I somehow miscalculated the number of Who
shows I’d attended when I wrote that Sunday’s show in Birmingham was my 36th.
Having consulted my Who Concert File,
I now realise it was my 37th, or 38th if you include my
sneaking into the Young Vic early in 1971 to watch them rehearsing for the aborted
Lifehouse project. I’m sure there’s
loads of fans who’ve seen them many more times than this but it began for me on
August 9, 1969, at the Plumpton Racecourse in Sussex where they blew me sideways
at what was known as the National Jazz & Blues Festival. A friend of mine
had got a gig working on one of the bars and he sneaked me in somehow.
Come
to think of it, if my timing had been better I might even have been able to catch
them at Leeds University in February of the following year – the famous Live At Leeds gig – as I had a friend
who was studying there and, with me wearing a borrowed University scarf and NUS
card, he’d got me into a few shows in ’68 & ’69 but I’d left Yorkshire by that point
in my life and wasn’t around for it.
Plumpton
was followed by two shows at the Dunstable Civic Hall, north of London, the
first in April ’70 and the second in July the same year, my first Who assignment
for Melody Maker. I saw them again at
Dunstable Civic in July of the following year but by that time I’d made contact
with them, as it were, and also seen them at the Isle of Wight Festival, the
Hammersmith Palais, the Roundhouse and that Young Vic show. I caught them in
Watford in July – a few days after that third Dunstable show – so by this time
I was seeing them as often as I possibly could. Next up was the Oval, the
cricket ground just south of the Thames in Kennington, a memorable night
indeed, and then the students-only show in Guildford that I write about
elsewhere on Just Backdated. Then there was a gig in Southampton when I went
with Keith and on the way back we called in at Ten Years After drummer Ric Lee’s
house to relieve him of the contents of his booze cupboard. Back in the MM office I wrote of the Southampton
show: “They used the best combination of songs to whip up the excitement to an
awe-inspiring climax as huge searchlights beamed down on delirious fans drunk
with ecstasy at the group’s new finale... There isn’t a band in the land that
couldn’t take a lesson or two from The Who...”
By
now I was getting seriously greedy so I gorged myself on three consecutive
nights at the newly-opened Rainbow in north London whose manager John Morris
had given me a pass that said ‘Admit to all parts of theatre at all times’ – a
passport to paradise really as I used it regularly for at least a year and saw
a load of other bands there too.
In
November ’71 I saw The Who in the US for the first time, travelling down with
them from New York to Charlotte, SC, and Tuscaloosa, Alabama. It was on one of
the plane flights on this trip, a regular commercial flight, that I was sat
next to Pete when he developed a nose bleed and I found myself cradling his
head in my lap and administering to him with a damp towel. It was also on this trip
that I remember a box of Meaty Beaty Big
And Bouncy albums arrived from MCA in LA, and we all sat around in Pete
Rudge’s room admiring it.
The following year,
1972, was quiet by Who standards but they did a short European tour in the spring
and I caught them in Amsterdam and Rome. In the Dutch capital I remember Roger
being frustrated by the sound system and making a gesture towards Bobby Pridden
that looked like he was, er, satisfying himself manually, if you get my
gist. The Rome show wasn’t sold out, as I recall, and afterwards Keith, Dougal
and myself roamed around Rome looking for non-existent club action. Back in the
office I wrote in MM: “It’s as good
as it always is, a combination of violent excitement, near perfect sound and
those power-packed Who songs... Townshend smashed his guitar into fragments –
the first break of the tour – at the end and the Italian fans didn’t know what
had hit them. He swung it wildly at Moon’s kit, and took three heavy blows
against the stage floor before the instrument succumbed... The Who are so good
they could probably put their shows over with their eyes shut. The inevitable
problem arises – what next for The Who?”
By the autumn of 1973 I was living in California,
and I caught two consecutive Quadrophenia
shows at the LA Forum on November 22 & 23. I remember being frustrated that
the momentum of the shows was interrupted by the apparent need to explain the
storyline of Quad. Nevertheless my MM report ended as follows: “Some 19,500
fans had stomped and cheered for over 15 minutes in the Forum, refusing to
leave even though the house lights had been raised and probably well aware that
The Who rarely do encores. But tonight their enthusiasm was rewarded with just
that. The group came back and did an encore – actually ‘Baby Don’t You Do It’ –
only the second time I’ve seen this happen in watching The Who around 20 times
now... they blasted through the song, climaxing with Townshend unstrapping the
Gibson and, gripping the fretboard as if it were an axe, bringing it down on to
the stage with a resounding crash time and time again until it cracked around
the 12th fret.”
The
following year I was in New York, of course, for the four June shows at Madison
Square Garden which I cover extensively in other posts here. Then I was back in
the UK in October ’75 for the two shows at Stafford, again covered in some
detail here, before I found myself back on the East coast of the US again for
another show at the Garden and one in Philadelphia. I think that Garden show
followed one in Boston where Keith collapsed and the show was aborted as a
result. I remember that afterwards, at the Navarro bar, he was nowhere to be
seen, which was most unusual. Then someone told me he’s been confined to his
room by Bill Curbishley, with a guard on the door.
The
following year, in August, I saw them with Keith for the last time, at Jacksonville,
on August 7. This was the show that wasn’t anywhere near sold out but they
played an absolute blinder, and Pete, exhausted and still trance-like, told me
afterwards that they were playing for the people who weren’t there.
So
now we’re into the post-Keith era, during which all the shows I’ve seen have
been in the UK, at Birmingham NEC, Wembley Arena, Shepherds Bush Empire, Watford
Coliseum, London’s Earls Court, the Town & Country Club in Kentish Town in
2004 (my first without John), and – after my longest ‘Who break’ ever – finally
Birmingham again earlier this week.
I
wrote in my report of the Birmingham show that I’d felt disconnected from The
Who after Keith died and I realise now that the same thing happened after John’s
death. Both tragedies somehow took away
my hunger for The Who, albeit temporarily, but I also refer to my ‘love affair’ with them and I
think that like all love affairs that last for decades, albeit those that are a bit on and
off, the tug is still there, won’t ever really go away completely. So Pete,
Roger, John and Keith (and the rest)… thanks again for all these magnificent shows. No one does it
better.
4 comments:
The Garden show (following the Boston fiasco) was actually March '76; all the other dates check out. Thanks for the rundown - you've witnessed some extraordinary Who music.
Although, the Philly show was Dec of 75. They didn't play Philly in 76. The 75 Spectrum gig is notable for 1) Pete smashed TWO guitars that night, Baba and WGFA. 2) Was also Keith's last ever show in the City Of Brotherly Love.
You are both no doubt right with the dates. The Philly show was the one where the whole audience rose to acknowledge 'Sparks', so well was it performed, and the other Garden show must have been the following year. Thanks - CC
"A friend of mine had got a gig working on one of the bars and he sneaked me in somehow." Hmmm!
Your friend had "access all areas" and, if my memory serves me right, so did you. We watched from the side of the stage at one point. Or was that The Kinks? Non-musical high point of the night was necking beers with Charlie Watts and his missus, in "my bar" which was situated at the back of the arena.
Long time ago! Cheers, T
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