1 00:00:11,410 --> 00:00:16,405 The double ending is okay. Also, Moonie, watch those breakers. 2 00:00:16,716 --> 00:00:18,844 Very treacherous undertow there. 3 00:00:19,085 --> 00:00:21,247 It's just the most dramatic thing to come out... 4 00:00:21,420 --> 00:00:23,446 ...by the time you give me another listen. 5 00:00:24,323 --> 00:00:26,952 With all that dynamic lead guitar playing... 6 00:00:27,159 --> 00:00:29,594 ...the drums would make the best contrast against it. 7 00:00:29,762 --> 00:00:31,355 Being sent to the British Museum. 8 00:00:32,431 --> 00:00:34,593 My resignation, actually. 9 00:00:34,767 --> 00:00:37,601 It's interesting without being... Picking the word to pieces. 10 00:00:37,803 --> 00:00:40,363 Maybe it's not the right word, because "irreverence" suggests... 11 00:00:40,606 --> 00:00:43,269 ...that you don't give a fuck about what's already there. 12 00:00:43,476 --> 00:00:46,537 What was interesting is that I think we all did. 13 00:00:46,779 --> 00:00:49,305 Us, from a... 14 00:00:49,515 --> 00:00:51,746 ...middle class and working class background... 15 00:00:51,951 --> 00:00:56,286 ...and our audience being middle and working class because we were postwar... 16 00:00:56,489 --> 00:00:59,755 ...and that that actually meant that the generation above us... 17 00:00:59,959 --> 00:01:02,724 ...had real difficulties engaging with us. 18 00:01:02,895 --> 00:01:05,763 So you'd have terrible trouble with schoolteachers and stuff. 19 00:01:05,965 --> 00:01:08,491 They would just expect you to do what they said. 20 00:01:08,701 --> 00:01:12,001 And if you even didn't just... You know, if you kind of... 21 00:01:12,204 --> 00:01:16,005 It wasn't necessarily you went out of your way to disobey authority... 22 00:01:16,175 --> 00:01:19,634 ...but if you didn't do it in the right way, they would get angry with you. 23 00:01:19,845 --> 00:01:24,283 So you would end up with, you know, situations of outright rebellion. 24 00:01:40,399 --> 00:01:42,368 ♪ I'm going down ♪ 25 00:01:43,202 --> 00:01:47,936 ♪ I'm going down, down, down Down, down ♪ 26 00:01:48,674 --> 00:01:49,869 ♪ Right now ♪ 27 00:01:52,178 --> 00:01:53,942 ♪ Going down ♪ 28 00:01:55,247 --> 00:01:58,911 ♪ Down, down, down, down, down ♪ 29 00:02:11,063 --> 00:02:12,588 ♪ Get down ♪ 30 00:02:15,234 --> 00:02:17,032 ♪ I'm going down ♪♪ 31 00:02:34,286 --> 00:02:36,152 Running on seven. 32 00:02:37,389 --> 00:02:41,053 Because the drum... After the silence, you come in with drums, Moonie, okay? 33 00:02:41,260 --> 00:02:43,786 Cut that, some of it. Is it all right with you, Pete? 34 00:02:44,964 --> 00:02:48,093 I like your adlib yells and screams, by the way. 35 00:02:48,300 --> 00:02:50,166 On the second time around, that would be very effective. 36 00:02:55,107 --> 00:02:56,632 Okay, go. 37 00:02:57,309 --> 00:03:02,247 And this is, like, '62 or something, '61, '62. 38 00:03:02,448 --> 00:03:05,418 And anyway, I had this sort of, like, um... 39 00:03:05,618 --> 00:03:07,177 ...breakdown of some sort, right? 40 00:03:07,419 --> 00:03:10,651 I had, like, a fabulous apartment, I had a car, you know? 41 00:03:10,890 --> 00:03:15,988 I had this huge sort of career really moving ahead in the film business... 42 00:03:16,195 --> 00:03:21,634 ...and I'm hanging out, you know, and I'm just dissatisfied. 43 00:03:21,834 --> 00:03:24,167 I didn't really believe anymore what I was doing. 44 00:03:24,403 --> 00:03:25,837 It became very superficial. 45 00:03:26,005 --> 00:03:28,338 I thought... I was looking for some sense in myself. 46 00:03:28,541 --> 00:03:30,942 I just hadn't really ever thought about that before. 47 00:03:31,143 --> 00:03:32,167 And I'm lost, you know? 48 00:03:32,411 --> 00:03:35,438 Anyway, and I'm wandering around looking, do you know what I mean? 49 00:03:35,648 --> 00:03:40,052 And thinking that, you know, I need to do something... 50 00:03:40,286 --> 00:03:43,620 ...which is more to do with my own self expression, you know? 51 00:03:44,023 --> 00:03:45,047 And, um... 52 00:03:45,624 --> 00:03:47,786 You know, Kit... I think a lot about Kit... 53 00:03:47,993 --> 00:03:52,021 ...and I miss Kit and, you know, how we have this sort of thing going on... 54 00:03:52,231 --> 00:03:55,633 It comes and goes. But I'm basically trying to sort of work out... 55 00:03:55,835 --> 00:03:57,428 ...where I am. 56 00:03:57,636 --> 00:04:00,037 I'm reading books that, like, seem to say things. 57 00:04:00,239 --> 00:04:02,572 Philosophy and the great novelists and whatever. 58 00:04:02,808 --> 00:04:05,471 I'm seeing these films. You know, I'm testing... 59 00:04:05,678 --> 00:04:08,045 ...you know, my awareness, my consciousness, right? 60 00:04:08,247 --> 00:04:09,545 I'm listening to jazz. 61 00:04:09,748 --> 00:04:13,549 And I've also now decided to become a cineaste, right? 62 00:04:13,752 --> 00:04:15,983 I thought you did things... Like, I became a mod. 63 00:04:16,188 --> 00:04:20,250 You just call yourself that, right? So I'd gone to see all the films, read all the... 64 00:04:20,492 --> 00:04:23,462 You know, I was voraciously open to take anything in. 65 00:04:23,662 --> 00:04:29,829 And so I see that the thing to be in films, right, is a director. 66 00:04:30,703 --> 00:04:32,763 I figured that's the game. 67 00:04:33,005 --> 00:04:35,474 And there's a coffee shop called... 68 00:04:35,674 --> 00:04:38,269 ...Act One, Scene 1, right? 69 00:04:38,878 --> 00:04:41,780 That was the name. It's early in the morning... 70 00:04:41,981 --> 00:04:44,382 ...and I go into the Act One, Scene 1 for a coffee... 71 00:04:44,550 --> 00:04:47,281 ...and Kit is sitting in the coffee shop. 72 00:04:47,519 --> 00:04:50,853 So anyway, we meet in this coffee shop, and it's fantastic to see him... 73 00:04:51,056 --> 00:04:54,026 ...and he's very happy to see me, and we spend the day together. 74 00:04:54,193 --> 00:04:55,991 And at the end of the day... 75 00:04:56,195 --> 00:04:59,632 ...we decided that we were gonna sort of write a screenplay... 76 00:04:59,865 --> 00:05:02,494 ...to make a film that would be our film. 77 00:05:05,905 --> 00:05:07,237 I fell in love. 78 00:05:07,439 --> 00:05:11,308 I mean, literally, with both of them immediately. I mean, I just... 79 00:05:11,543 --> 00:05:16,447 They completely and utterly, the pair of them, totally changed my life. 80 00:05:16,782 --> 00:05:18,444 That was good. Can I have a look? 81 00:05:18,651 --> 00:05:22,315 However highbrow you want to make it, I still think there is more valid... 82 00:05:22,554 --> 00:05:25,422 ...new creative music being made at the pop end. 83 00:05:25,624 --> 00:05:28,924 I don't see any good classical composers emerging at the moment. 84 00:05:29,128 --> 00:05:31,597 I certainly haven't heard a decent new symphony... 85 00:05:31,797 --> 00:05:34,596 ...or a decent new opera in the last 18 months... 86 00:05:34,800 --> 00:05:37,463 ...and I think opera as we know now is absolutely defunct. 87 00:05:37,670 --> 00:05:41,471 One needs a completely fresh approach and I think pop's gonna provide it. 88 00:05:41,674 --> 00:05:45,611 You gotta talk to Chris about this. It's a pity that Kit isn't here to tell his side. 89 00:05:45,811 --> 00:05:48,781 But, you know, how did these two guys find each other, you know? 90 00:05:48,981 --> 00:05:50,813 I mean, for a while there... 91 00:05:51,050 --> 00:05:55,112 ...I thought they must have fallen in love and had an affair or something. 92 00:05:55,321 --> 00:05:56,653 I couldn't work out where they'd come together. 93 00:05:56,855 --> 00:06:00,553 I knew they'd worked on films together, and they loved that about each other... 94 00:06:00,759 --> 00:06:04,355 ...that Chris did one thing, Kit did another. We'd come up with dumb reasons. 95 00:06:04,663 --> 00:06:06,689 Like, you know, maybe they were lovers... 96 00:06:06,932 --> 00:06:11,700 ...or something, but that just made it more intriguing, you know. More interesting. 97 00:06:17,209 --> 00:06:19,701 This memory came up that I was being carried. 98 00:06:19,945 --> 00:06:22,813 I think I was being carried by my Aunt Maude, ahem... 99 00:06:23,015 --> 00:06:28,181 ...and my mother, and I guess my brother. And we went into what was called... 100 00:06:28,387 --> 00:06:31,482 ...an Anderson air-raid shelter. 101 00:06:31,790 --> 00:06:36,319 You know, I played, as a kid on, you know... In the bomb sites. 102 00:06:36,528 --> 00:06:37,621 That's what we did. 103 00:06:37,830 --> 00:06:41,028 We played in the bomb sites, in the half bombed-out houses. 104 00:06:41,233 --> 00:06:45,967 We liked to smoke and, you know, do those very young things. 105 00:06:46,171 --> 00:06:48,140 So life was very quick. 106 00:06:48,340 --> 00:06:53,005 You were very sort of, like, old in a sense, quite quickly. 107 00:06:54,680 --> 00:06:56,876 We were really different individuals. 108 00:06:57,116 --> 00:07:01,212 Chris, he was always like a big persona. 109 00:07:01,420 --> 00:07:04,913 You know, he was this rough, tough, fighting, sort of spiv. 110 00:07:05,357 --> 00:07:10,022 I missed most of his kind of gang years, you know, because I'd left home. 111 00:07:10,229 --> 00:07:12,494 And then I remember getting a call... 112 00:07:12,698 --> 00:07:15,862 ...and having a conversation with my mother because she was frightened. 113 00:07:16,168 --> 00:07:18,660 I think police had brought him home. 114 00:07:18,904 --> 00:07:24,434 And so I was aware that I had to bridge a lot of water that had come between us. 115 00:07:24,676 --> 00:07:28,272 And the initial thing was just getting him to admit... 116 00:07:28,514 --> 00:07:32,884 ...or getting him to acknowledge that he did have an interest. 117 00:07:33,085 --> 00:07:36,021 In my conversation with him, there was this kind of lethargy... 118 00:07:36,221 --> 00:07:39,020 ...like he just wasn't interested in anything. 119 00:07:39,224 --> 00:07:40,715 I had found something. 120 00:07:40,926 --> 00:07:43,589 Unbeknownst to him and the family... 121 00:07:43,796 --> 00:07:47,392 ...I had found this thing to be an actor, and then, finally... 122 00:07:47,599 --> 00:07:49,397 ...he confessed that... 123 00:07:49,601 --> 00:07:51,729 When I, you know, pressed him... 124 00:07:51,937 --> 00:07:53,963 ...he said he was interested in girls. 125 00:07:54,206 --> 00:07:56,607 That's what he was interested in, girls. 126 00:07:56,809 --> 00:07:58,573 And so I said, "What kind of girls?" 127 00:07:58,777 --> 00:08:00,746 "Well, you know... 128 00:08:01,547 --> 00:08:03,982 ...dancing girls." And that came to me... 129 00:08:04,216 --> 00:08:07,584 ...the ballet, because I thought, "God, if you're interested in chicks... 130 00:08:07,786 --> 00:08:10,085 ...working backstage at the ballet... 131 00:08:10,289 --> 00:08:14,784 ...is the place where a young East End hobbidy wants to be, you know?" 132 00:08:15,094 --> 00:08:19,429 And I knew from my experiences that most of those girls were just dying... 133 00:08:19,631 --> 00:08:22,829 ...for somebody like Chris to fall across their path, you know. 134 00:08:23,068 --> 00:08:25,833 And if you worked backstage in the ballet... 135 00:08:26,071 --> 00:08:29,735 ...they're there and they'll love you. You know, you just gotta be there. 136 00:08:31,276 --> 00:08:33,336 And I stand on the side of the stage... 137 00:08:33,579 --> 00:08:35,980 ...looking for all these amazing women. 138 00:08:36,215 --> 00:08:39,947 And then the orchestra starts to tune up and I hear this music. 139 00:08:40,486 --> 00:08:44,082 And then the lights come on and then the show begins, and then... 140 00:08:44,289 --> 00:08:46,155 ...these people are just dancing... 141 00:08:46,358 --> 00:08:50,591 ...and it's the lights, you know, and it's so, like, gigantic to me. 142 00:08:50,796 --> 00:08:56,235 The show is about another half hour to go and this old prop guy comes up to me. 143 00:08:56,435 --> 00:08:59,166 "And so you haven't got any more cues. You can go home now." 144 00:08:59,371 --> 00:09:02,136 I said, "No, no, no! I'm not leaving." 145 00:09:02,341 --> 00:09:07,678 And that night, I mean, I absolutely know that whatever this was... 146 00:09:07,846 --> 00:09:09,974 ...um, I wanted in. 147 00:09:10,516 --> 00:09:14,476 I'm now, like, a second A.D. or second assistant, right? 148 00:09:14,686 --> 00:09:19,124 And Kit, he's in the same position as I am... 149 00:09:19,324 --> 00:09:22,351 ...and in the studio we bump into each other, as you do, right... 150 00:09:22,561 --> 00:09:24,052 ...when you're a runner, an A.D. 151 00:09:24,263 --> 00:09:26,755 We used to go to the cafeteria together at lunchtime... 152 00:09:26,965 --> 00:09:29,161 ...and we discovered we had exactly the same... 153 00:09:29,368 --> 00:09:32,896 I had the same as him, in terms of French cinema... 154 00:09:33,138 --> 00:09:35,403 ...you know, certain types of films that we liked. 155 00:09:35,641 --> 00:09:37,803 So that began the relationship. 156 00:09:38,010 --> 00:09:42,641 He said he'd met this guy, he was very smart, and different to him... 157 00:09:42,848 --> 00:09:45,716 ...but they kind of were a very good duo. 158 00:09:45,918 --> 00:09:49,320 They complemented each other, like two and two made six. 159 00:09:49,521 --> 00:09:55,222 And that they'd had this idea where they could never really make that jump... 160 00:09:55,427 --> 00:09:57,919 ...from being film assistants to being film directors. 161 00:09:58,163 --> 00:09:59,722 You know, it was impossible. 162 00:09:59,932 --> 00:10:05,166 Their idea was that they would find a rock 'n' roll group. 163 00:10:05,370 --> 00:10:07,737 They would find a really good rock 'n' roll group... 164 00:10:07,940 --> 00:10:10,205 ...and they would manage them. 165 00:10:10,409 --> 00:10:12,878 And they would make them so successful... 166 00:10:13,078 --> 00:10:16,446 ...that they would be able to direct a film about them. 167 00:10:16,682 --> 00:10:18,708 And then that film would be their showpiece. 168 00:10:18,917 --> 00:10:21,182 That film would be their entrée... 169 00:10:21,386 --> 00:10:24,845 ...into the world of film directing. And he did tell me about the idea... 170 00:10:25,057 --> 00:10:30,519 ...and before they met The Who, or The High Numbers as they were called. 171 00:10:30,729 --> 00:10:33,460 Kit, he'd been in the army, he'd gone to Oxford... 172 00:10:33,699 --> 00:10:38,967 ...and he'd also then gone from Oxford to some cinema school in Paris, right? 173 00:10:39,204 --> 00:10:42,436 All of that stuff that I thought was fantastic because none of that... 174 00:10:42,641 --> 00:10:46,100 ...was even in my viewpoint. We didn't know that you could go to college... 175 00:10:46,345 --> 00:10:50,248 ...where I came from. We weren't told. Then the fourth thing I knew about Kit... 176 00:10:50,415 --> 00:10:53,385 ...was that he had gone to Brazil... 177 00:10:53,585 --> 00:10:57,249 ...with an explorer to film... 178 00:10:57,456 --> 00:10:58,651 ...and he was actually... 179 00:10:58,890 --> 00:11:02,594 So, he was, like, a guy who'd held a camera, right? 180 00:11:02,728 --> 00:11:05,391 He's gone to Brazil because it was a chance to film... 181 00:11:05,597 --> 00:11:09,159 ...and because he was a reckless, impulsive, sort of great guy, right? 182 00:11:09,434 --> 00:11:12,165 The Iriri River was the longest river... 183 00:11:12,404 --> 00:11:15,067 ...in the world that had never been descended in full. 184 00:11:15,274 --> 00:11:20,508 You could go about a thousand kilometers in any direction and meet nobody. 185 00:11:20,746 --> 00:11:24,513 Just as though it was an island out in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. 186 00:11:24,750 --> 00:11:27,618 Kit wanted to come. I even thought it was great... 187 00:11:27,819 --> 00:11:31,153 ...because he was thinking of making a career in filmmaking. 188 00:11:31,957 --> 00:11:34,950 And he came along as the cameraman. 189 00:11:35,594 --> 00:11:39,793 He was very tough and, um, uncomplaining. 190 00:11:39,998 --> 00:11:43,662 Because it became quite a tough expedition. 191 00:11:43,902 --> 00:11:48,704 Much, much harder than we realized it was going to be. 192 00:11:52,344 --> 00:11:55,473 Kit had incredible, um, courage. 193 00:11:55,681 --> 00:11:57,172 You know, he had incredible... 194 00:11:57,416 --> 00:12:00,545 He was really always able to sort of really take risks. 195 00:12:00,786 --> 00:12:04,416 He'd gone to Brazil with this explorer, this guy called Richard. 196 00:12:04,623 --> 00:12:08,219 And, um, the guy he was with, they'd gone into an unknown part... 197 00:12:08,460 --> 00:12:10,292 ...he got killed by a tribe. 198 00:12:10,996 --> 00:12:12,965 I remember him coming back saying: 199 00:12:13,165 --> 00:12:17,466 "I've just had a radio message that there's been an attack on your camp." 200 00:12:17,869 --> 00:12:22,204 And, at that time, he said, "I think five people have been killed." 201 00:12:22,441 --> 00:12:26,435 In fact, it was only one, and it was an ambush on the trail. 202 00:12:27,579 --> 00:12:31,846 And in a way, I'm incredibly sort of, you know, in wonder. 203 00:12:32,050 --> 00:12:36,488 It was the possibility that you could do, you know... It was widening my angle... 204 00:12:36,688 --> 00:12:38,714 ...of awareness on possibilities. 205 00:12:41,560 --> 00:12:44,052 Mr. Lambert, Mr. Mason was an experienced explorer... 206 00:12:44,262 --> 00:12:48,097 ...and other members of the party have a lot of experience of this kind of country. 207 00:12:48,266 --> 00:12:50,531 What went wrong on this expedition? 208 00:12:50,736 --> 00:12:53,831 Well, the verdict of the Brazilian authorities was that it was: 209 00:12:55,273 --> 00:12:57,071 Pure fate. 210 00:12:57,275 --> 00:12:58,834 We end up living together, right? 211 00:12:59,044 --> 00:13:01,843 So we're in the same apartment, and then... 212 00:13:02,047 --> 00:13:06,075 ...we start to try and write screenplays, right? We started coming up with ideas. 213 00:13:07,586 --> 00:13:10,385 And then we got round to sort of what we really both liked. 214 00:13:10,589 --> 00:13:13,616 We got round to this whole sort of Jean-Luc Godard... 215 00:13:13,859 --> 00:13:15,987 ...cinema verité type of thing... 216 00:13:16,194 --> 00:13:19,096 ...and we realized that that's really where we should go. 217 00:13:19,297 --> 00:13:22,199 That's when I came up with the idea of the rock 'n' roll thing. 218 00:13:22,401 --> 00:13:26,361 We could manage a group, and how we did it... 219 00:13:26,571 --> 00:13:29,200 ...would be the theme of the film. How we managed them. 220 00:13:29,408 --> 00:13:31,240 We'd shoot it all as we were doing it... 221 00:13:31,443 --> 00:13:35,380 ...and that we would film the whole process of the managing... 222 00:13:35,580 --> 00:13:39,142 ...and the idea of, like, finding the group, working with them... 223 00:13:39,384 --> 00:13:41,751 ...making records, becoming successful... 224 00:13:41,953 --> 00:13:45,151 ...would be filmed, the whole process on all levels. 225 00:13:45,390 --> 00:13:49,418 Kit and I, we looked everywhere. We looked all over the place for these bands. 226 00:13:49,628 --> 00:13:53,258 How we defined what group we wanted to put in our so-called movie... 227 00:13:53,465 --> 00:13:56,094 ...was we didn't know what we wanted... 228 00:13:56,268 --> 00:13:58,328 ...but we absolutely knew what we didn't want. 229 00:13:58,637 --> 00:14:00,538 I mean, we looked for months. 230 00:14:00,739 --> 00:14:04,938 We found the people who were doing the music to be smart and neat and... 231 00:14:05,143 --> 00:14:07,305 They were very, like, jumping up and down. 232 00:14:07,546 --> 00:14:10,607 You know, they weren't what we wanted. 233 00:14:10,816 --> 00:14:13,650 But this we wanted was really about us. 234 00:14:14,586 --> 00:14:18,785 But it was gonna be some mad fucking concoction of stuff... 235 00:14:18,990 --> 00:14:21,050 ...that looked like Lambert and Stamp. 236 00:14:23,695 --> 00:14:26,187 What we did with the Railway Hotel, the Railway Club... 237 00:14:26,598 --> 00:14:30,091 ...it was a sort of a institutional pub kind of place. 238 00:14:30,302 --> 00:14:32,794 It was a bit sordid and grotty like they all are. 239 00:14:33,004 --> 00:14:36,566 So we blacked out all the windows, we turned all the radiators up... 240 00:14:36,775 --> 00:14:39,870 ...and we took all the light bulbs out and put in pink or red ones. 241 00:14:40,111 --> 00:14:42,706 So it was dark. It was hot. 242 00:14:42,948 --> 00:14:45,577 The band were loud. We had too many people in. 243 00:14:45,784 --> 00:14:47,719 It was fantastic. It was a real success. 244 00:14:47,953 --> 00:14:52,118 Things were going well, and one day I'm there on the door... 245 00:14:52,324 --> 00:14:55,692 ...and The High Numbers are playing. I think someone came and said: 246 00:14:55,861 --> 00:14:59,457 "There's some straight guy poking around outside." 247 00:14:59,664 --> 00:15:04,625 Now, we used to have in the club 500 people or something, you know? 248 00:15:04,836 --> 00:15:08,603 We were officially only allowed 180, but I suddenly thought: 249 00:15:08,807 --> 00:15:11,902 "Christ, it might be the local council." It was trouble. 250 00:15:12,310 --> 00:15:14,472 This was Kit Lambert. I mean, I didn't know. 251 00:15:14,679 --> 00:15:18,343 He's been driving around and he's seen this line of scooters and mods, you know. 252 00:15:18,550 --> 00:15:21,145 He'd been looking for a band to put into a film. 253 00:15:21,353 --> 00:15:23,254 Been looking for months with his partner. 