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[rattling]
4
00:00:20,954 --> 00:00:22,890
[liquid pouring]
5
00:00:25,093 --> 00:00:26,694
[door shuts]
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[ice clinking in glass]
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[footsteps]
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[static]
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00:00:39,273 --> 00:00:41,275
[footsteps]
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00:00:57,191 --> 00:00:58,959
[paper rustling]
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[footsteps]
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00:01:07,568 --> 00:01:09,270
[footsteps]
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00:01:17,911 --> 00:01:19,847
["Happy Jack" plays]
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00:01:19,913 --> 00:01:21,849
[music stops]
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00:01:21,915 --> 00:01:24,152
["Pinball Wizard" plays]
16
00:01:24,218 --> 00:01:26,554
["Squeeze Box" plays]
17
00:01:28,055 --> 00:01:30,524
* I'm not tryin' to cause
A big sensation *
18
00:01:30,591 --> 00:01:32,793
* Talking 'bout my generation *
19
00:01:34,895 --> 00:01:36,664
[songs overlapping]
20
00:01:45,273 --> 00:01:47,975
[Roger Daltrey]
Whatever happened that day
when Keith Moon joined
21
00:01:48,041 --> 00:01:50,644
John, Pete and myself
on the stage,
22
00:01:50,711 --> 00:01:52,380
something happened.
23
00:01:52,446 --> 00:01:55,048
There are billions of people
on this planet.
24
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What the fuck put four
25
00:01:58,386 --> 00:02:00,388
total individuals together
26
00:02:00,454 --> 00:02:03,257
on the stage in Greenford
to make this music?
27
00:02:03,324 --> 00:02:05,025
What the fuck did that?
28
00:02:05,092 --> 00:02:07,295
["Won't Get Fooled Again" plays]
29
00:02:19,240 --> 00:02:21,041
[song ends]
30
00:02:21,108 --> 00:02:23,043
[audience cheering, fades]
31
00:02:26,314 --> 00:02:28,282
[Klaxon wails]
32
00:02:30,718 --> 00:02:32,820
[violin plays]
33
00:02:37,625 --> 00:02:39,327
[big band tune plays]
34
00:02:46,700 --> 00:02:50,771
[Pete Townshend]
Towards the end of the war,
everything was secret.
35
00:02:50,838 --> 00:02:52,773
You never knew whether
you were winning or losing,
36
00:02:52,840 --> 00:02:56,844
and most of the time they
were saying you're winning
when you felt you were losing.
37
00:03:01,615 --> 00:03:04,051
I was born into that world.
38
00:03:04,117 --> 00:03:08,356
I was born in the hour
that Albert Speer was arrested.
39
00:03:08,422 --> 00:03:10,791
He was Hitler's
premiere architect.
40
00:03:10,858 --> 00:03:13,961
I don't mean war architect.
He was an actual architect.
41
00:03:14,027 --> 00:03:16,397
My father got
these two messages.
42
00:03:16,464 --> 00:03:19,066
One was "Speer's been captured,"
and the other was,
43
00:03:19,132 --> 00:03:21,969
"It's a boy, Mr. Townshend."
44
00:03:23,971 --> 00:03:27,575
[Daltrey]
When I think about my childhood
in the late '40s, '50s,
45
00:03:27,641 --> 00:03:29,643
it's almost like the world
was black-and-white.
46
00:03:29,710 --> 00:03:30,978
It is very weird.
47
00:03:31,044 --> 00:03:32,946
Very Spartan living.
48
00:03:33,013 --> 00:03:35,215
We were still on
food rationing.
49
00:03:35,283 --> 00:03:36,684
No cars in the street.
50
00:03:38,652 --> 00:03:40,988
[John Entwistle]
After the war, there was
bombed-out buildings
51
00:03:41,054 --> 00:03:43,291
that had loads of bricks,
so we didn't need Lego.
52
00:03:43,357 --> 00:03:45,158
We had the real thing.
53
00:03:45,225 --> 00:03:47,528
[Townshend]
Practically everybody
I know that I grew up with,
54
00:03:47,595 --> 00:03:50,631
if they were wild and crazy
and weird, or in a band,
55
00:03:50,698 --> 00:03:54,335
the chances were that they had
some weird shit happen to them
when they were kids.
56
00:03:54,402 --> 00:03:57,805
[big band music plays]
57
00:03:57,871 --> 00:04:00,908
My parents were both
working dance-band musicians,
58
00:04:00,974 --> 00:04:04,978
I grew up with
the music of my father,
which was the Basie Band,
59
00:04:05,045 --> 00:04:08,316
the Ellington Band,
and great singers
like Sarah Vaughan
60
00:04:08,382 --> 00:04:10,384
and Sinatra
and Ella Fitzgerald.
61
00:04:10,451 --> 00:04:13,020
And I felt
I couldn't even begin
62
00:04:13,086 --> 00:04:15,789
to emulate
or occupy their territory.
63
00:04:15,856 --> 00:04:19,660
[up-tempo jazz plays]
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00:04:19,727 --> 00:04:22,963
We were all interested
in traditional jazz at the time.
65
00:04:23,030 --> 00:04:25,132
To me, trad jazz was something
66
00:04:25,198 --> 00:04:28,636
that was already a rebellious
threat to the kind of serene
67
00:04:28,702 --> 00:04:31,872
dance-hall dance music
that my father played.
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00:04:31,939 --> 00:04:36,143
[male narrator] The first
connection between the four
talents of The Whocame in 1959,
69
00:04:36,209 --> 00:04:38,679
at a West London boys' school.
70
00:04:41,482 --> 00:04:44,318
[Townshend] I met John
at Acton County Grammar School.
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00:04:44,385 --> 00:04:46,587
Big guy. Funny.
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00:04:46,654 --> 00:04:48,522
Very sharply dressed.
73
00:04:48,589 --> 00:04:53,126
John and Pete didn't really
get to know one another well
74
00:04:53,193 --> 00:04:56,430
until they started up
playing instruments
together.
75
00:04:56,497 --> 00:04:59,433
[Townshend] Right from
the beginning and right
the way through our life,
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00:04:59,500 --> 00:05:01,502
he was a great
musical ally.
77
00:05:01,569 --> 00:05:04,071
[rock plays]
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00:05:08,876 --> 00:05:10,978
-Right over here,
and you're, um--
-John.
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00:05:11,044 --> 00:05:14,247
You're John?
And you're from--
London too.
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00:05:14,314 --> 00:05:15,616
From London too?
Yeah.
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00:05:15,683 --> 00:05:17,885
[rock plays]
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00:05:26,059 --> 00:05:28,095
[man] He was calling himself
John Allison
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00:05:28,161 --> 00:05:30,230
because his girlfriend was,
of course, called Allison.
84
00:05:34,735 --> 00:05:37,037
We thought "Entwistle"
was a really strange name
85
00:05:37,104 --> 00:05:38,539
for a band member.
86
00:05:38,606 --> 00:05:41,709
And we tried John Brown,
and we thought, well, no.
87
00:05:41,775 --> 00:05:43,611
He's John Entwistle.
88
00:05:43,677 --> 00:05:45,779
["Summertime Blues" plays]
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00:05:48,916 --> 00:05:51,318
The Who wouldn't have been
The Who without Entwistle.
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00:05:53,721 --> 00:05:55,723
He would fill the sound up
with the bass.
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00:05:57,157 --> 00:05:59,359
If you actually listen
to any Who record
92
00:05:59,427 --> 00:06:02,262
and you isolate the bass,
it's pretty astonishing
what he's doing.
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00:06:02,329 --> 00:06:04,565
It's nothing to do with what
a normal bass player would do.
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00:06:04,632 --> 00:06:09,069
* I'm a-gonna raise a fuss
I'm a-gonna raise a holler *
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00:06:12,239 --> 00:06:13,674
Entwistle stood still.
96
00:06:13,741 --> 00:06:16,644
[man]
You had Pete swinging his arm
around like a windmill.
97
00:06:16,710 --> 00:06:19,680
You had Roger throwing
his microphone around
all over the place.
98
00:06:19,747 --> 00:06:23,584
Keith smacking away
at the drums, and Dad stood away
in the corner playing quietly.
99
00:06:23,651 --> 00:06:27,921
* The boss said *
* No dice, son
You gotta work late *
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00:06:27,988 --> 00:06:29,857
[woman]
I used to get cross
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00:06:29,923 --> 00:06:32,426
that they didn't show John
so much on the television.
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00:06:32,493 --> 00:06:35,162
The cameras were always
on Pete and Roge.
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00:06:40,233 --> 00:06:44,271
He was, like,
the central point in
the spinning world, you know?
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00:06:46,774 --> 00:06:49,943
I think a lot of people
don't understand is that
what he was doing
105
00:06:50,010 --> 00:06:53,413
is he was playing
like a Bach organ.
106
00:06:53,481 --> 00:06:56,617
It was huge,
massive, rich sound.
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00:06:59,520 --> 00:07:01,922
So I used to find my way
inside there.
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00:07:01,989 --> 00:07:04,958
I used to sit with John
and sit inside,
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00:07:05,025 --> 00:07:07,895
and he would follow me
and support me,
and we'd play together.
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00:07:11,932 --> 00:07:15,636
[man] John had such
facility as a player,
and really very unique.
111
00:07:15,703 --> 00:07:19,840
I don't think anyone had really
gone into lead bass playing.
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00:07:24,478 --> 00:07:26,680
[man]
He wasn't actually a quiet guy.
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00:07:26,747 --> 00:07:29,149
He was just a very sardonic guy.
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00:07:29,216 --> 00:07:31,652
Very cynical.
He was very funny.
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00:07:31,719 --> 00:07:33,821
But in that sort of
laid-back way.
116
00:07:35,656 --> 00:07:37,891
[man]
Entwistle was uncompromising
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00:07:37,958 --> 00:07:40,528
in leading his own life,
you know.
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00:07:40,594 --> 00:07:42,429
[Johns]
Afraid John takes after me.
119
00:07:42,496 --> 00:07:45,265
I like music, dancing,
enjoying myself.
120
00:07:45,332 --> 00:07:48,401
Drinking.
I love partying.
121
00:07:50,971 --> 00:07:53,206
[Townshend]
I never, ever felt that
122
00:07:53,273 --> 00:07:58,579
John had any addictive problems
at all, except one,
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00:07:58,646 --> 00:08:00,548
which began with an H.
124
00:08:00,614 --> 00:08:02,616
It's a big shop in London
called Harrods.
125
00:08:02,683 --> 00:08:04,384
That was his one addiction.
126
00:08:04,451 --> 00:08:06,987
[Wise]
He could never buy
one pair of shoes.
127
00:08:07,054 --> 00:08:10,423
He always bought a dozen
in each color, and the shirts
and the trousers.
128
00:08:10,490 --> 00:08:12,292
He was certainly well dressed.
129
00:08:17,565 --> 00:08:20,033
Don't know about that skeleton
fuckin' leather thing though
130
00:08:20,100 --> 00:08:22,469
that John Entwistle was--
What's all that about?
131
00:08:22,536 --> 00:08:24,905
[jazz plays]
132
00:08:24,972 --> 00:08:27,608
[Johns] He was very musical
right from the age of three.
133
00:08:27,675 --> 00:08:30,711
He knew all the pop songs
that were in the charts,
134
00:08:30,778 --> 00:08:32,445
and he'd sing for hours.
135
00:08:32,512 --> 00:08:36,449
My first date with John was
to go to a Boys' Brigade thing
136
00:08:36,516 --> 00:08:38,018
at the Albert Hall.
137
00:08:38,085 --> 00:08:40,020
He used to play the bugle.
138
00:08:40,087 --> 00:08:42,022
[Johns]
He joined the school orchestra.
139
00:08:42,089 --> 00:08:45,793
He wanted to play the trumpet,
but they didn't have any left.
140
00:08:45,859 --> 00:08:48,395
The only instrument left
was the French horn.
141
00:08:50,397 --> 00:08:52,332
He practiced in the loo.
142
00:08:52,399 --> 00:08:54,534
He became quite proficient.
143
00:08:54,602 --> 00:08:56,870
[Daltrey] John Entwistle
was the only one of us
144
00:08:56,937 --> 00:08:59,973
that kind of had
any musical training at all.
145
00:09:00,040 --> 00:09:03,611
[Townshend]
He made his own first bass
with his own hands, you know.
146
00:09:03,677 --> 00:09:07,380
What he realized was
that he had the power
147
00:09:07,447 --> 00:09:10,784
to change
the fuckin' instrument.
148
00:09:10,851 --> 00:09:12,953
You know,
you don't change the trumpet.
149
00:09:13,020 --> 00:09:15,222
But the bass guitar
was relatively new.
150
00:09:15,288 --> 00:09:17,791
He started to
play it differently,
hold it differently.
151
00:09:17,858 --> 00:09:21,228
Being on stage with a guitar,
with a big amplifier,
152
00:09:21,294 --> 00:09:23,196
it became his voice.
153
00:09:30,103 --> 00:09:33,006
[Daltrey]
I was walking down the road
one day, coming home from work.
154
00:09:33,073 --> 00:09:35,175
I worked in
a sheet-metal work factory.
155
00:09:35,242 --> 00:09:39,179
I noticed this guy coming
towards me who I recognized
from being at school.
156
00:09:39,246 --> 00:09:42,883
And across his shoulder,
he's got this strange-looking
instrument.
157
00:09:42,950 --> 00:09:46,754
So I said to him,
you know, stupidly,
"What you got there?"
158
00:09:46,820 --> 00:09:48,488
[laughs]
He said, "It's a bass."
159
00:09:48,555 --> 00:09:50,824
They all went
to the same school.
160
00:09:50,891 --> 00:09:53,460
Roger was at the same school,
but he got expelled.
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00:09:53,526 --> 00:09:56,129
[Wise]
I think he was accused of
setting fire to the school.
162
00:09:56,196 --> 00:09:58,331
Roger was a bit of a tearaway.
163
00:09:58,398 --> 00:10:02,135
It's been said that
I was a bully later on
in my school career,
164
00:10:02,202 --> 00:10:05,005
but I don't think
I actually was.
165
00:10:05,072 --> 00:10:06,606
I just loved to fight.
166
00:10:07,908 --> 00:10:09,409
Still do.
167
00:10:09,476 --> 00:10:11,144
[Townshend]
When I first met Roger,
168
00:10:11,211 --> 00:10:13,613
he was one of the most
powerful, charismatic,
169
00:10:13,681 --> 00:10:16,049
and literally powerful men
I'd ever come across.
170
00:10:16,116 --> 00:10:18,318
You know,
he was like Elvis Presley.
171
00:10:19,619 --> 00:10:22,856
[Daltrey] Elvis, to me,
was the guy I wanted to be.
172
00:10:22,923 --> 00:10:26,393
But realistically,
the guy who showed me
173
00:10:26,459 --> 00:10:29,730
that I could, instead of
just dreaming about this
174
00:10:29,797 --> 00:10:33,433
could actually
go out there and do it,
was a guy called Lonnie Donegan.
175
00:10:33,500 --> 00:10:35,969
[skiffle music plays]
176
00:10:36,036 --> 00:10:40,607
* Sweet 16, goes to church
Just to see the boys *
177
00:10:40,674 --> 00:10:43,510
Lonnie Donegan was a big
influence on a lot of people.
178
00:10:43,576 --> 00:10:46,413
It's the rhythm, the beat
and the freshness of it.
179
00:10:46,479 --> 00:10:48,882
* She's only putting on
The style *
180
00:10:48,949 --> 00:10:53,486
* Yeah, putting on the agony
Putting on the style *
181
00:10:53,553 --> 00:10:56,456
It had that kind of
rock-and-roll
sort of pace to it.
182
00:10:56,523 --> 00:10:58,759
Skiffle is really basically
183
00:10:58,826 --> 00:11:00,794
early American folk songs.
184
00:11:00,861 --> 00:11:03,096
[Shaw] It was so easy.
Anyone could make
a skiffle group.
185
00:11:03,163 --> 00:11:05,165
You could do it
with home objects.
186
00:11:05,232 --> 00:11:07,567
For drums,
we had an old washing board.
187
00:11:07,634 --> 00:11:10,170
Tea chest bass,
which is basically a tea chest
188
00:11:10,237 --> 00:11:12,239
with a piece of string
and a broomstick.
189
00:11:12,305 --> 00:11:15,743
It lifted the music from,
like, big bands
190
00:11:15,809 --> 00:11:18,378
into people's parlors.
191
00:11:18,445 --> 00:11:19,947
You could do it yourself, like.
192
00:11:20,013 --> 00:11:22,549
Every street in Shepherd's Bush
had it's own skiffle group.
193
00:11:22,615 --> 00:11:26,653
[narrator]
On Fielding Road, Roger Daltrey
founded The Detours
194
00:11:26,720 --> 00:11:30,223
with a guitar he made himself
at the sheet-metal factory.
195
00:11:30,290 --> 00:11:32,893
At the age of 17 or 18,
you know,
196
00:11:32,960 --> 00:11:35,062
he was the king
of the neighborhood.
197
00:11:36,997 --> 00:11:39,532
So anyway, I'm walking home
from work one night,
and immediately
198
00:11:39,599 --> 00:11:41,735
I kind of felt a bonding
with this guy.
199
00:11:41,802 --> 00:11:45,338
So I said, "You in a band?"
And he said, "Yeah,
I'm in a band."
200
00:11:45,405 --> 00:11:47,540
I said,
"Have you got any work?"
201
00:11:47,607 --> 00:11:50,243
He said, "No."
I said, "Well, we have."
202
00:11:50,310 --> 00:11:53,013
I said, "Do you
get paid for your work?"
He said, "No."
203
00:11:53,080 --> 00:11:54,915
I said, "We do."
204
00:11:54,982 --> 00:11:56,716
I was lying.
[chuckles]
205
00:11:56,784 --> 00:12:00,087
I said, "We're looking
for a bass player.
Would you like to join?"
206
00:12:01,621 --> 00:12:04,925
Shortly after, Reg Bowen
on rhythm guitar left the band,
207
00:12:04,992 --> 00:12:07,828
and John said,
"Well, I know someone
who's a good rhythm player."
208
00:12:07,895 --> 00:12:09,897
So we said,
"Well, bring him along."
209
00:12:11,731 --> 00:12:14,434
John was very important for me
because he never let me go.
210
00:12:14,501 --> 00:12:17,437
He could've done.
A couple of the other guys
did let me go.
211
00:12:17,504 --> 00:12:20,207
John was very encouraging to me
and nurturing
212
00:12:20,273 --> 00:12:23,811
and used to constantly
say to me, "No, you're
a good musician."
213
00:12:23,877 --> 00:12:26,780
He was just vital to me
in those days.
214
00:12:28,348 --> 00:12:32,519
[narrator] By 1962,
The Detours were playing pubs
as a five-piece--
215
00:12:32,752 --> 00:12:35,889
John on bass,
Doug Sandom on the drums,
216
00:12:35,956 --> 00:12:38,926
Pete played rhythm guitar,
Colin Dawson singing,
217
00:12:38,992 --> 00:12:40,861
Roger playing lead guitar.
218
00:12:41,028 --> 00:12:43,797
It was Roger's band.
The Detours were Roger's band.
219
00:12:44,031 --> 00:12:46,433
Roger was the driving force.
Roger supplied all the energy,
220
00:12:46,499 --> 00:12:49,302
and he drove the van
and picked people up
and arranged everything.
221
00:12:49,369 --> 00:12:51,872
* Some way someday *
222
00:12:51,939 --> 00:12:53,807
* I'll find a way *
223
00:12:53,874 --> 00:12:56,977
* To make you see my way *
224
00:12:57,044 --> 00:12:59,412
[narrator] In '63,
Roger gave up the guitar,
225
00:12:59,479 --> 00:13:02,049
fired the singer
and took over as front man.
226
00:13:02,115 --> 00:13:06,019
When there was just
the three of us as a band--
227
00:13:06,086 --> 00:13:08,989
just two instruments,
Pete and John--
228
00:13:09,056 --> 00:13:11,925
the only thing with strings
was Pete and John--
229
00:13:11,992 --> 00:13:14,928
and I remember saying to him,
"It sounds fucking great."
230
00:13:15,662 --> 00:13:19,399
* You see my way *
231
00:13:20,901 --> 00:13:23,871
[Muddy Waters]
* Oh, yeah *
232
00:13:23,937 --> 00:13:26,339
[electric blues guitar plays]
233
00:13:26,406 --> 00:13:28,108
* Oh, yeah *
234
00:13:30,143 --> 00:13:34,814
* Everything gon' be all right
This mornin' *
235
00:13:34,882 --> 00:13:36,749
["Mannish Boy" plays]
236
00:13:39,887 --> 00:13:43,156
[Townshend] The other guys
in the band were working,
and I was at art school.
237
00:13:43,223 --> 00:13:45,558
I was on a grant.
I was having an easy life.
238
00:13:45,625 --> 00:13:47,928
I was smoking dope,
listening to, you know, records.
239
00:13:47,995 --> 00:13:50,864
[Barnes] I met Pete
when we were in art school,
240
00:13:50,931 --> 00:13:53,433
and I didn't even know
he was in a band.
241
00:13:53,500 --> 00:13:56,636
We'd got this flat
that had belonged to
242
00:13:56,703 --> 00:13:59,372
this American guy, Tom Wright.
243
00:13:59,439 --> 00:14:03,676
Tom Wright had a huge
blues archive from the States.
244
00:14:05,445 --> 00:14:07,847
* Now, when I was a young boy *
245
00:14:07,915 --> 00:14:10,417
* At the age of five *
246
00:14:10,483 --> 00:14:12,719
All that early blues stuff--
John Lee Hooker,
247
00:14:12,785 --> 00:14:14,554
Howlin' Wolf, Jimmy Reed.
248
00:14:14,621 --> 00:14:17,357
["Shame Shame Shame" plays]
249
00:14:21,328 --> 00:14:24,064
[Stamp] All those young kids
loved the blues,
250
00:14:24,131 --> 00:14:27,800
because the working classes
are in a similar
sociological position,
251
00:14:27,867 --> 00:14:30,503
you know what I mean,
to the blacks in America.
252
00:14:30,570 --> 00:14:32,605
My father was in the war.
253
00:14:32,672 --> 00:14:35,442
His ship gets torpedoed.
254
00:14:35,508 --> 00:14:38,645
My mother, who is pregnant,
goes to the shipping office,
255
00:14:38,711 --> 00:14:41,448
as she did every week,
to get his salary.
256
00:14:41,514 --> 00:14:44,784
And they say,
"Oh, no, there's no salary
this week, Mrs. Stamp.
257
00:14:44,851 --> 00:14:46,619
The ship's gone down."
258
00:14:48,989 --> 00:14:52,259
Right? So that was the status
of the working class, right?
259
00:14:52,325 --> 00:14:56,229
[Jimmy Reed]
* Well, it's a shame
Shame, shame *
260
00:14:56,296 --> 00:14:59,632
* Shame, shame on you *
261
00:14:59,699 --> 00:15:02,869
We identified
with American blues
262
00:15:02,936 --> 00:15:05,672
and those early
black American artists.
