Live At Eden Project 25 / 07 / 2023
The Who
Live at Eden Project 25/07/2023 is a live album by The Who, released on 29 May 2026 via earMUSIC. It captures the band's performance on 25 July 2023 at Cornwall's Eden Project — the celebrated biome attraction in St. Austell — before an audience of approximately 6,000, backed by the Heart of England Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Keith Levenson. The full live band on the night included guitarist and backing vocalist Simon Townshend, keyboardists Loren Gold and Emily Marshall, bassist Jon Button, drummer Zak Starkey, lead violinist Katie Jacoby, lead cellist Audrey Snyder, and backing vocalist Billy Nicholls. The 24-track, two-hour set is available as a 2CD Digipak, a standard 3LP gatefold, and a limited edition 3LP gatefold pressed on recycled vinyl without plastic shrink wrap — a nod to the Eden Project's environmental ethos — as well as on digital platforms. It is The Who's second orchestral live album, following The Who With Orchestra: Live at Wembley, recorded in 2019 and released in March 2023.
The setlist opens with seven consecutive tracks drawn from Tommy — "Overture," "1921," "Amazing Journey," "Sparks," "The Acid Queen," "Pinball Wizard," and "We're Not Gonna Take It" — before spanning the full breadth of the band's catalogue through "Who Are You," "My Generation," "Won't Get Fooled Again," and the closing "Baba O'Riley." Rarely performed pieces including "Cry If You Want," "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere," and the Quadrophenia suite excerpts "The Real Me," "I'm One," "5:15," "The Rock," and "Love Reign O'er Me" give the record depth beyond a standard hits run-through. Music Republic Magazine awarded the album four out of five stars, praising the orchestral arrangements for deepening rather than overwhelming the songs, singling out "Baba O'Riley" for its "cinematic force" at the finale and "Behind Blue Eyes" for the "fragile melancholy" it gains alongside Daltrey's older voice, and calling it "a moving late-career document from a legendary band still capable of thunder, vulnerability, and grandeur in equal measure."
Live at Eden Project 25/07/2023 is a live album by The Who, released on 29 May 2026 via earMUSIC. It captures the band's performance on 25 July 2023 at Cornwall's Eden Project — the celebrated biome attraction in St. Austell — before an audience of approximately 6,000, backed by the Heart of England Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Keith Levenson. The full live band on the night included guitarist and backing vocalist Simon Townshend, keyboardists Loren Gold and Emily Marshall, bassist Jon Button, drummer Zak Starkey, lead violinist Katie Jacoby, lead cellist Audrey Snyder, and backing vocalist Billy Nicholls. The 24-track, two-hour set is available as a 2CD Digipak, a standard 3LP gatefold, and a limited edition 3LP gatefold pressed on recycled vinyl without plastic shrink wrap — a nod to the Eden Project's environmental ethos — as well as on digital platforms. It is The Who's second orchestral live album, following The Who With Orchestra: Live at Wembley, recorded in 2019 and released in March 2023.
The setlist opens with seven consecutive tracks drawn from Tommy — "Overture," "1921," "Amazing Journey," "Sparks," "The Acid Queen," "Pinball Wizard," and "We're Not Gonna Take It" — before spanning the full breadth of the band's catalogue through "Who Are You," "My Generation," "Won't Get Fooled Again," and the closing "Baba O'Riley." Rarely performed pieces including "Cry If You Want," "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere," and the Quadrophenia suite excerpts "The Real Me," "I'm One," "5:15," "The Rock," and "Love Reign O'er Me" give the record depth beyond a standard hits run-through. Music Republic Magazine awarded the album four out of five stars, praising the orchestral arrangements for deepening rather than overwhelming the songs, singling out "Baba O'Riley" for its "cinematic force" at the finale and "Behind Blue Eyes" for the "fragile melancholy" it gains alongside Daltrey's older voice, and calling it "a moving late-career document from a legendary band still capable of thunder, vulnerability, and grandeur in equal measure."
