- Athena (song)
Infobox Single
Name = Athena
Artist =The Who
from Album =It's Hard
B-side = "A Man Is a Man"
Released = 1982
Format =
Recorded = June 1982
Genre = Rock
Length = 3:46
Label =Polydor Records (U.S.)
Warner Bros (U.K.)
Writer =Pete Townshend
Producer =Glyn Johns
Last single = "You"
(1981)
This single = "Athena"
(1982)
Next single = "Eminence Front "
(1982)
Misc = Extra tracklisting
Album =It's Hard
Type = studio
prev_track =
prev_no =
this_track = "Athena"
track_no = 1
next_track = "It's Your Turn"
next_no = 2"Athena" is a song written byPete Townshend and recorded byThe Who . It appears as the first track on the group's final studio album before their dissolution, "It's Hard " (1982). It was released as the first single from that album, achieving moderate chartal success at number 28 on theBillboard Hot 100 , but good airplay onalbum oriented rock and laterclassic rock radio formats, and number 40 on theUK Singles Chart . Along with the second single, "Eminence Front ", "Athena" was one of the two tracks that were well-received on an album generally not regarded very highly by critics and consumers alike.Pete Townshend wrote this song after an encounter with actress
Theresa Russell . He promptly fell in love with her, and his frustration of being rejected is contained in this song. In this context, associated with an issue with a film director, it became a subplot of the much later "The Lifehouse Chronicles ". While the subject of the song is now widely known, Townshend initially changed the title to "Athena" to disguise who the song was really about. And indeed given the lyric andRoger Daltrey 's vocal phrasing it can fairly be interpreted in ironic context ofAthena , Goddess of Wisdom, as well::"A-THEE-na, I had no idea how much I'd NEED her:"In peaceful times I hold her close and I FEED her Regardless of origin and intent, the song chugs along a mid-to-uptempo beat with the musical accent repeatedly placed on the second syllable of the titular name, making for an effective musical hook underpinning
internal rhyme s.
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