Uncut July 2025

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CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

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EVERY PRINT EDITION OF THIS ISSUE OF UNCUT COMES WITH A COPY OF THE NEW SOUNDS – 15 TRACKS OF THE MONTH’S BEST NEW MUSIC FEATURING S.G. GOODMAN, NATHAN SALSBURG, BC CAMPLIGHT, WITCH, NORTH MISSISSIPPI ALLSTARS AND MORE!

NICK DRAKE: A trove of unreleased music shines revelatory new light on Drake’s storied debut, Five Leaves Left, mapping the album’s genesis via outtakes, alternate versions and rediscovered recordings. In the company of Drake’s closest collaborators, Uncut pieces together the true story behind one of the most mythologised albums of all time. “No one’s ever been that close to these tapes…”

THE WHO: ROGER DALTREY and PETE TOWNSHEND reveal all about their final US tour… plus 1967: The Who conquer America!

BLACK SABBATH: With the original line-up of Sabbath gathered together for the final show, Uncut hears the band’s story from the secret ingredient of the band’s heavy swing: drummer BILL WARD. “I jump into a song and explode…”

BRIAN ENO: Deep inside his London studio, an uncharacteristically digressive Brian Eno finds time to discuss Scott Walker’s voice, communal living with Harmonia, mid-‘60s ‘happenings’ and his deep enthusiasm to create anew. “I’m sorry to be so shamelessly enthusiastic about my work…”

MATT BERNINGER: Away from his day job as The National’s lugubrious frontman, MATT BERNINGER has reached back into his Ohio upbringing for a ruminative new solo record. “I’m trying to understand my own fear…”

BOBBY WEIR: From Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests to the Sphere, it’s been a long, strange trip. But the guardian of the GRATEFUL DEAD’s legacy still has furthur to go. “Am I still on the bus now? Yeah, I am…”

NATALIE BERGMAN: When tragedy struck, NATALIE BERGMAN found solace in the New Mexico desert, shedding indie rock for psychedelic gospel-soul. “People form bands because we’re lost…”

ARTHUR BAKER: The electro super-producer on Bob, Bruce, Beastie Boys’ food fights and upsetting Fleetwood Mac.

SHARON JONES AND THE DAP-KINGS: From Rikers Island to Amy Winehouse and “Uptown Funk”: how a late-blooming diva helped rejuvenate a classic sound.

PEGGY SEEGER: Taking her bow after an extraordinary career, the godmother of folk looks back at her landmark releases.

REVIEWED: New albums by Pulp, Alan Sparhawk, Neil Young and The Chrome Hearts, BC Camplight, Kelsey Waldron, James McMurtry, Poor Creature, Van Morrison, Slow-Motion Cowboys; archive releases by Dionne Warwick, Mike Oldfield, The Beta Band, Melanie and Super Djata Band De Bamako; Mark Eitzel and Margo Cilker live; Bruce Springsteen on Screen and Richard Manuel in books.

PLUS: David Thomas and Wizz Jones depart; Queens Of The Stone Age untombed; Rough Trade Records‘ ’45s; Bonnie Dobson and the Hanging Stars; Big Mama Thornton; Gwenno‘s favourite albums… and meet indie/country contenders, Fellowship.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

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Every Album by the Who, Ranked

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Roger Daltrey of the Who in 1975. (Credit: Robert Ellis/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Keith Moon, drummer for the  Who, sprawled across his bed atop a polar bear hide. (Credit: © Shepard Sherbell/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)
Keith Moon, drummer for the Who, sprawled across his bed atop a polar bear hide. (Credit: Shepard Sherbell/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

The Who were not the first nor the biggest of the British Invasion bands that captured the imaginations of music lovers on both sides of the Atlantic in the mid-’60s. But they were the loudest of them all, and thanks to guitarist and principal songwriter Pete Townshend, the most conceptually ambitious one as well. 

