They hoped they’d die before they got old but on Friday
night bus pass rockers Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend picked up their guitars
and played – if not quite like yesterday then not far short of it.
Daltrey, an improbably buff 69, and Townshend – still
windmilling power chords at the age of 68 – are touring 1973 mods and rockers
concept album Quadrophenia, a difficult child at the best of times.
Perfectionist Pete has never been happy with his rock opera
in live concert, describing earlier outings in his recent autobiography as
shambolic and repeatedly failing to live up to the potential of the period pop
piece.
So the news that Daltrey had persuaded him to give it
another go came as something of a surprise. Whether the current tour will live
up to his high expectations only time will tell, although the 15,000 fans went
home happy.
The trouble with playing a double album – and not one of
your best – in its entirety, and in track order to boot, is that there will
inevitably be peaks and troughs, and there are more troughs than peaks in
Quadrophenia.
So while the diehard faithful will lap up every song, the
less committed have to show patience, especially when the band do not deign to
speak to the audience until they have finished serving the main course.
Opener The Real Me promises much with its Who hallmarks, but
it feels a long time until The Punk And The Godfather scales similar heights,
and kid brother Simon Townshend sings a surprisingly strong Dirty Jobs.
Archive images of the band smashing their instruments during
Helpless Dancer only serve to suggest how tame the new generation band seems.
It’s fully 45 minutes before a rousing 5:15 finally ignites the crowd, complete
with a film footage bass solo from the late John Entwistle.
Then it’s hit and miss again, the bluesy Drowned taking
things back to basics and Bell Boy boasting the dearly departed Keith Moon’s
madcap vocal, again captured on film. Daltrey watches his old friend as if
mesmerised.
The Rock is backed by film of social revolution from Vietnam
to Pussy Riot, earning Margaret Thatcher a chorus of booing from the audience.
Diana, Princess of Wales later gets a similar reaction. “What are you?” asks
Townshend. “All Irish?”
Throughout the gig there have been striking images on the video wall behind the band, ranging from early Who gigs to newsreel of the Blitz, rationing, the beach confrontations of the 60s and footage of Brighton Pier in flames.
Trouble is, at times they've been more eye-catching than the band.
Love Reign O’er Me brings Quadrophenia to a close,
microphone-twirling Daltrey in fine voice. And it’s then that the gig finally
moves up the gears with a short greatest hits setlist tagged on to the end.
Who Are You, You Better You Bet and Pinball Wizard have the
arena rocking. The mighty Baba O’Riley brings the house down, taking
well-heeled fans back out into the teenage wasteland.
Won’t Get Fooled Again is the inevitable, fist-pumping,
singalong finale. One of rock’s greatest anthems, it brings out the best in The
Who, sweeping aside the claims of much younger pretenders to the throne.
Good gig, then, but they were better when they played the
NIA a few years back with a joyous celebratory setlist not confined by the
zoot suit straitjacket of Quadrophenia.
THE SETLIST
I Am The Sea
The Real Me
Quadrophenia
Cut My Hair
The Punk And The Godfather
I’m One
The Dirty Jobs
Helpless Dancer
Is It In My Head?
I’ve Had Enough
5:15
Sea And Sand
Drowned
Bell Boy
Doctor Jimmy
The Rock
Love Reign O’er Me
Who Are You
You Better You Bet
Pinball Wizard
Baby O’Riley
Won’t Get Fooled Again
Tea & Theatre