263
00:15:05,738 --> 00:15:08,408
We started listening to that
and thought, "This is great."
264
00:15:08,475 --> 00:15:11,311
And we started
playing the blues.
I played the harmonica.
265
00:15:15,715 --> 00:15:18,151
Through that music,
we became aware
266
00:15:18,218 --> 00:15:21,321
of the limitations
of our drummer.
267
00:15:21,388 --> 00:15:24,391
[narrator] Doug Sandom
was fired in April of 1964.
268
00:15:24,457 --> 00:15:27,794
* Oh, it's a shame on you *
269
00:15:30,830 --> 00:15:32,966
[blues rock plays]
270
00:15:37,704 --> 00:15:41,308
[Daltrey] We got a session
drummer in for a couple
of gigs we had lined up.
271
00:15:41,374 --> 00:15:44,877
And we were playing one night
at the Oldfield Hotel
in Greenford.
272
00:15:46,179 --> 00:15:48,915
All I remember is
I was standing onstage
273
00:15:48,982 --> 00:15:52,452
getting ready to take a break,
when a-a...
274
00:15:53,886 --> 00:15:57,257
gingerbread man appeared
in the audience in front of me,
275
00:15:57,324 --> 00:16:01,561
looking up at me
with these great, big
puppy dog brown eyes.
276
00:16:01,628 --> 00:16:03,530
He wanted to be a Beach Boy,
277
00:16:03,596 --> 00:16:06,533
so he bought some
hydrogen peroxide
and bleached his hair.
278
00:16:06,599 --> 00:16:09,269
It come out bright orange.
279
00:16:09,336 --> 00:16:13,506
And he came up and,
with all the arrogance
in the world, said,
280
00:16:13,573 --> 00:16:15,408
"I hear you're looking
for a drummer.
281
00:16:15,475 --> 00:16:17,610
Well, I'm much better
than the one you've got."
282
00:16:19,712 --> 00:16:21,148
He sat down.
283
00:16:21,214 --> 00:16:24,984
Pete starts off
with a pick screeching
down the string.
284
00:16:25,052 --> 00:16:28,421
[imitates blues guitar riff]
Gets into a very heavy riff.
285
00:16:28,488 --> 00:16:31,391
All of a sudden,
it's like a jet engine
286
00:16:31,458 --> 00:16:33,993
started up
at the back of me.
287
00:16:37,164 --> 00:16:39,132
[blues rock plays]
288
00:16:41,568 --> 00:16:44,104
It was like magic.
289
00:16:44,171 --> 00:16:47,006
All of a sudden, it--
everything worked.
290
00:16:47,074 --> 00:16:48,608
We were just astonished.
291
00:16:48,675 --> 00:16:50,277
This kid was the missing link,
292
00:16:50,343 --> 00:16:54,414
and it was obvious
from the first minute
of him playing with us.
293
00:16:59,319 --> 00:17:02,455
The whole dance floor stopped
and started looking.
It was extraordinary.
294
00:17:02,522 --> 00:17:06,126
You didn't watch drummers.
He was the only drummer I know
that you'd watch.
295
00:17:08,395 --> 00:17:10,497
Moon was a star.
296
00:17:13,500 --> 00:17:15,335
["Who Are You" plays]
297
00:17:23,143 --> 00:17:25,312
He was a shooting star.
That's what he was.
298
00:17:26,546 --> 00:17:29,849
He was clearly an alcoholic,
an addict, a sex addict.
299
00:17:31,084 --> 00:17:34,053
* Who are you? *
300
00:17:34,121 --> 00:17:36,022
* Who, who, who, who *
301
00:17:36,089 --> 00:17:39,792
[man] On the one hand, he was
this lunatic who, you know,
302
00:17:39,859 --> 00:17:43,296
couldn't wait to get on a drum
kit and just explode with it.
303
00:17:43,363 --> 00:17:45,898
* Who are you? *
304
00:17:45,965 --> 00:17:49,902
And on the other hand,
he was a very quiet,
saddened person.
305
00:17:49,969 --> 00:17:51,671
* Who are you? *
306
00:17:51,738 --> 00:17:54,774
[Townshend]
He clearly had tremendous
esteem issue problems.
307
00:17:54,841 --> 00:17:57,210
He was a complex little ball
of difficulty.
308
00:17:57,277 --> 00:18:00,113
[man]
309
00:18:00,180 --> 00:18:02,482
Usually leave and get drunk.
310
00:18:02,549 --> 00:18:05,218
He wasn't like that as a boy.
That's what I can't understand.
311
00:18:05,285 --> 00:18:06,886
He always did as he was told.
312
00:18:06,953 --> 00:18:09,989
He was very quiet, and I had
no problem with him at all.
313
00:18:10,056 --> 00:18:11,491
He was a good boy.
314
00:18:13,926 --> 00:18:16,062
[narrator]
By the time he was 16,
315
00:18:16,129 --> 00:18:20,300
Moon was playing
American surf music in a band
called The Beachcombers.
316
00:18:20,367 --> 00:18:22,435
The Beachcombers
was the first band
317
00:18:22,502 --> 00:18:26,038
that I remember him having
at home and setting up
in the front room.
318
00:18:28,608 --> 00:18:30,543
Keith liked the Beach Boys.
319
00:18:30,610 --> 00:18:32,379
I f-- didn't like 'em.
320
00:18:32,445 --> 00:18:35,047
[falsetto]
* Fun, fun, fun till your daddy
Takes the T-Bird away *
321
00:18:35,114 --> 00:18:37,250
[singing falsetto notes]
You know, and they would
sing away.
322
00:18:37,317 --> 00:18:40,553
-* Barbara Ann
Ba-Ba, Ba-Barbara Ann *
-* Barbara Ann *
323
00:18:40,620 --> 00:18:42,722
* Ba-Ba-Ba
Ba-Barbara Ann *
324
00:18:42,789 --> 00:18:46,259
* You got me rockin'
And a-rollin', rockin'
And a-reelin', Barbara Ann *
325
00:18:46,326 --> 00:18:48,261
[Townshend] But he liked to do
those backing vocals--
326
00:18:48,328 --> 00:18:50,763
you know, the girl-y backing
vocals in a lot of their songs.
327
00:18:50,830 --> 00:18:53,032
The other thing that's
really important, of course,
328
00:18:53,099 --> 00:18:55,602
is that Keith was
a very lyrical drummer.
329
00:19:01,641 --> 00:19:04,311
Keith was like an orchestra
on the drums.
330
00:19:04,377 --> 00:19:06,646
He wasn't a time drummer,
like, "dum-dum-dum."
331
00:19:06,713 --> 00:19:08,881
It was, like,
all around the kit.
332
00:19:15,655 --> 00:19:17,557
[Daltrey]
Moon was doing things that
333
00:19:17,624 --> 00:19:20,827
just made us all work
a hundred percent harder.
334
00:19:22,028 --> 00:19:24,331
Not faster, not slower.
335
00:19:24,397 --> 00:19:26,399
A hundred percent harder.
336
00:19:26,466 --> 00:19:28,568
[up-tempo rock plays]
337
00:19:32,672 --> 00:19:35,708
[narrator]
In late April 1964,
he joined The Detours
338
00:19:35,775 --> 00:19:37,877
and started playing the blues.
339
00:19:37,944 --> 00:19:40,680
* Hey, fellas
Have you heard the news? *
340
00:19:40,747 --> 00:19:44,517
[Daltrey] When you've got
a 12-bar sequence,
it can become monotonous.
341
00:19:44,584 --> 00:19:47,920
Moonie had a very short
attention span
when it came to boredom.
342
00:19:47,987 --> 00:19:50,723
He started to double up
the beat.
343
00:19:50,790 --> 00:19:52,892
And that led to Pete
doubling the guitar.
344
00:19:55,662 --> 00:19:58,665
It led John to play
more jazzy bits in between.
345
00:20:00,467 --> 00:20:04,404
And from that, what we became
famous for evolved.
346
00:20:05,672 --> 00:20:08,241
That's when The Who started
to have its own identity.
347
00:20:08,308 --> 00:20:11,511
We played the blues,
but we'd put
our own stamp on it.
348
00:20:25,492 --> 00:20:28,828
We'd been The Detours
for quite a while,
and we'd built up
349
00:20:28,895 --> 00:20:32,265
quite a following in West London
on the pub circuit.
350
00:20:32,332 --> 00:20:35,201
[Townshend]
John Entwistle,
he'd heard about this band
351
00:20:35,268 --> 00:20:37,304
who'd got a record out
in America called The Detours.
352
00:20:37,370 --> 00:20:39,706
So we sat around
and had this think tank
353
00:20:39,772 --> 00:20:42,609
in Sunnyside Road,
where Barney and I had a flat.
354
00:20:42,675 --> 00:20:44,444
And the band never
came back there.
355
00:20:44,511 --> 00:20:46,346
I don't think they'd ever
been there before,
356
00:20:46,413 --> 00:20:49,416
because Pete and I were
art students smoking dope,
357
00:20:49,482 --> 00:20:50,917
and they didn't approve.
358
00:20:50,983 --> 00:20:54,020
And we were just jokingly
throwing names around.
359
00:20:54,086 --> 00:20:56,656
[Barnes]
We were trying to be avant-garde
or something.
360
00:20:56,723 --> 00:20:58,525
Think of, like, The Nothing
or names like that.
361
00:20:58,591 --> 00:21:00,860
I came up with The Hair.
362
00:21:00,927 --> 00:21:03,496
'Cause everything was
about hair at the time.
363
00:21:03,563 --> 00:21:07,534
And I said The Who,
'cause basically I was just
thinking of it on posters.
364
00:21:07,600 --> 00:21:10,236
You know, one of those
very quick conversations.
365
00:21:10,303 --> 00:21:11,938
"The Hair." "The Who."
366
00:21:12,004 --> 00:21:14,006
And everybody was laughing
at each one.
367
00:21:14,073 --> 00:21:16,976
And for a while,
it was kind of a bit of a war.
368
00:21:17,043 --> 00:21:20,880
"Well, we could call it
The Hair and The Who."
And it sounded like a pub.
369
00:21:20,947 --> 00:21:23,916
[Daltrey]
But The Who was something
we came back to.
370
00:21:23,983 --> 00:21:28,521
It didn't take very long
for us to carry our audience
into the change.
371
00:21:28,588 --> 00:21:31,223
Within two weeks, they'd
forgotten about The Detours
372
00:21:31,290 --> 00:21:33,292
and they knew
that it was The Who.
373
00:21:36,863 --> 00:21:39,732
* Dressed right
For a beach fight *
374
00:21:39,799 --> 00:21:42,502
* But I just can't explain *
375
00:21:42,569 --> 00:21:44,771
[man]
We were the first teenagers
after the war.
376
00:21:44,837 --> 00:21:47,574
All we wanted to do was just
377
00:21:47,640 --> 00:21:50,643
liberate ourselves, really,
and have fun.
378
00:21:50,710 --> 00:21:53,413
[man on radio]
South Coast police have warned
that if the fights
379
00:21:53,480 --> 00:21:56,282
between rival gangs
of mods and rockers continue...
380
00:22:00,753 --> 00:22:03,723
[Curbishley]
We used to go to Brighton,
areas like that,
381
00:22:03,790 --> 00:22:07,527
it was traditional that
you would end up clashing.
382
00:22:07,594 --> 00:22:10,196
We were teenagers together.
We were mods.
383
00:22:17,537 --> 00:22:20,840
It was all about
a pop-art gang culture.
384
00:22:23,075 --> 00:22:25,778
[Stamp]
We were called mods
'cause we were modernist.
385
00:22:25,845 --> 00:22:28,681
There was a type
of, like, "fuck you,"
386
00:22:28,748 --> 00:22:31,984
rebellious sort of behavior
about the mod kids.
387
00:22:32,051 --> 00:22:35,054
It was very much,
"Let's get out of
this class system."
388
00:22:39,291 --> 00:22:42,395
[man]
The original mods
were very smart.
389
00:22:42,462 --> 00:22:46,165
Short Italian jackets,
tight trousers,
winklepicker shoes.
390
00:22:46,232 --> 00:22:50,537
[Stamp] Perfectly tailored
sort of skintight,
sort of like sharkskin suit,
391
00:22:50,603 --> 00:22:54,373
with a little mascara on
and a special haircut
on Saturday nights.
392
00:22:54,441 --> 00:22:59,446
We spent all of our money
on clothes. We were like
little peacocks.
393
00:22:59,512 --> 00:23:02,014
* I'm the hippiest number
In town *
394
00:23:02,081 --> 00:23:05,452
* And I'll tell you why
And I'll tell you why *
395
00:23:05,518 --> 00:23:09,321
* I'm the snappiest dresser
Right down to
My inch-wide tie *
396
00:23:10,757 --> 00:23:13,860
Along came this guy
called Pete Meaden.
He was a publicist.
397
00:23:13,926 --> 00:23:15,628
And he transformed
the band.
398
00:23:15,695 --> 00:23:18,531
[Daltrey] He certainly had
a finger on the pulse
399
00:23:18,598 --> 00:23:22,101
of this embryo
of a fashion seed.
400
00:23:22,168 --> 00:23:24,804
And Pete Meaden had
this theory that the mods
401
00:23:24,871 --> 00:23:27,306
were like the new religion,
the new army,
402
00:23:27,373 --> 00:23:28,708
the new everything,
403
00:23:28,775 --> 00:23:31,911
and projected that
onto us as individuals.
404
00:23:31,978 --> 00:23:35,014
[Daltrey] He said,
"Get out there, cut your hair,
go out Carnaby Street,
405
00:23:35,081 --> 00:23:38,117
buy all the clever gear,"
and all of a sudden
we're a mod band.
406
00:23:38,184 --> 00:23:39,986
[blues rock plays]
407
00:23:49,496 --> 00:23:53,432
Pete Meaden also said,
"You've gotta change
the name-- The Who."
408
00:23:53,500 --> 00:23:56,536
And in that sense, he was right
in getting us to be mods,
409
00:23:56,603 --> 00:23:59,672
but he was wrong in changing
the name The Who
to The High Numbers.
410
00:23:59,739 --> 00:24:03,442
We kept seeing these posters
for The High Numbers,
"Who" in brackets.
411
00:24:03,510 --> 00:24:06,646
[man] They used to play
in West Hampstead,
the Railway Club.
412
00:24:06,713 --> 00:24:09,649
And it was a little hall,
tiny little shabby hall.
413
00:24:09,716 --> 00:24:11,684
The Who came up
as The High Numbers.
414
00:24:11,751 --> 00:24:14,153
We didn't know who they were.
We just went up there.
415
00:24:14,220 --> 00:24:16,789
And the drummer
was absolutely mental.
416
00:24:20,192 --> 00:24:23,329
* Gather round
My swingin' friends *
417
00:24:23,395 --> 00:24:26,499
* Let me forget
My hurtin' tears *
418
00:24:26,566 --> 00:24:29,869
* About the only girl
I ever loved *
419
00:24:29,936 --> 00:24:33,139
* The only one, baby
I, I gotta dance *
420
00:24:33,205 --> 00:24:35,374
* Just to keep from crying *
421
00:24:35,441 --> 00:24:38,477
* Gotta dance
Just to keep from crying *
422
00:24:38,545 --> 00:24:42,381
* Whoa-oa, do the fly
The flop, the twist *
423
00:24:42,448 --> 00:24:45,384
* Everybody
It goes like this *
424
00:24:45,451 --> 00:24:48,420
* You gotta dance
Got me swayin' all right *
425
00:24:48,487 --> 00:24:51,991
* Gotta dance
Got me swayin', all right *
426
00:24:52,058 --> 00:24:55,595
* Do the bird, the fly *
427
00:24:55,662 --> 00:24:58,631
* Come on, gang, you know
Bye, bye, bye, oh, yeah *
428
00:25:00,900 --> 00:25:03,636
They were amazing.
It was nothing like
the Beatles.
429
00:25:03,703 --> 00:25:05,672
Even the Stones.
It was nothing like that.
430
00:25:05,738 --> 00:25:08,608
And they were playing music
that you didn't hear
very often--
431
00:25:08,675 --> 00:25:10,777
Tamla-Motown and blues.
432
00:25:10,843 --> 00:25:13,680
They were a mod band,
and I was a mod.
433
00:25:13,746 --> 00:25:15,514
* Well, baby, so *
434
00:25:15,582 --> 00:25:18,651
* You know it's all right *
435
00:25:32,965 --> 00:25:36,135
[Stamp]
When I met Kit, we decided
to start to come up with
436
00:25:36,202 --> 00:25:38,204
an idea to make a film.
437
00:25:38,270 --> 00:25:41,841
We came up with a concept
that we would find a group,
438
00:25:43,175 --> 00:25:46,946
we would manage the group
to success,
439
00:25:47,013 --> 00:25:50,049
and we would all the time
film it.
440
00:25:50,116 --> 00:25:51,751
This was the idea.
441
00:25:51,818 --> 00:25:55,154
Kit and I,
we went up and down England
looking for a group.
442
00:25:55,221 --> 00:25:59,225
We couldn't find anyone to
put in the film, basically,
until we saw The High Numbers.
443
00:25:59,291 --> 00:26:02,028
* Let me tell you 'bout
Ooh Poo Pah Doo *
444
00:26:03,796 --> 00:26:06,098
* Baby, they call me the most *
445
00:26:07,499 --> 00:26:09,769
* Yeah, Ooh Poo Pah Doo *
446
00:26:11,070 --> 00:26:12,905
* Baby, call me the most *
447
00:26:12,972 --> 00:26:15,608
Lambert said immediately
he knew that was the band
he was looking for.
448
00:26:15,675 --> 00:26:17,877
* And I won't stop tryin' *
449
00:26:17,944 --> 00:26:19,946
* Till I create
A disturbance in your mind *
450
00:26:20,012 --> 00:26:23,415
We met Lambert and Stamp,
and the first thing
they wanted to do,
451
00:26:23,482 --> 00:26:26,819
they loved everything else
about us except the name.
452
00:26:26,886 --> 00:26:30,657
And then we told them
we used to be called The Who.
They went, "Great!"
453
00:26:31,758 --> 00:26:33,225
[song ends]
[audience applauds]
454
00:26:33,292 --> 00:26:34,894
[Stamp]
They were very individual.
455
00:26:34,961 --> 00:26:38,064
They didn't really
get along, you know,
that personally.
456
00:26:38,130 --> 00:26:41,400
I'd been in a gang
in my adolescence.
It wasn't that different.
457
00:26:41,467 --> 00:26:44,070
[guitar riffs play]
458
00:26:46,172 --> 00:26:48,174
[Shaw]
It just came across,
not antisocial,
459
00:26:48,240 --> 00:26:50,910
but they weren't there
to try to please people.
460
00:26:50,977 --> 00:26:53,112
They were there to do
what they were gonna do,
461
00:26:53,179 --> 00:26:55,047
and if you liked it,
that's up to you.
462
00:26:57,083 --> 00:27:00,720
Pete was using these
very high-volume amplifiers.
463
00:27:00,787 --> 00:27:04,090
He would, because of
the power in the amplifier,
create feedback.
464
00:27:04,156 --> 00:27:06,158
[amplifier feeding back]
465
00:27:07,894 --> 00:27:10,830
He did this thing
where he used to lift
the guitar like this.
466
00:27:10,897 --> 00:27:12,598
We had a very low ceiling there.
467
00:27:12,665 --> 00:27:15,567
I used to bang it to make it go
boing, boing, boing, boing.
468
00:27:15,634 --> 00:27:18,971
[Barnes] And the guitar neck
went through the ceiling.
469
00:27:19,038 --> 00:27:21,974
When it broke, I thought,
well, I may as well
finish it off.
470
00:27:24,844 --> 00:27:27,613
We just stood there.
"What is going on here?
It's great."
471
00:27:27,680 --> 00:27:29,949
[laughs]
I mean,
472
00:27:30,016 --> 00:27:32,451
nobody had ever smashed
anything on a stage.
473
00:27:34,854 --> 00:27:37,423
I saw Keith
looking at me.
474
00:27:39,225 --> 00:27:41,728
Next week, I start banging
my other guitar
475
00:27:41,794 --> 00:27:44,563
and immediately
the drums were over,
sticks through...
476
00:27:46,032 --> 00:27:48,334
[Barnes]
Pete said afterwards,
"Once I knew
477
00:27:48,400 --> 00:27:50,737
that Moonie was with me,
then I would do it again."
478
00:27:58,544 --> 00:28:01,580
[Townshend]
The guitar became,
when it was electrified,
479
00:28:01,647 --> 00:28:05,684
in my case,
an instrument of control,
480
00:28:05,752 --> 00:28:08,687
aggression,
latent violence.
481
00:28:11,423 --> 00:28:14,060
People say to me,
"It's just stagecraft, isn't it?
482
00:28:14,126 --> 00:28:16,162
Just showing off,
smashing your guitar."
483
00:28:16,228 --> 00:28:19,131
To me it was far, far,
far more than that.
484
00:28:19,198 --> 00:28:21,968
[amplifier feeding back]
485
00:28:22,034 --> 00:28:24,036
[narrator] At art school,
Pete and Barnesy
486
00:28:24,103 --> 00:28:26,505
had attended lectures
by Gustav Metzger,
487
00:28:26,572 --> 00:28:29,208
a German artist
who destroyed his creations
488
00:28:29,275 --> 00:28:32,278
as a political protest
against nuclear weapons.
489
00:28:32,344 --> 00:28:35,714
[Townshend] Gustav Metzger
came to my college
to do lectures.
490
00:28:35,782 --> 00:28:39,118
It was called The Destruction
in Art symposium.
491
00:28:39,185 --> 00:28:42,454
Yoko Ono did that thing
where she had
her clothes cut up,
492
00:28:42,521 --> 00:28:46,458
and he slashed his way
through a canvas
with a samurai sword,
493
00:28:46,525 --> 00:28:51,063
and next thing I knew,
I'm breaking up guitars at gigs.
494
00:28:52,664 --> 00:28:55,902
[Stamp] I thought it was
a bit sort of airy-fairy,
know what I mean?
495
00:28:55,968 --> 00:28:58,070
It was a bit
sort of like, why bother?
496
00:28:58,137 --> 00:29:01,107
You're fucking angry,
you're smashing your guitar up.
It looks great.
497
00:29:01,173 --> 00:29:03,475
It does suggest the rage
that we all feel.
498
00:29:05,244 --> 00:29:08,114
[Daltrey] It really did
annoy me that the visual
499
00:29:08,180 --> 00:29:11,350
kind of took over from
what was really going on.
500
00:29:11,417 --> 00:29:13,585
I'd even have the guys
in the band going,
501
00:29:13,652 --> 00:29:15,721
"What a lot of pompous,
pretentious drivel."
502
00:29:15,788 --> 00:29:17,756
And I'd go,
"No, it's auto-destructive art."