With frontman Roger Daltrey belting out Townshend’s imaginative and emotionally vulnerable lyrics over the thunderous rhythm section of drummer Keith Moon and bassist John Entwistle, the Who presented their fans with both substance and spectacle. On the road, the band would smash their instruments at the end of concerts and leave a string of demolished hotel rooms in their wake. In the studio, Townshend would create narratively sophisticated “rock operas” and experiment with fascinating synthesizer sounds to add texture to the band’s garage rock attack. 

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The Who perform in London in 1976.  (Credit: Michael Putland/Getty Images)
The Who perform in London in 1976. (Credit: Michael Putland/Getty Images)

Townshend and Daltrey have carried on with the Who after Moon’s death in 1978 and Entwistle’s in 2002, releasing the band’s 12th album, WHO, in 2019. They recently announced The Song is Over North American Farewell Tour, which will commence in August and September. It’s not the first time the Who have said goodbye—their first farewell tour was in 1982—but it’s increasingly likely, given Townshend and Daltrey’s age, that it really will be the last chance for American fans to see the band live.  

Townshend, who famously wrote the words “I hope I die before I get old,” turned 80 on May 19, and the fact that he’s lived a long and productive life despite that lyric has been to the great benefit of rock and roll as an artform. Is the band’s best album the trailblazing rock opera Tommy, the pop art prank The Who Sells Out, or the arena rock workhorse Who’s Next

13. Face Dances (1981)

The Who never released LPs as steadily as their peers—by the end of the ’70s they had just eight studio albums, while the Stones had 14 and the Kinks had 18. So it’s perplexing that Townshend decided to sign a solo contract in the early-’80s while also keeping the Who going after Moon’s death, cranking out two solo albums and two Who albums in the space of two and a half years. Quality was going to suffer when the songwriter spread himself that thin, and the album that really got the short shrift was Face Dances, which both critics and Daltrey compared unfavorably to Townshend’s 1980 album Empty Glass. Small Faces drummer Kenney Jones gives a solid effort in the impossible situation of taking Keith Moon’s place in the band, and Entwistle knew better than Townshend how to get the best out of Jones on “The Quiet One.” The defiant closing track “Another Tricky Day” outshines just about everything that preceded it, including the pleasantly banal lead single “You Better You Bet.”

12. It’s Hard (1982)

The thumping, ominous “Eminence Front” is by far the Who’s best and most enduring post-’70s track, nothing else even comes close. The rest of It’s Hard, however, is only a slight improvement on Face Dances. Jones in particular steps up, playing splashier and more creative fills on “It’s Your Turn” and the title track. “The generally broader, more politically minded lyrics of It’s Hard seem as straightforward as the evening news. Beyond that, however, Townshend’s renewed ties to the Who symbolize his rapprochement with the world after a period of exile in the wasteland,” wrote Parke Puterbaugh in the Rolling Stone review of the album.

11. WHO (2019)

“I don’t care, I know you’re gonna hate this song,” Daltrey snarls at the beginning of the Who’s most recent and likely final studio album. Townshend and Daltrey have nothing left to prove, but they still sound fiery and cantankerous on WHO. They’re backed by a variety of rhythm section players, including staples of the Who’s live lineup for the past two decades, Ringo Starr’s son Zak Starkey, and veteran bassist Pino Palladino, who plays with enough muscle and attitude to evoke Entwistle on “Detour.” WHO is a family affair for Townshend—his wife Rachel Fuller’s orchestral arrangement on “Hero Ground Zero” makes the song come alive, and his younger brother Simon Townshend wrote the stomp-clap acoustic song “Break the News.”

10. A Quick One (1966)

A Quick One is one of those experiments in creative democracy, like Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Mardi Gras or Weezer’s Red Album, that mostly just proves why the band’s usual primary songwriter was its rightful creative leader. Daltrey and Moon’s rare excursions in songwriting are decent but unmemorable attempts to mimic Townshend’s sensibility, while Entwistle succeeds by playing a completely different game with the horror novelty song “Boris the Spider.” Townshend’s 9-minute mini-opera, the brilliant and uproarious “A Quick One, While He’s Away,” is a thrilling trial run for his future album-length narratives, and it towers over the rest of A Quick One. But even that song, more than almost any other Who track, was far better live, with superior versions on The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus and expanded reissues of Live at Leeds. If the Who were releasing two or three albums a year like other British invasion bands, A Quick One’s shortcomings would be understandable, but it’s a disappointing weak link in the Who’s quartet of ’60s albums.  