254 00:15:23,421 --> 00:15:26,391 And the first thing he said to me: "Is it always like this?" 255 00:15:26,691 --> 00:15:29,627 I said, "No, no, it's a special night." Or something like that. 256 00:15:29,828 --> 00:15:32,423 Anyway, he forced his way past me, I think... 257 00:15:32,664 --> 00:15:36,533 ...and looked inside and he looked really shaken. 258 00:15:36,735 --> 00:15:39,000 And, you know, he's... And I'm going, I thought: 259 00:15:39,204 --> 00:15:43,437 "This is it." And he said, "I'm looking to hire a band." 260 00:15:43,842 --> 00:15:46,402 And I thought, We went in, we watched the band a bit... 261 00:15:46,578 --> 00:15:48,137 ...then we went upstairs to talk. 262 00:15:48,346 --> 00:15:51,680 Lambert says later, when he went, he said it was like going into hell... 263 00:15:51,883 --> 00:15:55,012 ...or a version of Hades or something. He said it was pitch black... 264 00:15:55,220 --> 00:15:57,655 ...very loud. The band were doing feedback. 265 00:15:57,856 --> 00:16:00,087 Pete was just getting into his feedback stuff. 266 00:16:00,292 --> 00:16:03,091 And he said all these mods were doing these dances... 267 00:16:03,295 --> 00:16:05,696 ...and he said they looked mesmerized... 268 00:16:06,031 --> 00:16:07,795 ...and just what he wanted. 269 00:16:08,033 --> 00:16:09,092 Up his street. 270 00:16:15,540 --> 00:16:18,669 Yeah, I do remember him. I remember the night that he was there. 271 00:16:18,877 --> 00:16:22,279 I remember Barney coming and saying to me, after the show... 272 00:16:22,480 --> 00:16:24,915 ...that there was somebody that had seen the band... 273 00:16:25,116 --> 00:16:27,415 ...that was interested in making a film about us. 274 00:16:28,053 --> 00:16:31,751 They were just an extraordinary flash of... 275 00:16:31,957 --> 00:16:35,621 I just felt a sense of serenity about them, of calmness. 276 00:16:35,827 --> 00:16:38,092 Of Kit smoking... 277 00:16:38,296 --> 00:16:42,734 ...and not really addressing the band very much. Kit didn't... 278 00:16:43,735 --> 00:16:46,432 ...immediately engage with the band. 279 00:16:46,638 --> 00:16:49,836 He seemed to be like somebody who had a big idea and was... 280 00:16:50,642 --> 00:16:54,101 I felt like we were actors in his play. 281 00:16:54,312 --> 00:16:57,771 There were two guys here, assistant directors in the film business. 282 00:16:57,983 --> 00:17:00,782 They were prepared to give all that up and manage the band. 283 00:17:00,986 --> 00:17:04,252 And put some money into it. I think they lied about the money. 284 00:17:04,623 --> 00:17:07,286 It was an interesting time. I was at art school. 285 00:17:07,492 --> 00:17:09,620 The other guys were in day jobs. 286 00:17:09,828 --> 00:17:14,289 Our group, The High Numbers, we hadn't really... 287 00:17:14,599 --> 00:17:16,966 We hadn't really got our heads sorted out properly. 288 00:17:17,435 --> 00:17:19,734 We were still struggling to find an image... 289 00:17:19,938 --> 00:17:22,601 ...and find our feet and... 290 00:17:23,742 --> 00:17:26,473 We wouldn't have been particularly impressive. Um... 291 00:17:27,846 --> 00:17:32,546 We had a few gimmicks. You know, Keith had an extraordinary look about him. 292 00:17:32,784 --> 00:17:35,151 In fact, you can see the movie of the event. 293 00:17:35,553 --> 00:17:39,854 They shot the first film of the band at that gig... 294 00:17:40,625 --> 00:17:43,754 ...and took us over then. Their original intention, you know... 295 00:17:43,962 --> 00:17:46,454 ...was to make a movie, not to manage a band. 296 00:17:46,665 --> 00:17:49,567 But they ended up doing both. 297 00:17:49,801 --> 00:17:51,793 ♪ Ooh poo pah do ♪ 298 00:17:52,537 --> 00:17:55,006 ♪ Well, baby, call me the most ♪♪ 299 00:17:55,206 --> 00:17:57,505 I think they got to know the band... 300 00:17:57,709 --> 00:18:00,144 ...got to see it, and got to see the situation... 301 00:18:00,345 --> 00:18:02,644 ...and saw the potential. 302 00:18:02,847 --> 00:18:08,081 They saw, probably, that the band really didn't have any leadership at that time. 303 00:18:08,319 --> 00:18:11,153 And I walked through with Kit... 304 00:18:11,356 --> 00:18:14,520 ...towards the front of the stage. I'm sort of fascinated, you know. 305 00:18:14,726 --> 00:18:17,821 I'm picking up what their audience... This is their audience, right? 306 00:18:18,029 --> 00:18:19,793 And the atmosphere was just rich. 307 00:18:20,231 --> 00:18:23,429 You know, you could really feel an audience, an atmosphere here... 308 00:18:23,601 --> 00:18:24,933 ...although the show is over. 309 00:18:25,336 --> 00:18:27,305 I look at these guys. They're four, like... 310 00:18:27,505 --> 00:18:31,169 You know, they're four complicated, difficult fucking guys, right? 311 00:18:31,376 --> 00:18:33,675 I can see that, you know? They're really awkward. Heh. 312 00:18:33,878 --> 00:18:35,710 And I'm thinking, "Yeah." You know? 313 00:18:35,914 --> 00:18:38,216 And I just, like... You know, I got that, right? 314 00:18:44,189 --> 00:18:46,317 Chris had got this job... 315 00:18:46,524 --> 00:18:49,619 ...as a second assistant... 316 00:18:49,861 --> 00:18:52,888 ...on a film called The Heroes of Telemark. 317 00:18:53,098 --> 00:18:56,364 And he was going to location... 318 00:18:56,568 --> 00:18:59,197 ...a long location shoot in Norway. 319 00:18:59,637 --> 00:19:03,904 And he told me that he had been able to sign this group... 320 00:19:04,109 --> 00:19:07,341 ...who they'd rechristened The Who... 321 00:19:07,545 --> 00:19:09,377 ...and they'd been able to sign them... 322 00:19:09,581 --> 00:19:11,948 ...because they'd offered them 20 quid a week... 323 00:19:12,150 --> 00:19:15,348 ...and he was going to go on location to Norway... 324 00:19:15,553 --> 00:19:19,115 ...and he was just gonna live on the canteen food. 325 00:19:19,357 --> 00:19:23,658 And he'd arranged for his salary to be sent back to London... 326 00:19:23,962 --> 00:19:26,932 ...and that 80 pounds was gonna be 20 quid a week... 327 00:19:27,132 --> 00:19:28,896 ...for the four members of The Who. 328 00:19:29,100 --> 00:19:31,660 And I thought that was kind of... 329 00:19:32,670 --> 00:19:35,663 ...a landmark, you know? I thought that was, like, really smart. 330 00:19:35,907 --> 00:19:39,435 So then Kit and I went to their parents, and the parents loved this... 331 00:19:39,644 --> 00:19:44,446 ...because Kit could put on a white shirt, and he was... He'd been to Oxford. 332 00:19:44,649 --> 00:19:46,481 But we went to the parents... 333 00:19:46,684 --> 00:19:51,315 ...and we agreed in the contract to give them a salary. 334 00:19:51,589 --> 00:19:53,319 - Which the parents loved. - Right, so... 335 00:19:53,525 --> 00:19:54,993 A guaranteed salary. 336 00:19:55,193 --> 00:19:57,253 I mean, where's this salary gonna come from? 337 00:19:57,462 --> 00:20:00,955 Well, we wanted to, you know... We were gonna find it, right? 338 00:20:01,166 --> 00:20:04,034 He was excited about it. They were kind of potential. 339 00:20:06,805 --> 00:20:08,831 And I said, "Are they kind of great-looking? 340 00:20:09,040 --> 00:20:12,135 Are they like the Beatles?" And he said, "Well, not exactly." 341 00:20:14,712 --> 00:20:17,682 He thought they had a look. 342 00:20:17,916 --> 00:20:20,545 So he gets out this photograph and he shows it to us. 343 00:20:20,785 --> 00:20:23,277 Our hearts sink, and we said: 344 00:20:23,488 --> 00:20:28,984 "Chris, they're so ugly. They're the ugliest guys. They're not gonna make it. 345 00:20:29,160 --> 00:20:31,186 There's no way these guys are gonna make it." 346 00:20:31,429 --> 00:20:33,728 - That's right. - And we picked out which one... 347 00:20:33,965 --> 00:20:35,399 We thought Keith Moon was okay. 348 00:20:35,567 --> 00:20:37,968 - We thought he was cute. - We thought Roger was okay. 349 00:20:38,136 --> 00:20:40,367 And Chris said, "That's the one the girls like." 350 00:20:40,572 --> 00:20:44,668 And then... But we said, "But the other guy with the nose... 351 00:20:44,876 --> 00:20:47,311 - That's right. - ...it's just not gonna work." 352 00:20:55,086 --> 00:20:58,352 ♪ When you move in Right up close to me ♪ 353 00:20:58,556 --> 00:21:00,548 - Do you think we could have... - Yes. 354 00:21:00,725 --> 00:21:02,717 - ...a conversation with you? - Yes, yes. 355 00:21:02,961 --> 00:21:05,863 ♪ That's when I get the shakes ♪ 356 00:21:06,064 --> 00:21:08,260 ♪ All over me ♪ 357 00:21:12,170 --> 00:21:14,833 ♪ Quivers down my backbone ♪♪ 358 00:21:15,006 --> 00:21:17,908 It was about putting the ideas up, seeing what they looked like... 359 00:21:18,109 --> 00:21:20,237 ...and trying them out. 360 00:21:21,045 --> 00:21:23,207 We had no idea of what they did in the music business... 361 00:21:23,414 --> 00:21:25,849 ...or what this whole world was about. 362 00:21:26,050 --> 00:21:29,612 We didn't come to the group as, like, professional managers. 363 00:21:30,021 --> 00:21:32,752 We came with these two guys who had these ideas... 364 00:21:32,991 --> 00:21:35,790 ...and were filmmakers and wanted to manage. 365 00:21:36,694 --> 00:21:38,492 We never said we knew how to do it. 366 00:22:57,608 --> 00:23:00,339 So we came in and like, "Hey, forget it, right? 367 00:23:00,578 --> 00:23:03,138 We're gonna do this and that." They loved that. 368 00:23:03,348 --> 00:23:07,080 They loved us. They... Every idea we threw at them, you know, they loved us. 369 00:23:07,285 --> 00:23:08,878 - Why? - I have no idea. 370 00:23:09,120 --> 00:23:11,589 I mean, we... You know, I mean, Kit was funny. 371 00:23:11,789 --> 00:23:15,624 I was, like, hip. We had a lot of dialogue. You know, we'd been around the block. 372 00:23:15,827 --> 00:23:19,525 They were sort of like a year younger than us and, you know, we were like... 373 00:23:19,731 --> 00:23:21,723 Whatever it was. They thought we were great. 374 00:23:21,966 --> 00:23:24,697 And we were telling them these ideas about filming and this. 375 00:23:24,902 --> 00:23:27,531 You know, we were really selling the deal. 376 00:23:27,739 --> 00:23:30,538 And they thought it was fabulous, and so they all went along with it. 377 00:23:30,708 --> 00:23:32,870 - Um, then I... - Did you have any idea... 378 00:23:33,111 --> 00:23:35,478 - ...what the fuck you were talking about? - No. 379 00:23:35,680 --> 00:23:39,117 No, but, I mean, I knew that what we would do would be fascinating, right? 380 00:23:39,317 --> 00:23:42,617 I told them, you know, we're gonna film stuff, you know, we're here. 381 00:23:42,820 --> 00:23:46,916 You know, we gotta sort of... I mean, and I started to sprout off like, you know: 382 00:23:47,158 --> 00:23:51,254 "We're gonna break the fucking iron stranglehold of the opium of the masses." 383 00:23:51,496 --> 00:23:55,524 I was giving them sort of Trotsky rhetoric and, you know... Whatever, right? 384 00:23:55,700 --> 00:23:57,498 - They fucking bought all this? - Yeah. 385 00:23:57,702 --> 00:23:59,398 Well, I don't know if they bought it. 386 00:23:59,637 --> 00:24:02,630 I mean, they thought, "These guys are fucking out there," right? 387 00:24:02,840 --> 00:24:07,676 We often used to say this will be 18 months to two years, and then it's over. 388 00:24:07,879 --> 00:24:09,245 Nobody believed, you see... 389 00:24:09,414 --> 00:24:12,680 ...that that period of pop music would last very long anyway. 390 00:24:12,884 --> 00:24:18,755 So if you... What I had was this idea that it would deliberately... 391 00:24:18,956 --> 00:24:20,515 ...blow itself up. 392 00:24:20,725 --> 00:24:23,661 You know, which Kit and Chris were really quite keen on... 393 00:24:23,861 --> 00:24:25,659 ...you know, as an idea. 394 00:24:25,863 --> 00:24:27,798 They didn't know what hit them about ideas. 395 00:24:27,965 --> 00:24:31,094 "We're gonna film everything. We're gonna sort of create images for you." 396 00:24:31,269 --> 00:24:32,269 You know: 397 00:24:34,572 --> 00:24:36,973 - Like what kind of images? - Who the fuck knows? 398 00:24:37,208 --> 00:24:39,541 I mean, look, I'm like... I'm gasping for breath. 399 00:24:39,744 --> 00:24:44,079 I mean, I'm doing the usual sort of, like, you know, mirrors work. 400 00:24:44,282 --> 00:24:45,614 Balls in the air. 401 00:24:45,817 --> 00:24:49,083 But I had, underneath all this, you see, I had... 402 00:24:49,420 --> 00:24:51,616 ...you know, the purpose, the meaning. 403 00:24:51,823 --> 00:24:54,054 Kit and I, relationship, all those things. 404 00:24:54,258 --> 00:24:57,387 There was an undercurrent in our personalities that was real. 405 00:24:57,595 --> 00:24:59,996 And I think a lot of it was the chemistry of the two. 406 00:25:00,231 --> 00:25:03,793 It was the most unlikely partnership, Lambert and Stamp, you could imagine. 407 00:25:04,001 --> 00:25:07,062 I mean, first of all, Kit Lambert was very upper class... 408 00:25:07,271 --> 00:25:09,272 ...and had this upper-class accent. 409 00:25:09,273 --> 00:25:13,734 It must have been very strange growing up with that famous father, Constant Lambert. 410 00:25:14,078 --> 00:25:18,846 And all that involvement with all those sort of aristocratic celebs... 411 00:25:19,083 --> 00:25:21,985 ...and highbrow intellectual musical people. 412 00:25:22,220 --> 00:25:26,282 So, what we are setting out to do is to assemble a portrait of Constant Lambert... 413 00:25:26,491 --> 00:25:28,926 ...viewed through those who knew him best. 414 00:25:29,127 --> 00:25:31,426 Our search begins in a club in Wardour Street... 415 00:25:31,629 --> 00:25:34,428 ...where a Lambert is still involved in the making of music. 416 00:25:34,632 --> 00:25:38,330 How does Christopher Lambert, manager of a pop group, remember his father? 417 00:25:38,536 --> 00:25:42,667 Well, sort of kind, but perhaps a rather formidable figure in many ways. 418 00:25:42,874 --> 00:25:44,433 Strongly eccentric. I'd say that. 419 00:25:44,642 --> 00:25:49,342 I remember noticing that, children are very conscious of these things, I suppose. 420 00:25:49,547 --> 00:25:52,039 He would be completely occupied by his own thoughts... 421 00:25:52,283 --> 00:25:55,879 ...and therefore not terribly aware of sometimes what was going on around him. 422 00:25:56,120 --> 00:25:59,716 I suppose he's the only person alive to have been driving with somebody... 423 00:25:59,891 --> 00:26:02,326 ...who then found themselves unable to change gear... 424 00:26:02,493 --> 00:26:04,519 ...because they couldn't find the gear lever. 425 00:26:04,695 --> 00:26:07,529 My father had managed to get it up the leg of his trousers... 426 00:26:07,698 --> 00:26:11,260 ...while doing the Times crossword puzzle on his knee. He was that kind of person. 427 00:26:11,469 --> 00:26:13,563 He didn't talk much about his father. 428 00:26:13,804 --> 00:26:18,765 He... I came into his room at Oxford in his first year. 429 00:26:19,377 --> 00:26:22,836 And I find him in tears and I said, "Kit, what's the matter?" 430 00:26:23,047 --> 00:26:27,417 And he said, "I'm just very depressed. I've been thinking about my father." 431 00:26:27,652 --> 00:26:30,212 And I didn't take it any further. 432 00:26:30,421 --> 00:26:32,549 I let him talk a bit more. 433 00:26:32,790 --> 00:26:34,884 He didn't say anything particularly revealing. 434 00:26:35,193 --> 00:26:38,652 I remembered that his father died about three years before. 435 00:26:38,863 --> 00:26:41,298 And also he was gay and he must have gone through... 436 00:26:41,499 --> 00:26:44,799 ...incredible gay period at public school. 437 00:26:45,002 --> 00:26:48,404 In those days, you see, I think it was illegal to be gay... 438 00:26:48,606 --> 00:26:51,804 ...and they were very open to blackmail and stuff like this. 439 00:26:52,009 --> 00:26:55,502 And he'd gone to Lancing Public School which is a private school... 440 00:26:55,713 --> 00:26:57,545 ...and he'd been an officer in the army. 441 00:26:57,748 --> 00:27:02,516 He came from this Oxford-educated theatrical environment... 442 00:27:02,720 --> 00:27:05,918 ...that he'd been to all these schools that we could only dream about. 443 00:27:06,123 --> 00:27:10,060 Kit wouldn't say he was the first real posh guy I'd ever spoke to... 444 00:27:10,261 --> 00:27:13,026 ...but Kit was the only posh guy I'd ever spoken to... 445 00:27:13,231 --> 00:27:15,530 ...that was actually interested in me... 446 00:27:15,733 --> 00:27:18,635 ...and wasn't talking down to me and... 447 00:27:20,404 --> 00:27:23,533 His enthusiasm was inst... I mean, it was... 448 00:27:23,741 --> 00:27:27,439 You could cut it with a knife. I mean, it was... It was... 449 00:27:27,645 --> 00:27:30,080 It was out here on him when he came to you. 450 00:27:30,281 --> 00:27:33,649 It was so warm and he was just, "Fucking great!" 451 00:27:39,123 --> 00:27:41,092 Well, not very short. 452 00:27:41,292 --> 00:27:43,557 - Up to here? - Pretty short. No, no, no! 453 00:27:43,761 --> 00:27:46,856 - Why not? - Further down there, about that far. 454 00:27:47,298 --> 00:27:50,268 - Quarter inch above my eyes like that. - Quarter. 455 00:27:50,468 --> 00:27:52,630 Not straight, of course. No? 456 00:27:52,870 --> 00:27:53,963 Why's that? 457 00:27:54,171 --> 00:27:55,571 It's all the worry I do. 458 00:27:55,773 --> 00:27:59,005 It took quite a bit of time to get to know Chris... 459 00:27:59,243 --> 00:28:01,974 ...because he was always off earning the money... 460 00:28:02,179 --> 00:28:03,477 ...to pay our wages. 461 00:28:04,248 --> 00:28:07,446 Earning the money for the guitars that we were smashing basically. 462 00:28:07,652 --> 00:28:09,814 This was the Ace Face. 463 00:28:10,021 --> 00:28:12,490 We were never gonna... Or I was never gonna be that. 464 00:28:14,425 --> 00:28:17,122 I loved the fact that he did not give a fuck. 465 00:28:17,328 --> 00:28:20,025 He... You know, he would not stand on grace. 466 00:28:20,264 --> 00:28:22,790 You know, he wasn't frightened of authority. 467 00:28:23,000 --> 00:28:26,630 He did not give a monkey's toss for breaking the rules... 468 00:28:26,837 --> 00:28:28,430 ...if the rules were stupid. 469 00:28:28,639 --> 00:28:31,040 Chris Stamp was working-class in the East End. 470 00:28:31,275 --> 00:28:34,803 His father was a tugboat captain on the Thames or something like that. 471 00:28:35,012 --> 00:28:38,676 You know, something... I mean, talk about chalk and cheese. 472 00:28:38,916 --> 00:28:42,819 And it's almost like... You can imagine if you'd made this up and gone as a... 473 00:28:43,020 --> 00:28:47,458 You know, a sitcom comedy idea, say look, you've got this upper-class guy... 474 00:28:47,658 --> 00:28:51,857 ...whose father is a classical composer. You got this tugboat captain's son. 475 00:28:52,063 --> 00:28:55,056 You know, working-class... They get toge... And you go, "No way." 476 00:28:55,299 --> 00:28:59,134 You know what I mean? It wouldn't work. It... You know, it's too far-fetched. 477 00:29:17,154 --> 00:29:21,216 When Kit and I first agreed to sort of make the film together... 478 00:29:21,459 --> 00:29:23,360 ...we were actually sharing an apartment. 479 00:29:27,465 --> 00:29:29,058 On the... On the table. 480 00:29:29,266 --> 00:29:31,462 Will anyone listen to me? 481 00:29:31,669 --> 00:29:33,103 Will anyone listen to me? 482 00:29:33,337 --> 00:29:37,172 One of the things that Kit and I did talk about was class. 483 00:29:37,375 --> 00:29:41,107 The rock thing was moving in a defiant way... 484 00:29:41,545 --> 00:29:43,070 ...in the class system. 485 00:29:43,280 --> 00:29:44,543 Very loud, Keith, now! 486 00:29:44,749 --> 00:29:49,778 We both considered ourselves, in a sense, outside of class, but of class. 487 00:29:50,020 --> 00:29:52,387 We were incomplete... 488 00:29:52,590 --> 00:29:54,559 ...and we both knew that it wasn't like... 489 00:29:54,759 --> 00:29:57,752 ...I would sort of have an inner satisfaction by becoming... 490 00:29:58,062 --> 00:30:02,022 ...rich and upper-class, and he knew that he wouldn't have inner satisfaction... 491 00:30:02,233 --> 00:30:03,929 ...by becoming hip and working-class. 492 00:30:04,101 --> 00:30:07,594 But we thought that there was somewhere within this... 493 00:30:07,805 --> 00:30:10,104 ...that would make life a little bit more... 494 00:30:10,307 --> 00:30:13,573 ...you know, like, real-feeling. 495 00:30:13,778 --> 00:30:16,907 You know, like, really feelings, like, more authentic or something. 496 00:30:17,114 --> 00:30:21,609 And in a lot of ways, I mean, Kit was the first... 497 00:30:22,953 --> 00:30:26,549 ...you know, really meaningful relationship that I'd ever entered into. 498 00:30:26,757 --> 00:30:29,591 Kit was a man, but he was a gay man... 499 00:30:29,794 --> 00:30:33,925 ...so he had the sort of sensitivity that I wanted to sort of communicate with. 500 00:30:34,265 --> 00:30:37,167 And I think that there was a certain safety... 501 00:30:37,535 --> 00:30:40,130 - ...in this relationship with Kit. - You've got to be Chris Stamp. 502 00:30:40,337 --> 00:30:43,034 - You've got to be Chris Stamp. - The living image. 503 00:30:43,240 --> 00:30:47,302 I wasn't able to communicate emotionally with a woman, right? 504 00:30:47,545 --> 00:30:48,979 I was naive in that area. 505 00:30:49,180 --> 00:30:52,480 I didn't know how to get into an emotional relationship with a woman. 