503
00:29:17,824 --> 00:29:21,593
[amplifier buzzing]
[audience cheers]
504
00:29:24,897 --> 00:29:27,066
[acoustic guitar plays]
505
00:29:34,573 --> 00:29:37,409
Pete was, even in those days,
in a class of his own.
506
00:29:39,979 --> 00:29:43,449
It was this act, you know,
smashing up the instruments,
feedback,
507
00:29:43,515 --> 00:29:46,518
Pete's windmilling arm.
508
00:29:46,585 --> 00:29:49,956
He did this sort of thing
that the kids called
the Birdman.
509
00:29:51,757 --> 00:29:55,327
[Daltrey] Lambert and Stamp
got us a gig at the Marquee
in the West End of London,
510
00:29:55,394 --> 00:29:58,264
and Kit had this poster made
of Pete with the guitar
511
00:29:58,330 --> 00:30:01,433
in the bird-like...
512
00:30:01,500 --> 00:30:04,236
sideways
and a profile of his nose.
513
00:30:04,303 --> 00:30:06,205
Fabulous.
Absolutely classic.
514
00:30:06,272 --> 00:30:09,308
You could not ignore
that poster. It was like,
"What is The Who?"
515
00:30:09,375 --> 00:30:11,377
["Heat Wave" plays]
516
00:30:13,279 --> 00:30:15,114
[vocalizing]
517
00:30:19,685 --> 00:30:22,254
Within a month,
the queues would be
518
00:30:22,321 --> 00:30:25,457
all the way down Wardour Street,
and they would be turning
thousands of people away.
519
00:30:25,524 --> 00:30:28,127
It was incredible.
520
00:30:28,194 --> 00:30:31,964
I've got to admit that
I felt that we were special.
521
00:30:32,031 --> 00:30:35,001
* Whenever she calls my name *
522
00:30:35,067 --> 00:30:38,971
* Yeah, yeah, yeah
I can't explain *
523
00:30:39,038 --> 00:30:41,240
* I feel, I feel *
524
00:30:41,307 --> 00:30:43,976
* Yeah, I feel
This burning flame *
525
00:30:44,043 --> 00:30:46,712
[Daltrey]
It's to do with attitude.
526
00:30:46,778 --> 00:30:49,281
It's like, you can hit
your hand like that.
527
00:30:49,348 --> 00:30:51,350
That's a tempo.
528
00:30:51,417 --> 00:30:53,452
Or you can hit it like this.
529
00:30:54,720 --> 00:30:57,356
Now, it's two totally
different attitudes.
530
00:30:57,423 --> 00:30:59,558
The tempo
hasn't changed at all.
531
00:30:59,625 --> 00:31:03,963
And The Who always did it
with that attitude of drive.
532
00:31:04,030 --> 00:31:08,200
* Oh, yeah, oh, yeah *
533
00:31:08,267 --> 00:31:09,835
[indistinct]
534
00:31:09,902 --> 00:31:13,439
* Oh, yeah, oh, yeah *
535
00:31:13,505 --> 00:31:15,507
[vocalizing]
536
00:31:21,647 --> 00:31:24,984
* Heat wave *
* Burnin' in my heart *
537
00:31:25,051 --> 00:31:28,887
I remember one thing that
we were very much aware of
538
00:31:28,955 --> 00:31:33,159
was that we were still
copying other people's songs.
539
00:31:33,225 --> 00:31:34,826
* Heat wave *
540
00:31:38,297 --> 00:31:41,400
[narrator]
By 1964, The Beatles
were revolutionizing
541
00:31:41,467 --> 00:31:43,802
popular music
with their songwriting.
542
00:31:43,869 --> 00:31:47,273
The Rolling Stones and the Kinks
joined the British invasion
of America
543
00:31:47,339 --> 00:31:49,408
by recording
original material.
544
00:31:49,475 --> 00:31:52,144
* Girl
You really got me going *
545
00:31:52,211 --> 00:31:55,414
* You got me so I don't know
What I'm doing *
546
00:31:55,481 --> 00:31:59,118
We needed a songwriter
in the group, and Pete
turned out to be one.
547
00:31:59,185 --> 00:32:03,255
I listened to a couple
of Kinks songs and just
produced this rhythm.
548
00:32:03,322 --> 00:32:05,324
["I Can't Explain" plays]
549
00:32:13,199 --> 00:32:16,935
* Got a feeling inside *
* Can't explain *
550
00:32:17,003 --> 00:32:20,339
* Certain kind *
* Can't explain *
551
00:32:20,406 --> 00:32:23,442
* I feel hot and cold *
* Can't explain *
552
00:32:23,509 --> 00:32:26,878
- * Down in my soul, yeah *
- * Can't explain *
553
00:32:26,945 --> 00:32:30,482
[Daltrey] Unlike The Kinks,
what on the surface
appears to be
554
00:32:30,549 --> 00:32:32,784
a very frilly little
pop song
555
00:32:32,851 --> 00:32:36,355
is a much, much bigger
statement from the vocal--
556
00:32:36,422 --> 00:32:38,624
"I've got a feeling inside
I can't explain."
557
00:32:38,690 --> 00:32:43,229
And you could see that
Townshend as a writer
had a huge potential.
558
00:32:43,295 --> 00:32:46,332
'Cause he wasn't going
the normal way
that pop songs go.
559
00:32:46,398 --> 00:32:47,799
It was going internal.
560
00:32:47,866 --> 00:32:50,836
* Can't explain
I think it's love *
561
00:32:50,902 --> 00:32:54,473
* Try to say it to you
When I feel blue *
562
00:32:54,540 --> 00:32:56,442
* But I can't explain *
563
00:32:56,508 --> 00:33:00,346
Back in those early days,
I thought, "I'm not gonna
write songs forever.
564
00:33:00,412 --> 00:33:02,048
This is boring."
You know.
565
00:33:02,114 --> 00:33:04,483
I really thought "Can't Explain"
was quite childish.
566
00:33:08,587 --> 00:33:12,058
[narrator] Pete's home-recorded
demo of the song
would get them signed.
567
00:33:12,124 --> 00:33:14,126
He was 19.
568
00:33:14,193 --> 00:33:16,962
He had it on tape,
which I played over the phone
569
00:33:17,029 --> 00:33:18,930
to Shel Talmy.
570
00:33:18,997 --> 00:33:23,169
The demo I heard was about
a minute and ten seconds long.
571
00:33:23,235 --> 00:33:26,238
Probably safe to say
in about the first, uh,
572
00:33:26,305 --> 00:33:29,041
30 to 45 seconds,
I said, "Yes."
573
00:33:33,045 --> 00:33:34,713
I said
"I will get us a deal."
574
00:33:34,780 --> 00:33:37,883
[Daltrey]
Kit told us this recording deal.
575
00:33:37,949 --> 00:33:41,453
And, I mean,
I'm a Shepherd's Bush boy.
You know, work the markets.
576
00:33:41,520 --> 00:33:44,356
When Kit told us
our percentage,
577
00:33:44,423 --> 00:33:48,260
it had something like
a couple of cents
on the end of it.
578
00:33:48,327 --> 00:33:50,796
[Barnes]
When Kit Lambert
and Chris Stamp
579
00:33:50,862 --> 00:33:53,932
were managing the band,
they got a very bad deal.
580
00:33:53,999 --> 00:33:56,368
[Shaw] I went round
to all the record shops,
581
00:33:56,435 --> 00:33:59,705
gave them free copies,
gave them posters,
582
00:33:59,771 --> 00:34:02,274
and helped push it that way.
583
00:34:02,341 --> 00:34:05,511
But then luckily
Radio Caroline played it.
584
00:34:05,577 --> 00:34:08,180
[woman] * Caroline
The sound of ignition *
585
00:34:09,548 --> 00:34:11,283
* Caroline! *
586
00:34:11,350 --> 00:34:13,485
["I Can't Explain" plays]
587
00:34:14,686 --> 00:34:16,122
Twelve midnight tonight,
Steve Young along
588
00:34:16,188 --> 00:34:18,023
on The Curly-Headed Kid Show
until 3 a.m.
589
00:34:18,090 --> 00:34:21,026
* Got a feeling inside *
* Can't explain *
590
00:34:21,093 --> 00:34:25,063
Radio Caroline was the first
of the pirate radio stations.
591
00:34:25,131 --> 00:34:27,833
'Cause radio was controlled
in England by the BBC.
592
00:34:27,899 --> 00:34:31,237
And suddenly these ships
out of England jurisdiction
593
00:34:31,303 --> 00:34:33,305
started to pump the music out
into England,
594
00:34:33,372 --> 00:34:35,641
and it took off like a rocket.
595
00:34:35,707 --> 00:34:38,444
[Daltrey] The truth is,
without pirate radio,
596
00:34:38,510 --> 00:34:41,880
the English invasion
and all that pop scene
would not have happened.
597
00:34:41,947 --> 00:34:44,650
* Can't explain
I think it's love *
598
00:34:44,716 --> 00:34:48,287
* Try to say it to you
When I feel blue *
599
00:34:48,354 --> 00:34:50,389
* But I can't explain *
600
00:34:50,456 --> 00:34:53,359
[narrator]
Released January 15, 1965,
601
00:34:53,425 --> 00:34:55,827
"I Can't Explain"
would climb to number eight
602
00:34:55,894 --> 00:34:58,797
on the New Musical Express
chart.
603
00:34:58,864 --> 00:35:01,367
[Townshend]
I was driving over
Hammersmith flyover
604
00:35:01,433 --> 00:35:03,535
and heard "Can't Explain"
on the radio
605
00:35:03,602 --> 00:35:05,804
and thought, "Wow," you know.
606
00:35:05,871 --> 00:35:08,907
"I've got a commission,
I've got a patron.
This is art."
607
00:35:08,974 --> 00:35:13,912
[narrator]
Brunswick Records sold
104,000 copies of the single.
608
00:35:13,979 --> 00:35:16,715
The boys made ยฃ250 each.
609
00:35:16,782 --> 00:35:19,518
* Said I can't explain *
610
00:35:19,585 --> 00:35:22,087
[audience cheers]
611
00:35:34,766 --> 00:35:38,404
It was chaos, 'cause we were
smashing up all this equipment,
and I had no money.
612
00:35:38,470 --> 00:35:42,441
I used to take all Pete's
guitars and in between a show,
putting 'em together.
613
00:35:42,508 --> 00:35:44,243
While one was being glued,
614
00:35:44,310 --> 00:35:46,912
the other one would be all set
from the day before.
615
00:35:46,978 --> 00:35:49,348
And the main thing was
keep the band working.
616
00:35:49,415 --> 00:35:51,350
[audience cheers]
617
00:35:51,417 --> 00:35:54,353
- * I can go any way *
- * Without you *
618
00:35:54,420 --> 00:35:57,256
- * I can live anyhow *
- * Without you *
619
00:35:57,323 --> 00:35:59,090
* I can go anywhere *
620
00:35:59,157 --> 00:36:02,994
[Daltrey] In those days,
it wasn't uncommon for us
to do a show at 8:00 till 9:00,
621
00:36:03,061 --> 00:36:06,131
travel 150 miles,
622
00:36:06,198 --> 00:36:08,734
and then do another show
at midnight till 1:00.
623
00:36:12,471 --> 00:36:14,406
We used to take amphetamines.
624
00:36:14,473 --> 00:36:17,409
I discovered that taking
amphetamines didn't go
with being a good singer.
625
00:36:17,476 --> 00:36:19,945
* Oh, C *
626
00:36:20,011 --> 00:36:22,681
* C.C. Rider *
627
00:36:22,748 --> 00:36:26,652
* See what you have done now *
628
00:36:26,718 --> 00:36:29,621
[Daltrey]
They pilled up
like no tomorrow,
629
00:36:29,688 --> 00:36:33,058
and their playing became
just a noise.
630
00:36:33,124 --> 00:36:36,127
[amplifier feeding back]
631
00:36:36,194 --> 00:36:38,264
Tempos went out the window,
632
00:36:38,330 --> 00:36:40,165
volumes went out the window.
633
00:36:40,232 --> 00:36:44,936
And everything we worked
to be good at
634
00:36:45,003 --> 00:36:48,106
suddenly disappeared
out the window
due to amphetamines.
635
00:36:51,477 --> 00:36:53,679
So it all came to a head
at one show
636
00:36:53,745 --> 00:36:57,749
where I just gave up onstage,
left the stage.
637
00:36:57,816 --> 00:37:00,819
Went back to the dressing room,
got the bag of amphetamines.
638
00:37:00,886 --> 00:37:03,555
I mean, these guys.
Flushed 'em down the toilet.
639
00:37:05,557 --> 00:37:10,028
Moon went up like a rocket
and hit me with a tambourine.
640
00:37:10,095 --> 00:37:13,599
I laid into Moonie
and ended up
in a real good punch-up.
641
00:37:13,665 --> 00:37:15,801
The roadies pulled us apart,
of course.
642
00:37:15,867 --> 00:37:18,136
But the damage had been done.
643
00:37:24,743 --> 00:37:27,879
Basically,
I was thrown out the band.
644
00:37:27,946 --> 00:37:29,948
At that moment,
I didn't give a fuck,
645
00:37:30,015 --> 00:37:32,083
'cause if that
was gonna be the band
646
00:37:32,150 --> 00:37:35,854
as they had been
on amphetamines,
it wasn't worth being in anyway.
647
00:37:35,921 --> 00:37:37,856
[rock plays]
648
00:37:40,726 --> 00:37:43,895
He had been this sort of
tough guy, boss of the group.
649
00:37:43,962 --> 00:37:47,666
Roger puts this band together
and then finds the three dwarfs
650
00:37:47,733 --> 00:37:51,102
that he's brought in
to support him suddenly
sort of leaving him behind.
651
00:37:53,739 --> 00:37:56,608
[Daltrey]
It was the first time in my life
that I realized that
652
00:37:56,675 --> 00:37:59,010
I loved something else
other than myself.
653
00:37:59,077 --> 00:38:01,780
And I thought,
if I'm being thrown out
for being like I was,
654
00:38:01,847 --> 00:38:05,384
then I'll have to change,
because the band is more
important to me than anything.
655
00:38:05,451 --> 00:38:08,186
After about four weeks,
they came back and said,
656
00:38:08,253 --> 00:38:13,058
"Look, you're back in the band,
but you're on probation.
657
00:38:13,124 --> 00:38:15,126
And, uh,
658
00:38:15,193 --> 00:38:18,464
one more outburst like that,
and you're out."
659
00:38:20,298 --> 00:38:23,535
Where's the place, Kit?
I have absolutely no idea.
660
00:38:23,602 --> 00:38:25,170
They're going to find it.
661
00:38:27,706 --> 00:38:30,409
[narrator]
Four weeks after
the blow-up in Copenhagen,
662
00:38:30,476 --> 00:38:34,446
The Who returned to the studio
to record Pete's
latest creation.
663
00:38:34,513 --> 00:38:36,382
When you're a kid and you,
664
00:38:36,448 --> 00:38:39,451
and you pick up a guitar
for the first time, you know,
665
00:38:39,518 --> 00:38:41,420
you just want to make
that sound.
666
00:38:41,487 --> 00:38:43,489
[playing "My Generation"]
667
00:38:45,791 --> 00:38:48,660
["My Generation" plays]
668
00:38:50,929 --> 00:38:53,298
* People try to put us d-down *
669
00:38:53,365 --> 00:38:55,567
* Talking 'bout my generation *
670
00:38:55,634 --> 00:38:58,404
* Just because we get around *
671
00:38:58,470 --> 00:39:00,606
* Talking 'bout my generation *
672
00:39:00,672 --> 00:39:02,908
[Stamp]
"My Generation" was the song
673
00:39:02,974 --> 00:39:05,844
that I felt an immediate
sort of thing for.
674
00:39:05,911 --> 00:39:08,113
* I hope I die
Before I get old *
675
00:39:08,179 --> 00:39:10,248
This had to be
the essence of The Who.
676
00:39:10,315 --> 00:39:12,250
* This is my generation *
677
00:39:12,317 --> 00:39:15,854
* This is my generation, baby *
678
00:39:15,921 --> 00:39:18,657
[Glyn Johns] I can remember
the "My Generation" session
very clearly,
679
00:39:18,724 --> 00:39:21,460
because it was so unusual,
the fact that he stuttered
on it.
680
00:39:21,527 --> 00:39:25,664
I mean, I thought
that was absolutely brilliant.
681
00:39:25,731 --> 00:39:29,635
* I'm not tryin' to cause
A big s-sensation *
682
00:39:29,701 --> 00:39:32,971
[Townshend] Roger's got
a story about the stutter,
and so has Chris Stamp.
683
00:39:33,038 --> 00:39:35,040
They're both well out of order.
684
00:39:35,106 --> 00:39:38,043
The stutter came from
John Lee Hooker.
685
00:39:38,109 --> 00:39:40,178
It was to do with
the pilled-up mod
686
00:39:40,245 --> 00:39:42,881
and the old blues stutter
and so on.
687
00:39:42,948 --> 00:39:46,652
And when I put it on
at the first demo,
it was partly there.
688
00:39:46,718 --> 00:39:48,454
And Chris Stamp said,
"What's that?"
689
00:39:48,520 --> 00:39:50,456
And I said,
"I'm stuttering."
690
00:39:50,522 --> 00:39:53,625
And I think maybe
he didn't realize
that I meant to stutter.
691
00:39:53,692 --> 00:39:56,562
I don't remember it
being on the demo.
It might have been.
692
00:39:56,628 --> 00:39:58,363
My memory's not that good on it.
693
00:39:58,430 --> 00:40:00,031
Does it--
Does it really matter?
694
00:40:00,098 --> 00:40:02,267
* My generation *
695
00:40:02,333 --> 00:40:05,471
* This is my generation, baby *
696
00:40:08,907 --> 00:40:11,309
[Sting]
I marveled at that bass line.
697
00:40:12,711 --> 00:40:15,481
Very flashy, very effective
and completely original.
698
00:40:15,547 --> 00:40:19,050
I don't know
where it came from.
[imitating bass riff]
699
00:40:19,117 --> 00:40:20,852
[chuckles]
It was fantastic.
700
00:40:24,022 --> 00:40:27,125
Amazing, the bass solo
in "My Generation."
701
00:40:27,192 --> 00:40:30,261
If you could write that
into words, that's what
you'd have on your gravestone.
702
00:40:30,328 --> 00:40:33,031
* People try to put us d-down *
703
00:40:33,098 --> 00:40:35,501
* Talking 'bout my generation *
704
00:40:35,567 --> 00:40:37,903
* Just because
We g-get around *
705
00:40:37,969 --> 00:40:40,438
* Talking 'bout my generation *
706
00:40:40,506 --> 00:40:43,575
[Townshend]
We're talking about
very, very early days here.
707
00:40:43,642 --> 00:40:46,545
I think back to those days,
and I just--
708
00:40:46,612 --> 00:40:49,347
I think it was really painful.
709
00:40:49,414 --> 00:40:51,683
* This is my generation *
710
00:40:51,750 --> 00:40:56,087
We hadn't really
respected the difficulties
that Roger had.
711
00:40:56,154 --> 00:40:58,690
It's wrong for me to say this,
but, you know...
712
00:41:01,560 --> 00:41:03,995
Keith was a genius,
John was a genius,
713
00:41:04,062 --> 00:41:06,765
I was certainly
on the edge of it.
714
00:41:06,832 --> 00:41:10,569
You know, Roger was a singer.
That was it.
715
00:41:10,636 --> 00:41:14,573
I just decided within myself
716
00:41:14,640 --> 00:41:16,675
that I would never let them--
717
00:41:16,742 --> 00:41:20,278
whatever they did to me,
whatever they did--
718
00:41:20,345 --> 00:41:23,715
I wouldn't ever react
like that again to them.
719
00:41:23,782 --> 00:41:26,384
And I became
a completely different guy,
720
00:41:26,451 --> 00:41:28,486
as far as
that's concerned.
721
00:41:28,554 --> 00:41:30,455
* This is my generation *
722
00:41:30,522 --> 00:41:32,390
But I struggled
more than anything
723
00:41:32,457 --> 00:41:35,226
to find a voice,
a real voice for this band.
724
00:41:35,293 --> 00:41:38,263
* Talking 'bout my generation *
* This is my generation *
725
00:41:49,841 --> 00:41:52,878
[guitar chord strums]
726
00:41:52,944 --> 00:41:54,780
* I don't mind *
727
00:41:54,846 --> 00:41:58,216
* Other guys dancing
With my girl *
728
00:41:59,818 --> 00:42:01,853
* That's fine *
729
00:42:01,920 --> 00:42:05,724
* I know them all
Pretty well *
730
00:42:07,025 --> 00:42:09,327
* But I know sometimes *
731
00:42:09,394 --> 00:42:13,899
* I must get out in the light *
732
00:42:13,965 --> 00:42:16,968
* Better leave her behind *
733
00:42:17,035 --> 00:42:20,471
* With the kids
They're alright *
734
00:42:20,538 --> 00:42:23,875
* The kids are alright *
735
00:42:27,545 --> 00:42:31,316
Our ambitions in those days
were very, very simple--
to be rich and famous.
736
00:42:31,382 --> 00:42:33,384
We made no excuses for it.
737
00:42:33,451 --> 00:42:36,454
We just got out of
having our ass hanging
out of our trousers.
738
00:42:36,521 --> 00:42:39,190
I don't make any apologies
for wanting to be
rich and famous.
739
00:42:39,257 --> 00:42:41,793
Thank you very much.
740
00:42:41,860 --> 00:42:46,364
* I was born with
A plastic spoon in my mouth *
741
00:42:47,633 --> 00:42:49,701
* The north side of my town
Faced east *
742
00:42:49,768 --> 00:42:53,204
* And the east
Was facing south *
743
00:42:53,271 --> 00:42:55,140
[narrator]
The Who played 60 shows
744
00:42:55,206 --> 00:42:58,109
through the first 90 days
of 1966.
745
00:42:58,176 --> 00:43:01,012
And we have got for you
the most controversial group
in England!
746
00:43:01,079 --> 00:43:03,348
-Ladies and gentlemen, The Who!
-The Who!
747
00:43:03,414 --> 00:43:04,916
-The Who!
-Les Who!
748
00:43:04,983 --> 00:43:07,418
-The Who!
-The Who!
-The Who!
749
00:43:07,485 --> 00:43:11,356
* One girl was called
Jean Marie *
750
00:43:11,422 --> 00:43:13,892
* Another little girl
Was called Felicity *
751
00:43:13,959 --> 00:43:16,762
[Townshend]
It used to feel to me
that the band was doomed.
752
00:43:16,828 --> 00:43:21,667
You know, I'm going off
with this fucking horrible
band of yobboes,
753
00:43:21,733 --> 00:43:24,435
you know, to Germany
and to Sweden and to--
754
00:43:24,502 --> 00:43:27,238
and with people with whom
I had absolutely
755
00:43:27,305 --> 00:43:30,942
nothing in common
whatsoever-- nothing.
