My Generation is considered one of the best songs by the British rock group, The Who, and was released as a single on November 5, 1965 and is found on the album of the same name.
The song was a best-seller in the United States and quickly became one of his most recognized songs. It has entered the rock and roll pantheon as one of the most famous and quoted songs of its language; it was ranked by Rolling Stone Magazine as the 11th best song of all time, according to its list of the 100 greatest songs in history.
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Pete Townshend, the band's guitarist, allegedly wrote the song on a train and is said to have been inspired by Mose Allison's "Young man blues" for the musical part.
The lyrics are a call to see how youth has changed, that it wants to be heard and to stop censoring the voice of a future, at that time, that sought change through young people. As Townshend told Rolling stone magazine in 1985 "My Generation is about finding a space in society".
This song marked the musical change experienced in England, where bands appeared that left aside the Yeah Yeah Yeah that years ago made the youth shiver and now looked for guitars and drums as a way to express poetic emotions and musical experiments that would later be essential in the mutation of rock.