506 00:30:53,617 --> 00:30:56,109 So Kit gave me that safety of being able to go there... 507 00:30:56,287 --> 00:30:58,756 ...because it was out in the open, it was understood. 508 00:30:58,923 --> 00:31:01,916 And as I say for me, it allowed me, in a sense, to be... 509 00:31:02,126 --> 00:31:06,427 ...more risk-taking emotionally than I had been. 510 00:31:06,630 --> 00:31:09,156 We were both marginalized sort of, you know... 511 00:31:09,366 --> 00:31:12,165 ...me in my class and him in his gayness. 512 00:31:12,369 --> 00:31:14,463 And he obviously had some sort of love for me. 513 00:31:14,672 --> 00:31:16,800 So I sort of trusted that. 514 00:31:17,007 --> 00:31:18,873 I'd never risked relationship before... 515 00:31:19,310 --> 00:31:24,613 ...and the acceptance on my part, which was quite a profound acceptance. 516 00:31:24,815 --> 00:31:29,276 You know, my young, stud, hip image... 517 00:31:29,487 --> 00:31:31,683 ...was rallying against this acceptance of Kit. 518 00:31:31,889 --> 00:31:37,328 What that worked into was the ESP that we had as a creative force. 519 00:31:37,528 --> 00:31:39,463 So it was a very powerful bond. 520 00:31:39,663 --> 00:31:42,132 Not really quite defined... 521 00:31:42,333 --> 00:31:46,964 ...because it was really defined outwardly in a creative sense with The Who. 522 00:31:47,171 --> 00:31:51,375 Believe me, my mind wasn't that fucking sophisticated then. But I knew something. 523 00:34:03,173 --> 00:34:07,008 There was this vast impact of teenagers unifying into this big mass... 524 00:34:07,244 --> 00:34:08,439 ...which people call mods. 525 00:34:08,646 --> 00:34:11,013 In marketing, you're always trying to find... 526 00:34:11,248 --> 00:34:14,309 ...some way to get around the fact that the audience are a problem. 527 00:34:14,518 --> 00:34:15,781 The consumer is a problem. 528 00:34:15,986 --> 00:34:18,956 Well, the way that you stop the consumer being a problem... 529 00:34:19,156 --> 00:34:21,523 ...is you don't give them what they want. 530 00:34:21,759 --> 00:34:25,025 You allow them to be. 531 00:34:25,362 --> 00:34:27,388 You affirm who they are. 532 00:34:27,631 --> 00:34:29,793 You don't try to change them. 533 00:34:30,000 --> 00:34:32,834 Kit and Chris, they could see... 534 00:34:33,037 --> 00:34:37,031 If I could just give you a picture, there you are, you're on the stage with a guitar. 535 00:34:37,274 --> 00:34:40,870 And the week before, from the stage, you would see... 536 00:34:41,078 --> 00:34:44,515 I'll often tell this story. You would see, you know, the sharp guy. 537 00:34:44,715 --> 00:34:46,149 Bill, the sharp guy. 538 00:34:46,350 --> 00:34:48,512 I love that. Love that. That shirt. 539 00:34:48,719 --> 00:34:50,347 Love those. That jacket. 540 00:34:50,554 --> 00:34:53,854 You go out, you buy yourself a jacket and shirt like Bill. 541 00:34:54,058 --> 00:34:55,583 Next week, you're on the stage. 542 00:34:55,826 --> 00:34:58,386 Bill, meanwhile, hasn't realized how cool he looks... 543 00:34:58,595 --> 00:35:01,895 ...and is coming in his Dungarees and his, you know, sweatshirt. 544 00:35:02,099 --> 00:35:05,399 You're on the stage with Bill's outfit from last week. 545 00:35:05,602 --> 00:35:08,037 Bill then looks at you and thinks, "Hey." 546 00:35:08,238 --> 00:35:12,334 So he comes back with the shirt and the jacket but everybody thinks it's you... 547 00:35:12,543 --> 00:35:14,910 ...that's influenced Bill, not the other way around. 548 00:35:15,112 --> 00:35:17,843 So you become a mirror to the audience. 549 00:35:18,048 --> 00:35:20,540 Kit and Chris watched this happen... 550 00:35:20,884 --> 00:35:23,911 ...and started to develop it as a way... 551 00:35:24,121 --> 00:35:27,523 ...of harnessing the energy of the audience... 552 00:35:27,725 --> 00:35:32,186 ...which was to empower them, make them realize how important they were. 553 00:35:32,396 --> 00:35:35,594 I was really uncomfortable with it. Really uncomfortable. 554 00:35:35,833 --> 00:35:40,271 You know, when we did our Marquee residency... 555 00:35:40,471 --> 00:35:43,464 ...Mike Shaw ran all around London giving people tickets... 556 00:35:43,707 --> 00:35:45,972 ...and he was choosing sharp-looking people. 557 00:35:46,210 --> 00:35:48,042 So we'd go to play the Marquee... 558 00:35:48,278 --> 00:35:53,876 ...and the fucking whole audience is full of all these unbelievably sharp-dressers. 559 00:35:54,084 --> 00:35:58,078 We had this idea which became known as the Hundred Faces Club. 560 00:35:58,288 --> 00:36:00,723 We would pick one of these kids... 561 00:36:00,924 --> 00:36:04,588 ...and make them official members. We would tell them they'd get in free... 562 00:36:04,795 --> 00:36:07,731 ...and they knew that they were in this sort of unique thing. 563 00:36:07,931 --> 00:36:13,495 They were able to recognize that synergy that was going on between the audience. 564 00:36:13,737 --> 00:36:17,572 And the only reason that I was into that, spotting that, was because, again... 565 00:36:17,775 --> 00:36:24,272 ...because of art-school training. Being told by my teachers, find a patron. 566 00:36:24,481 --> 00:36:28,282 Go out there, find a patron. Find somebody who will pay you to do art. 567 00:36:28,485 --> 00:36:30,647 And I very, very quickly realized, you know... 568 00:36:30,888 --> 00:36:34,154 ...the point where I was gonna go, "Enough of this stupid band... 569 00:36:34,391 --> 00:36:36,292 ...and of this stupid industry." 570 00:36:36,493 --> 00:36:38,291 Just as I'm looking at my watch... 571 00:36:38,495 --> 00:36:41,988 ...in the end, I suddenly think, "This is my patron. The audience." 572 00:36:42,199 --> 00:36:46,000 Well, Kit and Chris took it further. 573 00:36:46,203 --> 00:36:48,263 They're not just the patrons. 574 00:36:48,472 --> 00:36:51,135 They're the essence. 575 00:36:51,341 --> 00:36:55,403 And they are the people. You don't market to them. 576 00:36:55,612 --> 00:36:57,843 You market them. 577 00:36:58,348 --> 00:37:01,318 And we never quite knew what made them a Face. 578 00:37:01,518 --> 00:37:03,043 They had to dance well. 579 00:37:03,287 --> 00:37:07,281 They had to dress weird or well, in some way showed... 580 00:37:07,491 --> 00:37:09,960 ...their rebelliousness, their individuality. 581 00:37:10,160 --> 00:37:14,325 So we weren't only trying to identify The Who as such... 582 00:37:14,531 --> 00:37:17,296 ...but their specific audience through our judgment. 583 00:37:17,501 --> 00:37:21,029 We were the guys saying, "This is what we think The Who audience is." 584 00:37:21,238 --> 00:37:22,831 And we made them a Hundred Faces member. 585 00:37:23,073 --> 00:37:27,538 - And one of those was Irish Jack. - I remember like it was yesterday. 586 00:37:27,711 --> 00:37:30,704 He was older than me and didn't look like a real mod. 587 00:37:30,881 --> 00:37:34,477 As I stood there, I kept looking at this guy, Kit Lambert. 588 00:37:34,685 --> 00:37:38,383 I couldn't believe Lambert was going to be the new manager of The High Numbers. 589 00:37:38,589 --> 00:37:41,491 He looked timid and had a small physique... 590 00:37:41,692 --> 00:37:44,958 ...like it had never properly grown to his full proportions. 591 00:37:45,162 --> 00:37:47,757 He had a scarf folded over his shoulder... 592 00:37:47,998 --> 00:37:50,832 ...and wore a blazer-type double-breasted jacket. 593 00:37:51,034 --> 00:37:54,493 I shook his hand, and when he said, "Kit Lambert"... 594 00:37:54,705 --> 00:37:57,698 ...he sounded like someone from the BBC. 595 00:37:57,908 --> 00:38:00,173 He reminded me of an Oxford don... 596 00:38:00,377 --> 00:38:05,475 ...and the accent, ridiculous as it was, suited him down to the ground. 597 00:38:05,682 --> 00:38:08,242 I found myself liking him instantly... 598 00:38:08,485 --> 00:38:12,513 ...and I remember being very impressed when he told me his business partner... 599 00:38:12,789 --> 00:38:15,418 ...Chris Stamp, was currently in Ireland... 600 00:38:15,626 --> 00:38:19,620 ...working as an assistant director on the film Young Cassidy. 601 00:38:19,863 --> 00:38:23,061 Standing next to Kit Lambert, I felt a rush of excitement... 602 00:38:23,400 --> 00:38:26,131 ...as I listened to his rich Oxford tones... 603 00:38:26,370 --> 00:38:31,707 ...while he preached a gospel about The High Numbers needing a new direction. 604 00:38:31,909 --> 00:38:36,904 I felt Lambert studying me as he dragged the tar from a small French cigarette. 605 00:38:37,114 --> 00:38:41,882 In the background, 500 mods stomped in their red nylon socks... 606 00:38:42,085 --> 00:38:44,714 ...desert boots and pink stay-pressed jeans... 607 00:38:44,922 --> 00:38:48,256 ...to the Nashville Teens' "Tobacco Road." 608 00:38:48,458 --> 00:38:50,757 "Which do you think is best?" 609 00:38:50,961 --> 00:38:53,055 Kit Lambert shouted to me over the din. 610 00:38:53,263 --> 00:38:55,164 "The High Numbers or The Who?" 611 00:38:55,399 --> 00:38:59,302 It was that good, and I hadn't even met Chris Stamp yet. 612 00:38:59,469 --> 00:39:02,598 Kit thought that The High Numbers sounded like bingo. 613 00:39:02,806 --> 00:39:06,538 He thought people would think it was bingo when he was giving out leaflets. 614 00:39:06,743 --> 00:39:10,339 He didn't realize that, for mods, it meant the numbers were kind of kids... 615 00:39:10,580 --> 00:39:13,311 ...and a high number was some kind of top mod, I suppose. 616 00:39:13,550 --> 00:39:17,544 First, we were gonna change their name. They'd used the name "The Who" before. 617 00:39:17,754 --> 00:39:19,916 I was back at the flat, and they... 618 00:39:20,123 --> 00:39:22,319 They were in the van, trying to think of a name. 619 00:39:22,559 --> 00:39:25,154 And they didn't come into the flat because at the time... 620 00:39:25,362 --> 00:39:28,457 ...Pete and I were dope heads. We were smoking dope at art school. 621 00:39:28,632 --> 00:39:31,192 The others looked down upon it. Didn't approve. 622 00:39:31,368 --> 00:39:34,065 They were very straight then. Roger was a factory worker. 623 00:39:34,271 --> 00:39:35,671 John worked in the tax office. 624 00:39:35,872 --> 00:39:38,307 And they thought we were lazy, no-good, art students. 625 00:39:38,508 --> 00:39:41,103 We were, actually, but we resented them knowing it. 626 00:39:41,311 --> 00:39:44,509 Anyway, Pete said, "Let's go in and see if Barney's got any ideas." 627 00:39:44,715 --> 00:39:48,709 So they did come into the flat. It was only the second time they'd ever been in there. 628 00:39:48,885 --> 00:39:51,821 We made coffee and sit around. Just coming up with these names. 629 00:39:51,989 --> 00:39:55,357 And I sort of thought, "Imagine what you'd do if it was The Who"? 630 00:39:55,592 --> 00:39:59,290 You know you'd say, "The Who!" "Who?" "The Who." You know, corny but it was... 631 00:39:59,496 --> 00:40:01,328 He'd milk it for all it was worth. 632 00:40:01,531 --> 00:40:04,330 There were various other names. "Nothing" was a great name. 633 00:40:04,534 --> 00:40:05,661 Fantastic sort of name. 634 00:40:05,869 --> 00:40:08,304 At one time, I wanted to call it "British European Airways"... 635 00:40:08,472 --> 00:40:11,306 ...because I'd seen it... But I was so stoned by then, they ignored me. 636 00:40:11,508 --> 00:40:15,343 And the other name in contention was "The Hair," which was also a good name. 637 00:40:15,545 --> 00:40:17,207 Then Pete came up with the idea of saying: 638 00:40:17,414 --> 00:40:19,246 "Let's call it 'The Hair and The Who.'" 639 00:40:19,483 --> 00:40:21,349 "That sounds like a pub." 640 00:40:21,551 --> 00:40:23,850 It was a terrible name. Absolutely awful. 641 00:40:24,054 --> 00:40:27,183 And we left it like that, and then what happened the next day... 642 00:40:27,391 --> 00:40:30,190 ...when Roger came around to pick us up, he just said: 643 00:40:30,394 --> 00:40:34,195 "It's 'The Who, ' isn't it?" So that was it. Anyway, "The Who" worked. 644 00:40:34,398 --> 00:40:37,425 First of all, it looked good on posters. It was massive. 645 00:40:37,667 --> 00:40:40,660 We wanted to use that name because we wanted it to be a name... 646 00:40:40,871 --> 00:40:42,362 ...anything could be written on. 647 00:40:42,873 --> 00:40:44,671 Then he thought it wasn't long enough. 648 00:40:44,875 --> 00:40:47,572 I thought he got rid of The High Numbers because it was long. 649 00:40:47,778 --> 00:40:51,545 He said, "It's not long enough. We gotta have a longer name." 650 00:40:51,748 --> 00:40:54,377 Then he came up with a masterstroke where he called it: 651 00:40:54,584 --> 00:40:57,452 "The Who, Maximum R&B." 652 00:40:57,687 --> 00:41:01,783 They had this on these black-and-white posters that were made for the Marquee... 653 00:41:02,025 --> 00:41:05,757 ...with Pete swinging his arm, and that's when they came up with this logo... 654 00:41:05,962 --> 00:41:08,454 ...with The Who with an arrow symbol for a male... 655 00:41:08,698 --> 00:41:12,396 ...and with the arrow coming out the O, which people think I came up with. 656 00:41:12,602 --> 00:41:15,868 People say, "You designed that." I say, "I wish I had. I didn't." 657 00:41:16,073 --> 00:41:18,406 I thought it was great, to turn it back to The Who. 658 00:41:18,608 --> 00:41:20,076 Which was fantastic, because I thought of it. 659 00:41:20,277 --> 00:41:23,213 We're trying to define, you know, what their image is. 660 00:41:23,413 --> 00:41:26,679 And also, we were very constricted. We had no money. 661 00:41:26,883 --> 00:41:28,078 We had no money at all. 662 00:41:28,285 --> 00:41:32,484 So we were trying to be as clever with bank managers giving us loans... 663 00:41:32,722 --> 00:41:36,784 ...and running up sort of enormous debt with tailors and winemakers. 664 00:41:36,993 --> 00:41:39,895 Whatever it was, right? We were trying to do all these things... 665 00:41:40,097 --> 00:41:41,963 How did you plan to back any of this up? 666 00:41:42,299 --> 00:41:44,632 How did you plan to back this up? Pay for it? 667 00:41:44,801 --> 00:41:48,397 Well, we thought... We just had absolute belief in ourselves, right? Heh. 668 00:41:50,607 --> 00:41:53,600 - Where's Pete, Kit? - I have absolutely no idea. 669 00:41:53,810 --> 00:41:56,006 - We're gonna find him. - He rang off. 670 00:41:56,246 --> 00:41:58,477 There were not probably two guys on the planet... 671 00:41:58,715 --> 00:42:02,152 ...that knew less about rock than these two, but you felt... 672 00:42:02,352 --> 00:42:04,514 ...the... And they had no connections. 673 00:42:04,754 --> 00:42:07,588 Little doctor in Wimpole Street called Artemis. 674 00:42:08,158 --> 00:42:10,354 Has it to do with venereal disease, do you know? 675 00:42:10,594 --> 00:42:12,085 No, no, no. 676 00:42:12,295 --> 00:42:13,854 This fella called... 677 00:42:14,097 --> 00:42:16,225 This fella Chris Stamp introduced me to him. 678 00:42:16,433 --> 00:42:20,529 First of all, we wanted to find out if they did any songwriting. 679 00:42:20,770 --> 00:42:24,172 And Pete said, "Well, I've written one song." 680 00:42:24,608 --> 00:42:26,236 And we said that will do. 681 00:42:28,945 --> 00:42:30,675 If you can write one, right? 682 00:42:30,881 --> 00:42:36,184 Kit soon saw in that band that, really, the two stars in it were Pete and Keith Moon. 683 00:42:36,386 --> 00:42:38,878 They were the two, and he nurtured those two... 684 00:42:39,122 --> 00:42:41,284 ...quite clumsily, at the expense of the others. 685 00:42:41,491 --> 00:42:45,258 And Roger, for one, I think resented it, quite rightly because he got a bad deal. 686 00:42:45,462 --> 00:42:47,488 It was Roger's band. He was the leader. 687 00:42:47,697 --> 00:42:51,134 So, what happened when the music thing started with Pete... 688 00:42:51,334 --> 00:42:53,667 ...something came out of Kit that was always there. 689 00:42:53,870 --> 00:42:54,870 Right. 690 00:42:55,071 --> 00:42:56,300 But he hadn't owned that. 691 00:42:56,506 --> 00:42:59,340 - That was very good. - Suddenly, he could talk to Pete... 692 00:42:59,543 --> 00:43:01,876 ...about song construction... 693 00:43:02,078 --> 00:43:04,809 - It's the quiet bit... - ...and just those ideas. 694 00:43:05,015 --> 00:43:07,780 So he brought to this relationship with Pete... 695 00:43:07,984 --> 00:43:10,818 ...the newness of his acceptance of his musical heritage... 696 00:43:11,021 --> 00:43:13,923 ...and the beginning of Pete's understanding... 697 00:43:14,157 --> 00:43:18,151 ...that he was able to be a musician and a composer. 698 00:43:18,361 --> 00:43:23,993 Pete just suddenly became like a really fabulous fucking writer, you know? 699 00:43:24,201 --> 00:43:25,225 They were our managers. 700 00:43:25,435 --> 00:43:27,404 Then things really started to change. 701 00:43:27,938 --> 00:43:31,841 Their ideas were fantastic, and that's all I cared about was this band. 702 00:43:32,042 --> 00:43:36,537 All I ever wanted to do was make this band successful. 703 00:43:39,015 --> 00:43:41,177 And they, literally, had a map of England. 704 00:43:41,384 --> 00:43:45,082 And they would stick... "Gonna play there, gonna play there, gonna play there. 705 00:43:45,322 --> 00:43:48,884 And we're gonna get these posters, and gonna do that, gonna do that." 706 00:43:49,092 --> 00:43:50,458 Just like planning a battle. 707 00:43:56,933 --> 00:44:01,268 It was just... It was like being caught in a whirlwind of ideas of... 708 00:44:01,438 --> 00:44:03,373 ...how to get noticed. 709 00:44:04,474 --> 00:44:08,206 ♪ Took me three years of sweating blood To clean off all that Tennessee mud ♪♪ 710 00:44:08,411 --> 00:44:10,937 For that period, The Who was the... 711 00:44:11,147 --> 00:44:13,707 ...Kit Lambert, stroke, Pete Townshend Who. 712 00:44:13,917 --> 00:44:17,046 I know Roger probably wouldn't like that, but there's definitely... 713 00:44:17,220 --> 00:44:19,382 The Who went in this direction of writing this... 714 00:44:19,589 --> 00:44:21,114 Having Pete Townshend's songs. 715 00:44:21,358 --> 00:44:23,850 And very much inspired by Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp. 716 00:44:24,060 --> 00:44:28,088 Kit started nurturing him and taking him and Keith to posh restaurants... 717 00:44:28,298 --> 00:44:31,735 ...and introducing them to French wine and so on, and all the rest of it. 718 00:44:31,935 --> 00:44:34,928 And this is where Keith developed this "dear boy" thing. 719 00:44:35,138 --> 00:44:36,606 "Dear boy." He got it from Kit. 720 00:44:36,806 --> 00:44:40,641 I have to be honest about this. I do feel that I was treated differently by them... 721 00:44:40,877 --> 00:44:42,869 ...to the other guys in the band. 722 00:44:44,281 --> 00:44:46,614 I felt valued, you know? 723 00:44:46,816 --> 00:44:50,014 I was the one that was taken and moved from their apartment... 724 00:44:50,253 --> 00:44:54,281 ...to a flat in Belgravia, you know? Um... 725 00:44:55,458 --> 00:44:57,290 Keith Moon was left to, you know... 726 00:44:57,494 --> 00:44:59,986 ...struggle out in Wembley, where he came from. 727 00:45:00,196 --> 00:45:02,097 Kit came once to have a photograph. 728 00:45:02,299 --> 00:45:05,326 I was having my photograph taken for a teen magazine... 729 00:45:05,535 --> 00:45:09,165 ...at the apartment I shared with Barney, and he went around, looked around... 730 00:45:09,406 --> 00:45:11,272 ...and immediately said, "You've gotta get out of here." 731 00:45:11,474 --> 00:45:14,603 He knew Pete was the one that would write the songs, he needed to... 732 00:45:14,811 --> 00:45:17,508 ...kind of become his muse or whatever and encourage him. 733 00:45:17,714 --> 00:45:19,979 Pete and I were living together, and Pete said: 734 00:45:20,183 --> 00:45:22,482 "Kit wants me to go and move into his place." 735 00:45:22,686 --> 00:45:24,518 I said, "All right." And he moved away. 736 00:45:24,721 --> 00:45:28,920 Why did they move you in with them? 737 00:45:29,125 --> 00:45:30,149 What was the...? 738 00:45:30,360 --> 00:45:32,795 I think the, um... 739 00:45:34,230 --> 00:45:38,463 They felt... I mean, you know... You really have to ask Chris. 740 00:45:38,668 --> 00:45:40,933 But I... The message that I got that I felt... 741 00:45:41,137 --> 00:45:45,973 ...was it was nurturance, and in a sense, trying to draw me away... 742 00:45:46,176 --> 00:45:47,576 ...from the art-school crowd. 743 00:45:47,811 --> 00:45:50,144 He'd come to our flat, it was just blues records... 744 00:45:50,347 --> 00:45:52,316 ...dark, red light bulbs, smoking dope... 745 00:45:52,515 --> 00:45:56,213 ...people hanging about, you know? He didn't like it. Well, I don't know... 746 00:45:56,453 --> 00:45:59,753 And Pete said, "What he wants is, he wants to take me away... 747 00:45:59,989 --> 00:46:03,255 ...from the squalor that is ours to the squalor that is his. 748 00:46:03,493 --> 00:46:05,826 His upper-class, posh Belgravia squalor." 749 00:46:06,029 --> 00:46:09,397 We moved from one apartment to another apartment, Kit and I. 750 00:46:09,599 --> 00:46:12,831 So we wanted an apartment that would have a lot of good credit rating. 751 00:46:13,036 --> 00:46:14,265 We had absolutely no money. 752 00:46:14,504 --> 00:46:18,032 We wanted to move to an area of London where you could get things delivered. 753 00:46:18,241 --> 00:46:20,836 They'd deliver stuff with credit because of where you lived. 754 00:46:21,044 --> 00:46:25,038 Kit would be teaching us how to get by with no money. 