756
00:43:31,009 --> 00:43:33,078
They were at each other
a lot.
757
00:43:33,144 --> 00:43:35,346
[Daltrey]
The Who was built
on competition.
758
00:43:35,413 --> 00:43:39,350
The competition was horrendous
on and off the stage.
759
00:43:39,417 --> 00:43:43,855
[Barnes] Then it got great,
because it became wonderfully
sort of on edge because of that.
760
00:43:43,922 --> 00:43:47,625
You could be watching The Who
in that '66-'67 period
when they were gigging,
761
00:43:47,693 --> 00:43:50,762
and in the middle of a show,
suddenly Pete would
get the guitar
762
00:43:50,829 --> 00:43:53,064
and whack it
around Roger's head--
It was fantastic.
763
00:43:53,131 --> 00:43:56,534
Everyone was really on edge
watching them all the time,
you know.
764
00:43:59,370 --> 00:44:03,041
* I want to play cricket
On the green *
765
00:44:03,108 --> 00:44:06,611
* Ride my bike
Across the street *
766
00:44:06,678 --> 00:44:10,448
* Cut myself and see my blood *
767
00:44:10,515 --> 00:44:15,053
* I want to come home
All covered in mud *
768
00:44:18,289 --> 00:44:21,559
* I'm a boy, I'm a boy
But my mom won't admit it *
769
00:44:21,626 --> 00:44:24,963
* I'm a boy, I'm a boy
I'm a boy *
770
00:44:25,030 --> 00:44:27,498
[Townshend]
Roger talks now very
romantically about those days,
771
00:44:27,565 --> 00:44:29,367
like it was some kind of magic.
772
00:44:29,434 --> 00:44:33,038
I don't think there was
a lot of magic. What there was
was a lot of brute force.
773
00:44:33,104 --> 00:44:36,607
* I'm a boy *
774
00:44:36,674 --> 00:44:38,543
[Gallagher] Nobody knew
what they were doing.
775
00:44:38,609 --> 00:44:40,746
Those bands
were managed by kids.
776
00:44:40,812 --> 00:44:43,581
They didn't have a fuckin' clue
what they were doing either.
777
00:44:46,051 --> 00:44:48,619
[narrator]
In March of '66,
The Who and their management
778
00:44:48,686 --> 00:44:51,757
broke their contract
with producer Shel Talmy
779
00:44:51,823 --> 00:44:54,159
and began making
their own records.
780
00:44:54,225 --> 00:44:56,194
[Stamp] Very early on,
Kit and I realized
781
00:44:56,261 --> 00:44:58,897
that if we weren't
in control of the recording
782
00:44:58,964 --> 00:45:01,099
and how it went
and what happened,
783
00:45:01,166 --> 00:45:02,734
it would just be hopeless.
784
00:45:02,801 --> 00:45:04,669
We would lose
this gigantic piece
785
00:45:04,736 --> 00:45:07,238
of what the destiny
of the group was.
786
00:45:07,305 --> 00:45:09,808
And so we had to get out
of that contract.
787
00:45:13,111 --> 00:45:17,082
[narrator] Lambert and Stamp
started their own company,
Track Records.
788
00:45:17,148 --> 00:45:18,950
[Stamp] I was like
the executive producer.
789
00:45:19,017 --> 00:45:21,452
Kit was the overall
sort of musical director.
790
00:45:21,519 --> 00:45:23,488
Day to day, right,
in the studio.
791
00:45:27,492 --> 00:45:30,195
* I used to wake up
In the morning *
792
00:45:31,296 --> 00:45:33,799
* I used to feel so bad *
793
00:45:33,865 --> 00:45:35,801
Kit Lambert--
he had great ideas,
794
00:45:35,867 --> 00:45:37,568
but he wasn't really
technically very good.
795
00:45:37,635 --> 00:45:39,905
[Curbishley]
Kit was the ultimate
796
00:45:39,971 --> 00:45:42,640
Barnum & Bailey con man
in a lot of ways.
797
00:45:42,707 --> 00:45:45,243
He would bluster his way
through things, you know.
798
00:45:45,310 --> 00:45:48,346
He had a lot of front
and courage in that way.
799
00:45:48,413 --> 00:45:51,850
Big fucking pain in the ass,
you know, in the studio.
800
00:45:51,917 --> 00:45:53,785
But he made it fun.
801
00:45:53,852 --> 00:45:57,522
* Pictures of Lily *
I can do it if-- you know,
once I get used to sort of--
802
00:45:57,588 --> 00:45:58,990
[man] Just do it
with confidence.
803
00:45:59,057 --> 00:46:00,691
Just hit it, do you know?
804
00:46:00,758 --> 00:46:03,361
Keith, when you hit
the very high note,
back off a bit
805
00:46:03,428 --> 00:46:05,931
because you're really piercing
because of the height
of the thing.
806
00:46:05,997 --> 00:46:07,799
[Townshend]
So you keep
jumping on John's--
807
00:46:07,866 --> 00:46:09,600
John's
usually louder
808
00:46:09,667 --> 00:46:11,669
than everyone else
anyway, you know.
809
00:46:11,736 --> 00:46:14,772
And if anyone
needs backing up,
it's sort of me, you know.
810
00:46:14,840 --> 00:46:17,809
[Lambert]
You'll cut through everything
anyway on that note.
811
00:46:17,876 --> 00:46:20,178
[music plays]
812
00:46:20,245 --> 00:46:22,213
[laughter]
813
00:46:26,051 --> 00:46:28,786
[music stops]
Oh! Oh!
814
00:46:36,527 --> 00:46:39,030
Kit Lambert's father,
Constant Lambert,
815
00:46:39,097 --> 00:46:40,866
created the Royal Ballet.
816
00:46:40,932 --> 00:46:42,667
Created the Royal Ballet.
817
00:46:42,733 --> 00:46:45,470
Kit had gone into film
because he didn't want to be
818
00:46:45,536 --> 00:46:47,272
anything to do with music.
819
00:46:47,338 --> 00:46:49,707
And suddenly, you know,
life rips him back in
820
00:46:49,774 --> 00:46:52,510
right in the middle of music,
only a different type.
821
00:46:52,577 --> 00:46:57,415
* And I ask you, hey, mister
Have you ever seen *
822
00:46:57,482 --> 00:47:00,485
* Pictures of Lily? *
823
00:47:00,551 --> 00:47:04,155
I would say to Kit,
"I really want to
write a fuckin' opera.
824
00:47:04,222 --> 00:47:06,724
I don't want to write
rock songs all the time."
825
00:47:06,791 --> 00:47:09,727
he constantly encouraged me
on the basis of his background.
826
00:47:09,794 --> 00:47:12,964
* Her man's been gone *
827
00:47:13,031 --> 00:47:15,800
* For nearly a year *
828
00:47:15,867 --> 00:47:18,269
* He was due home yesterday *
829
00:47:18,336 --> 00:47:20,939
* But he ain't here *
830
00:47:21,006 --> 00:47:24,475
[Stamp]
It was called a mini-opera,
"A Quick One While He's Away,"
831
00:47:24,542 --> 00:47:27,445
which is an English way
of saying, you know,
832
00:47:27,512 --> 00:47:30,048
you have a quick fuck
while the husband's away, right?
833
00:47:30,115 --> 00:47:32,283
Do you know what I mean?
That was the story.
834
00:47:32,350 --> 00:47:36,621
* Down your street, your crying
Is a well-known sound *
835
00:47:37,923 --> 00:47:40,258
[Stamp]
It was a big operatic piece
836
00:47:40,325 --> 00:47:42,894
told in these
sort of six or seven
837
00:47:42,961 --> 00:47:44,896
one-minute or two-minute
pieces of song.
838
00:47:44,963 --> 00:47:49,000
* We have a remedy
You'll appreciate *
839
00:47:49,067 --> 00:47:53,104
* No need to be so sad
He's only late *
840
00:47:53,171 --> 00:47:56,474
Kit kept saying to me,
"My father, Constant Lambert,
would've loved The Who."
841
00:47:56,541 --> 00:48:00,078
So he was very supportive,
and that's how that grew.
842
00:48:00,145 --> 00:48:02,280
[Stamp] Probably
the most important relationship
843
00:48:02,347 --> 00:48:05,183
that Kit and Pete had
was each other.
844
00:48:07,718 --> 00:48:10,588
* You are forgiven *
845
00:48:10,655 --> 00:48:13,858
[narrator]
During the recording session
for A Quick One,
846
00:48:13,925 --> 00:48:16,727
Lambert introduced the band
to one of the first artists
847
00:48:16,794 --> 00:48:19,530
signed by the new
Track Records.
848
00:48:19,597 --> 00:48:22,267
[Daltrey]
He came to the studio
before he became
849
00:48:22,333 --> 00:48:24,469
the legendary Jimi Hendrix,
850
00:48:24,535 --> 00:48:26,804
and he was just a guitarist
in a soul band.
851
00:48:26,871 --> 00:48:30,841
* Forgiven, forgiven *
852
00:48:30,908 --> 00:48:32,377
You're forgiven.
853
00:48:41,919 --> 00:48:44,655
* Run, run, run *
854
00:48:44,722 --> 00:48:46,924
* Run, run, run *
855
00:48:46,992 --> 00:48:49,027
[Stamp]
We'd always been looking
at the United States,
856
00:48:49,094 --> 00:48:51,963
because that was
sort of like the home
857
00:48:52,030 --> 00:48:53,898
of the music that we loved.
858
00:48:53,965 --> 00:48:57,102
They just wanted to
crack America, and just
toured and toured and toured.
859
00:48:57,168 --> 00:49:01,106
[Goldsmith]
The Who were a brand
that represented Britishness
860
00:49:01,172 --> 00:49:03,508
and everything
that London stood for.
861
00:49:03,574 --> 00:49:07,378
[narrator]
They wore it on their backs
for their British invasion.
862
00:49:07,445 --> 00:49:10,348
* You better run, run, run *
863
00:49:10,415 --> 00:49:12,650
* Run, run, run *
864
00:49:12,717 --> 00:49:16,287
[Stamp] We couldn't just come
over here and make a couple
of hit tunes, like pop hits.
865
00:49:16,354 --> 00:49:19,557
If they took The Who,
they had to take
the whole package.
866
00:49:21,259 --> 00:49:23,861
[narrator]
In March of 1967,
867
00:49:23,928 --> 00:49:27,165
they played a nine-day showcase
in New York City.
868
00:49:27,232 --> 00:49:31,402
Three months later, they went
with their new label-mate
to Monterey, California.
869
00:49:34,005 --> 00:49:36,874
* If you're going *
870
00:49:36,941 --> 00:49:40,611
* To San Francisco *
871
00:49:40,678 --> 00:49:43,114
[Daltrey]
Monterey was a big one for us.
872
00:49:43,181 --> 00:49:46,451
Before we even got to Monterey,
Monterey was built up
873
00:49:46,517 --> 00:49:49,854
in my imagination
as an enormous event.
874
00:49:49,920 --> 00:49:54,225
Worst thing about Monterey
was we found out from
one of our ex-roadies
875
00:49:54,292 --> 00:49:56,661
that Hendrix was gonna
steal our act.
876
00:49:56,727 --> 00:49:59,764
[Townshend] Jimi was
out of his brain on acid
877
00:49:59,830 --> 00:50:02,767
and wouldn't discuss
who would go on first.
878
00:50:02,833 --> 00:50:04,902
It wasn't that we didn't
want to follow him.
879
00:50:04,969 --> 00:50:07,472
We just wanted to get our act,
you know, done first.
880
00:50:07,538 --> 00:50:09,474
We were kind of choked up
881
00:50:09,540 --> 00:50:12,310
because we were in debt
because we smashed our guitars,
882
00:50:12,377 --> 00:50:15,313
and then suddenly someone was
gonna come along from nowhere
883
00:50:15,380 --> 00:50:17,248
and steal it
in front of all those people.
884
00:50:17,315 --> 00:50:19,517
[emcee] I'd like to
introduce you to an act
885
00:50:19,584 --> 00:50:23,054
who have been passed by
slightly in America,
but they won't be after this.
886
00:50:23,121 --> 00:50:25,090
This is The Who, this one.
887
00:50:25,156 --> 00:50:27,325
[audience applauds]
888
00:50:27,392 --> 00:50:30,095
["My Generation" plays]
889
00:50:32,163 --> 00:50:36,601
-* People try to put us down *
-* Talking 'bout my generation *
890
00:50:36,667 --> 00:50:38,803
[man]
They played with kind of
a sense of abandon
891
00:50:38,869 --> 00:50:41,706
in a way
it hadn't been done before.
892
00:50:41,772 --> 00:50:44,442
I mean, the absolute abandon.
893
00:50:44,509 --> 00:50:47,778
* Yeah, I hope I die
Before I get old *
894
00:50:47,845 --> 00:50:50,381
[The Edge]
It was a sort of exorcism.
895
00:50:50,448 --> 00:50:53,184
The performance
just went off into
896
00:50:53,251 --> 00:50:56,554
a kind of emotional meltdown,
in a sense,
897
00:50:56,621 --> 00:50:58,923
which I don't think anyone
had ever seen before.
898
00:51:19,277 --> 00:51:23,214
[Daltrey]
The visual was a ritualistic
slaughter of a guitar,
899
00:51:23,281 --> 00:51:26,217
but the sound of that slaughter
was fuckin' brilliant.
900
00:51:49,307 --> 00:51:52,143
It was the best jazz.
It was the best rock and roll.
901
00:51:52,210 --> 00:51:54,712
It was something like
no one had ever done before.
902
00:51:54,779 --> 00:51:57,014
And I still love it
to this day.
903
00:52:06,624 --> 00:52:08,559
[audience cheers]
904
00:52:11,028 --> 00:52:13,798
[Townshend]
We made the house stand up
and roar and scream and shout.
905
00:52:13,864 --> 00:52:15,466
It's the first time
they'd ever seen it.
906
00:52:15,533 --> 00:52:17,368
They'd heard about it
but never seen it happen.
907
00:52:17,435 --> 00:52:20,971
And then Hendrix came on,
played fairly well
908
00:52:21,038 --> 00:52:24,442
and set his guitar alight,
slung it in the air
and did it all again.
909
00:52:24,509 --> 00:52:28,546
And this time the crowd got up
with the same kind of roar,
but slightly mystified--
910
00:52:28,613 --> 00:52:30,915
"Now, what's going on here?"
you know.
911
00:52:30,981 --> 00:52:33,083
[amplifier feeding back]
912
00:52:43,728 --> 00:52:46,864
[Townshend]
After Monterey Pop,
I became very
913
00:52:46,931 --> 00:52:48,966
disturbed about acid.
914
00:52:49,033 --> 00:52:50,801
[voice echoing]
915
00:52:50,868 --> 00:52:55,139
Coming back from Monterey,
on the plane, he had
a really bad trip
916
00:52:55,206 --> 00:52:59,377
and vowed he wouldn't take
any more psychedelic drugs
after that.
917
00:53:02,012 --> 00:53:05,149
[Townshend]
I just started to get
really sickened by LSD
918
00:53:05,216 --> 00:53:08,185
and acid
and by psychedelia and...
919
00:53:08,253 --> 00:53:10,555
But I'd also
been inspired by it.
920
00:53:10,621 --> 00:53:12,390
There was no question
I'd been inspired.
921
00:53:12,457 --> 00:53:14,292
So I was confused by it.
922
00:53:16,461 --> 00:53:19,597
Within about two months of that,
he was into Meher Baba.
923
00:53:19,664 --> 00:53:21,666
[Indian raga plays]
924
00:53:29,307 --> 00:53:31,976
I found him through
a man called Mike McInnerney.
925
00:53:32,042 --> 00:53:34,412
[man] I was talking
to Pete about it.
926
00:53:34,479 --> 00:53:38,082
I think Pete, like every other
rock-and-roll star, was, um,
927
00:53:38,148 --> 00:53:40,485
was not having
a good time sometimes.
928
00:53:42,219 --> 00:53:44,422
[Townshend] He gave me a book
called The God-Man
929
00:53:44,489 --> 00:53:47,458
about this guy
called Meher Baba.
930
00:53:47,525 --> 00:53:51,262
[narrator]
He was a Persian born in India
who took a vow of silence
931
00:53:51,329 --> 00:53:53,398
and kept it
for most of his life.
932
00:53:55,400 --> 00:53:58,703
True believers called him
an Avatar, god on Earth.
933
00:53:58,769 --> 00:54:02,106
[McInnerney]
The very simple thing that Baba
asked you to do was to love him.
934
00:54:02,172 --> 00:54:06,010
There's a difficulty there
for a start when you're
in rock and roll.
935
00:54:06,076 --> 00:54:09,780
You're a performer and you're
having to do all the stuff
that Pete's having to do,
936
00:54:09,847 --> 00:54:13,551
and yet he chooses to
try and to make a spiritual
journey at the same time.
937
00:54:14,852 --> 00:54:17,488
[narrator] The year Pete wrote
"I Can't Explain,"
938
00:54:17,555 --> 00:54:21,426
Meher Baba warned against
searching for god in a pill.
939
00:54:21,492 --> 00:54:24,695
[Townshend] To the sincere
seeker after truth,
940
00:54:24,762 --> 00:54:28,499
experimentation with drugs
may well open doors,
941
00:54:28,566 --> 00:54:31,235
but continued use
will lead to madness,
942
00:54:31,302 --> 00:54:33,638
death and insanity.
943
00:54:34,872 --> 00:54:38,275
And, you know,
from what I've seen,
944
00:54:38,343 --> 00:54:40,778
there are very, very,
very few exceptions.
945
00:54:44,949 --> 00:54:46,951
["Magic Bus" plays]
946
00:54:52,757 --> 00:54:55,292
We were booked on a tour,
bottom of the bill,
947
00:54:55,360 --> 00:54:57,795
with Herman's Hermits.
948
00:54:57,862 --> 00:55:00,798
You can imagine
Herman's Hermits' audience
949
00:55:00,865 --> 00:55:03,434
was sort of 13-year-old
middle-class girls.
950
00:55:03,501 --> 00:55:06,804
They were introduced to
their first piece of danger.
951
00:55:06,871 --> 00:55:09,640
* I want the magic bus *
952
00:55:09,707 --> 00:55:11,509
* I want the magic bus *
953
00:55:11,576 --> 00:55:13,944
They just ran.
They just--
954
00:55:14,011 --> 00:55:17,014
They ran to the back of the hall
until Herman came on.
955
00:55:17,081 --> 00:55:19,350
* Too much
The magic bus *
956
00:55:19,417 --> 00:55:22,587
[narrator]
In Georgia, Moonie discovered
firework stands.
957
00:55:24,121 --> 00:55:27,224
And in Michigan,
he celebrated his 21st birthday.
958
00:55:27,291 --> 00:55:29,827
[upbeat music plays]
959
00:55:43,408 --> 00:55:46,511
[man] I do remember
a car did end up
in a swimming pool.
960
00:55:46,577 --> 00:55:48,779
I don't know whether it was
a Lincoln Continental,
961
00:55:48,846 --> 00:55:52,216
but a car did end up
in the swimming pool,
and there was a lot of carnage.
962
00:55:52,282 --> 00:55:54,118
However much of that is true,
you don't know.
963
00:55:54,184 --> 00:55:56,086
I want it all to be true.
You know.
964
00:55:56,153 --> 00:55:59,524
You want to think that
he drove his Rolls-Royce
into a swimming pool.
965
00:55:59,590 --> 00:56:01,426
It was Keith Moon,
for crying out loud.
966
00:56:01,492 --> 00:56:04,762
[narrator] The truth is
several cars were damaged
967
00:56:04,829 --> 00:56:06,731
as well as several rooms
in the hotel.
968
00:56:06,797 --> 00:56:09,133
Moonie chipped a tooth
running from the law,
969
00:56:09,199 --> 00:56:13,103
and The Who was banned
from Holiday Inns for life.
970
00:56:13,170 --> 00:56:16,474
And over here,
the guy who plays
the sloppy drums.
971
00:56:16,541 --> 00:56:19,243
Follow the Yellow Brick Road.
What's your name?
972
00:56:19,309 --> 00:56:20,611
Keith.
Keith?
973
00:56:20,678 --> 00:56:23,380
My friends call me Keith.
You can call me John.
974
00:56:23,448 --> 00:56:25,249
What's the next song
you're gonna do?
975
00:56:25,315 --> 00:56:27,685
[stutters]
"My Generation."
976
00:56:27,752 --> 00:56:28,986
Your generation?
Yeah.
977
00:56:29,053 --> 00:56:30,488
I can really
identify with that,
978
00:56:30,555 --> 00:56:32,490
because I really identify
with these guys, I dig 'em.
979
00:56:32,557 --> 00:56:34,659
[farting sound]
And this is a--
980
00:56:36,226 --> 00:56:38,963
You know, you got
sloppy stagehands around here.
981
00:56:43,267 --> 00:56:46,136
[narrator]
On the last gig of the trip,
they smashed up their gear
982
00:56:46,203 --> 00:56:48,405
for the first time
on American television.
983
00:56:52,342 --> 00:56:55,646
Keith bribed
that sloppy stagehand
to overstuff his drum
984
00:56:55,713 --> 00:56:57,948
with a dangerous amount
of explosives.
985
00:57:06,957 --> 00:57:10,194
[John Entwistle]
Moon managed to fulfill
the outrageous part of the band,
986
00:57:10,260 --> 00:57:12,963
and we just let him
get on with it,
and he was outrageous.
987
00:57:13,030 --> 00:57:16,100
Ow! Aaah!
988
00:57:18,368 --> 00:57:20,270
[cymbal crashes]
989
00:57:22,172 --> 00:57:24,274
Uh, are you done?
990
00:57:28,779 --> 00:57:30,748
["Happy Jack" plays]
991
00:57:33,484 --> 00:57:37,087
* Happy Jack wasn't old
But he was a man *
992
00:57:37,154 --> 00:57:39,524
[Barnes] I think obviously
Pete wanted a bigger challenge
993
00:57:39,590 --> 00:57:41,592
than just the three-minute
single, you know.
994
00:57:41,659 --> 00:57:44,595
And he wanted to write
something much more complex
995
00:57:44,662 --> 00:57:46,497
and detailed and layered.
996
00:57:48,599 --> 00:57:52,570
[narrator] In four years,
The Who had released
eight singles in the UK,
997
00:57:52,637 --> 00:57:54,639
all of them top ten hits.
998
00:57:54,705 --> 00:57:56,173
Singles drove the market.
999
00:57:56,240 --> 00:57:59,877
Once the single happened,
you immediately went
to an album.
1000
00:57:59,944 --> 00:58:02,446
As much as we loved
the three-minute single,
1001
00:58:02,513 --> 00:58:05,616
the value was more than just
a three-minute single,
1002
00:58:05,683 --> 00:58:07,985
and it could add up
to a lot more.
