"I Can See for Miles" was recorded over several different recording sessions. Backing tracks for the song were recorded from May 6 to May 7, 1967, at CBS Studios in London. The vocals and overdubs were recorded at Masters Studio in New York City from August 6 to August 7, 1967. The Who's manager and the song's producer, Kit Lambert, then had the song mixed mastered at Gold Star Studios in Los Angles on September 10, 1967. It was included on their album The Who Sell Out.
"I Can See for Miles" was released as a single on September 18, 1967 in the United States. To promote the new single in the US, The Who appeared on The Smother Brothers Comedy Hour, where they also performed "My Generation." It remains one of The Who's best known television appearances, if not their best known television appearances. Allegedly, Keith Moon bribed a dodgy stagehand to let him put ten times the usual amount of explosives into his drum kit for the explosion at the end of "My Generation." The explosion was so great that Peter Townshend would experience tinnitus afterwards. 'I Can See for Miles" was released in the UK on October 13, 1967, although none of the song's promotion there was quite as, well, explosive as their Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour appearance in the United States.
"I Can See for Miles" peaked at no. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 and at no. 10 on the UK singles chart. It did better in Canada, where it went all the way to no. 4. In the United States, it was the highest ranking Who single to date. While many composers would have been happy with the song's performance on the charts, Pete Townsend was disappointed, to say the least. He later said, "To me it was the ultimate Who record, yet it didn't sell. I spat on the British record buyer."
Regardless, "I Can See for Miles" remains one of The Who's best known songs and the favourite of many fans (it is for me). It would also be the inspiration for a Beatles song. Paul McCartney read a description of the song in an interview with Pete Townsend as The Who's loudest song to date. Paul McCartney then wrote "Helter Skelter," arguably the loudest Beatles song ever recorded.
Without further ado, here is The Who's "I Can See for Miles."