755 00:46:25,248 --> 00:46:28,616 Which, you know, the aristocracy, they're educated in it. 756 00:46:28,852 --> 00:46:32,254 I mean, they're, you know, absolutely expert at it. 757 00:46:32,489 --> 00:46:35,049 You know, I've had an account at... 758 00:46:35,258 --> 00:46:38,626 ...Stone's Wine Shop in Belgravia... 759 00:46:38,862 --> 00:46:42,560 ...since I was 20. 760 00:46:42,766 --> 00:46:44,098 They've never sent me a bill. 761 00:46:44,300 --> 00:46:46,565 Whenever I go there and buy wine, if I need any... 762 00:46:46,770 --> 00:46:49,604 I don't drink wine anymore... But if I need wine for a party. 763 00:46:49,806 --> 00:46:53,573 They say, "Should we put it on account?" I say, "Do you want me to pay this?" 764 00:46:53,777 --> 00:46:55,746 "Don't worry, sir." 765 00:46:56,446 --> 00:46:58,745 It still goes on. So I think there was that. 766 00:46:58,948 --> 00:47:00,940 That sense of arriving in this place. 767 00:47:01,151 --> 00:47:03,382 And Kit was very, very transparent about it. 768 00:47:03,586 --> 00:47:06,579 He said, "You know, we need to have an address in Eaton Place... 769 00:47:06,790 --> 00:47:09,282 ...because then we won't ever have to pay our bills." 770 00:47:10,760 --> 00:47:12,558 I was living in the back of the van... 771 00:47:12,762 --> 00:47:15,664 ...but now I got a girlfriend. She didn't quite like the back of the van. 772 00:47:15,899 --> 00:47:18,926 Heh. So she preferred the couch of the office. 773 00:47:19,135 --> 00:47:21,161 The Who would do a gig, right? 774 00:47:21,404 --> 00:47:24,272 You know, and we would get, like, for the gig... 775 00:47:24,474 --> 00:47:27,774 ...60 pounds, or 50 pounds, right? 776 00:47:27,977 --> 00:47:30,412 Or 30 pounds. Really small amounts of money, right? 777 00:47:30,613 --> 00:47:33,139 - Right. - And Kit would figure, "Hey... 778 00:47:33,616 --> 00:47:36,609 ...if I take the 30 pounds to play blackjack... 779 00:47:36,820 --> 00:47:38,982 ...I might come out with a couple of hundred... 780 00:47:39,189 --> 00:47:42,489 ...but if we stay with 30, that's not gonna pay for very much anyway." 781 00:47:44,427 --> 00:47:46,123 So that was one of the systems. 782 00:47:46,329 --> 00:47:49,493 That was a sort of like... That didn't happen a lot... 783 00:47:49,699 --> 00:47:51,497 ...but that was one of the systems. 784 00:47:51,701 --> 00:47:53,135 We had many systems. 785 00:47:53,336 --> 00:47:56,170 I loved it there. I loved living with Kit... 786 00:47:56,372 --> 00:47:59,638 ...because he was passionate, and... 787 00:47:59,843 --> 00:48:02,506 And it was a fantastic fucking apartment too. 788 00:48:02,712 --> 00:48:05,682 Big, high ceilings in Eaton Place, you know? 789 00:48:05,882 --> 00:48:08,875 And you'd get in a taxicab, and he'd say, "Where you going, kid?" 790 00:48:09,118 --> 00:48:10,347 You go, "84 Eaton Place." 791 00:48:10,587 --> 00:48:12,180 He'd go, "Ooh. Ooh." 792 00:48:12,355 --> 00:48:13,355 You know? 793 00:48:13,590 --> 00:48:16,458 You could go into any bank account and say, "I want to write... " 794 00:48:16,659 --> 00:48:20,118 Coutts or one of these sort of banks, And say, "I want to open an account." 795 00:48:20,330 --> 00:48:22,231 Dress, and with your accent, "Eaton PI..." 796 00:48:22,465 --> 00:48:23,956 "Of course, sir." "And I want an overdraft. 797 00:48:24,167 --> 00:48:26,227 I want a 5000 pound overdraft." "Of course." 798 00:48:26,469 --> 00:48:29,496 Because they started doing this, it's what they called... 799 00:48:29,706 --> 00:48:31,299 First one they did it with was the Bank of Scotland. 800 00:48:31,508 --> 00:48:35,673 And Stamp, they run up this... Write all the checks up, spend all the money... 801 00:48:35,879 --> 00:48:39,407 ...and then skip without paying it back and open another one. 802 00:48:39,649 --> 00:48:42,380 Stamp used to say, "We're gonna do another Bank of Scotland job." 803 00:48:42,852 --> 00:48:44,844 And then I also had an older brother... 804 00:48:45,054 --> 00:48:47,250 ...who'd become a successful film actor. 805 00:48:47,490 --> 00:48:50,426 Yeah, it was... He was certainly making a lot of money, you know? 806 00:48:50,660 --> 00:48:52,652 So he... I would go to him to get money. 807 00:48:52,862 --> 00:48:54,558 Yeah. I mean, look. We were brothers. 808 00:48:54,764 --> 00:48:58,895 I mean, he didn't just give it to me freely. I had to sort of promise to pay it back. 809 00:48:59,135 --> 00:49:01,229 Pete said, "I was living there. Every now and again... 810 00:49:01,437 --> 00:49:03,633 ...these teenage boys would appear at breakfast. 811 00:49:03,840 --> 00:49:06,435 Kit would say, 'This poor boy. I found him in the street. 812 00:49:06,676 --> 00:49:08,167 Had nowhere to stay. I said he could stay.'" 813 00:49:08,378 --> 00:49:10,938 Like I say, that fearless quality because he was... 814 00:49:11,180 --> 00:49:13,706 You know, to be homosexual in... 815 00:49:13,917 --> 00:49:16,216 In those years in London was illegal. 816 00:49:16,419 --> 00:49:20,220 I was in the bedroom next to his, looking to offer him tea in the morning... 817 00:49:20,423 --> 00:49:22,517 ...and there'd be some boy in bed with him. 818 00:49:22,725 --> 00:49:26,093 But he never once tried to seduce me... 819 00:49:26,296 --> 00:49:29,596 ...and I remember feeling quite pissed off at one point, thinking: 820 00:49:29,799 --> 00:49:31,267 "Aren't I good-looking enough?" 821 00:49:31,467 --> 00:49:33,299 It wasn't that I wanted to be gay. 822 00:49:33,536 --> 00:49:35,368 I thought he should at least try it on if he's gay. 823 00:49:35,572 --> 00:49:38,098 And I shared the flat with him at the office. 824 00:49:38,308 --> 00:49:41,039 Mind you, I was with a beautiful girl as well. Ha-ha-ha. 825 00:49:41,244 --> 00:49:43,679 Maybe she came between us. Ha-ha-ha. 826 00:49:43,880 --> 00:49:46,281 He'd wear these suits. 827 00:49:46,482 --> 00:49:48,678 Beautiful cut suits from Savile Row... 828 00:49:48,885 --> 00:49:51,582 ...but always be like this and buttoned up wrong. 829 00:49:51,788 --> 00:49:53,723 And they'd all be... And he, I mean... 830 00:49:53,923 --> 00:49:56,483 ...I've never known anybody like Kit to smoke. Chain-smoke. 831 00:49:56,726 --> 00:50:00,060 He'd chain-smoke Player's or Senior Service. 832 00:50:00,263 --> 00:50:02,323 These were the best cigarettes. Untipped. 833 00:50:02,565 --> 00:50:04,466 One after the other, he'd light one from... 834 00:50:04,701 --> 00:50:08,229 We think he used one match in his whole life to light the very first one. 835 00:50:08,438 --> 00:50:11,203 Kit remembered he was, like, 9... 836 00:50:11,407 --> 00:50:15,344 ...when, you know, one of the artists who his father was fucking or knew... 837 00:50:15,578 --> 00:50:18,070 ...or what, you know, offered Kit his first cigarette. 838 00:50:18,281 --> 00:50:19,840 "Here, you want a cigarette, Kit?" 839 00:50:20,083 --> 00:50:22,484 There was no sort of... The fact that he was a child. 840 00:50:22,719 --> 00:50:24,984 He'd have cigarettes all over the place. 841 00:50:25,221 --> 00:50:27,588 And also, he was renowned for setting things alight. 842 00:50:27,790 --> 00:50:31,727 The number of sofas he'd gone through. In those days, sofas had horsehair. 843 00:50:31,928 --> 00:50:35,456 And he'd always leave cigarettes, and they'd fall down... 844 00:50:35,665 --> 00:50:37,497 You know, people would say things like: 845 00:50:37,734 --> 00:50:40,602 "Kit's late, what's happened?" And they'd say, "Another fire." 846 00:51:13,770 --> 00:51:16,638 And when I started to talk to Kit about classical music... 847 00:51:16,839 --> 00:51:20,332 ...and Baroque music, he immediately just simply... 848 00:51:20,543 --> 00:51:22,512 He didn't bother to try to educate me. 849 00:51:22,712 --> 00:51:26,149 He just chucked records at me that were from his father's collection. 850 00:51:26,349 --> 00:51:28,841 So, wow, you know. 851 00:51:29,052 --> 00:51:30,281 Wow, wow, wow. 852 00:51:30,486 --> 00:51:32,079 He started playing classical music. 853 00:51:32,321 --> 00:51:36,053 Purcell and English classical music that his father had championed. 854 00:51:36,292 --> 00:51:38,318 These... You know, and stuff like that. 855 00:51:38,528 --> 00:51:42,226 And Pete said as a result of listening to this sort of stuff: 856 00:51:42,432 --> 00:51:46,301 "I developed my chord sounds" like in "Kids Are Alright." 857 00:51:46,502 --> 00:51:50,064 The middle-chord bit was based on some particular Purcell... 858 00:51:50,306 --> 00:51:52,673 ...or music that Kit had played him. 859 00:51:52,875 --> 00:51:54,571 Because of his father's background... 860 00:51:54,811 --> 00:51:57,838 ...he knew that you could add these three-minute pieces up... 861 00:51:58,047 --> 00:52:01,040 ...to make a much more important... 862 00:52:01,250 --> 00:52:02,809 ...dramatic piece. 863 00:52:03,019 --> 00:52:04,180 And... 864 00:52:04,387 --> 00:52:07,915 And he had that in him right from the beginning. 865 00:52:08,124 --> 00:52:09,956 He kept, you know: 866 00:52:10,193 --> 00:52:12,685 He was always trying to put things in a... 867 00:52:12,895 --> 00:52:16,024 He taught me about the dramatics of a stage show. 868 00:52:16,232 --> 00:52:18,861 "It has to kind of be like this, Roger." 869 00:52:19,068 --> 00:52:21,904 "Really? What? No. Yeah, but wait." 870 00:52:54,871 --> 00:52:56,396 My mentoring Kit in the... 871 00:52:56,606 --> 00:53:01,909 In lots of the overview of the content of the songs that Pete was writing... 872 00:53:02,678 --> 00:53:05,409 ...we, the three of us, were working on that angle... 873 00:53:05,615 --> 00:53:08,244 ...with Pete, how we were staging them... 874 00:53:08,451 --> 00:53:11,478 ...how they looked on stage and how those things developed... 875 00:53:11,687 --> 00:53:13,383 ...you know, just fell to me. 876 00:53:13,589 --> 00:53:17,390 And then we had wrongly signed a sort of standard-type of recording deal... 877 00:53:17,593 --> 00:53:19,926 ...because we didn't know and went into this deal. 878 00:53:20,129 --> 00:53:22,894 And after we'd been in the studio for about three times... 879 00:53:23,099 --> 00:53:28,037 ...with this producer, we realized, wow, we'd let go of an essential ingredient... 880 00:53:28,271 --> 00:53:30,763 ...to the whole process, which was the studio work. 881 00:53:30,973 --> 00:53:33,340 We had to be in the studio directing everything. 882 00:53:33,543 --> 00:53:36,604 We couldn't have an outsider doing that. This guy was an outsider. 883 00:53:36,813 --> 00:53:38,281 He was a professional producer. 884 00:53:38,481 --> 00:53:41,610 Some say he was very clever, and very good, but he wasn't... 885 00:53:41,818 --> 00:53:44,686 He wasn't part of us. He wasn't seeing the vision. 886 00:53:44,921 --> 00:53:47,914 But it fell naturally into place. 887 00:53:48,124 --> 00:53:50,650 It wasn't really that talked about and agreed... 888 00:53:50,860 --> 00:53:55,195 ...but the in-the-studio producer would be Kit... 889 00:53:55,431 --> 00:53:59,027 ...and I would become like, the more overall executive producer in the studio. 890 00:53:59,368 --> 00:54:03,066 We had immediate success. I mean, we had hit records from day one. 891 00:54:03,306 --> 00:54:09,303 And we were never, ever, um, financially balanced. 892 00:54:09,512 --> 00:54:11,811 I mean, after we had, like... 893 00:54:12,014 --> 00:54:15,314 ...four or five hit records, we had no money whatsoever. 894 00:54:15,518 --> 00:54:16,884 We were being sued, you know? 895 00:54:17,086 --> 00:54:20,545 There were bailiffs outside the office. It was absolute chaos financially. 896 00:54:20,756 --> 00:54:25,353 Because every sort of forward move was another level to sort of challenge. 897 00:54:26,896 --> 00:54:29,058 Because they'd been in the film industry... 898 00:54:29,265 --> 00:54:33,259 ...they understood how a team of people... 899 00:54:33,502 --> 00:54:36,904 ...can change the way that you feel when you're creative and working. 900 00:54:37,106 --> 00:54:41,510 You know, I didn't want to be in a band until I was 61. 901 00:54:44,747 --> 00:54:47,376 I wanted to be in a band for a couple of years, you know? 902 00:54:47,717 --> 00:54:52,246 And I think they convinced me that, um, it was worth staying with. 903 00:54:52,488 --> 00:54:56,482 Particularly, those years that they were around and we worked as a team. 904 00:54:56,692 --> 00:54:58,991 The support that they gave me to try new things... 905 00:54:59,195 --> 00:55:03,223 ...was really what made it all last. 906 00:55:03,432 --> 00:55:09,394 But there was another magic, which was that John Entwistle is a fucking genius. 907 00:55:09,605 --> 00:55:14,441 A fucking genius on the bass guitar. 908 00:55:14,644 --> 00:55:17,375 I mean, an astonishing fucking genius. 909 00:55:17,647 --> 00:55:21,379 You know, it wasn't something that we were particularly aware of at the time... 910 00:55:21,584 --> 00:55:25,419 ...but Jesus Christ, you know, what he did was just beyond conception. 911 00:55:25,621 --> 00:55:27,647 And that Keith Moon... 912 00:55:27,890 --> 00:55:30,587 ...was not a drummer. 913 00:55:32,094 --> 00:55:34,222 He just wasn't a drummer. 914 00:55:34,430 --> 00:55:37,594 You know? He did something else. 915 00:55:37,800 --> 00:55:40,133 You know? And Roger, of course, is, you know... 916 00:55:40,336 --> 00:55:43,465 ...probably the only conventional figure in the band. 917 00:55:43,673 --> 00:55:47,269 And for years, for years and years and years, until Tommy... 918 00:55:47,476 --> 00:55:50,105 ...he didn't know what the fuck he was doing in the band. 919 00:55:50,313 --> 00:55:53,147 He didn't know what to do, how to behave. 920 00:55:53,349 --> 00:55:56,114 And has turned out to be one of the great... 921 00:55:56,319 --> 00:56:00,484 ...modern interpreters, editors and frontmen... 922 00:56:00,690 --> 00:56:02,784 ...of our business. 923 00:56:02,992 --> 00:56:09,455 Not of the business of what Kit and Chris recognized in the band. 924 00:56:09,765 --> 00:56:13,065 What they recognized there, that was what was great about Roger then... 925 00:56:13,269 --> 00:56:15,761 ...was the fact that he was lost. 926 00:56:16,572 --> 00:56:18,939 And that would he find himself? 927 00:56:19,141 --> 00:56:21,474 ♪ I can go any way ♪♪ 928 00:56:21,677 --> 00:56:25,273 Kit and Chris were used to working and creating teams... 929 00:56:25,481 --> 00:56:27,109 ...where everybody had a function. 930 00:56:27,316 --> 00:56:32,448 But that also... I suppose that sense of there only ever being one director. 931 00:56:32,655 --> 00:56:37,025 That doesn't mean that there's only one creative person in a team. 932 00:56:37,226 --> 00:56:40,321 It just means you have one person that has to have the last call... 933 00:56:40,529 --> 00:56:42,327 ...because otherwise you'd have chaos. 934 00:56:42,531 --> 00:56:48,095 And rock bands are, by nature, groups of creative people with no director. 935 00:56:48,304 --> 00:56:51,172 As soon as somebody says, "By the way, I'm the director." 936 00:56:51,340 --> 00:56:54,105 He goes, "No, I'm the director." Or, "No, I'm the director." 937 00:56:54,310 --> 00:56:55,710 It's like gang warfare. 938 00:56:55,911 --> 00:56:58,904 And Roger was still a street fighter in those days. 939 00:56:59,148 --> 00:57:03,813 He would win arguments by looking at you, and you got the feeling that: 940 00:57:04,020 --> 00:57:07,718 "If I don't acquiesce to his point of view right now, he's gonna kill me." 941 00:57:07,923 --> 00:57:10,324 It took quite an amount of wit and intelligence... 942 00:57:10,493 --> 00:57:14,897 ...and also people management for Kit and Chris to be able to juggle it. 943 00:57:15,698 --> 00:57:18,725 And obviously, they must have kind of manipulated a bit. 944 00:57:19,402 --> 00:57:21,871 But you know, like all good manipulators... 945 00:57:22,071 --> 00:57:24,063 ...you don't notice when it's done to you. 946 00:57:24,507 --> 00:57:27,534 Didn't he tell Roger he had to actually get rid of his first wife? 947 00:57:27,743 --> 00:57:29,507 - No. - No? 948 00:57:29,712 --> 00:57:31,704 Well, he, it was kind of... 949 00:57:31,914 --> 00:57:34,543 - As far as I know, I didn't even know... - It wasn't good. 950 00:57:34,750 --> 00:57:36,150 ...that was Roger's wife. 951 00:57:36,352 --> 00:57:38,651 Yeah, Roger was married when he was very young. 952 00:57:38,854 --> 00:57:41,153 - And... - And he was 19... 953 00:57:41,357 --> 00:57:45,727 ...and Kit said to him, "It's not a good idea for you to have a wife." 954 00:57:45,928 --> 00:57:48,921 And so he didn't get rid of his wife because of that... 955 00:57:49,165 --> 00:57:51,293 ...but he actually kept her out of the picture. 956 00:57:51,534 --> 00:57:53,696 - Right. - She was not in the picture. 957 00:57:53,903 --> 00:57:57,601 I mean, I remember that Kit was very, um... 958 00:57:57,807 --> 00:58:00,936 Always concerned, though, that... 959 00:58:01,410 --> 00:58:02,537 ...she got money. 960 00:58:02,745 --> 00:58:05,476 The idea I've got is called "Glittering Girl." It's... 961 00:58:05,714 --> 00:58:08,445 - That's a very good title. - It's, slightly different to that. 962 00:58:08,684 --> 00:58:10,983 It's more beaty, more punchy sort of thing. 963 00:58:11,220 --> 00:58:15,214 I'll give you a few bars. 964 00:58:17,126 --> 00:58:18,389 I want it to sort of be very: 965 00:58:21,764 --> 00:58:24,598 - Like that. No, it's got drums... - Some guitar in... 966 00:58:24,800 --> 00:58:27,326 - ...and where the whole group will be... - Yeah. 967 00:58:34,210 --> 00:58:36,441 ♪ She wasn't a fool ♪ 968 00:58:36,645 --> 00:58:39,274 ♪ That glittering girl ♪ 969 00:58:41,350 --> 00:58:43,478 ♪ She followed the rules ♪ 970 00:58:43,719 --> 00:58:46,279 ♪ That shimmering pearl ♪ 971 00:58:47,990 --> 00:58:50,585 ♪ Said the rules Mama preaches ♪ 972 00:58:50,793 --> 00:58:53,160 ♪ You just gotta break ♪ 973 00:58:55,364 --> 00:58:57,526 ♪ The things Mama teaches ♪ 974 00:58:57,766 --> 00:59:01,168 ♪ You just gotta shake ♪ 975 00:59:02,271 --> 00:59:04,365 ♪ She isn't a fool ♪ 976 00:59:04,607 --> 00:59:07,941 ♪ That slender love figure ♪ 977 00:59:09,145 --> 00:59:11,376 ♪ She follows the rules ♪ 978 00:59:11,614 --> 00:59:15,346 ♪ And made money bigger ♪ 979 00:59:16,118 --> 00:59:18,280 ♪ She isn't a fool ♪ 980 00:59:18,487 --> 00:59:20,683 ♪ That glittering girl ♪ 981 00:59:20,890 --> 00:59:23,951 Big key. Coming in harmony. That could take it to the next bit. 982 00:59:24,160 --> 00:59:27,255 - Yeah. - And there's a very quiet bit after that. 983 00:59:28,864 --> 00:59:31,026 Be good for Keith, yeah. 984 00:59:35,271 --> 00:59:38,571 ♪ You just gotta shake ♪ 985 00:59:39,141 --> 00:59:40,165 Yeah. 986 00:59:40,342 --> 00:59:45,042 ♪ She isn't a fool That slender love figure ♪ ♪ 987 00:59:47,816 --> 00:59:49,182 - That sort of... - That's... 988 00:59:49,385 --> 00:59:52,082 I think, really, that's much more direct, which... 989 00:59:52,321 --> 00:59:54,085 And when I miss Kit, is in the studio. 990 00:59:54,323 --> 00:59:57,725 Although, you know, he spent a lot of time mentoring me as a writer. 991 00:59:57,927 --> 01:00:00,055 There was this sense that everything about the band... 992 01:00:00,296 --> 01:00:02,288 - ...was being honored in the studio. - Yeah. 993 01:00:02,464 --> 01:00:04,399 You know, if I'd written three songs... 994 01:00:04,600 --> 01:00:06,728 ...and presented them to him, "They were all good." 995 01:00:07,403 --> 01:00:09,065 That's how his response was. 996 01:00:09,305 --> 01:00:11,399 He had found something good about all of them. 997 01:00:11,607 --> 01:00:12,802 And he wouldn't, he wouldn't kind of say: 998 01:00:13,008 --> 01:00:15,500 "And that, they're all good, but that one's great." 999 01:00:15,711 --> 01:00:18,078 It'd be, "They're all good. Let's work on that one." 1000 01:00:18,314 --> 01:00:21,045 And what I started to realize over a period of many years... 1001 01:00:21,250 --> 01:00:25,085 ...was the one that he'd pick to work on would be the one that he really thought... 1002 01:00:25,321 --> 01:00:28,189 ...either was promising or great, and the others, perhaps... 1003 01:00:28,390 --> 01:00:30,325 ...would just slide into the background. 1004 01:00:30,526 --> 01:00:33,963 When I go back through my catalog of the material... 1005 01:00:34,196 --> 01:00:36,188 ...that I used to play to Kit... 1006 01:00:36,398 --> 01:00:38,629 ...there must be 80 percent of what I wrote... 1007 01:00:38,867 --> 01:00:40,631 - ...just went on a back burner. - Right. 1008 01:00:40,869 --> 01:00:44,033 It didn't even get to be heard by the band until years later. 1009 01:00:44,240 --> 01:00:47,335 So I think it's that capacity that he had... 1010 01:00:47,543 --> 01:00:49,535 ...to accentuate the positive. 1011 01:00:49,745 --> 01:00:52,647 He had a natural ear for commercial. 1012 01:00:52,881 --> 01:00:55,077 Something that you could sell out there. 1013 01:00:55,284 --> 01:00:57,776 But the commercial wasn't just a record. 1014 01:00:57,987 --> 01:00:59,979 It was a whole package... 1015 01:01:00,222 --> 01:01:04,853 ...and that whole package also included attitude and philosophy, stagecraft... 1016 01:01:05,060 --> 01:01:06,722 ...and art school kind of ideas. 1017 01:01:06,929 --> 01:01:09,421 And I think if you grab an idea and you run with it... 1018 01:01:09,632 --> 01:01:11,601 ...the chances are somebody's gonna sneer at you. 1019 01:01:11,800 --> 01:01:14,895 You know, and if it's successful, um... 1020 01:01:15,104 --> 01:01:18,641 ...and they didn't think of it first, they're gonna be particularly pissed off. 1021 01:01:18,674 --> 01:01:20,609 Well, originally... 