Like
Who's Missing, this is an assortment of B-sides, UK-only tracks, outtakes, and live cuts from the 1960s and early '70s. Again, there's some notable, even terrific, material here: the fiery 1967 covers of
the Rolling Stones' "The Last Time" and "Under My Thumb," the strange 1968 UK single "Dogs," the heavy R&B of the '65 British B-side "Daddy Rolling Stone." Yet much of the rest of the album is extraneous to all but diehards, like a sluggish 1965 cover of
Martha & the Vandellas' "Motoring,"
Keith Moon's novelty B-side "Wasp Man," or the 1969 instrumental "Dogs, Part 2" (which does have some slick guitar runs and manic drumming). The record's haphazardly sequenced as well. Also,
Who's Missing and
Two's Missing still manage to miss a couple '60s B-sides that
Who fanatics might want (Entwistle's "I've Been Away" and
Keith Moon's "In the City"), although those two cuts are now available on the CD reissue of
A Quick One. In fact, the well-known bootleg
Who's Zoo does a much better job of assembling most of the group's early rarities into two albums.