The oft-overlooked bass player of one of history's most celebrated rock bands gets a closer look in this biography that draws on his unfinished memoir.
What The Reviewers Say
Jonah Raskin,
New York Journal of Books
What’s appealing about The Ox is that The Who’s bassist wasn’t a truly great rock star. By focusing on Entwistle...Rees is able to tell the story of The Who from the side, as it were. He look at Daltrey and Townshend from a slant, and yet without distorting the picture, including the drugs, affairs, womanizing, marriages, divorces, and the addiction to spending money.
Will Hodgkinson,
The Times (UK)
As it turns out, Entwistle was just as fascinating as his more voluble bandmates. The writing here is prosaic and lacking in flourish, but suited to its subject. Entwistle was the quintessential ordinary man living an extraordinary life.
Jude Rogers,
The Observer (UK)
... this biography feels desperately passe.
Jeffrey Hastings,
Library Journal
Solidly researched and written, and fleshed out with the recollections of Entwistle's son, Chris, this biography of one of the genre's finest bass players and most intriguing personalities will strike a chord with serious fans of classic rock..