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Summary

"1921" is a song composed and sung by Pete Townshend of The Who. It appears as the third track on...

Content

"1921" is a song composed and sung by Pete Townshend of The Who. It appears as the third track on the group's first rock opera, Tommy (1969). It is also sometimes known as "You Didn't Hear it". It also appears on the Deluxe Edition of The Who's legendary Live at Leeds album. In the song, Tommy's father, Captain Walker, returns home after being declared missing in action during World War I. When he returns home he discovers that his wife has found a new lover. Together, Capt. and Mrs. Walker murder the lover before the seven-year-old Tommy's eyes. They persuade him that "You didn't hear it/You didn't see it/You won't say nothing to no-one", and Tommy retreats into deafness, dumbness, and blindness as a consequence. In the film version of the song, Pete Townshend changed the time that the song takes place from 1921 to 1951 and instead of Capt. and Mrs. Walker killing the lover, Mrs. Walker and the lover kill Capt. Walker. In the Broadway version of Tommy, the song is renamed as "Twenty-One", and is sung about Tommy's mother's 21st birthday, rather than the year 1921. On the album Pete Townshend takes the main vocal part, however live, Roger Daltrey sings the main vocal part.

Created by: tristan Apr 10, 2007
Last edited by: tristan Apr 10, 2007

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