1022 01:01:20,809 --> 01:01:25,008 ..."My Generation" was going to be like a 16 bar Jimmy Reed song. 1023 01:01:25,247 --> 01:01:26,806 You know, um... 1024 01:01:27,016 --> 01:01:29,247 ♪ People try to pull us down ♪ 1025 01:01:29,451 --> 01:01:31,818 ♪ Talkin' about my generation ♪ ♪ 1026 01:01:32,021 --> 01:01:33,922 ♪ Just because we get around ♪ 1027 01:01:34,123 --> 01:01:35,921 ♪ Talkin' about my generation ♪ 1028 01:01:36,091 --> 01:01:38,651 ♪ Things they do look awfully cold ♪ 1029 01:01:38,894 --> 01:01:40,487 ♪ Talkin' about my generation ♪ 1030 01:01:40,696 --> 01:01:42,790 ♪ Hope I die before I get old ♪ 1031 01:01:42,998 --> 01:01:46,935 And it was Chris Stamp who suggested to Pete... 1032 01:01:47,136 --> 01:01:52,439 ...that the character in the song "My Generation" have a typical teenage stutter. 1033 01:01:52,608 --> 01:01:53,803 ♪ Talkin' about my generation ♪ 1034 01:01:54,109 --> 01:01:56,271 ♪ And don't try to dig what we all say ♪ ♪ 1035 01:01:56,478 --> 01:01:58,947 Nobody else had ever used such a dynamic... 1036 01:01:59,148 --> 01:02:01,982 ...and a true dynamic to society... 1037 01:02:02,184 --> 01:02:06,121 ...as a kid blocked up on pills with a stutter. 1038 01:02:06,455 --> 01:02:07,684 It was so true. 1039 01:02:07,923 --> 01:02:10,654 It wasn't a gimmick at all, because kids stuttered. 1040 01:02:11,060 --> 01:02:13,552 Especially when they were on pills... 1041 01:02:13,796 --> 01:02:17,233 ...on French blues and black bombers and Drinamyl. 1042 01:02:17,466 --> 01:02:21,870 And, it worked, and of course, it made everybody sit up and take notice. 1043 01:02:23,339 --> 01:02:25,968 I've heard a lot about you and the rest of the group taking drugs, Pete. 1044 01:02:26,175 --> 01:02:29,805 Does this mean you're usually blocked up when you're actually on stage? 1045 01:02:30,012 --> 01:02:33,710 No, but it means we're blocked up all the time, you know. 1046 01:02:33,949 --> 01:02:36,077 The intensity was always to keep The Who... 1047 01:02:36,318 --> 01:02:39,948 ...like a new form of crime in as much as they were never meant to be... 1048 01:02:40,155 --> 01:02:41,953 ...like, a "professional showbiz group." 1049 01:02:42,157 --> 01:02:45,821 They weren't handsome, you know, they weren't nice. 1050 01:02:46,028 --> 01:02:49,362 You know, they were outsiders, man. They were sort of like, misfits. 1051 01:02:49,565 --> 01:02:53,468 You know, they were looking to sort of, like, claim their place. 1052 01:02:53,669 --> 01:02:55,900 Remember those shows that we used to do in cinemas... 1053 01:02:56,105 --> 01:02:58,540 ...and that guy, who was a big fan of the band... 1054 01:02:58,741 --> 01:03:00,266 ...who banned us from the Granada Circuit... 1055 01:03:00,509 --> 01:03:02,774 ...because he disapproved of us smashing our instruments? 1056 01:03:03,011 --> 01:03:06,209 - Do you remember that? - I remember it vaguely. 1057 01:03:06,415 --> 01:03:08,179 "And the pity because you're such a good band." 1058 01:03:08,384 --> 01:03:10,683 And it was always me he would take out and give these lectures. 1059 01:03:10,886 --> 01:03:13,913 And I was just reduced to kind of telling him to fuck off. 1060 01:03:14,123 --> 01:03:17,116 Kit was trying to explain, "You have to have this band on." Yeah. 1061 01:03:17,359 --> 01:03:19,521 - This is a different kind of music. - It's a different kind of thing. 1062 01:03:19,728 --> 01:03:24,189 You know, there was something about not honoring electric guitars. 1063 01:03:24,400 --> 01:03:26,266 A, they were electric. 1064 01:03:26,502 --> 01:03:30,132 You know, we were looking at sound as sound, not just music. 1065 01:03:30,372 --> 01:03:34,275 The electrification, if you like, the modernization of life, right? 1066 01:03:34,510 --> 01:03:37,708 And us as a generation had seen that first in destruction, you know... 1067 01:03:37,913 --> 01:03:40,075 ...in a war, in a... On a beautiful city... 1068 01:03:40,282 --> 01:03:43,548 ...that we're living in had been bombed. It was abstract. 1069 01:03:44,253 --> 01:03:45,778 And it was a huge statement for The Who audience... 1070 01:03:46,021 --> 01:03:48,718 ...because The Who audience were coming to grips. 1071 01:03:48,924 --> 01:03:52,588 The Who audience was trying to, sort of, like, get some life in their body... 1072 01:03:52,795 --> 01:03:54,559 ...and life in their head and life in their hearts. 1073 01:03:54,763 --> 01:03:57,392 And life wasn't really offering them that, you know. 1074 01:03:57,599 --> 01:04:01,092 It was offering them a sort of an abstract, isolated form of life. 1075 01:04:01,303 --> 01:04:03,169 You know, they were saying, here's TV... 1076 01:04:03,405 --> 01:04:04,896 ...but they were also being sort of told... 1077 01:04:05,107 --> 01:04:07,576 ...but, you know, you're still a working class kid. 1078 01:04:08,177 --> 01:04:10,237 You're still white trash. 1079 01:04:11,447 --> 01:04:13,609 The group were acting out, because, you know... 1080 01:04:13,816 --> 01:04:16,684 ...we were like a fucked up family system right here, you know. 1081 01:04:16,919 --> 01:04:19,354 So there's a lot of like, weird behaviors going on... 1082 01:04:19,588 --> 01:04:25,118 ...and one of them was Roger, whacked Keith Moon... 1083 01:04:25,327 --> 01:04:27,990 ...and then they had a fight on stage. Thank God, right? 1084 01:04:28,197 --> 01:04:30,598 Thank God it wasn't wasted in the dressing room. 1085 01:04:32,601 --> 01:04:34,194 So they had a fight on stage... 1086 01:04:34,436 --> 01:04:37,372 ...and, um, Keith said, um... 1087 01:04:37,606 --> 01:04:40,007 ...that he'd never fucking work with Roger again. 1088 01:04:40,275 --> 01:04:44,474 So Kit and I sort of said, "Okay, so the band won't be the same band." 1089 01:04:44,680 --> 01:04:47,309 You know, so we presented an idea to them. 1090 01:04:47,516 --> 01:04:49,849 We'd create a band around Roger... 1091 01:04:50,085 --> 01:04:52,452 ...and then the three of them would... That sort of stuff. 1092 01:04:52,654 --> 01:04:55,089 But we were just winging it. 1093 01:04:55,290 --> 01:04:57,782 We really wanted them to be the four guys. 1094 01:04:58,060 --> 01:05:00,154 I remember I got a phone call from Chris... 1095 01:05:00,362 --> 01:05:04,299 ...and he said that he's spoken to Roger and that he got him to promise... 1096 01:05:04,500 --> 01:05:08,096 ...not to resort to violence to win arguments again. 1097 01:05:08,303 --> 01:05:12,707 And I said something like, "Good luck. I hope you can pull it off." 1098 01:05:12,908 --> 01:05:14,467 And, you know, in fact he did. 1099 01:05:14,676 --> 01:05:17,043 That was really our only way of dealing with... 1100 01:05:17,246 --> 01:05:18,509 We all had our own methods. 1101 01:05:18,714 --> 01:05:19,875 - I would... - That's right. 1102 01:05:20,115 --> 01:05:21,549 You weren't as good as Keith. 1103 01:05:21,750 --> 01:05:23,309 He was... 1104 01:05:23,752 --> 01:05:27,883 He was incredibly cruel when... My God, I paid for that day. 1105 01:05:28,123 --> 01:05:31,616 I had three years of hell, and he would deliberately goad me. 1106 01:05:31,827 --> 01:05:34,319 He would do anything just to try and make me explode. 1107 01:05:34,530 --> 01:05:36,226 It was a hell. 1108 01:05:36,431 --> 01:05:40,425 It was a painful time, and you and I didn't talk about it really at all at the time. 1109 01:05:40,669 --> 01:05:43,833 I was living in the office. Went from the back of the van to the office. 1110 01:05:44,039 --> 01:05:46,702 But he went through a kind of strange misery of his own. 1111 01:05:46,909 --> 01:05:48,878 - Do you remember that thing where he... - I knew he was miserable. 1112 01:05:49,077 --> 01:05:52,514 That period where he was on stage and he was crying... 1113 01:05:52,714 --> 01:05:55,013 - Yeah. - ...in deep depression. 1114 01:05:55,217 --> 01:05:58,085 You could just tell that there was something that he wanted... 1115 01:05:58,287 --> 01:05:59,846 ...that he wasn't ever gonna get. 1116 01:06:00,055 --> 01:06:03,856 - Yeah. - And in a way, he wanted us to deliver it. 1117 01:06:04,059 --> 01:06:05,527 - Yeah. - We couldn't deliver it. 1118 01:06:05,727 --> 01:06:07,355 And he couldn't articulate it. 1119 01:06:07,563 --> 01:06:10,533 I remember you were always more sympathetic to him than I was... 1120 01:06:10,732 --> 01:06:12,564 ...when he was in that state. "Fuck off," you know? 1121 01:06:12,768 --> 01:06:13,861 I remember you going up and putting your arm around him... 1122 01:06:14,069 --> 01:06:15,537 ...and saying, "What can... What is it, mate? 1123 01:06:15,737 --> 01:06:16,761 - What can we do?" - Yeah. 1124 01:06:16,972 --> 01:06:18,270 And I remember saying to you, "Tell him to fuck... 1125 01:06:18,473 --> 01:06:20,738 You know, stop taking his stupid whatever it is he's taking." 1126 01:06:20,943 --> 01:06:22,741 And you said, "No, there's something wrong with him. 1127 01:06:22,945 --> 01:06:24,709 There's something deeply wrong here." 1128 01:06:24,913 --> 01:06:27,940 And he was just... He had a... What looked like a nervous breakdown. 1129 01:06:28,183 --> 01:06:31,483 He was obviously on some drug or other. But it had led to a condition... 1130 01:06:31,720 --> 01:06:34,383 ...that was definitely a manic depression. 1131 01:06:34,590 --> 01:06:36,889 - It lasted for about two weeks. - Yeah, yeah. 1132 01:06:37,092 --> 01:06:38,617 - And... - Like he became schizophrenic. 1133 01:06:38,827 --> 01:06:41,422 - Wasn't it? Very strange. - Yeah. 1134 01:06:41,630 --> 01:06:44,623 I think we all knew what we had. I remember thinking certainly... 1135 01:06:44,833 --> 01:06:46,768 ...if this band breaks apart now... 1136 01:06:46,969 --> 01:06:49,700 ...what I've got left is never gonna equal it. 1137 01:06:49,905 --> 01:06:54,434 We somehow eased that through, diplomatically, ahem... 1138 01:06:54,643 --> 01:06:56,134 ...and Roger... 1139 01:06:56,345 --> 01:06:58,974 ...wonderfully agreed to stop hitting people. 1140 01:06:59,214 --> 01:07:01,649 And he's stood up to that until today. 1141 01:07:01,850 --> 01:07:04,820 And they... And it worked. 1142 01:07:05,020 --> 01:07:10,516 So their end of the family was broken up for a period... 1143 01:07:10,759 --> 01:07:13,786 ...and we managed to sort of get over the breakup... 1144 01:07:13,996 --> 01:07:15,658 ...you know, and come back together. 1145 01:07:15,864 --> 01:07:19,028 And then there were lots of bits and pieces like that. 1146 01:07:19,267 --> 01:07:21,099 - I was thrown out. - No, I was thrown out. 1147 01:07:21,303 --> 01:07:23,295 - No, I was thrown out too. - Ha-ha-ha. 1148 01:07:23,605 --> 01:07:26,871 Now what actually happened was that I discovered that Keith and John... 1149 01:07:27,109 --> 01:07:30,341 ...were forming this group with Jimmy Page called Led Zeppelin. 1150 01:07:31,813 --> 01:07:34,442 That's what they were up to. God knows I'd had no idea... 1151 01:07:34,650 --> 01:07:36,949 ...that they were gonna form a heavy metal band... 1152 01:07:37,152 --> 01:07:39,485 ...which is what they were talking about doing, John and Keith. 1153 01:07:39,688 --> 01:07:42,624 I'd gone through that thing in Paris... 1154 01:07:42,824 --> 01:07:48,491 ...of hearing, um, Keith and John talking about me behind my back... 1155 01:07:48,697 --> 01:07:50,893 ...in a way that was very, very disparaging. 1156 01:07:51,133 --> 01:07:53,295 Dear, dear Pete. 1157 01:07:56,672 --> 01:08:00,575 I was about to go into a hotel room and be with them, and I just turned back... 1158 01:08:00,809 --> 01:08:03,677 ...and I went to my room and just sat there and thought. 1159 01:08:03,979 --> 01:08:06,348 I felt like a real outsider. 1160 01:08:15,090 --> 01:08:18,993 Kit and I were in a club. We saw Jimi. He's just played with the group. 1161 01:08:19,194 --> 01:08:20,594 It wasn't his show. 1162 01:08:20,829 --> 01:08:23,196 He just jammed with the group, and we saw that... 1163 01:08:23,398 --> 01:08:24,696 ...and we heard him as well. 1164 01:08:24,900 --> 01:08:27,392 And we saw him, and we thought he's amazing. 1165 01:08:33,809 --> 01:08:37,109 And we went up afterwards, and Chas Chandler was there... 1166 01:08:37,345 --> 01:08:40,338 ...and we realized that Chas was the guy taking care of him. 1167 01:08:40,549 --> 01:08:43,576 So Jimi's sort of standing there, and we're talking to Chas... 1168 01:08:43,752 --> 01:08:46,347 ...and we said to Chas, "Listen, does he... 1169 01:08:46,555 --> 01:08:50,890 Can we... Can we produce him?" Right? And Chas said, "Well, I'm doing that." 1170 01:08:51,093 --> 01:08:53,187 We said, "Okay." We said, "Can we manage him?" 1171 01:08:53,395 --> 01:08:56,365 And he said, "Well, The Animals, you know, Mike, is doing that." 1172 01:08:56,565 --> 01:08:58,864 And we said, "Has he got a record label?" 1173 01:08:59,067 --> 01:09:01,195 And he said, "No." We said, "We'll do that then." Heh. 1174 01:09:01,403 --> 01:09:03,770 And we had talked about having a record label... 1175 01:09:04,239 --> 01:09:07,266 ...but we'd never actually... We hadn't actually put it into place. 1176 01:09:07,476 --> 01:09:10,036 So we immediately put it into place to get Jimi. 1177 01:09:10,245 --> 01:09:12,271 So you offered Jimi Hendrix a record deal... 1178 01:09:12,481 --> 01:09:13,972 ...but you didn't actually have a record company? 1179 01:09:14,216 --> 01:09:16,208 Right, that's right, that's right. 1180 01:09:16,752 --> 01:09:19,153 We didn't have a record company, but we intended to have one. 1181 01:09:19,387 --> 01:09:20,650 And so he was the beginning. 1182 01:09:20,889 --> 01:09:22,983 Kit was the first guy... 1183 01:09:23,225 --> 01:09:25,626 ...to start an independent record label... 1184 01:09:25,861 --> 01:09:28,421 ...you know, in the world. 1185 01:09:28,630 --> 01:09:30,963 And he went to Polydor and he got a deal. 1186 01:09:31,166 --> 01:09:33,226 I had got that artwork done of the f... 1187 01:09:33,435 --> 01:09:35,370 You know, have you ever seen the Track Record artwork? 1188 01:09:35,570 --> 01:09:38,130 You know, it's like a... It's a stylus on a record. 1189 01:09:38,373 --> 01:09:40,604 The arm of the stylus coming out onto a record... 1190 01:09:40,809 --> 01:09:43,404 ...only it's a T, but that was the design. 1191 01:09:43,612 --> 01:09:47,481 - I mean, and it was done overnight. - Track was the other home. 1192 01:09:47,682 --> 01:09:49,913 - It's where everyone went. - It was great. It was a great vibe. 1193 01:09:50,118 --> 01:09:51,780 And you didn't say I'm going down the office. 1194 01:09:51,987 --> 01:09:53,512 - No, no, no. - Going down to Track. 1195 01:09:53,755 --> 01:09:56,088 And it wasn't very much of an office, was it? 1196 01:09:56,291 --> 01:09:57,315 - It was great. - It was great. 1197 01:09:57,526 --> 01:09:58,585 - It was wonderful. - But, I mean, it wasn't... 1198 01:09:58,794 --> 01:10:00,092 There wasn't a lot of, sort of, like, business going on there. 1199 01:10:00,295 --> 01:10:01,627 - Do you remember? - It felt like it. 1200 01:10:01,897 --> 01:10:05,493 But it was ideas driven, right? It was ideas driven. 1201 01:10:09,838 --> 01:10:12,501 But you've got sufficient financial backing. 1202 01:10:12,707 --> 01:10:15,836 Hold on, sir. Kit? Problem. 1203 01:10:16,111 --> 01:10:20,549 - Phillip's had his guitar stolen. - Christ. Um... 1204 01:10:20,982 --> 01:10:24,282 - Can you try and borrow one from Pete? - I'll get on to Pete straight away. 1205 01:10:24,486 --> 01:10:28,116 We wanted to do all of this message stuff, but we embraced all of it. 1206 01:10:28,323 --> 01:10:30,485 We were not afraid of commercialism at all. 1207 01:10:30,692 --> 01:10:32,490 I am the god of hellfire! 1208 01:10:32,694 --> 01:10:34,287 And I bring you... 1209 01:10:34,496 --> 01:10:36,124 ♪ Fire ♪ 1210 01:10:36,665 --> 01:10:38,691 ♪ I'll take you to burn ♪♪ 1211 01:10:40,802 --> 01:10:46,241 Track was the first time you and Kit did anything outside of The Who... 1212 01:10:46,474 --> 01:10:49,569 ...and then all of the sudden, Kit was producing other artists. 1213 01:10:49,811 --> 01:10:52,076 And it did feel strange to me at the time. 1214 01:10:53,315 --> 01:10:57,150 Kit, to his credit, used to include me. I mean, when Arthur Brown was doing... 1215 01:10:57,652 --> 01:10:59,814 ...when he was mixing "Fire," he'd say, "Come down. 1216 01:11:00,021 --> 01:11:01,649 I want you to help me mix it." 1217 01:11:01,857 --> 01:11:03,382 But it's just how it felt. It was very strange. 1218 01:11:03,592 --> 01:11:06,494 Is it going to be an R and B label or an experimental label? 1219 01:11:06,828 --> 01:11:08,956 We're gonna have a lot of experimental stuff on it. 1220 01:11:09,164 --> 01:11:11,565 In fact, Pete Townshend is... 1221 01:11:11,766 --> 01:11:13,826 ...heading up a mysterious department... 1222 01:11:14,002 --> 01:11:16,699 ...called Jazz and New Sounds. - For me, the Track years... 1223 01:11:16,872 --> 01:11:19,205 ...were exciting because I had Thunderclap Newman. 1224 01:11:19,407 --> 01:11:21,171 - Right. - While I was doing demos for Tommy... 1225 01:11:21,376 --> 01:11:24,744 ...I'm knocking the demos for Tommy out, you know, I'm working on... 1226 01:11:24,980 --> 01:11:28,075 ...this little band, you know... 1227 01:11:28,283 --> 01:11:31,583 ...and kind of cooking stuff up out of nothing, having this brain fart. 1228 01:11:31,786 --> 01:11:34,915 Thinking, "That guitar player, that guy, put them together." Da-da-da-da. 1229 01:11:35,123 --> 01:11:36,853 - Yeah. - Next thing, it was number one. 1230 01:11:37,058 --> 01:11:39,618 So there's this sense that, "This is easy." You know? 1231 01:11:39,861 --> 01:11:42,353 It was only hard because before it was with The Who. 1232 01:11:42,564 --> 01:11:44,726 You know, they're very hard. They're difficult. 1233 01:11:44,933 --> 01:11:47,300 But when you work with somebody else, it's easy. 1234 01:11:47,535 --> 01:11:49,265 Arthur Brown, number one. 1235 01:11:49,504 --> 01:11:51,132 You know, "Something In The Air," number one. 1236 01:11:51,373 --> 01:11:53,035 You know, Jimi Hendrix, number one. 1237 01:11:53,241 --> 01:11:56,643 Marc Bolan and John's Children with "Ride A White Swan," number one. 1238 01:11:56,878 --> 01:11:59,643 We couldn't get fucking number ones. Everybody else was getting number one. 1239 01:11:59,881 --> 01:12:03,010 Track had four number ones in a row with other artists. 1240 01:12:03,218 --> 01:12:04,550 Marsha Hunt went to number four. 1241 01:12:05,620 --> 01:12:09,921 I mean, you know, ours were down at ten, 14. Ha, ha. 1242 01:12:10,125 --> 01:12:12,287 No. Hold on, sir. Kit? 1243 01:12:12,527 --> 01:12:15,929 The feeling I had was that we were never gonna make it in America. 1244 01:12:16,131 --> 01:12:17,656 - Yeah. - Never in a million years. 1245 01:12:17,899 --> 01:12:19,800 I just remember kind of looking at the kind of bands... 1246 01:12:20,035 --> 01:12:21,594 ...that were making it in America, thinking, you know... 1247 01:12:21,803 --> 01:12:25,035 ...if they like Eric Burdon, we're fucked. 1248 01:12:25,307 --> 01:12:27,799 Where especially in the States would you like to visit? 1249 01:12:28,043 --> 01:12:31,036 - California, I think. - Why California? 1250 01:12:31,246 --> 01:12:33,647 There's a good recording studio over there, Western. 1251 01:12:33,815 --> 01:12:35,340 And the surfing and hot rods. 1252 01:12:35,583 --> 01:12:38,417 Yeah. Surfing and the hot rods and the girls over there. 1253 01:12:38,620 --> 01:12:42,057 Why do you want to record in America? Why does this appeal to you? 1254 01:12:42,257 --> 01:12:44,488 It's because it's different from recording here. 1255 01:12:44,693 --> 01:12:46,184 - Sunnier. - Better studios. 1256 01:12:46,428 --> 01:12:49,057 No, I'm just... I'm not worried about the studios or the sound. 1257 01:12:49,264 --> 01:12:51,290 But when you go outside, you can get a tan... 1258 01:12:51,499 --> 01:12:53,161 ...which is more than you can get here. 1259 01:12:55,136 --> 01:12:59,631 We really saw the huge complexity of what America is. 1260 01:12:59,841 --> 01:13:01,366 Can you imagine Jackson, Mississippi... 1261 01:13:01,609 --> 01:13:04,670 ...Chicago, Detroit, you know, and then Baton Rouge. 1262 01:13:04,879 --> 01:13:10,011 And we went everywhere on this tour in this horrible old prop plane. 1263 01:13:10,352 --> 01:13:12,344 And it had bunks in it. 1264 01:13:12,620 --> 01:13:15,283 These sort of, like, rope bunks. 1265 01:13:15,490 --> 01:13:19,222 It was really shitty, but it was... We were all on it, all these three groups. 1266 01:13:19,461 --> 01:13:23,296 And there was a sort of old sort of American tour manager. 1267 01:13:23,498 --> 01:13:26,662 And especially in the South, when the plane had st... 1268 01:13:26,868 --> 01:13:29,167 You know, landed and we were about to get out... 1269 01:13:29,371 --> 01:13:32,864 ...he would stand at the door before we get out and he would tell us all... 1270 01:13:33,108 --> 01:13:35,043 ...he'd say, "Listen, in this state... 1271 01:13:35,243 --> 01:13:39,476 ...fucking women who are under, you know, over, under 20 or..." 1272 01:13:39,681 --> 01:13:42,116 - Because it was different in every state. - Every time he said: 1273 01:13:42,317 --> 01:13:44,809 "Because you could go to prison for this. You could do this," you know. 1274 01:13:45,020 --> 01:13:49,355 So the local rules of where we were going... 