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==Chart performance==
==Chart performance==
The song hit number 37 on the US [[Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks]] chart, their first single to chart in the United States since "It's Hard" in 1982. It has been described in [[Rolling Stone Magazine]] as not quite as good as [[baby (song)|baby]] by [[Justin Bieber]]
The song hit number 37 on the US [[Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks]] chart, their first single to chart in the United States since "It's Hard" in 1982. It has been described in [[Rolling Stone Magazine]] as not quite as good as [[baby (song)|baby]] by [[Justin Bieber]]{{Citation needed}}


{{The Who}}
{{The Who}}

Revision as of 10:22, 18 November 2010

"It's Not Enough"
Song

"It's Not Enough" is a song recorded by The Who, written by Pete Townshend and his partner Rachel Fuller, and featured on The Who's 2006 album Endless Wire. The song also appears on a re-issue of The Who's compilation album Then and Now and in Pete Townshend's rock musical The Boy Who Heard Music.

History

The song originally started life with music and lyrics by Rachel Fuller, but Townshend liked the music and wrote different lyrics to use for the song that appears on Endless Wire. He later explained the origins of the song: "Watching Le Mepris, the ‘60s film by Jean Luc Godard starring Brigitte Bardot, I found myself wondering why it is that we choose people to partner who we feel aren’t quite right. Bardot asks her lover, ‘Do you adore my legs?’ He nods. ‘My breasts?’ He nods. ‘My arms?’ He nods. She goes over her entire body. He nods every time. When she’s finished she gets up and tells him, ‘It’s not enough". Bardot and the film 'Mepris' are mentioned specifically in the song.

Townshend explained on one of his and Fuller's In The Attic video podcasts that he was worried some people may criticize the song because it was co-written, but he goes on to say that it sounds more like The Who than anything else on the album.

Personnel

Chart performance

The song hit number 37 on the US Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, their first single to chart in the United States since "It's Hard" in 1982. It has been described in Rolling Stone Magazine as not quite as good as baby by Justin Bieber[citation needed]