Live at Eden Project 25/07/2023 is a live album by The Who, released on 29 May 2026 via earMUSIC. It captures the band's performance on 25 July 2023 at Cornwall's Eden Project — the celebrated biome attraction in St. Austell — before an audience of approximately 6,000, backed by the Heart of England Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Keith Levenson. The full live band on the night included guitarist and backing vocalist Simon Townshend, keyboardists Loren Gold and Emily Marshall, bassist Jon Button, drummer Zak Starkey, lead violinist Katie Jacoby, lead cellist Audrey Snyder, and backing vocalist Billy Nicholls. The 24-track, two-hour set is available as a 2CD Digipak, a standard 3LP gatefold, and a limited edition 3LP gatefold pressed on recycled vinyl without plastic shrink wrap — a nod to the Eden Project's environmental ethos — as well as on digital platforms. It is The Who's second orchestral live album, following The Who With Orchestra: Live at Wembley, recorded in 2019 and released in March 2023.
The setlist opens with seven consecutive tracks drawn from Tommy — "Overture," "1921," "Amazing Journey," "Sparks," "The Acid Queen," "Pinball Wizard," and "We're Not Gonna Take It" — before spanning the full breadth of the band's catalogue through "Who Are You," "My Generation," "Won't Get Fooled Again," and the closing "Baba O'Riley." Rarely performed pieces including "Cry If You Want," "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere," and the Quadrophenia suite excerpts "The Real Me," "I'm One," "5:15," "The Rock," and "Love Reign O'er Me" give the record depth beyond a standard hits run-through. Music Republic Magazine awarded the album four out of five stars, praising the orchestral arrangements for deepening rather than overwhelming the songs, singling out "Baba O'Riley" for its "cinematic force" at the finale and "Behind Blue Eyes" for the "fragile melancholy" it gains alongside Daltrey's older voice, and calling it "a moving late-career document from a legendary band still capable of thunder, vulnerability, and grandeur in equal measure."
Live At Eden Project 25 / 07 / 2023
The Who
Live at Eden Project 25/07/2023 is a live album by The Who, released on 29 May 2026 via earMUSIC. It captures the band's performance on 25 July 2023 at Cornwall's Eden Project — the celebrated biome attraction in St. Austell — before an audience of approximately 6,000, backed by the Heart of England Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Keith Levenson. The full live band on the night included guitarist and backing vocalist Simon Townshend, keyboardists Loren Gold and Emily Marshall, bassist Jon Button, drummer Zak Starkey, lead violinist Katie Jacoby, lead cellist Audrey Snyder, and backing vocalist Billy Nicholls. The 24-track, two-hour set is available as a 2CD Digipak, a standard 3LP gatefold, and a limited edition 3LP gatefold pressed on recycled vinyl without plastic shrink wrap — a nod to the Eden Project's environmental ethos — as well as on digital platforms. It is The Who's second orchestral live album, following The Who With Orchestra: Live at Wembley, recorded in 2019 and released in March 2023.
The setlist opens with seven consecutive tracks drawn from Tommy — "Overture," "1921," "Amazing Journey," "Sparks," "The Acid Queen," "Pinball Wizard," and "We're Not Gonna Take It" — before spanning the full breadth of the band's catalogue through "Who Are You," "My Generation," "Won't Get Fooled Again," and the closing "Baba O'Riley." Rarely performed pieces including "Cry If You Want," "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere," and the Quadrophenia suite excerpts "The Real Me," "I'm One," "5:15," "The Rock," and "Love Reign O'er Me" give the record depth beyond a standard hits run-through. Music Republic Magazine awarded the album four out of five stars, praising the orchestral arrangements for deepening rather than overwhelming the songs, singling out "Baba O'Riley" for its "cinematic force" at the finale and "Behind Blue Eyes" for the "fragile melancholy" it gains alongside Daltrey's older voice, and calling it "a moving late-career document from a legendary band still capable of thunder, vulnerability, and grandeur in equal measure."