1003
00:58:08,052 --> 00:58:10,621
[narrator]
In December 1967,
1004
00:58:10,688 --> 00:58:13,257
The Who produced
a piece of pop art.
1005
00:58:13,323 --> 00:58:15,292
[Townshend] The only time
I'd even approached
1006
00:58:15,359 --> 00:58:17,595
my art-school training
was in Who Sell Out.
1007
00:58:17,662 --> 00:58:21,265
Doing commercials, writing songs
about products and all of that
kind of stuff.
1008
00:58:21,331 --> 00:58:23,200
[hard rock music plays]
1009
00:58:23,267 --> 00:58:24,935
* Coca-Cola *
1010
00:58:25,002 --> 00:58:28,338
* Things go better with Coke *
1011
00:58:28,405 --> 00:58:31,609
Little bit about it,
because it's a very
unusual concept.
1012
00:58:31,676 --> 00:58:34,111
We want the album
to run very smoothly
1013
00:58:34,178 --> 00:58:37,247
and perhaps have
the atmosphere of
a pirate radio station.
1014
00:58:37,314 --> 00:58:40,685
So we've done a commercial
for Jaguar cars,
Heinz baked beans,
1015
00:58:40,751 --> 00:58:43,520
and each one,
funnily enough,
has opened up
1016
00:58:43,588 --> 00:58:45,990
a fairly unique
opportunity musically
1017
00:58:46,056 --> 00:58:48,759
which we wouldn't have got
through our normal numbers.
1018
00:58:48,826 --> 00:58:50,995
Keith will play one
we did yesterday.
1019
00:58:51,061 --> 00:58:53,731
[John Peel]
Would you do that?
It'd be very bold of you.
1020
00:58:53,798 --> 00:58:56,300
[rock plays]
1021
00:58:56,366 --> 00:58:58,836
Pete realized
he was onto something.
1022
00:58:58,903 --> 00:59:01,806
We knew the album was
gonna be the new art form.
1023
00:59:03,173 --> 00:59:06,911
[narrator] Rock music
changed the business in 1968.
1024
00:59:06,977 --> 00:59:08,746
That year,
for the first time,
1025
00:59:08,813 --> 00:59:12,082
people bought more albums
than singles.
1026
00:59:12,149 --> 00:59:15,385
[Barnes]
I used to say the '60s
was like a renaissance almost.
1027
00:59:15,452 --> 00:59:19,256
But the one art form
or means of communication
1028
00:59:19,323 --> 00:59:22,960
that was more important
than all the others
was popular music.
1029
00:59:23,027 --> 00:59:25,930
* More music, more music
More music, more music *
1030
00:59:28,899 --> 00:59:32,069
[narrator]
The Who toured the UK,
Europe, Australia.
1031
00:59:32,136 --> 00:59:36,106
They went coast to coast
across North America twice.
1032
00:59:36,173 --> 00:59:38,208
* I know you've deceived me *
1033
00:59:38,275 --> 00:59:40,978
* Now here's a surprise *
1034
00:59:43,447 --> 00:59:45,082
* I know that you have *
1035
00:59:45,149 --> 00:59:49,253
* 'Cause there's magic
In my eyes *
1036
00:59:49,319 --> 00:59:53,390
* I can see for miles
And miles *
1037
00:59:53,457 --> 00:59:56,927
* And miles and miles *
1038
00:59:56,994 --> 00:59:59,897
* And miles *
1039
01:00:01,031 --> 01:00:02,633
* Oh, yeah *
1040
01:00:02,700 --> 01:00:04,802
[Townshend] We put out
"I Can See For Miles,"
1041
01:00:04,869 --> 01:00:06,436
and it clearly wasn't
gonna change the world,
1042
01:00:06,503 --> 01:00:09,406
and it was the best possible
thing I could ever write.
1043
01:00:09,473 --> 01:00:12,109
So I just thought,
well, what do we do now?
We're fucked.
1044
01:00:12,176 --> 01:00:15,445
* Here's a poke at you
You're gonna choke on it too *
1045
01:00:15,512 --> 01:00:17,614
* You're gonna lose that smile *
1046
01:00:17,682 --> 01:00:20,550
* Because all the while *
1047
01:00:20,617 --> 01:00:24,154
* I can see for miles
And miles *
1048
01:00:24,221 --> 01:00:27,491
* I can see for miles
And miles *
1049
01:00:27,557 --> 01:00:29,359
[Townshend]
I went away, and I thought,
1050
01:00:29,426 --> 01:00:31,628
"I have to save this band.
I have to do it."
1051
01:00:31,696 --> 01:00:34,298
Kit can't do it.
Keith can't do it.
Roger can't do it.
1052
01:00:34,364 --> 01:00:36,066
I have to do it.
1053
01:00:53,884 --> 01:00:56,520
[Stamp]
Pete comes up with this idea
1054
01:00:56,586 --> 01:00:59,690
of this deaf,
dumb and blind boy.
1055
01:00:59,757 --> 01:01:03,460
The only way
he connects with life
1056
01:01:03,527 --> 01:01:06,563
is he feels the vibes, right?
1057
01:01:08,065 --> 01:01:11,802
The vibes are music, right?
1058
01:01:11,869 --> 01:01:13,637
That was it.
1059
01:01:13,704 --> 01:01:17,007
That was like-- You know
the screenplay written on
the back of a cigarette packet?
1060
01:01:17,074 --> 01:01:18,876
That's what Pete's idea was.
1061
01:01:21,779 --> 01:01:25,049
[Townshend] It's a bit like
an opera, but in actual fact,
it's a rock opera.
1062
01:01:25,115 --> 01:01:27,117
It's modern music as such.
1063
01:01:27,184 --> 01:01:30,287
It's the story of Tommy,
the deaf, dumb and blind boy,
1064
01:01:30,354 --> 01:01:33,290
and his--
his journey through
1065
01:01:33,357 --> 01:01:35,492
to extreme high levels
of consciousness,
1066
01:01:35,559 --> 01:01:37,762
despite the fact that
he's deaf, dumb and blind.
1067
01:01:42,933 --> 01:01:44,735
* I'm free *
1068
01:01:46,570 --> 01:01:49,306
* I'm free *
1069
01:01:51,575 --> 01:01:54,979
* Freedom tastes *
1070
01:01:55,045 --> 01:01:57,381
* Of reality *
1071
01:01:57,447 --> 01:02:00,785
[Barnes] It's all part
of reincarnation and, uh,
1072
01:02:00,851 --> 01:02:03,320
levels of consciousness
and stuff like this.
1073
01:02:03,387 --> 01:02:05,222
Meher Baba stuff.
1074
01:02:05,289 --> 01:02:09,059
Baba might have provided
spiritual glue
which made sense of
1075
01:02:09,126 --> 01:02:11,261
the travails
this character
was going through,
1076
01:02:11,328 --> 01:02:13,530
and the symbolism,
if you like.
1077
01:02:15,833 --> 01:02:19,603
[Stamp] If you think about
the wound of all the sort of
working-class war kids,
1078
01:02:19,669 --> 01:02:22,773
it's that
we didn't have a voice,
you know, we couldn't see.
1079
01:02:22,840 --> 01:02:25,075
[Townshend]
We all had exactly
the same experience.
1080
01:02:25,142 --> 01:02:27,477
When you went
to Granddad and you said,
1081
01:02:27,544 --> 01:02:30,080
"What do you think made
the fucking Germans do that?"
1082
01:02:30,147 --> 01:02:32,983
He'd go, "I don't want to
fuckin' talk about it.
1083
01:02:33,050 --> 01:02:34,651
You know, fuck off."
1084
01:02:36,520 --> 01:02:38,889
* You didn't hear it
You didn't see it *
1085
01:02:38,956 --> 01:02:42,126
* You won't say nothing
To no one never in your life *
1086
01:02:42,192 --> 01:02:45,529
* You never heard it
How absurd it all seems *
1087
01:02:45,595 --> 01:02:47,531
* Without any proof *
1088
01:02:47,597 --> 01:02:50,767
[Townshend]
We had all these fucking lies
we grew up with.
1089
01:02:50,835 --> 01:02:53,838
Tommy was so much rooted
in my-my childhood story.
1090
01:02:55,405 --> 01:02:59,643
[narrator]
Recording began in the fall
of '68 and lasted six months.
1091
01:03:03,547 --> 01:03:06,316
[Daltrey] Pete at the time
was writing a song a week.
1092
01:03:06,383 --> 01:03:09,987
And literally-- or even
a song the same evening
1093
01:03:10,054 --> 01:03:12,422
as we'd been in the studio
in the afternoon.
1094
01:03:12,489 --> 01:03:16,093
He'd come in the next day
and say, "Here's the next one
and here's the next one."
1095
01:03:16,160 --> 01:03:19,629
[hard rock music plays]
1096
01:03:19,696 --> 01:03:24,168
[Townshend] That was when
the ideas from the other guys
in the band started to come in.
1097
01:03:24,234 --> 01:03:26,236
* I'm your wicked Uncle Ernie *
1098
01:03:26,303 --> 01:03:29,706
* Glad you can't see or hear me
As I fiddle about *
1099
01:03:29,773 --> 01:03:31,909
* Fiddle about, fiddle about *
1100
01:03:31,976 --> 01:03:35,512
[Townshend] John Entwistle
came up with two really
very, very powerful songs
1101
01:03:35,579 --> 01:03:38,548
about abuse and bullying
that I couldn't write myself
1102
01:03:38,615 --> 01:03:41,451
because of my own childhood
tenderness on the subject.
1103
01:03:41,518 --> 01:03:45,222
* Down with the bedclothes
Up with your nightshirt *
1104
01:03:45,289 --> 01:03:49,226
* Fiddle about
Fiddle about, fiddle about *
1105
01:03:49,293 --> 01:03:51,261
[Daltrey] His input
shouldn't be underestimated.
1106
01:03:51,328 --> 01:03:54,664
I mean, the antagonists
like Uncle Ernie,
1107
01:03:54,731 --> 01:03:57,134
who he initially is,
and Cousin Kevin,
1108
01:03:57,201 --> 01:04:00,004
are just as important
as the hero.
1109
01:04:00,070 --> 01:04:01,738
It gave
the whole thing a balance.
1110
01:04:01,805 --> 01:04:04,574
Good morning, campers!
* I'm your Uncle Ernie *
1111
01:04:04,641 --> 01:04:07,511
* And I welcome you to
Tommy's Holiday Camp *
1112
01:04:09,046 --> 01:04:12,216
[Townshend] Keith Moon came up
with the idea that the temple,
1113
01:04:12,282 --> 01:04:15,986
the bizarre church
that I created, should actually
be a British holiday camp.
1114
01:04:16,053 --> 01:04:19,589
* It is forever
Ha-ha!
1115
01:04:19,656 --> 01:04:22,592
In that moment,
all of the elements of it
come together.
1116
01:04:26,230 --> 01:04:30,134
And instead of talking about
the trouble that we'd created
a couple of years ago,
1117
01:04:30,200 --> 01:04:33,370
we were talking about
the project, about what
we could do with it.
1118
01:04:33,437 --> 01:04:35,940
* You don't answer my call *
1119
01:04:36,006 --> 01:04:38,542
* With even a nod or a wink *
1120
01:04:38,608 --> 01:04:43,080
* But you gaze at
Your own reflection
All right *
1121
01:04:43,147 --> 01:04:45,249
* You don't seem to see me *
1122
01:04:45,315 --> 01:04:48,685
* But I think
You can see yourself *
1123
01:04:48,752 --> 01:04:51,922
* How can the mirror
Affect you? *
1124
01:04:55,592 --> 01:04:57,794
[man] Can you explain
in any kind of a way
1125
01:04:57,861 --> 01:05:00,130
what satisfaction
you get from it?
1126
01:05:00,197 --> 01:05:02,032
Yeah. Sexual.
1127
01:05:03,500 --> 01:05:05,269
I've always liked balls,
1128
01:05:05,335 --> 01:05:10,040
and, uh, to see
big, shiny, silver balls
1129
01:05:10,107 --> 01:05:12,509
runnin' round
a playground like this,
1130
01:05:12,576 --> 01:05:15,845
I can get a certain amount
of satisfaction
1131
01:05:15,912 --> 01:05:18,915
building up a score
that's gonna knock
everybody else into oblivion,
1132
01:05:18,983 --> 01:05:21,251
which, you know--
which I do often.
1133
01:05:21,318 --> 01:05:23,920
["Pinball Wizard" plays]
1134
01:05:32,296 --> 01:05:34,698
They came up with this idea
of introducing pinball
1135
01:05:34,764 --> 01:05:38,068
into this bizarre,
strange story that was going
all over the place.
1136
01:05:38,135 --> 01:05:41,505
* Ever since I was a young boy
I played the silver ball *
1137
01:05:41,571 --> 01:05:43,640
* From Soho
Down to Brighton *
1138
01:05:43,707 --> 01:05:45,775
* I must've played 'em all *
1139
01:05:45,842 --> 01:05:49,546
* But I ain't seen
Nothin' like him
In any amusement hall *
1140
01:05:49,613 --> 01:05:53,817
* That deaf, dumb and blind kid
Sure plays a mean pinball *
1141
01:05:53,883 --> 01:05:56,220
[Barnes] Pete said,
"I thought it was rubbish.
1142
01:05:56,286 --> 01:05:58,555
I didn't know whether
I should bother finishing it."
1143
01:05:58,622 --> 01:06:02,259
And he played it and everyone
went quiet until someone said,
"That's the number one."
1144
01:06:02,326 --> 01:06:05,162
And he went, "Aw," you know.
He couldn't see
that it was good.
1145
01:06:05,229 --> 01:06:09,366
* He's a pinball wizard
There has to be a twist *
1146
01:06:09,433 --> 01:06:14,338
* A pinball wizard's
Got such a supple wrist *
1147
01:06:14,404 --> 01:06:17,441
[Townshend]
Roger suddenly decided
that he would be Tommy.
1148
01:06:17,507 --> 01:06:19,676
I was supposed to sing Tommy.
1149
01:06:19,743 --> 01:06:21,578
He said, "Can I be Tommy?"
1150
01:06:21,645 --> 01:06:24,148
And I remember
thinking, yeah.
1151
01:06:24,214 --> 01:06:26,450
* See me *
1152
01:06:26,516 --> 01:06:28,818
[audience cheers]
1153
01:06:28,885 --> 01:06:30,587
* Feel me *
1154
01:06:32,656 --> 01:06:34,358
* Touch me *
1155
01:06:36,793 --> 01:06:38,595
* Heal me *
1156
01:06:38,662 --> 01:06:41,931
[Daltrey]
It was only really though
when we got onstage with Tommy
1157
01:06:41,998 --> 01:06:44,968
as a complete piece of music
1158
01:06:45,035 --> 01:06:48,472
that I really found my feet
and found The Who voice.
1159
01:06:48,538 --> 01:06:50,274
* Touch me *
1160
01:06:52,476 --> 01:06:54,578
* Heal me *
1161
01:06:56,080 --> 01:07:00,150
[Townshend]
Roger suddenly became
this different kind of singer.
1162
01:07:00,217 --> 01:07:03,153
* Feel me *
1163
01:07:03,220 --> 01:07:05,855
He'd never had that quality
that he now has,
1164
01:07:05,922 --> 01:07:09,059
which is of going up
to the audience
and engaging them
1165
01:07:09,126 --> 01:07:12,529
and opening his body
to them, you know,
and that kind of nakedness,
1166
01:07:12,596 --> 01:07:15,865
instead of being a really
tight little kind of,
"I'm a vicious mug.
1167
01:07:15,932 --> 01:07:17,834
Don't get in my way"
kind of thing.
1168
01:07:17,901 --> 01:07:20,036
* Listening to you *
1169
01:07:20,104 --> 01:07:22,606
* I get the music *
1170
01:07:22,672 --> 01:07:25,041
* Gazing at you *
1171
01:07:25,109 --> 01:07:27,244
* I get the heat *
1172
01:07:27,311 --> 01:07:29,879
* Following you *
1173
01:07:29,946 --> 01:07:32,216
* I climb a mountain *
1174
01:07:32,282 --> 01:07:38,054
* I get excitement
At your feet *
1175
01:07:38,122 --> 01:07:39,623
[Heather Daltrey]
It was a role.
1176
01:07:39,689 --> 01:07:42,126
He actually lived each song
as it went through.
1177
01:07:42,192 --> 01:07:46,396
* Got a feeling '21
Is gonna be a good year *
1178
01:07:47,831 --> 01:07:51,768
* Especially if you and me
See it in together *
1179
01:07:53,470 --> 01:07:56,440
* So you think '21
Is gonna be a good year *
1180
01:07:56,506 --> 01:07:59,643
[Stamp] Rock and roll
was still being seen
on a very bad level.
1181
01:07:59,709 --> 01:08:02,112
The sound systems weren't good.
You couldn't hear it properly.
1182
01:08:02,179 --> 01:08:04,481
So we thought, well,
let's use opera houses.
1183
01:08:04,548 --> 01:08:08,118
* Have no reason to be
Overoptimistic *
1184
01:08:08,185 --> 01:08:12,956
The group played Tommy
truly as an opera,
and it was, like, fantastic.
1185
01:08:13,022 --> 01:08:17,127
'Cause you had
these ancient, beautiful
acoustical places, right,
1186
01:08:17,194 --> 01:08:19,496
and this audience
hearing their music
1187
01:08:19,563 --> 01:08:22,199
played this way
for the first time.
1188
01:08:22,266 --> 01:08:24,534
[narrator]
After 18 months of touring,
1189
01:08:24,601 --> 01:08:26,903
The Who played
one final opera house
1190
01:08:26,970 --> 01:08:29,506
in New York City--
the Metropolitan.
1191
01:08:36,146 --> 01:08:37,814
[Stamp]
They really didn't want us
to go in there.
1192
01:08:37,881 --> 01:08:40,684
They really didn't want to
put rock and roll
in the Metropolitan Opera House.
1193
01:08:40,750 --> 01:08:43,287
The worst snobs turned out
to be Americans.
1194
01:08:43,353 --> 01:08:46,089
We got in,
and when we got in,
1195
01:08:46,156 --> 01:08:48,558
Decca Universal
re-released Tommy.
1196
01:08:48,625 --> 01:08:51,328
It just sold again
1197
01:08:51,395 --> 01:08:53,730
like five times
what it had sold the first time.
1198
01:08:53,797 --> 01:08:57,934
It became one of
those huge albums.
That was the printing-money era.
1199
01:08:58,001 --> 01:09:00,437
* Can you, can you hear me? *
1200
01:09:00,504 --> 01:09:06,510
* How can we be saved? *
1201
01:09:06,576 --> 01:09:08,878
[Curbishley] Tommy was huge
1202
01:09:08,945 --> 01:09:11,581
and did take the band along
on its coattails.
1203
01:09:11,648 --> 01:09:15,419
Tommy, in its own way,
became as big as The Who.
1204
01:09:15,485 --> 01:09:17,887
* Waking up
On Christmas morning *
1205
01:09:17,954 --> 01:09:21,425
* Hours before
The winter sun's igniting *
1206
01:09:23,927 --> 01:09:26,162
* They believe in dreams
And all they mean *
1207
01:09:26,230 --> 01:09:28,998
* Including heaven's
Generosity *
1208
01:09:31,668 --> 01:09:35,004
* Peeping round the door to see
What parcels are for free *
1209
01:09:35,071 --> 01:09:36,873
* In curiosity *
1210
01:09:39,175 --> 01:09:42,579
[Barnes] They were developing
this high-powered sound
for live gigs.
1211
01:09:42,646 --> 01:09:44,548
And it's absolutely
incredible
1212
01:09:44,614 --> 01:09:47,784
that you could get
that fantastic full,
1213
01:09:47,851 --> 01:09:50,186
rich, rock sound
out of just a guitar,
1214
01:09:50,254 --> 01:09:52,088
a bass guitar and a drum.
1215
01:10:09,138 --> 01:10:13,176
* Listening to you
I get the music *
1216
01:10:13,243 --> 01:10:16,713
* Gazing at you
I get the heat *
1217
01:10:16,780 --> 01:10:18,515
* Following you *
1218
01:10:18,582 --> 01:10:21,718
* I climb the mountain *
1219
01:10:21,785 --> 01:10:25,289
* I get excitement
At your feet *
1220
01:10:25,355 --> 01:10:26,990
Come on!
1221
01:10:27,056 --> 01:10:31,428
I started to feel
accepted again in the band
during Tommy.
1222
01:10:31,495 --> 01:10:35,832
[Townshend] Roger became Tommy,
became this figure.
Then it equalized.
1223
01:10:35,899 --> 01:10:38,468
And then we were
unbelievably potent,
1224
01:10:38,535 --> 01:10:40,770
because we were balanced.
1225
01:10:40,837 --> 01:10:43,407
It was a marriage,
but it was a good marriage.
1226
01:10:43,473 --> 01:10:45,609
Those were glorious years.
1227
01:10:45,675 --> 01:10:49,613
* Behind you
I see the millions *
1228
01:10:49,679 --> 01:10:54,017
* From you, I see the glory *
1229
01:10:54,083 --> 01:10:57,754
* From you, I get opinions *
1230
01:10:57,821 --> 01:11:02,025
* From you, I get the story *
1231
01:11:30,053 --> 01:11:32,055
["Behind Blue Eyes" plays]
1232
01:11:37,527 --> 01:11:40,664
* No one knows what it's like *
1233
01:11:40,730 --> 01:11:43,099
* To be the bad man *
1234
01:11:44,534 --> 01:11:46,836
* To be the sad man *
1235
01:11:48,538 --> 01:11:50,974
* Behind blue eyes *
1236
01:11:51,040 --> 01:11:54,444
I think that Pete has always
felt the pressure
1237
01:11:54,511 --> 01:11:58,014
of being the guy
who came up with the ideas.
1238
01:11:58,081 --> 01:12:00,584
It was such
a special gift that he had.
1239
01:12:00,650 --> 01:12:03,587
* No one knows what it's like *
1240
01:12:03,653 --> 01:12:05,922
* To be hated *
1241
01:12:07,424 --> 01:12:10,594
* To be fated *
1242
01:12:10,660 --> 01:12:13,229
* To telling only lies *
1243
01:12:13,296 --> 01:12:15,432
[Daltrey] I went through
terrible periods where
1244
01:12:15,499 --> 01:12:17,767
I would want to be
getting closer to him,
1245
01:12:17,834 --> 01:12:21,204
but I had to push myself away
because he was
in a creative thing.
1246
01:12:21,270 --> 01:12:24,708
And you kind of felt
that if you left him alone,
it would be better.
1247
01:12:24,774 --> 01:12:28,211
But it must have been,
for Pete, incredibly lonely.
1248
01:12:28,277 --> 01:12:30,346
It must've felt sometimes
that we didn't give a fuck
about him.
