The Who
The Who institutionalized chaos. Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey have spent sixty years in a partnership both describe with the enthusiasm of men discussing a shared mortgage; Keith Moon destroyed hotels as a hobby with its own budget line; and John Entwistle stood perfectly still through all of it. The band's internal violence — Daltrey once knocked Townshend out cold — is documented chiefly by the participants themselves, who cannot stop giving interviews about it.
The Who assembled in West London in 1964 from four men with four incompatible temperaments: Pete Townshend, the art-school conceptualist; Roger Daltrey, the sheet-metal-worker enforcer; John Entwistle, the immovable virtuoso; and Keith Moon, a force of nature wearing a drummer costume. The friction was not incidental to the music — Townshend has said repeatedly that the band's aggression onstage was real, because they largely disliked each other.
The violence began early and stayed in-house as often as not. In 1965 Daltrey was briefly fired from his own band after a physical confrontation over the others' drug use — flushing Moon's pills triggered a dressing-room fight — and was readmitted on probationary terms. In 1973 a fight over recording delays ended with Daltrey knocking Townshend unconscious with, by both men's accounts, a single punch. Moon, meanwhile, conducted a parallel career in demolition: the exploding toilets, the hotel bans, the car in the pool of legend (embellished, but anchored in genuine, invoiced destruction), and the 21st birthday party in Flint, Michigan that got the band banned from Holiday Inns.
The file also contains genuine tragedy — Moon's death in 1978, the 1979 Cincinnati crowd crush that killed eleven fans, Entwistle's death on the eve of a 2002 tour — each of which the band absorbed and, controversially at times, played through. Sixty years on, Townshend and Daltrey remain on the road, describing their relationship in interviews with a candour most couples reserve for counselling.
Timeline of unravelling
The High Numbers become The Who
Detours become The Who become the High Numbers (one flop single) become The Who again. Keith Moon reputedly earns the drum seat by destroying a rival band's kit at an audition — an accurate omen.
Roger Daltrey is fired from The Who
After Daltrey flushes Moon's amphetamines and the dispute turns physical, the band briefly fires its own singer during the year 'My Generation' is released. He is reinstated within days on a promise of restraint the others found hilarious in retrospect.
Auto-destruction as a business expense
Townshend's guitar-smashing — begun accidentally at the Railway Tavern — becomes doctrine; Moon matches it with his kit. The band spends its early years operating at a loss substantially because it destroys its own equipment nightly, a business model management describes through gritted teeth as 'branding.'
The exploding drum kit, live on American TV
On the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, Moon overloads his bass drum with flash powder. The detonation at the end of 'My Generation' cuts studio cameras, singes Townshend (who credits the blast in part for his hearing damage) and embeds shrapnel in Moon's arm. Bette Davis, waiting in the wings, is reported to have fainted.
Flint, Michigan: the birthday that banned a band
Moon's 21st birthday party at a Flint Holiday Inn escalates into legend: a demolished room, a fire-extinguished parade of chaos, a knocked-out tooth, and a lifetime Holiday Inn ban for the band. The car-in-the-pool detail grew in the telling — Moon being the primary teller — but the invoice was real.
Tommy, Leeds, and a punch
Tommy and Live at Leeds make The Who arguably the greatest live band on Earth. Offstage, the Quadrophenia era boils over: in 1973 a studio argument ends with Daltrey knocking Townshend out cold; on the tour's opening night, a tranquilizer-incapacitated Moon collapses twice, and Townshend asks the crowd if anyone can play drums — 19-year-old audience member Scot Halpin finishes the show.
Moon's decline and death
Moon's addictions overwhelm his playing; sessions for Who Are You (1978) are difficult, and the album cover shows him seated on a chair labelled 'Not to be taken away.' Weeks after its release, Moon dies of an overdose of the medication prescribed to manage his alcohol withdrawal. He was 32.
Cincinnati
Eleven fans die in a crowd crush outside Riverfront Coliseum before a Who concert; the band, not informed until after the show, learns the scale of the tragedy afterward and plays the next night in Buffalo after agonized debate. The disaster reshapes US crowd-management law — festival seating was banned in Cincinnati for decades — and the band returned in 2022 to honour the victims.
The first farewell (of several)
Exhausted and grieving, the band stages a farewell tour in 1982 and formally splits in 1983 — inaugurating rock's most porous retirement. Reunions follow in 1985 (Live Aid), 1988 and 1989, establishing The Who's signature late-period genre: the definitive final tour, annually.
Entwistle dies on the eve of the tour
John Entwistle dies in Las Vegas the night before a US tour opener, of a heart attack with cocaine a contributing factor. After brief postponement, Townshend and Daltrey controversially proceed with the tour — a decision they defended as the only way through, and critics called something colder.
The eternal duet
Townshend and Daltrey continue as The Who, releasing WHO (2019) and touring with orchestras. Their interviews remain a genre unto themselves: each periodically announces the other is impossible, the partnership loveless or the band finished, before the next tour is announced. Daltrey has summarized the relationship as two men who never really knew each other. They have worked together for sixty years.
Who held the thread
The Who endures as a two-man institution with session support, a catalogue in perpetual licensing (CSI alone kept three of their songs in weekly circulation for years), and a farewell-tour practice now in its fifth decade. The 2025 drummer saga — Zak Starkey dismissed, reinstated, then dismissed again within weeks, with duelling statements — confirmed the band can still generate personnel drama with a lineup of two.
Their file matters because they made the dysfunction itself the show: the smashed guitars, the exploding kit and the onstage fury weren't marketing gloss over a happy band, but the audible surface of a genuinely combustible one. That the two survivors still tour together, while cheerfully testifying they were never really friends, may be the most honest sixty-year partnership in rock.
Further reading & official links
- Official site — thewho.com ↗ external
- Wikipedia — The Who ↗ external
- Wikipedia — Keith Moon ↗ external
External links are provided for reference. The Threads is not affiliated with any linked site, artist, or organization, and does not control external content. Facts above are drawn from widely published reporting, interviews, court records, and band autobiographies; see our legal notice for our corrections policy.