1275 01:13:49,557 --> 01:13:51,719 ...were always told to us before we got off the plane. 1276 01:13:51,926 --> 01:13:53,326 And they were mostly about fucking. 1277 01:13:53,561 --> 01:13:54,654 ♪ Magic bus ♪♪ 1278 01:13:54,829 --> 01:13:57,822 And then they started releasing really mediocre songs... 1279 01:13:58,033 --> 01:14:03,199 ...like "Magic Bus", "Dogs", "Call Me Lightning", things like this... 1280 01:14:03,405 --> 01:14:06,341 ...that were sort of not really up to The Who's standard. 1281 01:14:06,541 --> 01:14:09,375 And he said, "Well, we've run out of songs basically." 1282 01:14:09,577 --> 01:14:12,513 And it looked very much like it was the end of the band. 1283 01:14:15,417 --> 01:14:20,219 Before Tommy we were finished. Without something audacious... 1284 01:14:20,422 --> 01:14:23,221 ...The Who were done for. So, you know... 1285 01:14:23,425 --> 01:14:27,089 ...somewhere there, Kit and I took a gamble. 1286 01:14:27,295 --> 01:14:29,787 I spoke earlier about the fact that... 1287 01:14:30,031 --> 01:14:33,763 ...Kit had nurtured me as a composer. 1288 01:14:33,968 --> 01:14:36,062 I don't mean a songwriter. 1289 01:14:36,271 --> 01:14:39,207 I mean a composer. I wanted to learn to orchestrate... 1290 01:14:39,407 --> 01:14:42,707 ...and I wanted to write an opera. Kit came in sideways... 1291 01:14:42,911 --> 01:14:49,408 ...and he was the one that, in a sense, accused me of vanity. 1292 01:14:50,085 --> 01:14:52,884 He said, "You know, The Who need a new single." 1293 01:14:53,088 --> 01:14:55,114 You know, and I said, "Well, you know, I'm working on this opera." 1294 01:14:55,323 --> 01:14:57,815 He said, "Well, you know, how's it gonna help The Who?" 1295 01:14:58,059 --> 01:14:59,925 And I said, "Don't know." 1296 01:15:00,562 --> 01:15:03,293 He said, "Well, what have you got?" I said, "I've got this, this, this, and this." 1297 01:15:03,498 --> 01:15:07,629 We were just totally immersed in this venture. 1298 01:15:08,503 --> 01:15:12,201 You know, the... Any growth, any personal self-growth... 1299 01:15:12,407 --> 01:15:16,902 ...was happening within this space. 1300 01:15:17,145 --> 01:15:19,637 It didn't really happen outside of it. 1301 01:15:21,249 --> 01:15:22,842 It started to end about 19... 1302 01:15:23,084 --> 01:15:27,454 You know, that closeness began to end, really, after Tommy. 1303 01:15:27,655 --> 01:15:30,420 That's the... That's the second era, so to speak. 1304 01:15:30,992 --> 01:15:33,359 Tommy was the major turning point for that band. 1305 01:15:33,595 --> 01:15:35,223 You know, there was up to Tommy... 1306 01:15:35,430 --> 01:15:36,489 ...and after Tommy. 1307 01:15:36,764 --> 01:15:38,596 And Tommy was the turning point. 1308 01:15:38,800 --> 01:15:41,634 Pete said to me, he said, at the time of Tommy... 1309 01:15:41,836 --> 01:15:44,431 ...it was the first time the word "million" ever appeared. 1310 01:15:49,177 --> 01:15:51,840 By the end of five years, we had produced Tommy. 1311 01:15:52,046 --> 01:15:54,345 We'd done all the opera house tours. 1312 01:15:54,549 --> 01:15:56,484 You know, we created a new way of touring. 1313 01:15:56,684 --> 01:15:58,949 And it was just a very short period of time. 1314 01:15:59,154 --> 01:16:02,955 And 1969, with Tommy was when we first had some money. 1315 01:16:03,158 --> 01:16:04,649 So we had worked all of this... 1316 01:16:04,859 --> 01:16:08,125 ...without ever having any real sort of safety money... 1317 01:16:08,329 --> 01:16:09,353 ...constantly in debt. 1318 01:16:09,564 --> 01:16:12,557 And Tommy made so much money... 1319 01:16:12,800 --> 01:16:14,325 ...that we had to have some money. 1320 01:16:14,536 --> 01:16:16,266 It beat us, you know. 1321 01:16:16,471 --> 01:16:18,133 We didn't care, but it did, you know. 1322 01:16:18,339 --> 01:16:20,365 It outgrossed even our sort of expenditure. 1323 01:16:20,575 --> 01:16:22,339 ♪ So ♪ 1324 01:16:22,544 --> 01:16:27,015 ♪ So long ♪ ♪ 1325 01:16:30,418 --> 01:16:34,048 In those days, everything was mini: skirts, cars. 1326 01:16:34,222 --> 01:16:36,282 Even our money was mini. 1327 01:16:36,491 --> 01:16:37,652 Not today, though. 1328 01:16:37,859 --> 01:16:39,350 ♪ See me ♪ 1329 01:16:41,429 --> 01:16:44,831 ♪ Feel me ♪ 1330 01:16:45,200 --> 01:16:47,533 ♪ Touch me ♪ 1331 01:16:48,903 --> 01:16:51,395 ♪ Heal me ♪ 1332 01:16:57,912 --> 01:16:59,073 ♪ Listening to you ♪ 1333 01:16:59,247 --> 01:17:02,081 I could see that Tommy made Roger the singer... 1334 01:17:02,317 --> 01:17:04,377 ...the frontman that he'd always needed to be. 1335 01:17:05,220 --> 01:17:06,950 ♪ I get the heat ♪ 1336 01:17:07,188 --> 01:17:10,522 What he is is a great, great, great interpreter and actor. 1337 01:17:10,692 --> 01:17:13,025 And so this gave him a role. 1338 01:17:14,229 --> 01:17:17,529 Kit had always wanted Roger to have his hair more natural and longer... 1339 01:17:17,732 --> 01:17:21,100 ...and Roger had his hair straight, he was hanging on to the mod thing... 1340 01:17:21,336 --> 01:17:25,103 ...and when Heather came into his life, his hair suddenly became amazing, right? 1341 01:17:25,340 --> 01:17:27,332 And he grew it long, and it was just curly. 1342 01:17:27,542 --> 01:17:29,101 And Kit always said, "Wow... 1343 01:17:29,344 --> 01:17:31,575 ...Heather is really doing an amazing job with Roger. 1344 01:17:31,746 --> 01:17:34,341 - Ha-ha-ha. - She's got him to do the right hair." 1345 01:17:34,549 --> 01:17:38,714 And he always, thought that you dressed Roger amazingly. 1346 01:17:38,920 --> 01:17:40,946 - Yeah, we used to choose the clothes... - Yeah. 1347 01:17:41,155 --> 01:17:42,646 Well, mostly he wore my clothes. 1348 01:17:42,890 --> 01:17:43,983 - That's what happened. - Yeah, well, anyway... 1349 01:17:44,225 --> 01:17:47,093 ...whatever you did, you were Kit's hero because you sort of... 1350 01:17:47,295 --> 01:17:49,787 ...like, perfected the whole sort of look of Roger. 1351 01:17:53,434 --> 01:17:54,493 ♪ Listening to you ♪ ♪ 1352 01:17:54,669 --> 01:17:57,002 We bring up these arc lights, you know... 1353 01:17:57,238 --> 01:17:59,173 ...real film studio stuff, right? 1354 01:17:59,407 --> 01:18:01,672 We bring them up behind the group, right? 1355 01:18:01,909 --> 01:18:03,878 Six of them, on these opera house stages. 1356 01:18:04,078 --> 01:18:06,013 And we shine them right through the group. 1357 01:18:06,247 --> 01:18:07,442 So the group just vanish. 1358 01:18:07,649 --> 01:18:10,278 And they're intense, those lights, those Brutes, right? 1359 01:18:10,485 --> 01:18:14,013 And the audience stand up and become part of this experience... 1360 01:18:14,255 --> 01:18:17,953 ...and that was the first time that that movement in a rock concert was done. 1361 01:18:18,159 --> 01:18:20,128 And it was just such an incredible final. 1362 01:18:23,931 --> 01:18:25,695 "Listening to you, I get the music"... 1363 01:18:25,933 --> 01:18:28,801 ...is not a prayer to God, it's a prayer to the audience. 1364 01:18:30,405 --> 01:18:33,136 It's about you. It's about you. 1365 01:18:33,341 --> 01:18:36,903 I don't write songs about me. I write songs about you. 1366 01:18:37,111 --> 01:18:39,706 That's why I'm successful, you know? 1367 01:18:39,947 --> 01:18:41,438 You think they're about me... 1368 01:18:41,649 --> 01:18:43,777 ...so, you know, you can live, in a sense... 1369 01:18:43,985 --> 01:18:45,977 ...through what you think I'm going through. 1370 01:18:46,187 --> 01:18:47,985 But actually, I'm writing about you... 1371 01:18:48,189 --> 01:18:50,852 ...and that's really where... That was what Kit and... 1372 01:18:51,059 --> 01:18:54,621 And if Chris was in the room now he would be nodding. I know he would. 1373 01:18:54,829 --> 01:18:57,321 Because we got this very, very early on... 1374 01:18:57,532 --> 01:18:59,865 ...and we reinforced it in each other. 1375 01:19:01,235 --> 01:19:03,204 Ladies and gentlemen... 1376 01:19:04,038 --> 01:19:05,165 The Who. 1377 01:19:08,076 --> 01:19:11,240 Typical Kit and Chris thing, when they were gonna break Tommy... 1378 01:19:11,479 --> 01:19:13,846 ...they wanted it to play at all the opera houses... 1379 01:19:14,048 --> 01:19:15,175 ...all over the world... 1380 01:19:15,350 --> 01:19:18,081 ...and they were gonna try and break into the Leningrad Opera House... 1381 01:19:18,319 --> 01:19:20,686 ...or the Moscow Opera House or something like that. 1382 01:19:20,888 --> 01:19:23,585 Stamp went to Russia and tried to persuade them to... 1383 01:19:23,825 --> 01:19:27,227 You can imagine. This was, like, we're talking about 1969. 1384 01:19:27,562 --> 01:19:29,724 I used to go to events at the Russian Embassy... 1385 01:19:29,964 --> 01:19:34,026 ...and watch four-hour totally boring films on Lenin and all that, you know. 1386 01:19:34,235 --> 01:19:38,468 As I was a bit of an expert on Lenin, I could hold my own. But it was awful. 1387 01:19:38,673 --> 01:19:41,165 We wanted to get Moscow Opera House... 1388 01:19:41,376 --> 01:19:43,777 ...and we wanted to get the Metropolitan Opera House. 1389 01:19:44,011 --> 01:19:46,776 And we wanted to sort of have the headline: 1390 01:19:47,014 --> 01:19:50,610 "Rock Breaks the Iron Curtain," you know, when we flew from Moscow. 1391 01:19:50,852 --> 01:19:53,014 They wouldn't give us their fucking opera house. 1392 01:19:53,221 --> 01:19:56,589 They offered us St. Petersburg, but it was years down the road, you know. 1393 01:19:56,791 --> 01:19:59,522 And in rock 'n' roll terms, that was like a century, right? 1394 01:19:59,727 --> 01:20:00,922 And who are The Who? 1395 01:20:01,129 --> 01:20:03,928 Well, The Who are The Who, that's who they are. 1396 01:20:04,132 --> 01:20:06,567 A rock group, veterans of Woodstock... 1397 01:20:06,768 --> 01:20:09,567 ...and now the authors and performers in a rock-opera. 1398 01:20:09,771 --> 01:20:12,798 - You could feel the vibrations. - Man, we freaked it all out. 1399 01:20:13,040 --> 01:20:14,633 - It's beautiful. - It's unreal. 1400 01:20:14,876 --> 01:20:17,812 Without the libretto, it was more difficult than Italian opera. 1401 01:20:18,212 --> 01:20:20,306 The seats are comfortable, aren't they? 1402 01:20:20,548 --> 01:20:22,574 Keith Moon loved the melodrama... 1403 01:20:22,784 --> 01:20:25,652 ...and the pomposity of, "Shut up, it's a fucking opera!" 1404 01:20:25,887 --> 01:20:27,048 You know? 1405 01:20:28,456 --> 01:20:30,516 John Entwistle got to play the French horn... 1406 01:20:30,725 --> 01:20:33,456 ...and I could see that it maybe might give Kit... 1407 01:20:33,661 --> 01:20:35,527 ...his big movie that he'd always wanted. 1408 01:20:35,696 --> 01:20:37,221 The relationship that I had with Kit... 1409 01:20:37,398 --> 01:20:39,390 ...was about the fact that he... 1410 01:20:39,600 --> 01:20:42,263 ...right from the very, very beginning... 1411 01:20:42,537 --> 01:20:45,302 ...was quite clearly a frustrated composer. 1412 01:20:46,073 --> 01:20:47,268 So he saw in me... 1413 01:20:47,475 --> 01:20:52,436 ...a chance to expound some of his own frustrated ideas. 1414 01:20:52,647 --> 01:20:54,411 He encouraged the preposterous. 1415 01:20:54,615 --> 01:20:56,550 The more preposterous, the better. 1416 01:20:56,751 --> 01:20:58,686 The more adventurous, the more dangerous... 1417 01:20:58,920 --> 01:21:00,821 ...the more exotic, the more absurd. 1418 01:21:01,055 --> 01:21:03,354 Tommy was a mess. It was typical Townshend thing. 1419 01:21:03,591 --> 01:21:06,425 He'd have a song here, something there, a bit of music there, something here... 1420 01:21:06,627 --> 01:21:08,789 ...some abandoned project there, a laundry list there. 1421 01:21:08,996 --> 01:21:11,693 And he put it all together and try and get some sort of... 1422 01:21:11,933 --> 01:21:13,196 ...great concept out of it. 1423 01:21:13,434 --> 01:21:16,632 But Kit, because of his, I suppose... 1424 01:21:16,838 --> 01:21:19,364 ...scriptwriting experience on films and stuff... 1425 01:21:19,607 --> 01:21:20,870 ...put it into some order... 1426 01:21:21,108 --> 01:21:23,942 ...because he was writing the script as Tommy was recorded. 1427 01:21:24,145 --> 01:21:28,310 Pete may have always known the story inside, right? 1428 01:21:28,516 --> 01:21:30,951 We know it was about this deaf, dumb and blind boy... 1429 01:21:31,152 --> 01:21:32,176 ...it's about vibes. 1430 01:21:32,386 --> 01:21:34,651 I mean, the original idea is deaf, dumb and blind boy. 1431 01:21:34,822 --> 01:21:40,193 Um, he... Vibes, this was, like, '68, right? Acid was big. 1432 01:21:40,394 --> 01:21:42,625 It was all about vibes, all about connection. 1433 01:21:42,830 --> 01:21:45,891 The infinity of the universe... 1434 01:21:46,133 --> 01:21:49,865 ...of eternity, of all the eternal aspects of the universe... 1435 01:21:50,104 --> 01:21:52,471 ...aware of the invalidity... 1436 01:21:52,640 --> 01:21:55,838 ...of what we know as reality. 1437 01:21:56,477 --> 01:21:59,037 Reality with a small R. 1438 01:21:59,247 --> 01:22:01,546 Kit found it very, very difficult... 1439 01:22:01,749 --> 01:22:06,016 ...when I started to study spiritual matters. 1440 01:22:06,220 --> 01:22:11,124 And, particularly, the work of Inayat Khan... 1441 01:22:11,325 --> 01:22:14,489 ...the Sufi Master who was a master musician. 1442 01:22:14,729 --> 01:22:18,928 Kit, you know, was just... He just wanted it to stop. 1443 01:22:19,767 --> 01:22:22,737 Yeah, but that's like fucking hippie-dippy, right? 1444 01:22:22,937 --> 01:22:25,406 Which it was. Come on, I mean, like, vibes, you know? 1445 01:22:25,640 --> 01:22:29,338 Deaf, dumb and blind, that bit's good. But how did he get deaf, dumb and blind? 1446 01:22:29,544 --> 01:22:32,514 Tommy began as a spiritual allegory... 1447 01:22:32,713 --> 01:22:34,841 ...and he made it a story of postwar life. 1448 01:22:35,049 --> 01:22:37,883 So we had the lover come home with the husband from the war... 1449 01:22:38,085 --> 01:22:41,385 ...kill the lover, the kid sees it, the lover and mother shake the kid. 1450 01:22:41,589 --> 01:22:43,751 "You didn't hear it." And traumatize him, right? 1451 01:22:43,958 --> 01:22:46,393 So he goes into trauma, becomes deaf, dumb and blind. 1452 01:22:46,594 --> 01:22:47,789 Then he tries some acid... 1453 01:22:48,029 --> 01:22:49,861 ...the Acid Queen, to bring him back... 1454 01:22:50,064 --> 01:22:51,555 ...and he's growing up, and never gets back. 1455 01:22:51,766 --> 01:22:54,031 Then he has a breakup, and he gets enlightened... 1456 01:22:54,235 --> 01:22:57,672 ...he has a sort of spiritual experience and becomes an enlightened being. 1457 01:22:57,872 --> 01:23:00,239 When Pete was writing the songs... 1458 01:23:00,441 --> 01:23:03,434 ...and it was his original idea... 1459 01:23:03,678 --> 01:23:06,079 ...um, within the studio context... 1460 01:23:06,280 --> 01:23:08,909 ...it wasn't clear where it was going... 1461 01:23:09,116 --> 01:23:10,311 ...where it was gonna end. 1462 01:23:10,551 --> 01:23:14,181 I mean, the songs, the bad stuff, the shitty stuff... 1463 01:23:14,388 --> 01:23:17,415 ...you know, Uncle Ernie, who's a fucking pedophile, right? 1464 01:23:17,625 --> 01:23:19,753 And Cousin Kevin who's a bully, right? 1465 01:23:19,961 --> 01:23:22,294 You know, the real stuff that happens in life. 1466 01:23:22,496 --> 01:23:24,556 You know, John Entwistle wrote those songs. 1467 01:23:24,765 --> 01:23:30,397 He was more of a sort of, you know, nasty, cynical, grounded type of being. 1468 01:23:30,605 --> 01:23:32,437 Do you know what I mean? That he could write that horrible shit... 1469 01:23:32,640 --> 01:23:34,506 ...because John was a very dark guy. 1470 01:23:34,742 --> 01:23:36,210 What was it that you went to see this doctor for? 1471 01:23:36,410 --> 01:23:38,436 - I had a poisoned finger. - A poisoned finger. 1472 01:23:38,713 --> 01:23:40,011 - How did you get it? - It was weeping. 1473 01:23:40,247 --> 01:23:41,943 When we asked him, there was a big grin on his face. 1474 01:23:42,149 --> 01:23:44,209 "I'll write them, sure." 1475 01:23:44,418 --> 01:23:48,617 Kit wrote a screenplay... 1476 01:23:48,823 --> 01:23:51,725 ...only as a guideline... 1477 01:23:51,926 --> 01:23:53,622 ...for the guys in the studio. 1478 01:23:54,228 --> 01:23:55,856 Remember, we didn't have any money... 1479 01:23:56,097 --> 01:23:57,929 ...we were in a sort of cheap studio... 1480 01:23:58,132 --> 01:24:00,829 ...and come Thursday we would pack up, put it in the van... 1481 01:24:01,035 --> 01:24:03,300 ...because the group had to go out and perform... 1482 01:24:03,504 --> 01:24:05,370 ...to get the money. 1483 01:24:05,640 --> 01:24:07,871 They couldn't take time off to actually record. 1484 01:24:08,743 --> 01:24:12,111 And Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights were the big earners, right? 1485 01:24:12,313 --> 01:24:14,839 Then they would come back in. So it was always lost all over the place. 1486 01:24:15,049 --> 01:24:17,382 Sometimes they would go out and play some songs they recorded... 1487 01:24:17,652 --> 01:24:19,814 ...then come back, they want to re-record them. 1488 01:24:20,021 --> 01:24:24,015 So Kit wrote this screenplay as a way to give it structure. 1489 01:24:24,258 --> 01:24:25,692 And he showed it to Pete. 1490 01:24:26,060 --> 01:24:29,189 And he'd noted where there should be some songs and stuff like that. 1491 01:24:29,397 --> 01:24:32,959 Now, whether that fell in line with Pete's overall vision, I don't know. 1492 01:24:33,167 --> 01:24:36,194 And, certainly, let me put it this way: 1493 01:24:36,404 --> 01:24:40,705 Pete doesn't really give credit for the screenplay to Kit. 1494 01:24:43,144 --> 01:24:45,306 So, it's an un... It's a mystery. 1495 01:24:45,513 --> 01:24:47,675 He started to bring in the idea... 1496 01:24:47,882 --> 01:24:50,044 ...that there was a postwar element in there. 1497 01:24:50,284 --> 01:24:53,686 But, you know, I already had songs like "Captain Walker Didn't Come Home." 1498 01:24:53,888 --> 01:24:55,686 I already had songs about, you know... 1499 01:24:55,890 --> 01:25:00,089 ...child abuse and brutality and bullying and, you know... 1500 01:25:00,327 --> 01:25:03,297 So, you know, it was all there, you know, it's my story. 1501 01:25:03,497 --> 01:25:08,197 And he came up with a few things that were really fundamentally important: 1502 01:25:08,402 --> 01:25:11,167 The idea of doing an overture, which I did at the end... 1503 01:25:11,372 --> 01:25:14,900 ...and also the idea of repeating the refrain at the end... 1504 01:25:15,076 --> 01:25:17,045 ...the "Listening To You" prayer at the end... 1505 01:25:17,244 --> 01:25:20,112 ...putting that at the end. I think that's some ideas he had... 1506 01:25:20,347 --> 01:25:22,248 ...but we were all rather kind of groping. 1507 01:25:22,450 --> 01:25:27,354 The film was gonna be produced and directed by Lambert/Stamp. 1508 01:25:27,555 --> 01:25:29,251 I mean, no one else, right? 1509 01:25:29,457 --> 01:25:32,450 So we're gonna make this film, and we're gonna make it our way. 1510 01:25:32,693 --> 01:25:34,594 We're gonna cast it our way... 1511 01:25:34,829 --> 01:25:38,698 ...and we're gonna sort of, like, do it, and it's gonna be another level. 1512 01:25:38,899 --> 01:25:44,702 And suddenly, Pete Townshend balks at this idea. 1513 01:25:44,905 --> 01:25:49,138 The first sort of "pfft" in the camp. 1514 01:25:49,376 --> 01:25:50,571 Right? The first breakup. 1515 01:25:50,778 --> 01:25:53,577 You know, just on an emotional level, you know... 1516 01:25:53,781 --> 01:25:58,116 ...Kit and I weren't even gonna attempt to make the movie without Pete. 1517 01:25:58,352 --> 01:26:01,550 What had happened was that they'd come at me with a script... 1518 01:26:01,756 --> 01:26:04,487 ...with a treatment, and I wouldn't look at it. 1519 01:26:04,725 --> 01:26:07,627 I'm not... You know, I'm not gonna allow a film to be made. 1520 01:26:07,862 --> 01:26:11,299 I'm not gonna allow you to make a film. Because I didn't want to lose them. 1521 01:26:11,866 --> 01:26:13,095 I felt already that they were going... 1522 01:26:13,300 --> 01:26:16,293 ...I thought they were going to Hollywood, so I wouldn't look at it. 1523 01:26:16,504 --> 01:26:19,440 And what was bad about it was the way I'd handled it. 1524 01:26:20,407 --> 01:26:22,808 And what I see now is Pete was afraid, now... 1525 01:26:23,010 --> 01:26:25,502 ...that if Lambert and Stamp do the film... 1526 01:26:25,746 --> 01:26:27,180 ...then Lambert and Stamp... 1527 01:26:27,414 --> 01:26:30,578 ...being the producer-managers of The Who is sort of over. 1528 01:26:30,785 --> 01:26:33,448 We have also... We've completed our cycle... 1529 01:26:33,654 --> 01:26:36,988 ...we've come back to make... And we make our film, and we leave. 1530 01:26:37,191 --> 01:26:41,295 We become the bad parents who are abandoning them, right? 1531 01:26:41,296 --> 01:26:45,756 What happened was, is that Kit appropriated it... 1532 01:26:45,966 --> 01:26:48,697 ...the piece, as an opportunity to make a movie. 1533 01:26:48,936 --> 01:26:53,897 He took the story, he wrote a script around it... 1534 01:26:54,108 --> 01:26:57,909 ...which was loosely based on the story that I'd written. 1535 01:26:58,345 --> 01:26:59,643 Um... 1536 01:26:59,847 --> 01:27:02,316 And... 1537 01:27:03,984 --> 01:27:07,045 Registered it as a grand right. 