1249
01:12:30,414 --> 01:12:34,250
* I have hours *
1250
01:12:34,317 --> 01:12:36,219
* Only lonely *
1251
01:12:37,954 --> 01:12:40,223
* My love is vengeance *
1252
01:12:41,858 --> 01:12:44,594
* That's never free *
1253
01:12:46,095 --> 01:12:48,097
[Barnes]
It took a terrible toll on him.
1254
01:12:48,164 --> 01:12:50,333
After Tommy, they said,
"What are you gonna do next?"
1255
01:12:51,635 --> 01:12:53,369
[narrator] In 1971,
1256
01:12:53,437 --> 01:12:56,172
Pete conceived the first
interactive rock show.
1257
01:12:56,239 --> 01:12:58,742
He imagined fans
connected to the band,
1258
01:12:58,808 --> 01:13:00,710
the music, the art.
1259
01:13:00,777 --> 01:13:03,580
The futuristic performance
was to be filmed for a movie
1260
01:13:03,647 --> 01:13:06,049
and called Lifehouse.
1261
01:13:06,115 --> 01:13:09,018
The trouble is with Lifehouse
1262
01:13:09,085 --> 01:13:12,288
no one I've ever met,
apart from Pete,
ever understood it.
1263
01:13:12,355 --> 01:13:14,424
At the time, people just
thought I was nuts.
1264
01:13:14,491 --> 01:13:16,960
[narrator]
Including his mentor.
1265
01:13:17,026 --> 01:13:20,830
Behind my back,
Kit Lambert was
telling everybody
1266
01:13:20,897 --> 01:13:23,066
that I was insane
1267
01:13:23,132 --> 01:13:26,703
and that what we were
really doing was making
a movie of Tommy,
1268
01:13:26,770 --> 01:13:28,672
and he was directing it.
1269
01:13:28,738 --> 01:13:30,807
[Barnes] Pete said,
"I've had enough of that.
1270
01:13:30,874 --> 01:13:34,644
We're gonna be known
just for Tommy.
It's bigger than the band."
1271
01:13:34,711 --> 01:13:38,548
That was the point
at which Kit just
exploded the relationship.
1272
01:13:39,949 --> 01:13:43,186
* No one knows what it's like *
1273
01:13:43,252 --> 01:13:45,421
* To be the bad man *
1274
01:13:46,923 --> 01:13:49,392
* To be the sad man *
1275
01:13:51,094 --> 01:13:54,664
* Behind blue eyes *
1276
01:13:54,731 --> 01:13:57,901
[narrator]
In the spring of '71,
Lifehouse was abandoned.
1277
01:13:57,967 --> 01:13:59,969
["Baba O'Riley" plays]
1278
01:14:03,607 --> 01:14:05,809
The songs for Lifehouse
became the basis
1279
01:14:05,875 --> 01:14:09,045
of The Who's
most successful album,
Who's Next.
1280
01:14:10,747 --> 01:14:13,517
The opening track
was an anthem named in part
1281
01:14:13,583 --> 01:14:16,653
for Pete's spiritual guide,
Meher Baba.
1282
01:14:16,720 --> 01:14:18,722
[Barnes] The nerve
of having something open
1283
01:14:18,788 --> 01:14:21,725
with that huge, long
synthesizer intro,
1284
01:14:21,791 --> 01:14:24,961
which everyone in rock
at the time said, "You can't
have an intro like that,
1285
01:14:25,028 --> 01:14:26,863
because the radio
won't play it."
1286
01:14:26,930 --> 01:14:29,866
He claims-- Pete says
that those riffs are that
1287
01:14:29,933 --> 01:14:34,103
he put Meher Baba's birth
into the computer,
and this is what came out.
1288
01:14:34,170 --> 01:14:37,073
"Yeah, yeah, I know you, Pete.
Yeah, right."
1289
01:14:37,140 --> 01:14:38,775
You know. Like hell.
1290
01:14:47,551 --> 01:14:50,053
* Out here in the fields *
1291
01:14:52,188 --> 01:14:54,624
* I fight for my meals *
1292
01:14:56,059 --> 01:14:58,595
[Townshend]
One of the first messages
that received directly
1293
01:14:58,662 --> 01:15:01,531
from Meher Baba
was that he recognized me.
1294
01:15:01,598 --> 01:15:03,366
That I was one of his,
as it were.
1295
01:15:03,432 --> 01:15:05,935
And he died two years later,
so I never met him.
1296
01:15:08,437 --> 01:15:10,640
* Don't cry *
1297
01:15:12,141 --> 01:15:15,378
* Don't raise your eye *
1298
01:15:16,512 --> 01:15:23,086
* It's only teenage wasteland *
1299
01:15:25,421 --> 01:15:27,456
* Sally, take my hand *
1300
01:15:29,358 --> 01:15:31,895
* We'll travel south
'Cross land *
1301
01:15:32,762 --> 01:15:35,198
* Put out the fire *
1302
01:15:35,264 --> 01:15:38,101
* And don't look past
My shoulder *
1303
01:15:41,404 --> 01:15:43,640
[narrator] Following the tour
for Who's Next,
1304
01:15:43,707 --> 01:15:46,743
Pete went to India to visit
the tomb of his spiritual guide.
1305
01:15:46,810 --> 01:15:49,545
"Beloved Baba
sends his love to you.
1306
01:15:49,613 --> 01:15:52,582
He is always with you,
in you and near you,
1307
01:15:52,649 --> 01:15:56,185
and he says, be happy
and not to worry."
1308
01:15:56,252 --> 01:15:59,255
[Townshend]
In a sense, I was engaged
in some kind of sabotage.
1309
01:15:59,322 --> 01:16:03,159
I was inside this
very, very macho group
that smashed its guitars
1310
01:16:03,226 --> 01:16:06,562
and had a reputation
for being quite rebellious,
1311
01:16:06,630 --> 01:16:10,199
trying to spread this message
of love and peace. [laughs]
1312
01:16:12,368 --> 01:16:14,370
[cheering]
1313
01:16:18,541 --> 01:16:20,543
["The Real Me" plays]
1314
01:16:31,788 --> 01:16:33,957
* I went back to the doctor *
1315
01:16:34,023 --> 01:16:36,893
* To get another shrink *
1316
01:16:36,960 --> 01:16:40,363
* I sit and tell him
About my weekend *
1317
01:16:40,429 --> 01:16:44,500
* But he never betrays
What he thinks, whoo *
1318
01:16:44,567 --> 01:16:47,236
* Can you see the real me *
1319
01:16:47,303 --> 01:16:50,339
* Doctor, Doctor? *
1320
01:16:50,406 --> 01:16:54,978
* Can you see
The real me, Doctor? *
1321
01:16:55,979 --> 01:16:58,481
* Whoa, Doctor *
1322
01:17:00,549 --> 01:17:05,088
[narrator]
In 1973, Pete crafted
a second rock opera.
1323
01:17:05,154 --> 01:17:07,390
Quadrophenia
was set against the rumble
1324
01:17:07,456 --> 01:17:09,525
of the mods and rockers.
1325
01:17:09,592 --> 01:17:12,628
* She said
"I know how it feels, Son *
1326
01:17:12,696 --> 01:17:15,765
* 'Cause it runs
In the family" *
1327
01:17:15,832 --> 01:17:18,401
[Townshend]
I wanted Kit to be
a part of Quadrophenia,
1328
01:17:18,467 --> 01:17:20,369
even though it was
done and dusted.
1329
01:17:20,436 --> 01:17:23,506
Chris Stamp said,
"He's in New York and he's got
a bit of a problem.
1330
01:17:23,572 --> 01:17:25,074
He's become
a heroin addict."
1331
01:17:25,141 --> 01:17:27,576
[Daltrey] After Tommy,
the drugs changed.
1332
01:17:27,643 --> 01:17:30,379
We'd lost a bit of our--
our vision.
1333
01:17:30,446 --> 01:17:34,984
The dynamic of wealth
introduced into this family
1334
01:17:35,051 --> 01:17:36,619
was what changed it.
1335
01:17:42,726 --> 01:17:45,895
[Curbishley] Kit and Chris
were fighting on a daily basis.
1336
01:17:45,962 --> 01:17:48,998
They began to fall apart
as partners,
1337
01:17:49,065 --> 01:17:51,567
and they began
to fall apart as people.
1338
01:17:51,634 --> 01:17:53,870
It was quite obvious
that Kit was now
1339
01:17:53,937 --> 01:17:56,172
into quite heavy substances.
1340
01:17:56,239 --> 01:17:58,141
And money was going missing.
1341
01:17:58,207 --> 01:18:00,509
It wasn't a matter of
they were trying to screw us.
1342
01:18:00,576 --> 01:18:02,812
They were just completely
out of control.
1343
01:18:02,879 --> 01:18:04,680
We became the problem, right?
1344
01:18:04,748 --> 01:18:07,583
So if we were to go, the problem
would resolve itself.
1345
01:18:07,650 --> 01:18:11,254
Now, I've never understood that.
1346
01:18:11,320 --> 01:18:14,157
Because although
we may have been fucked up,
1347
01:18:14,223 --> 01:18:17,193
we could still utter
one decent idea once a week...
1348
01:18:18,494 --> 01:18:20,329
from our stupor, you know?
1349
01:18:20,396 --> 01:18:22,231
So, I don't know.
It ended.
1350
01:18:23,566 --> 01:18:25,601
[narrator] The band
turned to Bill Curbishley
1351
01:18:25,668 --> 01:18:27,336
to take over management.
1352
01:18:27,403 --> 01:18:30,139
I looked at the past contracts
1353
01:18:30,206 --> 01:18:33,509
and what they were achieving
as live performers,
1354
01:18:33,576 --> 01:18:36,980
and I felt that could be
dramatically changed.
1355
01:18:37,046 --> 01:18:38,414
* Bell boy *
1356
01:18:38,481 --> 01:18:42,185
-* Gonna get running now *
-* Bell boy *
1357
01:18:42,251 --> 01:18:45,721
[narrator] Having set their
affairs in order, he urged
them to tour Quadrophenia.
1358
01:18:45,789 --> 01:18:49,425
-* Carry the bloody
Baggage out *
-* Bell boy *
1359
01:18:49,492 --> 01:18:52,261
* Always running
At someone's heel *
1360
01:18:52,328 --> 01:18:55,231
But Pete's new opera
was much more demanding live
1361
01:18:55,298 --> 01:18:57,066
than Tommy had been.
1362
01:18:57,133 --> 01:18:59,335
[Townshend] What happened
on Quadrophenia was
1363
01:18:59,402 --> 01:19:02,071
I had absolute control.
1364
01:19:02,138 --> 01:19:04,841
And everybody involved in it
was like my puppet.
1365
01:19:04,908 --> 01:19:08,411
And I think
by the very, very end of it,
Roger just got sick of it.
1366
01:19:08,477 --> 01:19:11,214
[power chords play on guitar]
1367
01:19:11,280 --> 01:19:14,350
Roger and Pete
had a fight in rehearsals.
1368
01:19:17,486 --> 01:19:19,522
[Daltrey] Pete just got
really angry with me.
1369
01:19:19,588 --> 01:19:21,991
Takes his guitar and hits me
over the shoulder with it.
1370
01:19:22,058 --> 01:19:24,293
So the road crew,
they jump on me.
1371
01:19:24,360 --> 01:19:28,131
I was holding Pete back,
and the roadies were
holding Roger back.
1372
01:19:28,197 --> 01:19:30,533
And I hadn't done anything.
1373
01:19:30,599 --> 01:19:33,169
Pete turned around and said,
"Yeah, let me go, let me go."
1374
01:19:33,236 --> 01:19:35,138
So, I thought, fine.
I let him go.
1375
01:19:35,204 --> 01:19:38,041
And he just came at me.
He was so drunk.
1376
01:19:38,107 --> 01:19:42,345
-And he walked up to Roger.
-I just managed to catch him
with a very lucky punch.
1377
01:19:42,411 --> 01:19:45,081
-Whack.
-Completely knocked him sparko.
1378
01:19:45,148 --> 01:19:46,015
Thump.
1379
01:19:48,317 --> 01:19:51,620
His feet left the ground,
and he hit his head
on the stage.
1380
01:19:51,687 --> 01:19:54,057
And he was unconscious,
and I thought, "Fuck."
1381
01:19:56,192 --> 01:19:59,929
We were all exhausted.
And it's a magnificent
piece of work.
1382
01:19:59,996 --> 01:20:03,366
Absolutely magnificent.
It's our towering triumph,
Quadrophenia.
1383
01:20:03,432 --> 01:20:05,835
So, in a sense, you know,
1384
01:20:05,902 --> 01:20:08,737
a little bit of blood spilt
on the way is nothing.
1385
01:20:11,674 --> 01:20:14,510
[narrator]
As boys, they played
dance halls and pubs.
1386
01:20:14,577 --> 01:20:17,680
[emcee]
Here they are, The Who!
1387
01:20:17,746 --> 01:20:22,051
Less than a decade later,
they were headlining stadiums.
1388
01:20:22,118 --> 01:20:25,154
As The Who developed,
so had the business.
1389
01:20:25,221 --> 01:20:29,425
[Curbishley]
Just think about the feeling
to walk onto a stage,
1390
01:20:29,492 --> 01:20:32,461
and you've got 60,000 people
out there to see you.
1391
01:20:33,562 --> 01:20:38,534
Adulation from masses
of people is power.
1392
01:20:38,601 --> 01:20:40,503
And it distorts.
1393
01:20:40,569 --> 01:20:42,538
[audience cheers]
1394
01:20:45,942 --> 01:20:48,311
[Daltrey] The adrenaline
that you get from stage--
1395
01:20:48,377 --> 01:20:53,449
it's incredibly good
when it's used.
1396
01:20:53,516 --> 01:20:57,253
But if you can't use it,
it's incredibly destructive.
1397
01:20:59,122 --> 01:21:02,325
[Townshend]
Keith and John together
were a dangerous double act.
1398
01:21:02,391 --> 01:21:03,927
I was very naive.
1399
01:21:03,993 --> 01:21:06,729
I didn't realize
how much coke they were doing,
as well as drinking.
1400
01:21:06,795 --> 01:21:08,531
And Keith
was doing everything else.
1401
01:21:15,638 --> 01:21:17,640
Mandrax to go to sleep.
1402
01:21:17,706 --> 01:21:20,276
Elephant tranquilizer.
Anything anybody gave him,
he would do it.
1403
01:21:22,311 --> 01:21:24,747
[Daltrey]
Who knows what was
going on in his brain?
1404
01:21:24,813 --> 01:21:29,218
I sometimes feel that
he started to believe
that he was invincible.
1405
01:21:29,285 --> 01:21:31,787
"I can take anything.
I'm Keith Moon of The Who."
1406
01:21:39,295 --> 01:21:42,731
[Townshend]
He was falling down
with drug overdoses
1407
01:21:42,798 --> 01:21:46,635
on the stage
during the shows!
1408
01:22:00,616 --> 01:22:03,052
I thought if we kept doing
what we were doing,
1409
01:22:03,119 --> 01:22:04,820
you know,
Keith was gonna die.
1410
01:22:08,992 --> 01:22:10,659
[audience cheers]
1411
01:22:10,726 --> 01:22:12,628
[narrator]
After the Quadrophenia tour,
1412
01:22:12,695 --> 01:22:15,731
The Who did not take
the stage again for 16 months.
1413
01:22:18,767 --> 01:22:22,405
[drumroll, horn fanfare plays]
1414
01:22:22,471 --> 01:22:25,341
[Daltrey] We were off the road
for long periods of time,
1415
01:22:25,408 --> 01:22:27,443
and that in itself
was destructive to Keith.
1416
01:22:27,510 --> 01:22:31,514
Keith used to go out on benders
because he didn't have
nothing else to do.
1417
01:22:32,815 --> 01:22:35,751
[upbeat march plays]
1418
01:22:35,818 --> 01:22:37,653
He loved dressing up.
1419
01:22:37,720 --> 01:22:40,023
But the trouble is,
you'd end up in a nightclub
1420
01:22:40,089 --> 01:22:42,425
with him dressed up
as a tart or a cavalier.
1421
01:22:42,491 --> 01:22:45,194
And then 3:00 in the morning,
1422
01:22:45,261 --> 01:22:48,097
you've gone home,
and he's still that person.
1423
01:22:48,164 --> 01:22:50,666
* Ba-- Ba-Bar-Ran *
1424
01:22:50,733 --> 01:22:53,569
[Butler] We'd just book
a hotel in London, and he'd pull
1425
01:22:53,636 --> 01:22:55,971
all the Swedish models
out of Tramps for four nights
1426
01:22:56,039 --> 01:22:57,906
and, excuse my French,
shag ourselves to death.
1427
01:22:57,973 --> 01:23:02,411
I used to drive him home,
and he was like that in the car.
1428
01:23:02,478 --> 01:23:05,248
I'd just get him outside,
but he goes, "Ah, dear boy.
1429
01:23:05,314 --> 01:23:08,251
What a brilliant four days.
Let's do that again next week."
1430
01:23:08,317 --> 01:23:10,186
And I'd go, "Yeah, okay."
1431
01:23:10,253 --> 01:23:12,221
[Stamp] Dougal,
he was always there for Keith.
1432
01:23:12,288 --> 01:23:14,623
He was a good roadie.
He was a good driver.
1433
01:23:14,690 --> 01:23:18,394
He was a good--
He was a good cornerman.
1434
01:23:18,461 --> 01:23:22,031
[narrator]
Moon's previous cornerman
was killed on the job.
1435
01:23:22,098 --> 01:23:25,501
In 1970, his childhood friend,
Neil Boland,
1436
01:23:25,568 --> 01:23:27,603
was accidentally run over
by Keith
1437
01:23:27,670 --> 01:23:31,174
during an alcohol-fueled
scuffle outside a nightclub.
1438
01:23:31,240 --> 01:23:35,010
Nobody's really clear on
what happened that night,
1439
01:23:35,078 --> 01:23:37,446
but Keith's journey
1440
01:23:37,513 --> 01:23:40,216
of experience
with alcohol and drugs
1441
01:23:40,283 --> 01:23:43,619
basically gathered speed.
1442
01:23:45,188 --> 01:23:48,291
[narrator] In 1974,
Moon moved to Malibu,
1443
01:23:48,357 --> 01:23:51,760
home of the Southern California
surfer music he loved so much.
1444
01:23:51,827 --> 01:23:54,963
* Here by the sea and sand *
1445
01:23:55,030 --> 01:23:57,666
* Nothing ever goes as planned *
1446
01:23:57,733 --> 01:24:00,503
* I just couldn't face
Going home *
1447
01:24:02,205 --> 01:24:05,141
* It was just a drag
On my own *
1448
01:24:05,208 --> 01:24:06,909
[Butler]
He wanted to get into movies.
1449
01:24:06,975 --> 01:24:09,812
People would say, "Oh,
he'd make a great movie star."
1450
01:24:09,878 --> 01:24:12,348
At the end,
it became too much.
1451
01:24:12,415 --> 01:24:15,551
* I'm the face
If you want it, baby *
1452
01:24:15,618 --> 01:24:18,821
* I'm the face if you want it *
1453
01:24:18,887 --> 01:24:22,925
[Butler] I made a phone call
to Bill Curbishley and I said,
"Look, I'm leaving,
1454
01:24:22,991 --> 01:24:24,760
'cause I can't do it anymore."
1455
01:24:24,827 --> 01:24:27,530
* If you want it *
1456
01:24:27,596 --> 01:24:31,700
But I did say to Bill,
"Get him home
as soon as possible,
1457
01:24:31,767 --> 01:24:35,738
'cause the way
he's carrying on, he's not
gonna be here much longer."
1458
01:24:37,106 --> 01:24:40,209
* Nothing is planned
By the sea and the sand *
1459
01:24:42,645 --> 01:24:46,615
[fanfare plays]
1460
01:24:46,682 --> 01:24:51,086
[narrator] In 1975,
Tommy was immortalized on film,
1461
01:24:51,154 --> 01:24:53,122
but not by Kit Lambert.
1462
01:24:53,189 --> 01:24:57,460
Director Ken Russell wrote
a new script for the rock opera.
1463
01:24:57,526 --> 01:25:00,062
[Gallagher]
The film is appalling, right?
It's dreadful.
1464
01:25:00,129 --> 01:25:04,066
And everybody in it
really should question
their fuckin' judg--
1465
01:25:04,133 --> 01:25:05,768
particularly
Eric Clapton.
1466
01:25:05,834 --> 01:25:09,705
A bit pants.
A little bit pants.
1467
01:25:09,772 --> 01:25:12,941
[Townshend]
And I've always been a fan
of Ken's, both as a person
1468
01:25:13,008 --> 01:25:16,212
and as a visionary,
and I love it--
I just love it.
1469
01:25:16,279 --> 01:25:19,448
[narrator] Tommy spent 14 weeks
atop the British box office
1470
01:25:19,515 --> 01:25:22,618
and garnered three
Academy Award nominations.
1471
01:25:24,653 --> 01:25:28,357
As his most popular creation
took another lap
around the world,
1472
01:25:28,424 --> 01:25:31,126
Pete went to work
on a new album.
1473
01:25:31,194 --> 01:25:33,696
[Townshend] I would think,
"I can't go through that again."
1474
01:25:33,762 --> 01:25:35,464
I just can't
go through it again.
1475
01:25:35,531 --> 01:25:38,534
I can't come up
with some great idea
and push it through.
1476
01:25:38,601 --> 01:25:41,937
I don't have the arrogance.
I don't have the--
1477
01:25:42,004 --> 01:25:44,673
I don't have the--
the balls to do it again.
1478
01:25:44,740 --> 01:25:48,277
* It's clear to all my friends
That I habitually lie *
1479
01:25:48,344 --> 01:25:51,214
* I just bring them down *
1480
01:25:51,280 --> 01:25:54,250
[Townshend]
Where we saw our future
was in movies.
1481
01:25:54,317 --> 01:25:56,252
We'd already done Tommy.
1482
01:25:56,319 --> 01:25:59,188
We'd managed to get a foothold
in Shepperton Studios.
1483
01:25:59,255 --> 01:26:01,857
We thought that we were
gonna be about movies.
1484
01:26:01,924 --> 01:26:04,427
[narrator]
Manager Bill Curbishley
would strike a deal
1485
01:26:04,493 --> 01:26:07,563
to produce the film
of Quadrophenia.
1486
01:26:07,630 --> 01:26:10,499
As they pursued
the new popular art form,
1487
01:26:10,566 --> 01:26:13,101
a new generation
began taking over music.
1488
01:26:13,168 --> 01:26:15,037
[punk rock plays]
1489
01:26:17,172 --> 01:26:19,975
[Goldsmith] Punk-- I hated it,
and I couldn't see the point
1490
01:26:20,042 --> 01:26:21,877
of spitting
and all that crap.
1491
01:26:21,944 --> 01:26:24,213
It was the revolution
of the uglies.
1492
01:26:24,280 --> 01:26:26,282
[narrator]
And the uglies loved The Who.