9. Who Are You (1978)

The futuristic sound the Who made in the early ’70s still felt current enough at the end of the decade that the band quite successfully returned to the aesthetic of Who’s Next on Keith Moon’s swan song. The results are electrifying on Who Are You’s closing title track, one of the band’s signature symphonies of guitar bombast and exploratory synths. But the lead up to that climax is sometimes tedious as Townshend self-consciously wrestles with the band’s place in a shifting musical landscape on “New Song,” “Sister Disco,” and “Music Must Change.”

8. Endless Wire (2006)

The Who became an oldies act after they reunited in 1989, touring many times but almost never entering the studio, with Townshend pouring his creative energies into solo work and side projects. Perhaps it was Entwistle’s unexpected death in 2002 that spurred Townshend to put together the first Who album in 24 years, a poignant affirmation of his personal and creative brotherhood with Daltrey. The best track on Endless Wire, “Mike Post Theme,” is a surprising and amusing celebration of the composer of countless great TV theme songs, from Law & Order to The Rockford Files. “A handful of cuts form Townshend’s latest mini-opera, with the highlight ‘It’s Not Enough,’ a self-contained gem that proves the guitarist hasn’t lost his knack for pop precision,” wrote Mikael Wood in the SPIN review of Endless Wire.

7. Odds & Sods (1974)

In the ’60s, the Who’s labels occasionally cobbled together stopgap collections like Magic Bus: The Who on Tour and Direct Hits that mixed non-LP singles with recycled album tracks. But with Odds & Sods, the Who created arguably the first rarities compilation by a major band that plays well from front to back like a proper album. Entwistle was given the task of assembling a record to combat bootlegs of the Who’s unreleased songs, which is why an Entwistle song, “Postcard,” got to open an album and appear on the A-side of a single for once. But Entwistle also arranged great Townshend songs like “Pure and Easy” and “Naked Eye” into a satisfying sequence, with “I’m the Face,” the 1964 debut single the band released under the name the High Numbers, providing a key piece of the Who’s early history.

6. The Who by Numbers (1975)

After years of writing songs around big, concept-heavy narratives, Townshend scaled things down and wrote some of his most intimately personal songs for The Who By Numbers. It’s Daltrey’s favorite Who album, perhaps because it’s where he most fully becomes Townshend’s second voice, amplifying and dramatizing the guitarist’s anxieties and insecurities on songs like “In a Hand or a Face” and “However Much I Booze.” The album’s only hit is its shortest and flimsiest song, “Squeeze Box,” which may be why The Who By Numbers is the band’s most underestimated masterpiece today.

5. Tommy (1969)

After he got a taste for using the Who’s songs as storytelling vehicles with 1966’s “A Quick One, While He’s Away” and 1967’s “Rael (1 and 2),” Townshend’s ambitions blossomed into the band’s fourth album. Tommy almost single-handedly introduced the idea of a “rock opera” to pop culture, and is now a franchise unto itself, adapted into a 1975 film and several stage productions on and off Broadway. Townshend’s devotion to the operatic form, and the story of Tommy the deaf and blind pinball prodigy, means that Tommy keeps revisiting the same musical and lyrical motifs over and over, making it a bit repetitive and single-minded as an album. Like Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Tommy is a landmark work that expanded everyone’s understanding of what a rock album could be, but that doesn’t mean it’s the band’s best record. Still, the power and emotion that the Who puts into songs like “Pinball Wizard” and “We’re Not Gonna Take It” makes it easy to understand why Tommy was a phenomenon that finally brought the band the level of commercial success they deserved.