1538 01:27:07,288 --> 01:27:11,055 And took it to Universal... 1539 01:27:11,292 --> 01:27:14,319 ...and tried to persuade them to make a movie and... 1540 01:27:14,528 --> 01:27:17,293 Meanwhile, I was on to the next thing, you know, so... 1541 01:27:17,631 --> 01:27:20,931 And, Tommy, he never got to make Tommy... 1542 01:27:21,135 --> 01:27:25,800 ...but felt that he should do, you know, and... 1543 01:27:26,006 --> 01:27:27,668 Um... 1544 01:27:28,075 --> 01:27:30,544 And we never really worked together again after that. 1545 01:27:35,516 --> 01:27:39,715 In Kit's myth, he'd been conceived in Venice, if you like. 1546 01:27:40,254 --> 01:27:43,224 His father and mother were on their honeymoon... 1547 01:27:43,457 --> 01:27:46,450 ...or Constant was playing some sort of orchestra or something. 1548 01:27:46,660 --> 01:27:49,027 And Kit had this thing about Venice... 1549 01:27:49,230 --> 01:27:51,461 ...that it was his... There was some other draw. 1550 01:27:51,665 --> 01:27:58,663 In 1971, um, Kit rented a floor of a palazzo on the Grand Canal... 1551 01:27:58,873 --> 01:28:01,866 ...and it was quite, quite magical. 1552 01:28:02,343 --> 01:28:04,335 He obviously developed a taste for Venice... 1553 01:28:04,545 --> 01:28:07,709 ...because very soon he bought his own palazzo... 1554 01:28:07,915 --> 01:28:09,213 ...the Palazzo Dario. 1555 01:28:09,416 --> 01:28:13,478 Kit bought it from some Italian nobleman. 1556 01:28:13,687 --> 01:28:16,521 Or rather the estate of some Italian nobleman... 1557 01:28:16,724 --> 01:28:19,751 ...who had been murdered by his Yugoslav boyfriend... 1558 01:28:19,994 --> 01:28:22,725 ...I think, about six or seven months before. 1559 01:28:22,930 --> 01:28:27,595 And Jane and I found ourselves sleeping in the murder bedroom. 1560 01:28:28,068 --> 01:28:32,506 And one morning, I was scrambling about under the bed for my slippers... 1561 01:28:32,706 --> 01:28:36,074 ...and I felt something sort of slightly soft and plastic. 1562 01:28:36,277 --> 01:28:42,547 And I touched it, and I realized that it was a gout of blood. 1563 01:28:42,750 --> 01:28:46,016 By that time, Kit was becoming quite well known. 1564 01:28:46,220 --> 01:28:49,588 He was known as "Il Barone," "Il Barone Lambert." 1565 01:28:49,790 --> 01:28:53,158 And so I think when he started to make good money... 1566 01:28:53,394 --> 01:28:55,022 ...I think he rather anticipated... 1567 01:28:55,229 --> 01:28:58,757 ...the receiving of money by spending it early... 1568 01:28:58,966 --> 01:29:01,265 ...but eventually he did make a lot of money. 1569 01:29:01,468 --> 01:29:04,131 And so everyone had money, for the first time. 1570 01:29:04,338 --> 01:29:07,740 Now, that was sort of needed, nice for everyone to have some security. 1571 01:29:07,942 --> 01:29:10,241 And so when the Tommy thing didn't continue... 1572 01:29:10,444 --> 01:29:12,970 ...straight on into a film, there was this sort of gap. 1573 01:29:13,180 --> 01:29:15,945 You know, the actual life that came about was normal life... 1574 01:29:16,150 --> 01:29:17,948 ...and we all wanted some normal life. 1575 01:29:18,152 --> 01:29:20,053 People had started to buy houses... 1576 01:29:20,254 --> 01:29:21,950 ...and John had gotten married. 1577 01:29:22,156 --> 01:29:24,648 He'd married his schoolgirl sweetheart, and, um... 1578 01:29:24,858 --> 01:29:27,418 They've also started to make babies... 1579 01:29:27,628 --> 01:29:29,324 ...you know, have girlfriends. 1580 01:29:29,563 --> 01:29:34,797 Kit found me having a conventional little family... 1581 01:29:35,002 --> 01:29:38,166 ...that was gonna lead to me having children and a house and stuff... 1582 01:29:38,372 --> 01:29:39,965 ...he found it very bourgeois. 1583 01:29:40,207 --> 01:29:42,676 And was quite antagonistic. 1584 01:29:43,143 --> 01:29:47,137 They're not quite as, dangerously out of control... 1585 01:29:47,348 --> 01:29:48,680 ...right, as Kit and I. 1586 01:29:48,882 --> 01:29:51,078 I mean, you know, we were gonna go to the edge. 1587 01:30:02,229 --> 01:30:05,825 Kit went to New York and started to produce records there... 1588 01:30:06,033 --> 01:30:07,228 ...and had some success. 1589 01:30:07,468 --> 01:30:12,304 The life of New York then was... You know, matched Kit's own decadence. 1590 01:30:12,506 --> 01:30:14,668 There was a lot of coke, a lot of drugs... 1591 01:30:14,875 --> 01:30:16,537 ...a lot of, like, action, whatever. 1592 01:30:16,744 --> 01:30:21,478 I cried when Kit called me and invited me to New York to work... 1593 01:30:21,682 --> 01:30:25,141 ...because I'd kind of really lost heart in the Lifehouse project. 1594 01:30:25,652 --> 01:30:27,985 Battering away, battering away, battering away... 1595 01:30:28,188 --> 01:30:32,717 ...trying to get people to get inside what it was that I was trying to get across. 1596 01:30:33,160 --> 01:30:34,651 I knew I had this great music... 1597 01:30:34,862 --> 01:30:38,264 ...but just not the craft and skills to deliver a story that made sense... 1598 01:30:38,499 --> 01:30:40,764 ...and not any idea about how it would work... 1599 01:30:41,001 --> 01:30:43,436 ...that was a hopeful return to a project... 1600 01:30:43,670 --> 01:30:46,071 ...if not a frontline production process... 1601 01:30:46,273 --> 01:30:50,074 ...certainly one in which he would have some kind of mentoring figure in it... 1602 01:30:50,277 --> 01:30:52,542 - That's right, that's right. - ...as he had on Tommy. 1603 01:30:53,013 --> 01:30:56,279 The next rift type of thing came about with... 1604 01:30:56,517 --> 01:30:59,009 ...what became the Who's Next album. 1605 01:30:59,219 --> 01:31:02,678 The Who's Next album was a conceptual project... 1606 01:31:02,890 --> 01:31:05,382 ...a rock opera called Lifehouse. 1607 01:31:05,592 --> 01:31:10,053 And Kit didn't actually think the piece was right... 1608 01:31:10,264 --> 01:31:14,224 ...because he thought the idea, which was a mystical idea... 1609 01:31:14,435 --> 01:31:16,097 ...was too mystical. 1610 01:31:16,303 --> 01:31:20,934 And also, I think, unconsciously Kit was, like, wounded in a sense of saying: 1611 01:31:21,175 --> 01:31:23,406 "Why should I work with Pete on Lifehouse? 1612 01:31:23,610 --> 01:31:25,943 So you can fuck me when I wanna make a film of it?" 1613 01:31:26,180 --> 01:31:29,173 I don't know. That's purely come to my head for the first time. 1614 01:31:29,383 --> 01:31:32,581 Kit did help. Um... 1615 01:31:34,221 --> 01:31:38,420 He brought us to New York, where he was based, working with Patti LaBelle. 1616 01:31:38,625 --> 01:31:42,118 And he thought we should invite all the great New York musicians to help. 1617 01:31:42,329 --> 01:31:45,993 Just... Not actually to do finished recordings. That wasn't Kit's idea. 1618 01:31:46,233 --> 01:31:48,793 The idea of Kit's was to, sort of, shift the focus. 1619 01:31:49,002 --> 01:31:55,238 Um, Pete had had issues with Kit on production, um... 1620 01:31:55,609 --> 01:31:59,569 ...of Who's Next, which was kind of all a bit of a mystery... 1621 01:31:59,780 --> 01:32:02,477 ...to the rest of the band, because something happened... 1622 01:32:02,716 --> 01:32:04,844 ...between Pete and Kit, and we don't know what. 1623 01:32:05,085 --> 01:32:07,486 We went to... We did some recording of Who's Next... 1624 01:32:07,721 --> 01:32:10,520 ...in New York, which sounded great to me. 1625 01:32:10,757 --> 01:32:12,248 Um... 1626 01:32:13,627 --> 01:32:16,324 Came back to England, and the next thing we know... 1627 01:32:16,530 --> 01:32:17,964 ...we're gonna re-record it. 1628 01:32:18,165 --> 01:32:21,431 And these decisions were all made by Pete, who, you know... 1629 01:32:21,635 --> 01:32:23,831 ...now was gaining more and more control. 1630 01:32:28,642 --> 01:32:31,806 Kit was making a new life in New York. 1631 01:32:32,012 --> 01:32:36,677 There was a sort of a sense of safety for Kit in that world. 1632 01:32:36,884 --> 01:32:41,822 We didn't see what Kit was building for himself there, and how carefully... 1633 01:32:42,022 --> 01:32:45,288 ...he was structuring it, and how it was very much from his old world. 1634 01:32:45,492 --> 01:32:47,961 It became clear that Kit was in bad shape... 1635 01:32:48,162 --> 01:32:51,564 ...but the most important thing was that Keith was... 1636 01:32:51,798 --> 01:32:54,324 It wasn't right for Keith to be working in New York. 1637 01:32:54,535 --> 01:32:57,266 He was using narcotics, and we were very worried about him. 1638 01:32:57,471 --> 01:33:01,067 So we had him and Kit at the same time... 1639 01:33:01,308 --> 01:33:04,506 ...and it was almost like, you know, who do we keep an eye on? 1640 01:33:04,711 --> 01:33:06,407 At the end, on Quadrophenia... 1641 01:33:06,647 --> 01:33:09,014 ...when we got to the studio, Kit did that thing... 1642 01:33:09,216 --> 01:33:11,776 ...of showing up about two or three hours late. 1643 01:33:11,985 --> 01:33:17,356 Did really lose my temper with him one night, because he was so disruptive. 1644 01:33:17,558 --> 01:33:19,220 What happened? 1645 01:33:19,426 --> 01:33:23,522 I just... You know, just kind of went for him and... 1646 01:33:23,730 --> 01:33:26,427 I didn't do anything, I didn't hit him. I really wanted to. 1647 01:33:26,667 --> 01:33:28,659 I wanted to throw him down the stairs. 1648 01:33:28,869 --> 01:33:32,169 And he started to cry, and he was... 1649 01:33:32,372 --> 01:33:34,898 He was obviously in very bad shape. 1650 01:33:35,108 --> 01:33:37,009 You know, he suddenly broke down. 1651 01:33:37,211 --> 01:33:39,806 I was saying to him, "You let me down, you let me down." 1652 01:33:40,013 --> 01:33:44,109 "This is a very hard project. I can't do it on my own. It's too hard. 1653 01:33:44,351 --> 01:33:46,513 There's so much to do." I'd just come out of... 1654 01:33:46,720 --> 01:33:50,714 I was in the middle of, actually... Dealing with two other quite big things. 1655 01:33:50,924 --> 01:33:54,622 One was... I'd got involved with, Eric Clapton... 1656 01:33:54,861 --> 01:33:58,559 ...and his, you know, recovery from the grave of the day. 1657 01:33:58,765 --> 01:34:02,224 But also we were preparing the Tommy film. 1658 01:34:02,436 --> 01:34:06,771 So I was really quite hard-pressed and really wanted... 1659 01:34:06,974 --> 01:34:08,704 Just needed a bit of help with... 1660 01:34:08,909 --> 01:34:12,607 Because it was kind of done, but it needed a bit of... 1661 01:34:12,846 --> 01:34:14,974 It needed Kit, really. 1662 01:34:15,215 --> 01:34:16,911 And, um... 1663 01:34:17,117 --> 01:34:21,578 Anyway, it would have been a different ball of string if he'd have been around. 1664 01:34:21,788 --> 01:34:24,656 But that was the last attempt that he had of... 1665 01:34:24,891 --> 01:34:27,760 At being, you know, part of things. 1666 01:34:27,761 --> 01:34:30,856 I went to collect Kit from a nursing home. 1667 01:34:31,064 --> 01:34:35,092 I think he was drying out from alcohol. I went to collect him from a nursing home... 1668 01:34:35,302 --> 01:34:38,397 ...I think in Redding, to drive him to stay with us. 1669 01:34:38,605 --> 01:34:42,007 And he insisted on saying: 1670 01:34:42,242 --> 01:34:44,234 "I want to stop somewhere on the way." 1671 01:34:44,444 --> 01:34:46,504 And he stopped off at a wine merchant's. 1672 01:34:46,747 --> 01:34:49,307 And although he was not meant to be drinking himself... 1673 01:34:49,516 --> 01:34:52,782 ...he brought us three bottles of some of the most wonderful claret... 1674 01:34:52,986 --> 01:34:55,080 ...I've ever drunk in my life. 1675 01:34:56,089 --> 01:35:01,118 Kit's idea of Venice... He bought the palazzo. He would start to write there. 1676 01:35:01,328 --> 01:35:05,424 This was a bit of a idealistic dream, but he... That was his idea. 1677 01:35:05,632 --> 01:35:10,297 Track was gonna transship vinyl to Russia and to India... 1678 01:35:10,504 --> 01:35:12,803 ...you know, which you couldn't do business. 1679 01:35:13,006 --> 01:35:14,941 Records weren't allowed to be sold. 1680 01:35:15,142 --> 01:35:19,136 So we would transship them for goods through Venice, right? 1681 01:35:19,346 --> 01:35:22,111 Which was just a very solid business idea. 1682 01:35:22,316 --> 01:35:24,217 It was before the Wall came down... 1683 01:35:24,451 --> 01:35:29,185 ...and there was this whole market of rock 'n' roll that wanted it madly. 1684 01:35:29,423 --> 01:35:32,154 And we would give it to them and take all the money. 1685 01:35:32,359 --> 01:35:34,487 But we would then leave it in Venice. 1686 01:35:34,695 --> 01:35:38,063 And Kit's idea was to create all the money for Venice In Peril. 1687 01:35:38,298 --> 01:35:40,563 That's what Kit wanted. To save Venice, because... 1688 01:35:40,801 --> 01:35:44,238 ...he considered it an incredible artistic creative center. 1689 01:35:44,471 --> 01:35:49,466 So his idea was to, sort of, do things that were socially, sort of, giving. 1690 01:35:51,445 --> 01:35:53,641 I'd offered all the four members of The Who... 1691 01:35:53,847 --> 01:35:57,807 ...ten percent each of Track Records. 1692 01:35:58,018 --> 01:36:01,318 The idea was that Track Records would become, like, the bigger company. 1693 01:36:01,521 --> 01:36:06,255 They would be partners in it, and that they would come into the fold. 1694 01:36:06,493 --> 01:36:12,524 Our roles as managers and, sort of, day-to-day, sort of, studio producers... 1695 01:36:12,733 --> 01:36:14,759 ...would fade into something else... 1696 01:36:15,001 --> 01:36:18,199 ...as they become bigger, to be part of this thing. 1697 01:36:18,405 --> 01:36:20,067 And they refused this. 1698 01:36:20,273 --> 01:36:22,469 It was a gift to say to these guys: 1699 01:36:22,676 --> 01:36:25,840 "We are tired of this job and we're not so together anymore." 1700 01:36:26,046 --> 01:36:29,778 You know, "Come in and help us in a different way." 1701 01:36:30,016 --> 01:36:34,078 And, you know, what we weren't good at was we weren't good at the psychology. 1702 01:36:34,287 --> 01:36:36,688 Because, you know, we were saying to them: 1703 01:36:36,890 --> 01:36:39,883 "We don't want to be your managers anymore, come in to Track." 1704 01:36:40,093 --> 01:36:42,255 And they took it badly. 1705 01:36:42,696 --> 01:36:44,927 I've had conversation with Roger subsequently... 1706 01:36:45,132 --> 01:36:47,727 ...and, um, I mean, he's just very emotional. 1707 01:36:47,934 --> 01:36:51,735 I mean, he'd created the band, more or less. He's the leader of the band. 1708 01:36:51,938 --> 01:36:55,397 He'd had a terrible time because that was taken away from him, you know? 1709 01:36:55,609 --> 01:36:57,009 The leadership, per se. 1710 01:36:57,210 --> 01:37:00,078 And he was really concerned... 1711 01:37:00,280 --> 01:37:04,911 ...that, like, the way that Kit and I were, in our drug using... 1712 01:37:05,118 --> 01:37:10,386 ...or whatever it was, that a lot of damage would be done. 1713 01:37:10,590 --> 01:37:13,583 The early '70s coincided with two things. 1714 01:37:13,794 --> 01:37:19,426 You know, one was The Who becoming a road war machine, and the other... 1715 01:37:19,633 --> 01:37:22,068 ...with Kit Lambert becoming a heroin addict. 1716 01:37:22,269 --> 01:37:28,573 In 1973, he explained that he was in a bad way, and he admitted... 1717 01:37:28,775 --> 01:37:32,234 ...he was taking a lot of drugs, and he wanted... 1718 01:37:32,446 --> 01:37:36,645 He asked me if I would represent his interests. 1719 01:37:36,850 --> 01:37:40,184 And I said, "Look, I really am not cut out for this kind of thing." 1720 01:37:40,620 --> 01:37:45,251 And I helped Bill Curbishley organize a European tour... 1721 01:37:45,459 --> 01:37:49,294 ...sometime in sixty... In '74, I think it was. 1722 01:37:49,496 --> 01:37:51,328 I have to say I was not cut out for it. 1723 01:37:51,498 --> 01:37:54,798 Um, and it was difficult to talk to Kit about it at that time... 1724 01:37:55,001 --> 01:37:58,301 ...because if I tried to ask him questions, "Now, what do you think? 1725 01:37:58,505 --> 01:38:02,442 How should we... What sort of percentage should we ask for The Who?" 1726 01:38:02,642 --> 01:38:05,669 He didn't want to talk about that. He wanted to talk about something else. 1727 01:38:05,879 --> 01:38:08,815 He didn't seem to want to talk about business at all. 1728 01:38:09,783 --> 01:38:16,383 In 19... Was it '74? I had to instigate... 1729 01:38:16,623 --> 01:38:20,219 ...leaving them as managers, because it was so out of control. 1730 01:38:20,861 --> 01:38:22,955 Not, um... 1731 01:38:24,464 --> 01:38:26,729 Not an easy decision. 1732 01:38:26,967 --> 01:38:30,096 The Who have become a multimillion-pound corporation. 1733 01:38:30,303 --> 01:38:33,296 Their business empire is based here at Shepperton Studios... 1734 01:38:33,507 --> 01:38:37,535 ...where their trucking, laser and sound equipment businesses are housed. 1735 01:38:37,744 --> 01:38:41,875 During the last few years, The Who's other interests have diversified so much... 1736 01:38:42,115 --> 01:38:46,553 ...that people have wondered whether they're musicians or businessmen. 1737 01:38:50,023 --> 01:38:52,492 Director Ken Russell and producer Robert Stigwood... 1738 01:38:52,692 --> 01:38:54,684 ...have made a film of Tommy. 1739 01:38:55,128 --> 01:38:58,860 Kit saw my betrayal as Tommy the film. 1740 01:38:59,065 --> 01:39:02,729 The unspoken deal was that him and... You know, Lambert and Stamp... 1741 01:39:02,936 --> 01:39:06,498 ...would make the rock film. And when I went with Stigwood... 1742 01:39:06,706 --> 01:39:09,733 And I went with him because it was still difficult at that stage. 1743 01:39:09,943 --> 01:39:11,741 Elton John, Eric Clapton... 1744 01:39:11,945 --> 01:39:15,848 So Stigwood equals Ken Russell equaled Columbia, and that's basically it. 1745 01:39:16,049 --> 01:39:19,850 And then Stigwood said to me, um, you know, "But I can't have Kit around." 1746 01:39:20,053 --> 01:39:21,681 Your senses will never be the same. 1747 01:39:21,888 --> 01:39:24,016 And when Kit was going slightly mad, slightly off the wall... 1748 01:39:24,224 --> 01:39:27,717 ...more eccentric than normal, he got very frightened of Kit. 1749 01:39:29,162 --> 01:39:33,759 Kit felt sort of rejected by me. 1750 01:39:33,967 --> 01:39:35,799 He felt rejected by Pete. 1751 01:39:36,169 --> 01:39:37,865 He didn't feel rejected by Keith. 1752 01:39:38,071 --> 01:39:41,906 Keith made it very clear that he was there for him, you know? 1753 01:39:42,108 --> 01:39:48,070 But he... But the two... The two poles in his life were Pete and me. Ahem. 1754 01:39:48,281 --> 01:39:52,218 If I tried to deal with him, he would be firing pieces of handwritten paper at me... 1755 01:39:52,419 --> 01:39:55,719 ...which were the writs that he was gonna smack on the film. 1756 01:39:55,922 --> 01:39:57,083 He somehow let go. 1757 01:39:57,290 --> 01:39:59,987 This kind of classic addiction, alcoholic stuff. 1758 01:40:00,226 --> 01:40:04,322 Unable to hang on to reality, but just falling into... 1759 01:40:04,564 --> 01:40:07,261 ...you know, deep, deep, deep anger and resentment. 1760 01:40:07,467 --> 01:40:11,063 You know, deeply felt resentment, which eats and eats and eats away... 1761 01:40:11,271 --> 01:40:15,641 ...and in the end, you know, you're the one that gets it. 1762 01:40:16,076 --> 01:40:17,203 It's a drag. 1763 01:40:17,410 --> 01:40:19,743 I'm... I'm still functioning. 1764 01:40:19,946 --> 01:40:22,643 I'm the one who's functioning. Kit isn't functioning. 1765 01:40:22,849 --> 01:40:26,945 His life was getting incredibly complicated. He'd lost his house... 1766 01:40:27,420 --> 01:40:30,219 Um, being a ward of the court, he didn't have... 1767 01:40:30,423 --> 01:40:33,291 ...the freedom to access his money and all those things, right? 1768 01:40:33,493 --> 01:40:36,486 Well, his view of me changed around... 1769 01:40:36,663 --> 01:40:39,599 Um, he was getting slightly paranoid. 1770 01:40:39,799 --> 01:40:43,292 He didn't think he was being confided in and respected in the way... 1771 01:40:43,503 --> 01:40:46,029 ...he thought he should be by The Who, whatever, right? 1772 01:40:46,272 --> 01:40:50,471 He's paranoid. Paranoid is a paranoia. It's a type of mental illness, right? 1773 01:40:50,677 --> 01:40:54,978 It's the same as, like, being a mentally-ill alcoholic or an addict, right? 1774 01:40:55,181 --> 01:40:59,185 You're not quite in touch with reality, per se. 1775 01:40:59,252 --> 01:41:03,053 And at the end of that, Roger and I had to kind of... 1776 01:41:03,289 --> 01:41:06,555 ...just face the fact that it was kind of up to us really. 1777 01:41:06,793 --> 01:41:10,628 You know, and that was hard, that was a hard lesson... 1778 01:41:10,830 --> 01:41:14,289 ...because we'd never really established a proper, sort of, working... 1779 01:41:14,501 --> 01:41:16,163 You know, a way of working together. 1780 01:41:16,369 --> 01:41:21,069 Kit had been the intermediary, you know? He was who we worked for. Through. 1781 01:41:21,307 --> 01:41:24,505 You know, we struggled and I don't think we ever really found a way... 1782 01:41:24,711 --> 01:41:28,648 ...of working together that was as good as having him there. 1783 01:41:36,856 --> 01:41:39,690 ♪ I went to Dallas back in '82 ♪♪ 1784 01:41:39,893 --> 01:41:41,020 Keith was in California. 