"We're just hitting back at COVID because it
stopped us in our tracks. We were, we were going to call it,
'Where Were We?'" lead singer Roger Daltrey said ahead of the
tour starting next week.
Canceled charity concerts for The Who's foundation, Teenage
Cancer, at London's Royal Albert Hall had cost the group about
$3 million, said Daltrey, 78. The charity works with UK and U.S.
hospitals to develop state-of-the-art spaces for teens suffering
from cancer to meet and stay connected.
Daltrey and Pete Townshend, the band's principal songwriter
famed for thrashing his guitar on stage, are the only surviving
original members of the group which emerged in 1960s London with
drummer Keith Moon and bass player John Entwistle.
The Who has sold more than 100 million records worldwide, with
the rock opera "Tommy" and hits like "Won't Get Fooled Again"
and "I Can See For Miles."
Daltrey and Townshend, along with six band members and an
orchestra, will kick off their North American tour on April 22
in Hollywood, Florida, and wrap it up in Las Vegas in November.
The Who's tours have become a lot more complicated, Daltrey
said. "We were, we were four guys with eight amplifiers, a drum
kit and a sound system. That was it. We turn up in a U-Haul
truck and three roadies would suit us for the night."
Daltrey refuses to worry about COVID affecting the tour, he said
at his England countryside home. "We're just living our lives.
And if you get it and die, you get it and die, you know?"
The rock legend, who has worked with many of the world's top
bands, named Mick Jagger as his top rock band frontman followed
jointly by Freddie Mercury and Elton John, Bruce Springsteen and
David Bowie.
While the band has no plans to stop touring, the time will come,
Daltrey acknowledged.
"I've always said about this business. You don't give it up, it
gives you up. I will open my mouth and it won't come out like it
should. And I will go, that's it, can't do it anymore."
(Reporting by Alicia Powell; Editing by Richard Chang and David
Gregorio)
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