1493
01:26:26,349 --> 01:26:31,420
* You think that we look
Pretty good together *
1494
01:26:33,322 --> 01:26:35,924
You know, they'd come under
that category a little bit
1495
01:26:35,991 --> 01:26:38,861
as big, big stars
that weren't approachable.
1496
01:26:38,927 --> 01:26:41,964
* Substitute for another guy *
1497
01:26:42,030 --> 01:26:44,767
[Townshend]
We were frightened. It was
like the French Revolution.
1498
01:26:44,833 --> 01:26:46,802
It could've ended up
with, you know,
1499
01:26:46,869 --> 01:26:50,939
The Beatles, The Stones
and The Who being beheaded
in public.
1500
01:26:51,006 --> 01:26:55,844
* I was born with
A plastic spoon in my mouth *
1501
01:26:55,911 --> 01:27:00,082
Me and Cookie went down
to Speakeasy, which was
an after-hours place in London,
1502
01:27:00,148 --> 01:27:02,184
and Townshend was in there,
already drunk.
1503
01:27:02,251 --> 01:27:06,255
Went screaming up
to Jones and Cook
and kind of going, you know,
1504
01:27:06,322 --> 01:27:09,191
"If you want to take over,
fuckin' take over.
Just fuckin' get on with it.
1505
01:27:09,258 --> 01:27:11,226
Good fuckin' luck."
1506
01:27:11,294 --> 01:27:15,230
[Jones] I think we might've
been all a bit tipsy,
but he was hammered.
1507
01:27:15,298 --> 01:27:18,634
And he was going up
to people saying,
"Who are ya? Who are ya?"
1508
01:27:18,701 --> 01:27:20,002
To everyone.
1509
01:27:30,446 --> 01:27:33,849
[narrator] In 1977,
Keith returned to England.
1510
01:27:33,916 --> 01:27:37,252
Pete had been writing
new material.
1511
01:27:37,320 --> 01:27:39,355
* Who are you? *
1512
01:27:39,422 --> 01:27:42,391
* Who, who, who, who *
1513
01:27:42,458 --> 01:27:45,193
* Who are you? *
1514
01:27:47,162 --> 01:27:49,131
* Who the fuck are you? *
1515
01:27:49,197 --> 01:27:51,534
That December,
they filmed a performance
1516
01:27:51,600 --> 01:27:54,370
for the band's latest project,
a documentary film.
1517
01:27:54,437 --> 01:27:56,739
* Who are you? *
1518
01:27:58,741 --> 01:28:00,743
* Tell me, who are you? *
* Who are you? *
1519
01:28:00,809 --> 01:28:03,312
It was their first time back
onstage in more than a year.
1520
01:28:03,379 --> 01:28:05,381
* Oh, tell me, who are you? *
1521
01:28:05,448 --> 01:28:07,450
* Who are you? *
1522
01:28:11,454 --> 01:28:13,922
* I woke up in a Soho doorway *
1523
01:28:13,989 --> 01:28:17,292
* A policeman knew my name *
1524
01:28:17,360 --> 01:28:19,728
* You can go sleep
At home tonight *
1525
01:28:19,795 --> 01:28:21,730
* If you can get up
And walk away *
1526
01:28:23,366 --> 01:28:25,534
* I staggered back
To the underground *
1527
01:28:25,601 --> 01:28:29,004
* And the breeze
Blew back my hair *
1528
01:28:29,071 --> 01:28:31,507
* I remember
Throwing punches around *
1529
01:28:31,574 --> 01:28:34,710
* And preaching from my chair *
1530
01:28:34,777 --> 01:28:37,380
* Who are you? *
1531
01:28:37,446 --> 01:28:39,748
[Townshend] Unfortunately,
the band didn't play as well,
1532
01:28:39,815 --> 01:28:42,818
but we all-- I think
all of us had such
a good time together.
1533
01:28:42,885 --> 01:28:46,054
But we were all wrecks.
You know, so it's kind of like--
1534
01:29:05,841 --> 01:29:09,144
* Who are you? *
1535
01:29:09,211 --> 01:29:12,047
-* Who, who, who, who *
-* I really want to know *
1536
01:29:12,114 --> 01:29:14,383
* Who are you? *
1537
01:29:14,450 --> 01:29:16,952
* Who, who, who, who *
1538
01:29:17,019 --> 01:29:18,954
* Oh, who the fuck are you? *
1539
01:29:19,021 --> 01:29:20,956
[narrator]
In the spring of 1978,
1540
01:29:21,023 --> 01:29:24,627
they went back into the studio
for the first time
in three years.
1541
01:29:24,693 --> 01:29:28,130
That summer,
Moon began taking
prescription medicine
1542
01:29:28,196 --> 01:29:29,798
to try to curb his drinking.
1543
01:29:34,336 --> 01:29:36,839
[Townshend]
Keith did that thing of, uh--
1544
01:29:36,905 --> 01:29:39,808
I said, "Now, come on, come on.
Give it a real go."
1545
01:29:39,875 --> 01:29:42,678
And he'd start to try and play.
1546
01:29:42,745 --> 01:29:45,047
I'd say, "Come on. Try again."
1547
01:29:46,281 --> 01:29:49,384
And in the end, he threw down
his sticks and went,
1548
01:29:49,452 --> 01:29:52,421
"I'm still--- having a bad day--
1549
01:29:52,488 --> 01:29:56,358
but I'm still the best fuckin'--
1550
01:29:56,425 --> 01:29:59,294
Keith Moon-type--
drummer in the world!"
1551
01:30:12,007 --> 01:30:14,710
* Who are you? *
1552
01:30:14,777 --> 01:30:17,312
* Who, who, who, who *
1553
01:30:17,379 --> 01:30:19,281
* I really want to know *
1554
01:30:19,347 --> 01:30:22,951
[narrator]
Who Are You was released
August 18, 1978.
1555
01:30:23,018 --> 01:30:25,153
* I really want to know *
1556
01:30:25,220 --> 01:30:27,389
* Who are you? *
1557
01:30:27,456 --> 01:30:29,458
* Who *
1558
01:30:29,525 --> 01:30:32,027
* I really want to know *
1559
01:30:32,094 --> 01:30:35,063
* I really want to know *
1560
01:30:35,130 --> 01:30:37,566
* Come on
Tell me, who are you *
1561
01:30:37,633 --> 01:30:41,937
* You, you, who are you? *
1562
01:30:45,741 --> 01:30:48,544
[man on radio]
He was found unconscious
in a London flat this morning.
1563
01:30:48,611 --> 01:30:51,046
[man 2 on radio]
The doctor was called,
who pronounced Moon dead.
1564
01:30:51,113 --> 01:30:54,316
[woman on radio] He was
found dead by his girlfriend
early today. He was 32.
1565
01:30:58,887 --> 01:31:02,958
It was a silly mistake
that made him take
a handful of Heminevrin.
1566
01:31:03,025 --> 01:31:06,962
It disables the esophagus,
and, you know, he couldn't
throw up, and--
1567
01:31:07,029 --> 01:31:10,699
He just always
took pills in handfuls.
It was just a habit that he had.
1568
01:31:12,300 --> 01:31:14,770
[Curbishley]
He was never gonna
grow old gracefully.
1569
01:31:14,837 --> 01:31:18,206
I don't think he was destined
to make old bones.
1570
01:31:19,407 --> 01:31:22,010
I suppose he was designed
in such a way
1571
01:31:22,077 --> 01:31:23,946
to be remembered as he was.
1572
01:31:25,347 --> 01:31:27,482
It is the end of an era.
1573
01:31:27,550 --> 01:31:29,952
We're gonna try and go on.
1574
01:31:30,018 --> 01:31:32,120
The one thing that
everyone must understand--
1575
01:31:32,187 --> 01:31:34,790
It will never, ever
be the same. That died.
1576
01:31:47,169 --> 01:31:49,071
[audience cheers]
1577
01:31:50,539 --> 01:31:53,441
But it was very strange,
'cause there's something
underneath
1578
01:31:53,508 --> 01:31:56,979
that determined
not to let the one thing
1579
01:31:57,045 --> 01:32:02,250
that we'd all created,
including Keith, die--
1580
01:32:02,317 --> 01:32:04,152
the music,
not to let it die.
1581
01:32:04,219 --> 01:32:08,156
* Long live rock
I need it every night *
1582
01:32:11,426 --> 01:32:13,428
* Long live rock *
1583
01:32:13,495 --> 01:32:15,564
* Come on and join the line *
1584
01:32:19,134 --> 01:32:23,606
* Long live rock *
1585
01:32:23,672 --> 01:32:25,941
* Be it dead or alive *
1586
01:32:26,008 --> 01:32:28,110
[narrator]
Less than eight months
after Moonie's death,
1587
01:32:28,176 --> 01:32:31,546
The Who returned to the stage
with keyboard player
Rabbit Bundrick
1588
01:32:31,614 --> 01:32:34,216
and drummer Kenney Jones.
1589
01:32:34,282 --> 01:32:36,852
Kenney Jones was a good mate
from The Small Faces,
1590
01:32:36,919 --> 01:32:40,589
and we'd always
admired him as a drummer,
and we liked him as a guy.
1591
01:32:40,656 --> 01:32:44,593
Anything can change,
especially, you know, with Pete.
1592
01:32:44,660 --> 01:32:48,597
So, you just go with it,
and you got to know
when to go with it.
1593
01:32:53,636 --> 01:32:56,939
[Stamp] I went to see
The Who for the first time
without Keith,
1594
01:32:57,005 --> 01:32:59,141
and I'm standing at
the side of the stage,
1595
01:32:59,207 --> 01:33:01,443
and Pete goes off
onto some sort of
1596
01:33:01,509 --> 01:33:03,846
freestyle sort of riff,
you know, on his guitar,
1597
01:33:03,912 --> 01:33:06,348
and he turns to Keith.
1598
01:33:06,414 --> 01:33:09,084
Because he's gone
as far as he can go.
1599
01:33:09,151 --> 01:33:11,687
So he turns to Keith
to take it over.
1600
01:33:13,722 --> 01:33:16,692
Those moments, like on the stage
when I'm taken aback,
1601
01:33:16,759 --> 01:33:19,327
because I look,
and I expect him to be there.
1602
01:33:19,394 --> 01:33:21,529
This is because
it is like a marriage.
1603
01:33:21,596 --> 01:33:23,666
* Long live rock *
1604
01:33:23,732 --> 01:33:25,734
* Come on and join the line *
1605
01:33:25,801 --> 01:33:27,836
A real sense of connection
1606
01:33:27,903 --> 01:33:31,139
and of life wanting
to kind of go on like a wheel.
1607
01:33:31,206 --> 01:33:34,376
And thinking, well, everything
that goes comes back again.
1608
01:33:34,442 --> 01:33:37,245
And the thing is,
is that with people
it doesn't work like that,
1609
01:33:37,312 --> 01:33:39,381
and they don't come back again.
1610
01:33:39,447 --> 01:33:40,949
[audience applauds]
1611
01:33:41,016 --> 01:33:43,585
Let's have the biggest hand
of the night
1612
01:33:43,652 --> 01:33:46,554
for Mr. Kenney Jones,
our new drummer.
1613
01:33:46,621 --> 01:33:48,657
-Hey.
-[audience cheers]
1614
01:33:51,259 --> 01:33:54,663
Didn't know what I was letting
myself in for, to be honest.
But there you go.
1615
01:33:57,666 --> 01:34:01,536
What happened to me
was I started to drift
into substances, you know.
1616
01:34:03,138 --> 01:34:05,974
[Daltrey]
Pete's addiction in 1979
1617
01:34:06,041 --> 01:34:09,211
was perhaps a reflection
of, I think, the guilt
1618
01:34:09,277 --> 01:34:13,381
that both--
I'm sure Pete felt.
1619
01:34:13,448 --> 01:34:17,119
'Cause I know I did.
That I hadn't done enough--
1620
01:34:17,185 --> 01:34:19,421
enough to save Kei--
save Keith.
1621
01:34:21,123 --> 01:34:24,860
You know, even I started to do
things I'd never done before.
1622
01:34:24,927 --> 01:34:27,495
You know, I felt very miserable
for a long time.
1623
01:34:28,596 --> 01:34:32,200
[Jones] Roger obviously
was missing Moonie.
1624
01:34:32,267 --> 01:34:35,003
Not just onstage,
but in many other ways.
1625
01:34:35,070 --> 01:34:37,372
And I think
it really got to him a bit.
1626
01:34:37,439 --> 01:34:40,943
I didn't bank on the emotional
elements, you know.
1627
01:34:42,010 --> 01:34:43,846
[narrator]
During Kenney's first tour,
1628
01:34:43,912 --> 01:34:48,116
The Who played through
the deadliest rock concert
in US history.
1629
01:34:48,183 --> 01:34:51,987
Cincinnati was an emotionally
devastating situation.
1630
01:34:52,054 --> 01:34:55,958
The band were, like,
20 minutes into their show.
1631
01:34:56,024 --> 01:34:58,293
The co-promoter came to me,
and he said,
1632
01:34:58,360 --> 01:35:01,529
"We've got a problem
up on the plaza level."
1633
01:35:03,165 --> 01:35:05,801
What happened is there was
only one door to get through
1634
01:35:05,868 --> 01:35:08,536
and a staircase to go down,
so they all rushed.
1635
01:35:08,603 --> 01:35:11,874
[Curbishley] And those kids
that fell got trampled on.
1636
01:35:13,308 --> 01:35:15,677
The band were unaware
of what was happening
1637
01:35:15,744 --> 01:35:17,712
until they finished the show.
1638
01:35:20,015 --> 01:35:22,885
[Jones]
We had to go back to America
a couple of months later
1639
01:35:22,951 --> 01:35:25,453
and be grilled by the lawyers--
1640
01:35:25,520 --> 01:35:28,523
"Do you feel responsible
for the people that died?"
You know.
1641
01:35:28,824 --> 01:35:31,960
It still haunts me
to this day.
1642
01:35:32,027 --> 01:35:35,330
I can't tell you
how I felt about
1643
01:35:35,397 --> 01:35:38,166
the parents of those kids.
1644
01:35:38,233 --> 01:35:40,235
Their kids had gone off
to a concert,
1645
01:35:40,302 --> 01:35:42,037
and they don't come home.
1646
01:35:44,106 --> 01:35:45,908
We all bear scars.
1647
01:35:45,974 --> 01:35:49,978
But you don't live without
1648
01:35:50,045 --> 01:35:53,281
having that map of life
somewhere on your face.
1649
01:35:54,616 --> 01:35:56,618
["Eminence Front" plays]
1650
01:36:11,133 --> 01:36:13,701
[narrator]
They released two albums
in two years--
1651
01:36:13,768 --> 01:36:15,804
Face Dances in '81
1652
01:36:15,871 --> 01:36:17,940
and It's Hard in '82,
1653
01:36:18,006 --> 01:36:21,009
only to be savaged
by some fans and critics.
1654
01:36:21,076 --> 01:36:23,745
[Townshend]
When you read the newspapers
and the reviews, it's like,
1655
01:36:23,812 --> 01:36:27,549
"This album is the worst thing
that's ever happened in
the history of rock and roll.
1656
01:36:27,615 --> 01:36:29,852
Townshend has gone mad,
and he's masturbating
in public."
1657
01:36:29,918 --> 01:36:33,255
You know.
"They may as well
crawl away and die."
1658
01:36:33,321 --> 01:36:35,457
* Sun shines *
1659
01:36:37,625 --> 01:36:39,461
* People forget *
1660
01:36:43,231 --> 01:36:45,367
* Spray flies *
1661
01:36:45,433 --> 01:36:47,469
* As the speedboat glides *
1662
01:36:47,535 --> 01:36:49,271
* People forget *
1663
01:36:49,337 --> 01:36:52,274
[narrator]
The man who encouraged Pete
to write works of art
1664
01:36:52,340 --> 01:36:55,410
died of a brain hemorrhage
in 1981.
1665
01:36:55,477 --> 01:36:58,113
Kit Lambert was 45.
1666
01:36:58,180 --> 01:36:59,614
I didn't have an answer.
1667
01:36:59,681 --> 01:37:01,516
I couldn't work out what to do
1668
01:37:01,583 --> 01:37:04,586
that would return the band
to its halcyon years.
1669
01:37:04,652 --> 01:37:07,222
* As the skier tracks *
1670
01:37:07,289 --> 01:37:09,191
* People forget *
1671
01:37:09,257 --> 01:37:11,559
* They forget they're hiding *
1672
01:37:12,727 --> 01:37:14,762
* It's an eminence front *
1673
01:37:14,829 --> 01:37:17,765
[Daltrey] What makes
The Who special is that
it's not even what's written.
1674
01:37:17,832 --> 01:37:21,203
It's the bits you don't know
are going to happen, and they
come out of thin air.
1675
01:37:21,269 --> 01:37:24,172
Some nights it makes it,
some nights it doesn't.
1676
01:37:24,239 --> 01:37:27,242
But the nights
that it makes it,
they were the--
1677
01:37:27,309 --> 01:37:30,845
That was the trouble
with Kenney. Those nights
became fewer and fewer.
1678
01:37:32,747 --> 01:37:35,450
[Curbishley]
It was Roger who pushed
1679
01:37:35,517 --> 01:37:37,519
to get him out of the band.
1680
01:37:37,585 --> 01:37:39,287
He didn't think
he was right for The Who.
1681
01:37:39,354 --> 01:37:41,289
There is no right drummer
for The Who.
1682
01:37:41,356 --> 01:37:43,825
There will be never be
the right drummer for The Who.
1683
01:37:43,892 --> 01:37:45,560
It will only be Keith.
1684
01:37:46,895 --> 01:37:48,463
But there you go.
1685
01:37:48,530 --> 01:37:51,466
* Eminence front, yeah *
1686
01:37:51,533 --> 01:37:54,502
* Just an eminence front
It's a put-on *
1687
01:37:54,569 --> 01:37:58,640
[narrator]
In 1983, Pete officially
dissolved the band.
1688
01:37:58,706 --> 01:38:03,711
Just months before, Tommy
was reissued on a new format--
the compact disc.
1689
01:38:03,778 --> 01:38:07,149
* Bullshit, bullshit
Yeah, yeah, yeah *
1690
01:38:07,215 --> 01:38:09,551
We just reached the end,
you know.
1691
01:38:09,617 --> 01:38:12,054
That's the way I feel about it.
I don't know why.
1692
01:38:12,120 --> 01:38:15,123
Bye, bye.
I can't wait to get out.
1693
01:38:15,190 --> 01:38:17,960
* You got to dress to kill *
1694
01:38:23,999 --> 01:38:26,101
* Dress yourself to kill *
1695
01:38:26,168 --> 01:38:28,436
[audience cheers]
1696
01:38:30,672 --> 01:38:32,840
[Daltrey] You've been
traveling on this thing
1697
01:38:32,907 --> 01:38:35,677
that was going
a million miles an hour,
and all of a sudden,
1698
01:38:35,743 --> 01:38:38,246
it comes to
a complete, dead stop.
1699
01:38:38,313 --> 01:38:42,985
And it's incredibly
difficult to adjust.
1700
01:38:43,051 --> 01:38:45,620
Because we haven't lived
normal lives.
1701
01:38:45,687 --> 01:38:48,423
It's as though
the world stops.
1702
01:38:58,733 --> 01:39:00,802
[Townshend] At the time,
I was fairly convinced
1703
01:39:00,868 --> 01:39:02,971
that I would do better
as a solo artist.
1704
01:39:03,038 --> 01:39:05,473
I did a few songs.
It was a pragmatic decision.
1705
01:39:05,540 --> 01:39:08,276
Whether it was the right
or wrong decision,
I had to do something.
1706
01:39:09,477 --> 01:39:11,413
I think if we'd have
continued to work,
1707
01:39:11,479 --> 01:39:13,881
I think I would've been
a casualty.
1708
01:39:13,948 --> 01:39:16,851
I blamed rock and roll,
and, of course,
after three or four years
1709
01:39:16,918 --> 01:39:19,154
being out of
frontline rock and roll,
1710
01:39:19,221 --> 01:39:22,724
I realize I was just as sick,
just as mad, and you know,
just as overworked.
1711
01:39:22,790 --> 01:39:26,228
You know, so...
it was me that was the problem.
1712
01:39:26,294 --> 01:39:30,065
[narrator]
The Who returned to the stage
on only two occasions
1713
01:39:30,132 --> 01:39:32,467
over the next 13 years--
1714
01:39:32,534 --> 01:39:34,869
a 20-minute set at Live Aid
1715
01:39:34,936 --> 01:39:39,407
and an all-star tour
for the 20th anniversary
of Tommy.
1716
01:39:39,474 --> 01:39:40,808
That's the weird thing.
1717
01:39:40,875 --> 01:39:44,246
It's like soldiers
that used to go out to war
and come back
1718
01:39:44,312 --> 01:39:46,714
and just couldn't identify
with, like, normal life anymore.
1719
01:39:46,781 --> 01:39:51,253
When you come home, it's like,
"I can't take this,
like, normal existence."
1720
01:39:51,319 --> 01:39:53,355
[man]
John lived for gigging.
1721
01:39:53,421 --> 01:39:57,092
He went out with solo bands,
and it cost him.
1722
01:39:57,159 --> 01:40:01,296
He'd finance it.
He didn't make any money.
Just to be out there.
1723
01:40:01,363 --> 01:40:03,398
[Daltrey]
John was deeply in debt.
1724
01:40:03,465 --> 01:40:05,533
I don't think it's any secret
that he was.
1725
01:40:05,600 --> 01:40:07,635
Those years
when The Who weren't working,
1726
01:40:07,702 --> 01:40:11,073
he continued to spend
and live the lifestyle.
1727
01:40:11,139 --> 01:40:13,141
[audience cheers]
1728
01:40:13,208 --> 01:40:15,710
[piano plays]
1729
01:40:18,546 --> 01:40:22,584
I went to Pete and said,
"You know, this is the only way
he's gonna ever get
1730
01:40:22,650 --> 01:40:26,721
a chance to dig himself out
of the hole is if you would
get The Who back together."
1731
01:40:27,589 --> 01:40:29,424
* Why should I care? *
1732
01:40:31,326 --> 01:40:33,027
* Why should I care? *
1733
01:40:33,095 --> 01:40:35,463
I would never hesitate
to consider, at least,
1734
01:40:35,530 --> 01:40:38,466
that it might be
something to do,
because I would just think,
1735
01:40:38,533 --> 01:40:40,702
"Well, without him,
I wouldn't even be here."
1736
01:40:40,768 --> 01:40:43,638
["5.15" plays]
1737
01:40:47,442 --> 01:40:50,978
[narrator]
Pete agreed to tour
Quadrophenia in 1996.
1738
01:40:51,045 --> 01:40:53,681
The band brought in
Ringo Starr's son,
1739
01:40:53,748 --> 01:40:56,084
Zak Starkey, on drums.
1740
01:40:56,151 --> 01:40:58,920
As soon as
we played those songs,
Moonie was alive again.