4. Quadrophenia (1973)

The protagonist of Quadrophenia is Jimmy, a mod in the mid-’60s that Townshend based on several early fans of the Who, but the band is firmly in their ’70s arena rock mode for bombastic songs like “The Real Me” and “Love, Reign O’er Me.” With more sophisticated production, Quadrophenia is the Who’s most cinematic rock opera, with songs fitting together elegantly into a narrative arc with fewer of the meandering instrumental interludes that tied Tommy together. “The music is cluttered with horns and unnecessarily shrill, so that—despite its considerable melodic (and motivic, as they say) pizzazz—you don’t play it for fun. But if Townshend’s great virtue is compassion, this is his triumph,” Robert Christgau wrote in the Village Voice review of Quadrophenia.

3. My Generation (1965)

My Generation is the greatest debut album of the British Invasion, its title track a singular achievement that captures the spirit of rock ’n roll in three minutes as perfectly as any song in history. Nobody else was playing drums like Moon or bass like Entwistle in 1965, and the band’s “maximum R&B” cranked up the volume on two James Brown covers and one Bo Diddley tune along with nine originals that established Townshend as a giant among rock songwriters. Punk rock and heavy metal might have happened eventually if My Generation never existed, but it probably would’ve taken a lot longer for everyone else to make rock louder and faster without the Who’s blueprint. 

2. The Who Sell Out (1967)

The Who Sell Out is both a cheeky pop art satire of the commercialization of rock music and a celebration of the offshore pirate radio stations like Radio London that helped make the mid-’60s such a remarkable and unique moment in British music and culture. During the summer of ’67 that the band toiled on the album, however, the U.K. Parliament passed the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act and forced Radio London off the air, making The Who Sell Out something of a real-time eulogy for the pirate radio era. The band composed fake radio jingles for real products to really flesh out the album’s concept, putting them in between great songs like “Tattoo” and the band’s only Top 10 hit in America, “I Can See For Miles.” But Townshend went above and beyond the call of duty on “Odorono,” creating a full-length song full of pathos and drama that happened to be about underarm deodorant.

1. Who’s Next (1971)

Townshend wanted to follow up Tommy with an even more ambitious rock opera, Lifehouse. But nobody else seemed to understand his futuristic narrative, or his aspirations to develop the album in a communal environment in a theater residency, integrating the audience’s lives into the songs. Townshend nearly had a nervous breakdown, and felt somewhat defeated when he consented to simply release nine songs written for the project as Who’s Next without all of the multimedia concepts he’d dreamed up for Lifehouse. Fortunately, they happened to be nine of the greatest songs the Who ever recorded, with co-producer Glyn Johns helping the band marry innovative analogue synthesizer programming to some of the most powerful hard rock ever put on record at the time. Townshend has revisited Lifehouse again and again, in a radio play, a graphic novel, and the 2000 Lifehouse Chronicles box set. But songs like “Baba O’Riley,” “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” and “Behind Blue Eyes” remain immortal anthems to millions of people who never worked out the story Townshend was trying to tell in the lyrics. 

To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here.

The Who fire Zak Starkey… again!

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The Who have parted ways with their drummer Zak Starkey, just one month after he was sacked and swiftly reinstated, The Guardian reports.

The Who have parted ways with their drummer Zak Starkey, just one month after he was sacked and swiftly reinstated, The Guardian reports.

THE JUNE 2025 ISSUE OF UNCUT IS AVAILABLE TO ORDER NOW: STARRING R.E.M., A DOORS RARITIES CD, BON IVER, PRINCE, SHACK, AMY WINEHOUSE, DIRE STRAITS, STEREOLAB AND MORE

Starkey has been the band’s drummer since 1996.

In an Instagram post on Monday, May 19, Pete Townshend announced that Starkey was no longer performing with The Who.

“After many years of great work on drums from Zak the time has come for a change,” Townshend’s post read. “A poignant time. Zak has lots of new projects in hand and I wish him the best.”

