My Size

1971 single by John Entwistle From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"My Size" is a song by the English rock musician John Entwistle. The song is the first track on his debut solo studio album Smash Your Head Against the Wall (1971) and ends with the main riff from one of Entwistle's popular compositions for the Who, "Boris the Spider". "My Size" was released as a promotional single in May 1971.

ReleasedMay 1971
RecordedNovember 1970 and January 1971
Quick facts Single by John Entwistle, from the album Smash Your Head Against the Wall ...
"My Size"
Single by John Entwistle
from the album Smash Your Head Against the Wall
B-side"I Believe in Everything"
ReleasedMay 1971
RecordedNovember 1970 and January 1971
StudioTrident Studios (Soho, London)
GenreHard rock
Length3:43
LabelTrack
SongwriterJohn Entwistle
ProducerJohn Entwistle
John Entwistle singles chronology
"I Believe in Everything"
(1971)
"My Size"
(1971)
"I Wonder"
(1972)
Official audio
"My Size" on YouTube
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Background and composition

When Entwistle was asked about the song, he said simply: "'My Size,' was just written in the studio, we wrote the chord progressions and then I went home and composed the tune and the words."[1] In another interview Entwistle called "My Size" a sequel to his 1966 song with the Who, "Boris the Spider". He said, "I wrote it as a sequel to 'Boris the Spider' for our manager. Our manager wanted me to put 'Boris the Spider' on my album. So I wrote 'My Size' and I wrote it in a sort of code so it sounds as if it were being sung about a woman. Then I stuck the ending on it as a clue. It wasn't a very good clue, I suppose."

Release

Entwistle said: "A lot of people thought that 'My Size' from 'Smash Your Head' was actually the new Who single."[2]

The 'My Size' versions on the Sundazed and Repertoire re-releases are completely different. Both of the LPs match the Sundazed version.[3]

Critical reception

When the BBC were reviewing the compilation album So Who's the Bass Player? The Ox Anthology (2005) they said that the sound sounded like a Black Sabbath song, namely "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath".[4]

Personnel

References

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