The High Numbers did a single for Fontana in July, I'm the Face/Zoot Suit. Both sides of the 45 were written by Meaden, the A-side loosely adapted from Slim Harpo's Got Love If You Want It, a popular cover choice among British bands of the time (including the Kinks and the Yardbirds). The flipside is often said to be similarly based on Country Fool, an obscure New Orleans R&B number by the Showmen, although the resemblance to a previous song is not as blatant as it is with I'm the Face. The lyrics, too, were rather blunt pastiches of mod jargon and sloganeering. Relatively little of the Who's personality came through on the disc. Pete Townshend's guitar in particular bore little resemblance to his power chords and searing feedback on the Who's 1965 singles; the leads on the single were so jazzy and thin that one wonders if they were, in fact, the work of a session musician. In fact, Zoot Suit rather overshadows the routine R&B of the A-side, with its unusual minor-key tune and rushed tempo. In any case, the single went virtually unnoticed upon initial release. The group did record two R&B-soul covers at the same session, Bo Diddley's Here 'Tis and Eddie Holland's Leaving Here, that showed them to better advantage, if still a long way off from their great 1965 power pop recordings. Both of those songs eventually found official release on archival Who compilations.
The High Numbers wisely changed their name back to the Who by November 1964, by which time they had also changed management, replacing Meaden with Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp. Whether this was intentional or not, it also erased any stigma that might have been attached to them as the result of the High Numbers' flop 45, and allowed them to present their first 1965 single, I Can't Explain, as the debut of a brand-new band, the Who. Very rare for a decade, I'm the Face and 'Zoot Suit" appeared on Who compilation albums in the '70s, and later on CD. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi