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Roger Daltrey Revisited the Making of “Who’s Next” on “Real Time”

The Who frontman joined Bill Maher for a career-spanning chat

Bill Maher

Bill Maher talked with Roger Daltrey on a new "Real Time."

By Tobias Carroll

“You look smart. I look like a bag of laundry.” That was how Roger Daltrey compared Bill Maher’s sartorial instincts to his own as he took to the Real Time stage. The Who’s vocalist is touring the U.S. in June, and joined Maher for a candid look back at his own career — including the very distinctive cover of 1971’s Who’s Next.

The vibe was established pretty early, when Maher showed a number of images of a younger Daltrey in full shirtless rock-god mode. “I feel restricted with a shirt on. I took it off and I felt wonderful,” Daltrey recalled. “Well, it used to be. Not quite when you’re 80 years old.”

Maher asked Daltrey about the cover of the band’s album Who’s Next, in which the band stood beside a concrete pillar in a slag heap. Daltrey explained that the band had ambitions to use it for the cover art, but were underwhelmed after seeing it in person. “We’d just gotten out of the group van and thought, well we can use it as a urinal,” he said. “Then it became a competition — who had the highest pee.”

Later, the conversation turned to the chemistry between Daltrey and Pete Townshend. “There’s always been friction, but that’s what makes it special,” Daltrey said. “We existed on friction. That’s where the really good creation came from.”

Daltrey also raised the subject of The Who’s late drummer Keith Moon, about whom he’s been working to make a film for decades. “I’m determined to make a proper film,” he said — and clarified that that meant that it would be no longer than two hours and 15 minutes. Daltrey, it turns out, is not fond of three-plus hour films. He also shared one particularly memorable story about Moon: “He was the only guy I knew who could make Peter Sellars laugh.”

Maher asked Daltrey about revisiting his old songs. “I love them all,” Daltrey said. “There’s only one I’m bored with, and that’s ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again.’”

So, if that’s at one end of the spectrum, what’s on the other? “The one I love singing the most is probably ‘Love, Reign o’er Me,’” he said.

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Some other notable moments from the episode:

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