1741
01:41:00,855 --> 01:41:04,292
- * Girls of 15 *
- * Sexually knowing *
1742
01:41:04,359 --> 01:41:08,196
- * The ushers are sniffing *
- * Eau-de-cologne-ing *
1743
01:41:08,263 --> 01:41:11,999
At the end John was
handed checks of well over
two, three million dollars,
1744
01:41:12,066 --> 01:41:13,835
and they were gone overnight.
[snaps fingers]
1745
01:41:13,901 --> 01:41:16,138
* Prettier women *
1746
01:41:16,204 --> 01:41:18,206
["I Can't Explain" plays]
1747
01:41:19,807 --> 01:41:22,277
[narrator]
With John in financial trouble,
they agreed to
1748
01:41:22,344 --> 01:41:24,712
yet another reunion in 1999
1749
01:41:24,779 --> 01:41:26,581
with just their basic lineup.
1750
01:41:26,648 --> 01:41:29,083
* I've got a feeling inside *
1751
01:41:29,151 --> 01:41:30,752
* Can't explain *
1752
01:41:30,818 --> 01:41:34,389
-* It's a certain kind *
-* Can't explain *
1753
01:41:34,456 --> 01:41:36,591
[Townshend] John never seemed
to go into a depression.
1754
01:41:36,658 --> 01:41:40,428
As long as there was
a nice, big wardrobe
with 15 pairs of shoes in it
1755
01:41:40,495 --> 01:41:42,730
and, uh--
and the obligatory
1756
01:41:42,797 --> 01:41:45,933
serially monogamous
girlfriend along,
he was happy.
1757
01:41:46,000 --> 01:41:49,671
[narrator]
Under the continued leadership
of manager Bill Curbishley,
1758
01:41:49,737 --> 01:41:53,074
the band agreed to
a series of live shows.
1759
01:41:53,141 --> 01:41:55,977
* I can't explain
I think it's love *
1760
01:41:56,043 --> 01:41:59,514
* Try to say it to you
When I feel blue *
1761
01:41:59,581 --> 01:42:02,083
* But I can't explain *
1762
01:42:02,150 --> 01:42:04,018
[Daltrey]
Something happened then.
1763
01:42:04,085 --> 01:42:05,587
Pete became inspired again.
1764
01:42:05,653 --> 01:42:08,423
It was like the wheel
was back on the barrow.
1765
01:42:16,964 --> 01:42:20,034
[Townshend]
We were just celebrating
the old music.
1766
01:42:20,101 --> 01:42:24,038
I'd felt like
we should just
1767
01:42:24,105 --> 01:42:26,274
accept that, you know,
we had these great songs,
1768
01:42:26,341 --> 01:42:28,910
and personally,
I was never gonna
be able to surpass them.
1769
01:42:28,976 --> 01:42:31,613
* I said, I can't explain *
1770
01:42:31,679 --> 01:42:33,648
[audience cheers]
1771
01:42:40,222 --> 01:42:42,056
Thank you very much.
1772
01:42:44,959 --> 01:42:48,596
We are honored
to be here.
1773
01:42:53,034 --> 01:42:55,770
["Won't Get Fooled Again" plays]
1774
01:42:58,005 --> 01:43:00,141
[Eddie Vedder]
Music is an art form.
1775
01:43:00,208 --> 01:43:03,044
That art form includes rhythm,
1776
01:43:03,110 --> 01:43:05,380
meaning and communication.
1777
01:43:05,447 --> 01:43:08,383
I've met people
from different walks of life,
1778
01:43:08,450 --> 01:43:12,186
and they've all been touched
in such a unique
1779
01:43:12,254 --> 01:43:14,689
and pure way.
1780
01:43:14,756 --> 01:43:18,360
They really feel
this deep connection.
1781
01:43:18,426 --> 01:43:21,496
So now you've got, for me,
1782
01:43:21,563 --> 01:43:24,165
the greatest art form
that ever existed.
1783
01:43:38,313 --> 01:43:40,715
* There'll be fighting
In the streets *
1784
01:43:40,782 --> 01:43:45,086
* With our children
At our feet *
1785
01:43:45,152 --> 01:43:48,956
* And the morals
That we worshipped
Will be gone *
1786
01:43:51,893 --> 01:43:54,796
* And the men
Who spurred us on *
1787
01:43:54,862 --> 01:43:56,931
[Curbishley]
When we got that call
1788
01:43:56,998 --> 01:43:59,901
about the concert
for New York,
1789
01:43:59,967 --> 01:44:03,271
America meant so much
to The Who, we had to go.
1790
01:44:06,408 --> 01:44:10,144
* I'll tip my hat
To the new constitution *
1791
01:44:10,211 --> 01:44:13,715
* Take a bow
For the new revolution *
1792
01:44:13,781 --> 01:44:16,984
* Smile and grin
At the change all around *
1793
01:44:17,051 --> 01:44:19,521
* Pick up my guitar
And I'll play *
1794
01:44:19,587 --> 01:44:22,957
[Curbishley]
I was standing
just off the stage.
1795
01:44:23,024 --> 01:44:26,894
I mean, you know, for me,
over all those years
of watching The Who,
1796
01:44:26,961 --> 01:44:30,097
man, I've never seen
anything like that.
1797
01:44:31,433 --> 01:44:34,336
* We don't get fooled again *
1798
01:44:35,637 --> 01:44:37,439
* No, no *
1799
01:44:46,113 --> 01:44:49,751
[The Edge] I was sitting
with Bono, just the two of us.
Could not believe it.
1800
01:44:49,817 --> 01:44:54,188
Just the way they just
owned that event, you know,
over the TV.
1801
01:45:01,963 --> 01:45:04,899
* There's nothing
In the streets *
1802
01:45:04,966 --> 01:45:08,436
* Looks any different
To me *
1803
01:45:08,503 --> 01:45:11,606
* And the slogans
Are replaced *
1804
01:45:11,673 --> 01:45:13,408
* By the by *
1805
01:45:14,776 --> 01:45:17,345
[The Edge] Just so much
more powerful live
1806
01:45:17,412 --> 01:45:19,781
than anyone else that was
on the bill that night.
1807
01:45:20,715 --> 01:45:22,149
[Vedder]
That show in New York,
1808
01:45:22,216 --> 01:45:25,720
that could be one of
the best illustrations
of the power of music.
1809
01:45:39,401 --> 01:45:42,537
* Yeah! *
1810
01:45:49,310 --> 01:45:52,179
* Not gonna get fooled *
1811
01:45:52,246 --> 01:45:54,616
* Don't you get fooled again *
1812
01:45:56,150 --> 01:45:57,719
* No, no, no, no *
1813
01:46:13,468 --> 01:46:15,336
[Gallagher]
The sentiments
of those songs--
1814
01:46:15,403 --> 01:46:18,706
If I could explain it
to you, right, it would--
1815
01:46:18,773 --> 01:46:21,308
It would be too easy
to explain it to you.
1816
01:46:21,375 --> 01:46:25,513
It's magic how those songs came
from Shepherd's Bush, you know,
1817
01:46:25,580 --> 01:46:29,316
and mean as much to people
40 years later
1818
01:46:29,383 --> 01:46:31,385
than they did
when they were written.
1819
01:46:31,453 --> 01:46:34,355
You know, that's phenomenal.
And that's something
you can't put into words.
1820
01:46:34,422 --> 01:46:36,257
It's just magic, man.
1821
01:46:46,267 --> 01:46:49,036
[Curbishley] They were back
in a big, big way.
1822
01:46:49,103 --> 01:46:51,372
Back as a four-piece.
Back on the road.
1823
01:46:51,439 --> 01:46:53,407
It was like
a rebirth again.
1824
01:47:01,248 --> 01:47:05,252
We had to go back
and play there. We had
a contract to play Las Vegas.
1825
01:47:07,655 --> 01:47:09,924
[Curbishley]
I flew out to Las Vegas,
1826
01:47:09,991 --> 01:47:14,462
and the next morning got a call
from my tour manager saying
they couldn't wake John up.
1827
01:47:21,435 --> 01:47:24,138
[Butler]
Let's put something into
a little bit of perspective.
1828
01:47:24,205 --> 01:47:26,774
John was one of the best
bass players in the world.
1829
01:47:26,841 --> 01:47:28,876
John died
at the age of nearly 60
1830
01:47:28,943 --> 01:47:32,580
with a woman, in bed,
after snorting cocaine.
1831
01:47:32,647 --> 01:47:34,916
Now, you think, "Hold on, John.
1832
01:47:34,982 --> 01:47:39,286
You should've done this
in the '70s, not now."
1833
01:47:40,688 --> 01:47:42,924
The coroner's report
of the situation
1834
01:47:42,990 --> 01:47:44,926
in Las Vegas is quite clear.
1835
01:47:44,992 --> 01:47:48,329
He shouldn't have been there,
doing what he was doing,
and it was crazy.
1836
01:47:48,395 --> 01:47:50,998
It's kind of what
he chose to do.
1837
01:47:51,065 --> 01:47:53,835
That's just how he was.
1838
01:47:53,901 --> 01:47:55,903
[Jones]
I did have a chuckle. I mean,
1839
01:47:55,970 --> 01:47:59,974
if he was gonna go,
he couldn't have gone
in a better way, really.
1840
01:48:00,041 --> 01:48:02,043
On tour,
doing all the things he,
1841
01:48:02,109 --> 01:48:04,345
and being around the things
he loved best, you know.
1842
01:48:09,250 --> 01:48:11,886
[Sting] I think all of us
would want to die onstage.
1843
01:48:11,953 --> 01:48:15,923
I mean, none of us want to be,
uh, just written off.
1844
01:48:15,990 --> 01:48:18,660
[Gallagher]
It gets more difficult
as you get older.
1845
01:48:18,726 --> 01:48:20,494
How do I say this?
1846
01:48:20,562 --> 01:48:23,765
Let's say for argument's sake
you're a 58-year-old guy
1847
01:48:23,831 --> 01:48:26,901
who's been in a band
from the '60s, all right?
1848
01:48:26,968 --> 01:48:29,837
It's fuckin' frowned upon
in this country.
1849
01:48:29,904 --> 01:48:32,774
Like, "You fucking idiot.
What are you doing,
silly old man?"
1850
01:48:34,809 --> 01:48:38,079
We have this tendency
to kind of take the piss
out of lads like that.
1851
01:48:38,145 --> 01:48:39,714
I don't know why it is,
you know.
1852
01:48:39,781 --> 01:48:43,350
We should keep going
until it's over.
1853
01:48:43,417 --> 01:48:45,119
We shouldn't stop.
1854
01:48:47,221 --> 01:48:52,560
* They make my dream
Come true *
1855
01:48:54,596 --> 01:48:59,466
* They make my dream
Come true *
1856
01:49:01,002 --> 01:49:04,572
Pete rang me back and said,
"I want to continue
with this tour."
1857
01:49:04,639 --> 01:49:07,474
If we'd have split up
and gone our own ways,
1858
01:49:07,541 --> 01:49:10,845
the next day, I think
we would've probably
1859
01:49:10,912 --> 01:49:14,548
found it very difficult to get
back together on a stage.
1860
01:49:15,783 --> 01:49:17,652
[narrator] The Who
performed four days later
1861
01:49:17,719 --> 01:49:19,887
at the Hollywood Bowl
in Los Angeles.
1862
01:49:21,088 --> 01:49:23,024
[audience cheers]
1863
01:49:25,359 --> 01:49:29,163
Pino Paladino was the band's
first choice to fill in on bass.
1864
01:49:30,632 --> 01:49:32,700
Listen, we know this--
1865
01:49:32,767 --> 01:49:35,703
for some of the fans
that have followed us
for many years,
1866
01:49:35,770 --> 01:49:37,538
this is gonna be
very difficult.
1867
01:49:37,605 --> 01:49:39,373
And, uh, we understand.
1868
01:49:39,440 --> 01:49:43,678
And we're not pretending
that nothing's happened,
as Roger said earlier on.
1869
01:49:43,745 --> 01:49:45,680
And, uh---
1870
01:49:45,747 --> 01:49:47,514
And, uh, it is difficult.
1871
01:49:49,350 --> 01:49:51,552
I can tell you
with my hand on my heart
1872
01:49:51,619 --> 01:49:54,722
that when I did look over there
and he wasn't there,
1873
01:49:54,789 --> 01:49:58,159
I wanted to die--
I just wanted to die.
1874
01:49:58,225 --> 01:50:00,594
* The song is over *
1875
01:50:03,197 --> 01:50:06,200
* I'm left with only tears *
1876
01:50:07,969 --> 01:50:10,071
* I must remember *
1877
01:50:12,707 --> 01:50:14,709
* Even if it takes *
1878
01:50:14,776 --> 01:50:19,446
* A million years *
1879
01:50:21,448 --> 01:50:23,617
[Curbishley]
If Moon was predictable,
1880
01:50:23,685 --> 01:50:25,753
then John was unnecessary.
1881
01:50:26,954 --> 01:50:28,756
A great, great loss.
1882
01:50:28,823 --> 01:50:30,557
Great loss, John.
1883
01:50:34,829 --> 01:50:37,331
I miss him so much,
I can't tell you.
1884
01:50:48,009 --> 01:50:49,977
[acoustic guitar plays]
1885
01:50:52,680 --> 01:50:55,516
[Townshend]
What's actually now happened,
a further gift
1886
01:50:55,582 --> 01:50:57,785
that John's death
has given me is
1887
01:50:57,852 --> 01:51:01,622
to enjoy an acutely
1888
01:51:01,689 --> 01:51:03,691
emphatic relationship
with Roger.
1889
01:51:05,126 --> 01:51:06,794
You know,
we experienced John's death.
1890
01:51:06,861 --> 01:51:09,096
He saw me get arrested for,
you know,
1891
01:51:09,163 --> 01:51:11,665
a child pornography allegation.
1892
01:51:11,733 --> 01:51:16,037
* How dare you wear a robe
To preside *
1893
01:51:16,103 --> 01:51:20,074
* How dare you cover
Your head to hide *
1894
01:51:20,141 --> 01:51:22,209
* Your face from God *
1895
01:51:22,276 --> 01:51:23,911
He was vilified.
1896
01:51:23,978 --> 01:51:26,714
He was dragged across
the fuckin' national papers
1897
01:51:26,781 --> 01:51:29,250
in a scurrilous way,
you know.
1898
01:51:29,316 --> 01:51:31,786
And after months
of investigation,
1899
01:51:31,853 --> 01:51:35,389
they established
that there was nothing
he could be charged with.
1900
01:51:41,829 --> 01:51:45,399
In the end,
nobody much is gonna
listen to me.
1901
01:51:45,466 --> 01:51:47,869
But Roger Daltrey,
his partner,
1902
01:51:47,935 --> 01:51:50,371
he went to bat for him,
1903
01:51:50,437 --> 01:51:53,040
and he was under
a lot of pressure, Roger.
1904
01:51:53,107 --> 01:51:57,311
* How dare you?
Do you think
I'll quietly go? *
1905
01:51:57,378 --> 01:52:00,815
* You are much braver
Than you know *
1906
01:52:00,882 --> 01:52:03,384
* For I can't die *
1907
01:52:03,450 --> 01:52:06,153
Roger is the voice of The Who,
and when you're growing up,
1908
01:52:06,220 --> 01:52:10,424
you think that he wrote all
those things and he's singing
them from his heart and--
1909
01:52:10,491 --> 01:52:13,594
And then you realize that
it's coming from this guy, Pete.
1910
01:52:13,660 --> 01:52:16,697
That's when I started to realize
there was something deeper
going on here.
1911
01:52:16,764 --> 01:52:18,732
They're two incredibly
strong forces,
1912
01:52:18,800 --> 01:52:20,835
and they've relied
on each other for years.
1913
01:52:20,902 --> 01:52:22,770
[audience cheers]
1914
01:52:31,678 --> 01:52:36,283
Since John died, we're probably
musically more together.
1915
01:52:36,350 --> 01:52:38,953
I'm sure spiritually we are.
1916
01:52:39,020 --> 01:52:41,122
* Will you have some tea *
1917
01:52:47,194 --> 01:52:50,064
* At the theater with me? *
1918
01:52:56,303 --> 01:52:57,872
* We did it all *
1919
01:53:01,142 --> 01:53:03,610
* Didn't we? *
1920
01:53:03,677 --> 01:53:06,313
* Jumped every wall *
1921
01:53:06,380 --> 01:53:10,151
[Townshend]
I think Roger is the best
interpreter of my work
1922
01:53:10,217 --> 01:53:12,086
that I could've ever
hoped for.
1923
01:53:12,153 --> 01:53:15,589
* Unraveled codes *
1924
01:53:16,891 --> 01:53:19,493
* Ingeniously *
1925
01:53:19,560 --> 01:53:22,296
What's very interesting about
what Roger and I are left with
1926
01:53:22,363 --> 01:53:25,032
is that we have
a very pure relationship.
1927
01:53:25,099 --> 01:53:27,401
* So seamlessly *
1928
01:53:28,870 --> 01:53:31,939
* We made it work *
1929
01:53:32,006 --> 01:53:34,808
[Daltrey]
I recognize his genius,
and I love him dearly.
1930
01:53:34,876 --> 01:53:37,912
He's like a brother.
You know, that's love.
1931
01:53:37,979 --> 01:53:40,481
Even though on the outside
and when you read things
1932
01:53:40,547 --> 01:53:44,051
about what we did
in the past and how many
fights we used to have,
1933
01:53:44,118 --> 01:53:46,320
you'd think these guys
used to hate each other.
1934
01:53:46,387 --> 01:53:48,622
Did we? Fuck.
You know.
1935
01:53:49,590 --> 01:53:52,193
Well, I didn't anyway.
I loved him.
1936
01:53:52,259 --> 01:53:56,597
* A great dream derailed *
1937
01:53:56,663 --> 01:53:59,233
[Townshend]
He's my friend, I love him,
1938
01:53:59,300 --> 01:54:02,003
and I'm standing by him,
and he stands by me.
1939
01:54:02,069 --> 01:54:04,571
We can say what we like
about each other now.
1940
01:54:04,638 --> 01:54:07,875
It's not easy for either of us,
because we're so
1941
01:54:07,942 --> 01:54:11,378
unbelievably un-alike.
1942
01:54:11,445 --> 01:54:14,148
But, you know, we're kind of
all we've got now.
1943
01:54:14,215 --> 01:54:17,318
* One of us, me *
1944
01:54:17,384 --> 01:54:20,187
* All of us, sad *
1945
01:54:20,254 --> 01:54:23,090
It is really not important
whether I am at the time
1946
01:54:23,157 --> 01:54:25,927
getting on with Pete
or he's getting on with me.
1947
01:54:25,993 --> 01:54:29,530
It doesn't matter.
All that matters is what
we create on the stage--
1948
01:54:29,596 --> 01:54:31,598
that two hours of music
that night.
1949
01:54:31,665 --> 01:54:34,568
And as long as that is
still moving people
1950
01:54:34,635 --> 01:54:36,770
and sending people
out with a buzz,
1951
01:54:36,837 --> 01:54:38,705
then we're succeeding.
1952
01:54:38,772 --> 01:54:41,008
* Will you have some tea *
1953
01:54:46,480 --> 01:54:49,516
* At the theater with me? *
1954
01:54:56,423 --> 01:54:59,460
[audience applauds, cheers]
1955
01:55:16,610 --> 01:55:19,113
One, two!
One, two, three!
1956
01:55:19,180 --> 01:55:21,983
["My Generation" plays]
1957
01:55:24,285 --> 01:55:26,620
* People try to put us d-down *
1958
01:55:26,687 --> 01:55:29,156
* Talking 'bout my generation *
1959
01:55:29,223 --> 01:55:31,125
* Just because we g-get around *
1960
01:55:31,192 --> 01:55:33,794
* Talking 'bout my generation *
1961
01:55:33,860 --> 01:55:36,263
* Things, they do look
Awful c-cold *
1962
01:55:36,330 --> 01:55:38,032
* Talking 'bout my generation *
1963
01:55:38,099 --> 01:55:40,334
* I hope I die
Before I get old *
1964
01:55:40,401 --> 01:55:44,171
-* Talking 'bout my generation *
-* This is my generation *
1965
01:55:44,238 --> 01:55:47,274
* This is my generation, baby *
1966
01:55:47,341 --> 01:55:49,910
* Why don't you all
F-Fade away *
1967
01:55:49,977 --> 01:55:52,213
* Talking 'bout my generation *
1968
01:55:52,279 --> 01:55:54,148
* Don't try to dig
What we all say *
1969
01:55:54,215 --> 01:55:56,883
* Talking 'bout my generation *
1970
01:55:56,950 --> 01:55:59,653
* I'm not trying to cause
A b-big sensation *
1971
01:55:59,720 --> 01:56:01,822
* Talking 'bout my generation *
1972
01:56:01,888 --> 01:56:04,591
* Just talking 'bout
My g-generation *
1973
01:56:04,658 --> 01:56:06,960
* Talking 'bout my g-- *
1974
01:56:07,028 --> 01:56:09,163
-* My generation *
-* Talking 'bout my generation *
1975
01:56:09,230 --> 01:56:11,398
* Talking 'bout my generation *
1976
01:56:36,557 --> 01:56:40,061
* Why don't you all
F-Fade away *
1977
01:56:40,127 --> 01:56:44,998
* And don't try to dig
What-What we all s-say *
1978
01:56:45,066 --> 01:56:50,304
* I'm not trying to cause
A bloody big sensation *
1979
01:56:50,737 --> 01:56:54,808
-* Talking 'bout my-my-my *
-* Talking 'bout my generation *
1980
01:56:54,875 --> 01:56:56,843
* My g-generation *
1981
01:57:07,121 --> 01:57:09,290
* Yeah, I'm talking 'bout it *
1982
01:57:09,723 --> 01:57:11,725
[indistinct]
1983
01:57:35,082 --> 01:57:36,317
* Hey *
1984
01:57:38,885 --> 01:57:40,154
* Hey *
1985
01:58:37,110 --> 01:58:38,879
[Daltrey] Keith Moon
on the drums here.
1986
01:58:38,945 --> 01:58:41,382
In the black corner,
the Ox.
1987
01:58:41,448 --> 01:58:43,717
For Mr. Kenney Jones.
1988
01:58:43,784 --> 01:58:46,520
Pino Paladino on bass!
1989
01:58:46,587 --> 01:58:49,623
Simon Townshend,
guitar, vocal!
1990
01:58:49,690 --> 01:58:51,958
Zak Starkey on the drums!
1991
01:58:52,025 --> 01:58:55,929
John "Rabbit" Bundrick
on keyboards!
1992
01:58:55,996 --> 01:58:59,433
But most of all, you!
1993
01:58:59,500 --> 01:59:01,302
[audience cheers]
1994
01:59:07,241 --> 01:59:10,744
[Townshend]
We will be back!
1995
01:59:29,363 --> 01:59:31,898
[footsteps]
1996
01:59:31,965 --> 01:59:34,034
[static]
154461
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