![]() ![]() “It’s brutal going deaf,” he says, briefly removing them and laying them on the table. ![]() And I should suggest it’s taken on a very similar slant…”Ĭompact and lithe, Daltrey, who turned 77 in March, retains a restless physical energy but his hair is sandy grey, he wears prescription sunglasses and has two discreet hearing aids. The last people to burn books were the Nazis. Not burn things, or disappear things, because then it can all happen again. “Do they really think eradicating history – toppling statues and burning books – is going to solve anything? You should take the past as an example to make the point of why something was wrong. He is not impressed with the “woke generation”, either. I still haven’t changed my mind that we did the right thing. “Brexit hasn’t f- touring,” he insists. “We knew it would be difficult, but it will sort itself out. And, of course, Brexit, of which Daltrey has been quite an isolated voice of support within an industry angered by its impact on European touring. He has trenchant opinions about everything, expressed in pungent language delivered in an accent that’s all nasal tones and dropped aitches.ĭuring a couple of lively hours of conversation, he makes brusque, argumentative digressions into politics, taxation, history, charity, Covid, unions, wages and climate change. If we all take care of each other, we’ll be all right.”ĭaltrey is a fascinating character, a charismatic multimillionaire veteran rock superstar with the belligerent humour of a London cabbie. “What do you do? You roll yourself into a ball and say life’s over, or you push yourself out there. “Nothing in the world makes sense to me any more,” he says. He grumbles enthusiastically, swears colourfully. He is furious at the Government for its failure to provide adequate support and insurance for the music business throughout the pandemic now, he’s stumping up his own cash for a tour on which he fears, given the precariousness of the Covid situation, “they could pull the plug any minute”. “And secondly, to get our road crew and musicians working, because they’ve had a tough 18 months.” “There’s two purposes: one is to keep me singing, fit, out of the house,” he says. Gotta use it or lose it.”ĭaltrey is embarking on a short solo tour next month, backed by the Who’s live band. “Somewhere in there is a load of gigs that we hope to get to. I didn't see the car in the pool, but I saw the bill.“Like roaring into a thick fog at 300 miles an hour,” is how Roger Daltrey describes his imminent return to live performance for the first time in months. "Their story was we had driven this Lincoln Continental up flights of stairs into the swimming pool. "The next day I woke up and Keith has a tooth missing. Speaking to America's AXS TV, he said: "Things started to get out of hand, and I left. Singer Roger remains bewildered by Keith's legendary 21st birthday party at the Holiday Inn in Flint, Michigan. "And he would be put in the worst hotel room that needed decorating each time, and we paid for it." He continued: "And when we came back, the manager would go 'Ah Mr Moon'. "We would leave everything we would be kosher." "We stayed at a hotel in New York called the Navarro, and I swear to you I reckon that Keith Moon decorated every room in that hotel because he smashed one, we'd pay in cash, the manager would claim the insurance. Roger admitted: "The manager used to love us because we used to pay them in cash, and then they claimed in on the insurance. Neil 'Razor' Ruddock drops stone and a half after serious health warnings from doctors ![]()
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