1785 01:41:41,227 --> 01:41:43,219 I stayed with him in California, he was going through a bad time. 1786 01:41:43,430 --> 01:41:47,231 I stayed in his house, was there for him. I tried to get his record together. 1787 01:41:47,434 --> 01:41:49,926 I tried to like clean him up as best as I could, right? 1788 01:41:50,170 --> 01:41:52,901 Whatever it was. I was just there as his friend, right? 1789 01:41:53,339 --> 01:41:54,705 He moved in with Kit. 1790 01:41:55,842 --> 01:41:57,367 Right? At one time, and then... 1791 01:41:57,577 --> 01:41:59,808 ...he also would come over to my house. 1792 01:42:00,513 --> 01:42:05,178 In the complaint from The Who to the various companies, right... 1793 01:42:05,385 --> 01:42:08,355 I mean, the time it was originally signed... 1794 01:42:08,555 --> 01:42:11,957 ...it was only actually signed by Roger and John. 1795 01:42:12,192 --> 01:42:15,390 So Pete had eventually gone along with it. 1796 01:42:15,595 --> 01:42:20,829 But Keith had been the one member of the group... 1797 01:42:21,034 --> 01:42:24,903 ...who refused to sign those legal documents... 1798 01:42:25,105 --> 01:42:26,937 ...against Kit and I. 1799 01:42:27,273 --> 01:42:30,573 He said, "I'm not gonna sign anything to do with hurting Kit or Chris." 1800 01:42:31,644 --> 01:42:35,445 So we had one meeting where Keith and the whole group were there. 1801 01:42:35,648 --> 01:42:38,345 And Sam Sylvester was listing off the things... 1802 01:42:38,551 --> 01:42:41,851 ...that were on the original complaint. 1803 01:42:42,055 --> 01:42:45,924 And every time there was something about Kit and Chris... 1804 01:42:46,126 --> 01:42:48,095 ...Keith would answer. 1805 01:42:48,461 --> 01:42:50,794 When money was missing, "No, you don't understand. 1806 01:42:50,997 --> 01:42:53,660 Kit and Chris had to spend money getting me out of prison. 1807 01:42:53,900 --> 01:42:55,493 Kit and Chris had to..." You know? 1808 01:42:55,735 --> 01:42:59,103 He was the best defense lawyer on our behalf. 1809 01:42:59,672 --> 01:43:02,972 Um, so, when... 1810 01:43:03,610 --> 01:43:06,011 ...um, he died... 1811 01:43:07,514 --> 01:43:08,914 The Who, with their lawyers... 1812 01:43:09,115 --> 01:43:12,017 ...wanted to get together with me the day after the funeral. 1813 01:43:13,520 --> 01:43:14,681 They came here, right? 1814 01:43:14,921 --> 01:43:16,947 To Shepperton Studios, where Kit and I met. 1815 01:43:18,424 --> 01:43:20,757 The Who own Shepperton Studios, right? 1816 01:43:21,194 --> 01:43:23,686 And so... But that was the symbol of Keith dying... 1817 01:43:23,930 --> 01:43:25,762 ...and then this meeting. 1818 01:43:25,965 --> 01:43:31,302 So when I walked in here, into this boardroom, at Shepperton here... 1819 01:43:31,504 --> 01:43:33,632 ...that was my frame of mind. 1820 01:43:33,840 --> 01:43:36,332 And we waited about... It was over half an hour. 1821 01:43:36,543 --> 01:43:39,308 And the person who lived nearest to Shepperton was Pete... 1822 01:43:39,512 --> 01:43:40,810 ...and he was the one that was late. 1823 01:43:41,147 --> 01:43:42,638 We're in the old house having this meeting... 1824 01:43:42,849 --> 01:43:44,010 ...discussing the management, right? 1825 01:43:44,217 --> 01:43:46,982 I'm there with my lawyer, in a raincoat, my one lawyer. 1826 01:43:47,187 --> 01:43:49,816 There's a bank of lawyers on the other side of the table. 1827 01:43:50,023 --> 01:43:52,959 And this is going on and, like... 1828 01:43:53,159 --> 01:43:55,628 ...I'm getting more and more crazy... 1829 01:43:55,829 --> 01:43:58,321 ...that I'm being sued for mismanagement, right? 1830 01:43:58,531 --> 01:44:03,526 Kit isn't there, Kit didn't show up. I don't have my support around me. 1831 01:44:03,736 --> 01:44:05,034 Kit is not doing well. 1832 01:44:06,039 --> 01:44:07,837 My life is pretty fucked up... 1833 01:44:08,041 --> 01:44:10,840 ...and my wife is... You know, I'm not with my wife. 1834 01:44:11,044 --> 01:44:14,071 And for me, in that state of mind that I was in... 1835 01:44:16,182 --> 01:44:19,983 I just didn't want to continue anymore. And so that was in my mind. 1836 01:44:20,386 --> 01:44:22,719 I'm looking at this place... 1837 01:44:22,956 --> 01:44:27,257 ...this studio that, um, Kit and I met at, right... 1838 01:44:27,493 --> 01:44:29,325 ...that The Who now own. 1839 01:44:29,529 --> 01:44:31,725 Right? And I stood up and I said: 1840 01:44:31,965 --> 01:44:35,959 "Do you call this fucking mismanagement?" Right? 1841 01:44:36,169 --> 01:44:39,901 You know, referring to... They own Shepperton Studios. 1842 01:44:40,473 --> 01:44:43,966 I mean, what is fabulous management? 1843 01:44:44,177 --> 01:44:45,611 This is mismanagement? Right? 1844 01:44:45,845 --> 01:44:49,111 Anyway, I was trying to do the best I could. 1845 01:44:49,916 --> 01:44:51,851 But the best I could... 1846 01:44:52,051 --> 01:44:56,546 ...didn't include Kit... 1847 01:44:56,756 --> 01:45:00,090 ...because I couldn't get him to the table. 1848 01:45:00,526 --> 01:45:02,188 I was a manager... 1849 01:45:03,062 --> 01:45:05,088 ...and I wasn't able to hold my ground. 1850 01:45:05,632 --> 01:45:07,567 It's like, you know... 1851 01:45:07,767 --> 01:45:11,204 ...you can't get the lighting right, and you're the cameraman. 1852 01:45:12,071 --> 01:45:13,869 That's what I was doing. 1853 01:45:14,073 --> 01:45:17,009 I didn't have film in the camera. You know. 1854 01:45:17,210 --> 01:45:19,406 I knew that there was no way... 1855 01:45:19,612 --> 01:45:26,143 ...to, sort of, nicely move through this impasse. 1856 01:45:26,386 --> 01:45:31,586 So I just, as sensibly as I could... 1857 01:45:31,791 --> 01:45:37,025 ...I tried to resolve a way to just sign off from these guys. 1858 01:45:37,764 --> 01:45:39,392 Because I was in the studio... 1859 01:45:39,599 --> 01:45:41,932 ...and because this is where Kit and I first met... 1860 01:45:42,135 --> 01:45:45,299 ...and it was just so... It was all overwhelming. 1861 01:45:45,538 --> 01:45:48,599 So this place of the beginning of all things... 1862 01:45:48,808 --> 01:45:50,071 ...in my young life... 1863 01:45:50,276 --> 01:45:53,610 Becoming an assistant director at Shepperton for the first time... 1864 01:45:53,813 --> 01:45:54,906 ...and all of that... 1865 01:45:55,114 --> 01:45:58,915 ...it had all just ended up like this, you know? 1866 01:45:59,552 --> 01:46:01,987 When I thought about them, I... "Fuck them," you know? 1867 01:46:02,188 --> 01:46:04,987 I hated them. You know, "Scumbags." There wasn't any... 1868 01:46:05,191 --> 01:46:07,057 It was always like resentment. 1869 01:46:07,260 --> 01:46:09,320 I was angry, I was hurt, I was pissed off. 1870 01:46:09,562 --> 01:46:13,658 You know, I was full of self-pity. It was all this shit I hadn't done, right? 1871 01:46:13,866 --> 01:46:15,926 "These little fuckers," you know what I mean? 1872 01:46:16,135 --> 01:46:19,628 Like, I didn't get to make... I didn't even direct Tommy, you know? 1873 01:46:26,980 --> 01:46:29,814 Kit told me his father died... 1874 01:46:30,450 --> 01:46:32,885 ...at 45... 1875 01:46:33,119 --> 01:46:35,884 ...and that he thought he would die at 45 as well. 1876 01:46:39,125 --> 01:46:41,651 On my 45th birthday, um... 1877 01:46:41,861 --> 01:46:44,990 ...I woke up in a detox. 1878 01:46:45,198 --> 01:46:47,224 Which I had gone to, right, you know, specifically. 1879 01:46:47,400 --> 01:46:48,891 And I was 45. 1880 01:46:49,135 --> 01:46:51,730 So, um, you know... 1881 01:46:51,971 --> 01:46:55,100 ...from that point on, this idea of recovery... 1882 01:46:55,308 --> 01:46:58,210 ...of being a sober guy, began. 1883 01:46:58,544 --> 01:46:59,876 It began. 1884 01:47:09,522 --> 01:47:13,516 - Should we walk down to Kit's? - Okay, fine. Fine, fine. Okay. 1885 01:47:18,364 --> 01:47:21,198 There's someone in the audience who is a really, really... 1886 01:47:21,401 --> 01:47:23,893 Man who's very special in my life... 1887 01:47:24,137 --> 01:47:27,938 ...because The Who would never have been... 1888 01:47:28,174 --> 01:47:31,406 ...I'm sure, ever successful without the help... 1889 01:47:32,245 --> 01:47:35,147 ...of two special people. 1890 01:47:35,348 --> 01:47:38,147 In those days when we started, we were a little band... 1891 01:47:38,351 --> 01:47:40,286 ...and two people joined us. 1892 01:47:40,520 --> 01:47:42,751 There was Kit Lambert and there was Chris Stamp. 1893 01:47:44,223 --> 01:47:46,419 Sadly, Kit isn't around anymore... 1894 01:47:46,659 --> 01:47:49,094 ...but Chris Stamp is here tonight. 1895 01:47:51,030 --> 01:47:52,760 - And... - Sit down so he can see you. 1896 01:47:53,299 --> 01:47:55,859 I love him dearly and I've got to tell you... 1897 01:47:56,069 --> 01:47:57,264 ...they were so important. 1898 01:47:57,670 --> 01:47:59,969 They were the fifth and sixth members of this band. 1899 01:48:00,206 --> 01:48:03,574 They formed the shell of the egg that you know as The Who these days. 1900 01:48:03,776 --> 01:48:05,404 They guided us in every way. 1901 01:48:06,712 --> 01:48:09,978 And what Chris was really good at, was he was the ideas man. 1902 01:48:10,216 --> 01:48:13,277 He was the juggler, he was the magician saying: 1903 01:48:13,486 --> 01:48:16,115 "They can't just do an album. We've gotta be on the ball. 1904 01:48:16,322 --> 01:48:18,587 We gotta do something that's ahead of the curve." 1905 01:48:18,791 --> 01:48:20,487 It was so lovely to see you out there. 1906 01:48:20,726 --> 01:48:22,092 - Yeah, no, it was fucking great, man. - It really was. 1907 01:48:22,295 --> 01:48:24,730 I was, like... You know, I was near tears all the time. 1908 01:48:24,931 --> 01:48:26,797 You know what I mean? Because I was full. 1909 01:48:26,999 --> 01:48:30,094 I'm not mentioning it, but I loved all the shit you said about me. 1910 01:48:30,269 --> 01:48:32,795 - Ha-ha-ha. I don't want to... - Really, mate? 1911 01:48:33,005 --> 01:48:35,634 - I don't want to appear... Yes, yes, yes! - True. 1912 01:48:35,842 --> 01:48:38,141 And then, okay, I got sober. Right? 1913 01:48:39,512 --> 01:48:42,949 I mean, and by the act of getting sober, whatever that means... 1914 01:48:43,149 --> 01:48:45,948 What it meant for me was, you know, I expanded somewhat... 1915 01:48:46,152 --> 01:48:49,987 ...and started to sort of like, own myself, for what I was, right? 1916 01:48:50,223 --> 01:48:53,819 You know, and that was just a part of my life that was in the past. 1917 01:48:54,026 --> 01:48:56,291 I wasn't letting it live in me now, you know. 1918 01:48:56,496 --> 01:48:58,089 I wasn't, like, festering over it. 1919 01:48:58,297 --> 01:48:59,526 And then Roger called me. 1920 01:48:59,765 --> 01:49:01,927 Right? Roger called me. I think Pete called me. 1921 01:49:02,135 --> 01:49:04,627 I don't think they called me for any particular reason. 1922 01:49:04,837 --> 01:49:07,136 Roger was... Roger... 1923 01:49:07,340 --> 01:49:12,108 Roger, he had all sorts of ideas that he wanted to talk to me about. 1924 01:49:12,979 --> 01:49:14,140 You know. 1925 01:49:14,347 --> 01:49:16,839 So we talked about the ideas, right? 1926 01:49:17,183 --> 01:49:19,311 You know, he made amends with his part. 1927 01:49:19,519 --> 01:49:21,954 I sort of said, well, the same for me, you know? 1928 01:49:22,388 --> 01:49:26,382 I owned how I've left him behind. It wasn't one-sided. 1929 01:49:26,626 --> 01:49:28,788 And the first idea that came up between Roger and I... 1930 01:49:28,995 --> 01:49:31,294 ...was he wanted to make a film about Keith Moon. 1931 01:49:31,497 --> 01:49:33,329 And that seemed a way to move forward. 1932 01:49:33,533 --> 01:49:35,661 It was a film, it was another film, you know. 1933 01:49:35,868 --> 01:49:37,996 And so, we got a script organized. 1934 01:49:38,204 --> 01:49:41,140 We got it out to Hollywood, you know? 1935 01:49:41,340 --> 01:49:44,242 We raised money. 1936 01:49:51,851 --> 01:49:53,843 Well, The Who are being honored... 1937 01:49:54,053 --> 01:49:58,081 ...it's called the Kennedy Center Awards. 1938 01:49:58,591 --> 01:50:00,059 You're given an award... 1939 01:50:00,293 --> 01:50:05,391 ...it's an outstanding contribution to the arts and culture. 1940 01:50:05,998 --> 01:50:11,596 You know, I can also say that I was still happy they got it, right? 1941 01:50:11,837 --> 01:50:14,705 I was genuinely happy they got it. I wasn't sort of like: 1942 01:50:14,907 --> 01:50:18,036 "Yeah the fuckers, they've sold out." I didn't think like that. 1943 01:50:18,244 --> 01:50:21,180 The invitation came directly from Roger. 1944 01:50:21,380 --> 01:50:23,849 He was very gracious and very loving. 1945 01:50:24,050 --> 01:50:28,545 You know, Roger has an understanding that this group of people, alive and dead... 1946 01:50:28,754 --> 01:50:31,724 ...you know, where the centerpiece... 1947 01:50:31,924 --> 01:50:34,689 ...is something bigger than all of us, you know? 1948 01:50:34,894 --> 01:50:37,454 And Roger understands that in a very, sort of, deep way. 1949 01:50:37,730 --> 01:50:40,564 And so he, with a lot of love and a lot of graciousness... 1950 01:50:40,766 --> 01:50:44,203 ...insisted that I come. 1951 01:50:44,470 --> 01:50:47,099 And I was happy to accept, you know? 1952 01:50:47,340 --> 01:50:50,105 Because it's about something we were all involved with. 1953 01:50:50,343 --> 01:50:53,142 I mean, Kit is dead, Keith's dead, John's dead... 1954 01:50:53,779 --> 01:50:57,216 But overall, the people who were here today... 1955 01:50:57,416 --> 01:51:00,477 ...the three of us here today, of that era... And Bill Curbishley... 1956 01:51:00,720 --> 01:51:02,985 ...who's been here since, as the manager figure... 1957 01:51:03,222 --> 01:51:05,384 ...have been involved in this process. 1958 01:51:06,225 --> 01:51:09,286 Pete said something which I loved. 1959 01:51:09,495 --> 01:51:12,795 He said, "As I wrote on what The Who performed for... 1960 01:51:12,999 --> 01:51:15,798 ...the people who liked us felt seen and heard." Right? 1961 01:51:16,002 --> 01:51:19,769 He said, "Now that the fucking privileged understand and like my lyrics... 1962 01:51:19,972 --> 01:51:21,998 ...why the fuck am I still writing them?" 1963 01:51:23,009 --> 01:51:25,444 I didn't want my life to be like, well, I didn't get to make Tommy... 1964 01:51:25,645 --> 01:51:28,376 ...I didn't get to make The Who film, and I'm not making the Keith Moon film. 1965 01:51:28,581 --> 01:51:31,483 Right? So perhaps I shouldn't be making fucking films. 1966 01:51:33,119 --> 01:51:35,247 You know, perhaps that's not in the picture. 1967 01:51:35,454 --> 01:51:38,151 You know, I mean, it was obviously not working, right? 1968 01:51:38,391 --> 01:51:39,984 I hadn't pulled one out of the bag. 1969 01:51:40,192 --> 01:51:42,593 I hadn't directed this fucking great masterpiece... 1970 01:51:42,795 --> 01:51:46,288 ...that I'd been carrying around me since I'm like 16 or whatever it was. 1971 01:51:46,632 --> 01:51:48,828 Isn't that wild? The White House. 1972 01:51:49,035 --> 01:51:52,938 A lot of things we could've done, and should have done, and didn't do... 1973 01:51:53,139 --> 01:51:56,701 ...but we, you know, we did enough. You know, we spurred each other on. 1974 01:51:56,942 --> 01:52:00,435 We were sort of, like... You know, we were loving, man. 1975 01:52:00,680 --> 01:52:03,809 We were loving to each other, you know? 1976 01:52:04,016 --> 01:52:07,009 It's very difficult to, sort of, know, you know... 1977 01:52:07,219 --> 01:52:10,678 ...the moments that you love someone a lot of the time. 1978 01:52:13,459 --> 01:52:15,553 Yeah, love is giving. 1979 01:52:15,961 --> 01:52:19,454 Get a bit of love in your life, you could give a little bit, right? 1980 01:52:20,132 --> 01:52:23,466 It's called intimacy, you know, and all... 1981 01:52:23,669 --> 01:52:27,231 We want to naturally back off from all that shit, right? 1982 01:52:29,642 --> 01:52:32,077 And Kit Lambert, Chris Stamp, Pete Townshend... 1983 01:52:32,311 --> 01:52:34,712 ...Roger Daltrey, Keith Moon and John Entwistle... 1984 01:52:34,947 --> 01:52:38,577 ...didn't quite back off for a long period of time, you know? 1985 01:52:40,986 --> 01:52:44,889 We all thought we were sort of keeping our so-called "individual cool"... 1986 01:52:45,091 --> 01:52:46,491 ...but we weren't, you know? 1987 01:52:47,259 --> 01:52:49,353 We were there for each other... 1988 01:52:49,562 --> 01:52:51,190 ...you know, in an un-heroic way... 1989 01:52:51,397 --> 01:52:53,832 ...in a sensitive, frightening way. 1990 01:52:54,033 --> 01:52:56,195 Sensitive and frightening. 1991 01:52:56,402 --> 01:52:58,894 Just gonna pull your jacket so... 1992 01:52:59,105 --> 01:53:01,370 It's about to roll out. 1993 01:53:01,574 --> 01:53:03,372 - Is that the end of the roll? - Yeah. 1994 01:53:03,576 --> 01:53:05,340 That's the end of the night then. 1995 01:53:34,640 --> 01:53:37,610 ♪ Every day I get in the queue ♪ 1996 01:53:37,810 --> 01:53:39,574 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 1997 01:53:39,779 --> 01:53:42,544 ♪ To get on the bus That takes me to you ♪ 1998 01:53:42,748 --> 01:53:44,774 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 1999 01:53:45,017 --> 01:53:48,112 ♪ I'm so nervous I just sit and smile ♪ 2000 01:53:48,320 --> 01:53:49,913 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2001 01:53:50,122 --> 01:53:52,921 ♪ Your house is only another mile ♪ 2002 01:53:53,125 --> 01:53:55,390 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2003 01:53:55,594 --> 01:53:58,063 ♪ Thank you, driver, for getting me here ♪ 2004 01:53:58,264 --> 01:54:00,597 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2005 01:54:00,800 --> 01:54:03,463 ♪ You'll be an inspector, have no fear ♪ 2006 01:54:03,669 --> 01:54:05,763 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2007 01:54:05,971 --> 01:54:08,736 ♪ I don't wanna cause a fuss ♪ 2008 01:54:08,941 --> 01:54:11,069 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2009 01:54:11,277 --> 01:54:13,974 ♪ Can I buy your Magic Bus? ♪ 2010 01:54:14,180 --> 01:54:15,944 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2011 01:54:16,148 --> 01:54:17,844 ♪ No ♪ 2012 01:54:27,193 --> 01:54:29,856 ♪ I don't care how much I pay ♪ 2013 01:54:30,129 --> 01:54:31,961 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2014 01:54:32,164 --> 01:54:35,100 ♪ I'm gonna drive my bus To my baby each day ♪ 2015 01:54:35,301 --> 01:54:37,861 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2016 01:54:38,103 --> 01:54:40,197 ♪ Every day you'll see the dust ♪ 2017 01:54:40,439 --> 01:54:42,670 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2018 01:54:42,875 --> 01:54:45,845 ♪ As I drive to my baby In my Magic Bus ♪ 2019 01:54:46,078 --> 01:54:48,343 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2020 01:54:48,581 --> 01:54:50,982 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2021 01:54:51,183 --> 01:54:53,880 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2022 01:54:54,119 --> 01:54:56,486 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2023 01:54:59,158 --> 01:55:00,319 ♪ The Magic Bus ♪ 2024 01:55:00,526 --> 01:55:02,825 ♪ Give me a hundred The Magic Bus ♪ 2025 01:55:03,028 --> 01:55:05,463 ♪ She goes like thunder The Magic Bus ♪ 2026 01:55:05,664 --> 01:55:08,224 ♪ I won't take under The Magic Bus ♪ 2027 01:55:08,467 --> 01:55:11,232 ♪ It's a bus age wonder I want it, I want it, I want it ♪ 2028 01:55:11,470 --> 01:55:14,372 ♪ You can have her But this bus driving to hell ♪ 2029 01:55:14,540 --> 01:55:17,635 ♪ Onto my bus I wanted to sell ♪ 2030 01:55:17,810 --> 01:55:19,176 ♪ I wanna drive it ♪ 2031 01:55:37,663 --> 01:55:38,756 ♪ You can't have it ♪ 2032 01:55:41,333 --> 01:55:43,029 ♪ You can't have it ♪ 2033 01:55:44,236 --> 01:55:46,705 ♪ Thrupence and sixpence every day ♪ 2034 01:55:55,214 --> 01:55:57,945 ♪ Thrupence and sixpence every way ♪ 2035 01:56:05,591 --> 01:56:08,584 ♪ But I wanna buy your Magic Bus ♪ 2036 01:56:08,794 --> 01:56:11,354 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus Give me a hundred ♪ 2037 01:56:11,564 --> 01:56:14,056 ♪ I wanna buy your Magic Bus ♪ 2038 01:56:15,167 --> 01:56:17,466 ♪ She goes like thunder Magic Bus ♪ 2039 01:56:17,803 --> 01:56:20,568 ♪ Won't take under Magic Bus ♪ 2040 01:56:20,773 --> 01:56:22,708 ♪ I won't take under Magic Bus ♪ 2041 01:56:22,908 --> 01:56:25,400 ♪ It's a bus age wonder Magic bus ♪ 2042 01:56:25,611 --> 01:56:27,102 ♪ I ain't got enough ♪ 2043 01:56:27,313 --> 01:56:30,374 ♪ I want it, I want it, I want it ♪ 2044 01:56:30,549 --> 01:56:34,384 ♪ What they going on about God knows ♪ 2045 01:56:34,587 --> 01:56:37,421 ♪ I want it, I want it, I want it ♪ 2046 01:56:38,290 --> 01:56:40,259 ♪ Why don't he give it to him I don't know ♪ 2047 01:56:55,608 --> 01:56:57,975 ♪ The Magic Bus Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2048 01:56:58,210 --> 01:57:00,577 ♪ Magic Bus Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2049 01:57:00,779 --> 01:57:03,112 ♪ Magic Bus Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2050 01:57:03,315 --> 01:57:05,807 ♪ Magic Bus Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2051 01:57:06,018 --> 01:57:08,453 ♪ Magic Bus Too much, the Magic Bus ♪ 2052 01:57:08,654 --> 01:57:11,317 ♪ Too much, the Magic Bus ♪♪ 2053 01:57:22,468 --> 01:57:25,461 You've reached the voice mail of Chris Stamp. 2054 01:57:25,671 --> 01:57:28,163 Please leave a message. I'll call you back. Thank you.