Live at Eden Project 25/07/2023 is a live album by The Who, released on 29 May 2026 via earMUSIC. It captures the band's performance on 25 July 2023 at Cornwall's Eden Project — the celebrated biome attraction in St. Austell — before an audience of approximately 6,000, backed by the Heart of England Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Keith Levenson. The full live band on the night included guitarist and backing vocalist Simon Townshend, keyboardists Loren Gold and Emily Marshall, bassist Jon Button, drummer Zak Starkey, lead violinist Katie Jacoby, lead cellist Audrey Snyder, and backing vocalist Billy Nicholls. The 24-track, two-hour set is available as a 2CD Digipak, a standard 3LP gatefold, and a limited edition 3LP gatefold pressed on recycled vinyl without plastic shrink wrap — a nod to the Eden Project's environmental ethos — as well as on digital platforms. It is The Who's second orchestral live album, following The Who With Orchestra: Live at Wembley, recorded in 2019 and released in March 2023.
The setlist opens with seven consecutive tracks drawn from Tommy — "Overture," "1921," "Amazing Journey," "Sparks," "The Acid Queen," "Pinball Wizard," and "We're Not Gonna Take It" — before spanning the full breadth of the band's catalogue through "Who Are You," "My Generation," "Won't Get Fooled Again," and the closing "Baba O'Riley." Rarely performed pieces including "Cry If You Want," "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere," and the Quadrophenia suite excerpts "The Real Me," "I'm One," "5:15," "The Rock," and "Love Reign O'er Me" give the record depth beyond a standard hits run-through. Music Republic Magazine awarded the album four out of five stars, praising the orchestral arrangements for deepening rather than overwhelming the songs, singling out "Baba O'Riley" for its "cinematic force" at the finale and "Behind Blue Eyes" for the "fragile melancholy" it gains alongside Daltrey's older voice, and calling it "a moving late-career document from a legendary band still capable of thunder, vulnerability, and grandeur in equal measure."
Live at Eden Project 25/07/2023 is a live album by The Who, released on 29 May 2026 via earMUSIC. It captures the band's performance on 25 July 2023 at Cornwall's Eden Project — the celebrated biome attraction in St. Austell — before an audience of approximately 6,000, backed by the Heart of England Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Keith Levenson. The full live band on the night included guitarist and backing vocalist Simon Townshend, keyboardists Loren Gold and Emily Marshall, bassist Jon Button, drummer Zak Starkey, lead violinist Katie Jacoby, lead cellist Audrey Snyder, and backing vocalist Billy Nicholls. The 24-track, two-hour set is available as a 2CD Digipak, a standard 3LP gatefold, and a limited edition 3LP gatefold pressed on recycled vinyl without plastic shrink wrap — a nod to the Eden Project's environmental ethos — as well as on digital platforms. It is The Who's second orchestral live album, following The Who With Orchestra: Live at Wembley, recorded in 2019 and released in March 2023.
The setlist opens with seven consecutive tracks drawn from Tommy — "Overture," "1921," "Amazing Journey," "Sparks," "The Acid Queen," "Pinball Wizard," and "We're Not Gonna Take It" — before spanning the full breadth of the band's catalogue through "Who Are You," "My Generation," "Won't Get Fooled Again," and the closing "Baba O'Riley." Rarely performed pieces including "Cry If You Want," "Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere," and the Quadrophenia suite excerpts "The Real Me," "I'm One," "5:15," "The Rock," and "Love Reign O'er Me" give the record depth beyond a standard hits run-through. Music Republic Magazine awarded the album four out of five stars, praising the orchestral arrangements for deepening rather than overwhelming the songs, singling out "Baba O'Riley" for its "cinematic force" at the finale and "Behind Blue Eyes" for the "fragile melancholy" it gains alongside Daltrey's older voice, and calling it "a moving late-career document from a legendary band still capable of thunder, vulnerability, and grandeur in equal measure."
