoil, and social trials aren't exactly "light" per se, but compared to ''Music/{{Tommy}}'' this album has no torture or rape and an overall happy ending.
121* TheMirrorShowsYourTrueSelf: The album cover has each of the mirrors on Jimmy's scooter showing a different face (one of each member of The Who, each representing one of his personalities).
122* MushroomSamba:
123** "5:15" depicts Jimmy taking the train to Brighton while on an acid trip. IntoxicationEnsues is also implied in the movie version.
124** His mood swing personalities are also fueled by drugs (well, sometimes).
125* NietzscheWannabe: "Helpless Dancer" has a little bit of this.
126* NonIndicativeTitle: While "5:15" lists the time the ideas leave Jimmy's head, the song itself doesn't last that, being 12 seconds short.
127* OneManSong: "Bell Boy", "Doctor Jimmy".
128* PrecisionFStrike: The only f-bomb on the album is used highly effectively in "Doctor Jimmy":
129--> You say she's a virgin, but I'm gonna be the first in.
130--> Her fella's gonna kill me? Oh, ''fucking will he?''
131** From the 1997 live version of "5:15"
132--> Where the ''fuck'' have I been, out of my brain on the 5:15
133** There's another one on a 2013 live version of "The Punk and the Godfather"
134-->We're the slaves of the phony ''fucking'' leaders
135* ProductPlacement: One for Gibson and GS.
136* ProgressiveEraMontage: Since the 2012/13 Quadrophenia And More tour, "The Rock" features one on the video screens, showing a montage of events that have taken place from the era of the story up to the present including UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar, UsefulNotes/RichardNixon's resignation, the deaths of Music/ElvisPresley, Keith Moon and Music/JohnLennon, UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher becoming Prime Minister of England, Prince Charles & Princess Diana's wedding, the Berlin Wall coming down, Desert Storm, Waco, Princess Diana's death, Columbine, the new millennium, 9/11, John Entwistle's death, Hurricane Katrina and the Occupy Wall Street movement.
137* ProgressiveRock: Rather unusually for The Who, though this ''was'' an album released just over half a year after ''Music/TheDarkSideOfTheMoon''.
138* QuestioningTitle: "Is It in My Head?"
139* RecurringRiff: The four "themes" of Jimmy's personalities echo throughout the album.
140* RedemptionInTheRain: Jimmy gets this while standing in the rain.
141* RockOpera: Naturally. However, it does have less dialogue than ''Music/{{Tommy}}'' did.
142* SanitySlippageSong: Every other track. Subverted at the end.
143* SelfDeprecation: In "The Punk Meets The Godfather" Jimmy goes to a Who concert and mocks the band for cannibalizing his lifestyle for their music, including a mocking version of the chorus of "My Generation."
144* SiameseTwinSongs: "I Am the Sea"/"The Real Me".
145* SpecialGuest: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQlXlkGRW7k In 1996, the band performed the record in Hyde Park with a number of special guests]]:
146** [[Music/PinkFloyd David Gilmour]] as The Bus Driver ("The Dirty Jobs") and would also play guitar on several other songs.
147** Creator/TrevorMcDonald as The Newsreader (at the end of "Cut My Hair")
148** Music/GaryGlitter as The Godfather ("The Punk Meets The Godfather", "I've Had Enough")
149** Creator/AdrianEdmondson as Ace Face ("I've Had Enough", "Sea And Sand", "Bell Boy")
150** Creator/StephenFry as the Hotel Manager ("Bell Boy")
151** [[Film/{{Quadrophenia}} Phil Daniels]] as The Narrator
152*** For the 1996/97 tour, guest singers handled the roles of the Godfather (Gary Glitter, PJ Proby) and Ace Face (Music/BillyIdol, Ben Waters).
153*** For the 2012/13 tour, they used archival footage to allow appearances from the late Keith Moon ("Bell Boy") and John Entwistle ("5:15").
154* SplitPersonality: The titular quadrophenia is a play on the older (incorrect) use of the term schizophrenia and "quad" for four. This isn't a strict case though, as the separate "personalities" of Jimmy are implied to be closer to mood swings than anything. Also possibly a play on "quadraphonic", a new style of recording that was popular at the time.
155* StepUpToTheMicrophone: Keith Moon sings co-lead vocals on "Bell Boy", one of very few Who songs where he sings lead.
156** Pete Townshend sings lead on "I'm One" and co-lead on several other songs. Although Roger Daltrey sang it on the album, Pete would usually handle lead vocals on "Drowned" in concert, often performing it solo, just himself and an acoustic guitar.
157** On the 1996/97 and 2012/13 live performances of the album, second guitarist Simon Townshend (Pete's younger brother) would sing the first half of "The Dirty Jobs".
158** Averted with John Entwistle; this was the first Who album since [[Music/MyGeneration their first]] on which he had no lead vocal (as well as the first on which he contributed to none of the songwriting). The cut song "We Close Tonight" featured him and Keith Moon singing lead vocals, but it was removed for being seen as too lighthearted for the album.
159*** In live performances, John would get ADayInTheLimelight via his bass solo near the end of "5:15".
160* ThereAreNoTherapists: {{Averted|Trope}} - Jimmy visits one in "The Real Me." This isn't the first time, either. It doesn't help, and so he visits a vicar and his mom too. [[AdultsAreUseless But then...]]
161* TitleTrack: Though its an {{Instrumental}}.
162* TrainSong: "5.15". The slow beginning of the song symbolizes the train at the station before departure, then picks up tempo with the train in motion, then slows down again near the end to symbolize it arriving at its destination.
163----
164[[TheStinger LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE!!]]

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