Townshend went on to say that Scott Devours, from Roger Daltrey‘s solo band, will play drums on the tour instead.

Starkey responded shortly after Townshend, writing on Instagram:

“I was fired two weeks after reinstatement and asked to make a statement saying I had quit the who to pursue my other musical endevours this would be a lie. I love the who and would never had quit. So I didn’t make the statement ….quitting the who would also have let down the countless amazing people who stood up for me (thank you all a million times over and more) thru the weeks of mayhem of me going ‘in an out an in an out an in an out like a bleedin squeezebox x To clarify ‘other projects’ yes I do have other projects and always have. The Who have been sporadic or minimalist in touring most years apart from a two extensive tours in 2000 and 2006/7
To be precise while I was in the who 1996-1999 I had other projects with Johnny Marr, Lightning Seeds and Mike Scott.
2000-2003 Johnny Marr and The Healers opening for oasis in Europe releasing album and 6 month world tour 2004-2008 Oasis 2 studio albums and 120live shows. 2006-2017 Pengu!Ns , Sshh touring internationally. Releasing 3 singles, Kasabian bbc proms 2007 Weller Coxon Starkey Mani.
2015 Hollywood Vampires Roxy LA shows and rock in Rio 2017-2020 Trojan Jamaica record label releasing three albums and winning Grammy for best reggae album 2020
2020 Peter Green Tribute Concert . As u see there has always been time for other projects … 2022-2025/now mantra of the cosmos with Shaun Ryder Bez Andy Bell and NG. Releasing singles but not touring cos members are so busy. None of this has ever interfered with The Who and was never a problem for them . The lie is or would have been that I quit the who- i didn’t. I love the who and everyone in it.”

Starkey was first fired from the band in April, but reinstated three days later.

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Zak Starkey Out Again As The Who’s Drummer

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A month after he was fired, and then quickly rehired, following a 29-year stint filling the late Keith Moon’s shoes in the Who, Zak Starkey has been let go again — this time for good. He will be replaced by Scott Devours, the longtime drummer for Who frontman Roger Daltrey’s solo band.

“After many years of great work on drums from Zak, the time has come for a change,” the Who’s Pete Townshend wrote on Instagram. “A poignant time. Zak has lots of new projects in hand and I wish him the best.” Later in the day, the Who’s website posted a separate statement attributed to Townshend and Daltrey, whose issues with Starkey’s playing style propelled the original firing.

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“The Who are heading for retirement,” the statement said, referencing the legendary band’s upcoming farewell tour of North America. “whereas Zak is 20 years younger and has a great future with his new band and other exciting projects. He needs to devote all his energy into making it all a success. We both wish him all the luck in the world.”

Starkey quickly responded on Instagram, writing, “I was fired two weeks after reinstatement and asked to make a statement saying I had quit the Who to pursue my other musical endeavours. This would be a lie. I love the Who and would never had quit. So I didn’t make the statement. Quitting the Who would also have let down the countless amazing people who stood up for me (thank you all a million times over and more) thru the weeks of mayhem of me going ‘in an out an in an out an in an out’ like a bleedin squeezebox x.”

After the original incident, Starkey said he planned to take some time off with his family, finish his autobiography (“written solely by me”) and work further with Mantra of the Cosmos, his band with Ride/Oasis member Andy Bell and Happy Mondays principals Shaun Ryder and Bez.

The Who’s tour begins Aug. 16 in Sunrise, Fl., and has shows on the books through Sept. 28 in Las Vegas. For now, no international dates have been confirmed.

To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here.

Introducing…The History Of Rock: 1968!

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With Pete Townshend announcing The Who’s farewell US tour, now seems a good time to remind ourselves of when the band made one of their earliest trips to the continent. You can read all about it in The History Of Rock: 1968, the latest in our series of premium magazines curated from the archives of NME and Melody Maker.

Pete in 1968 is a big fan of America. Amazing microphone systems. Great groups like Moby Grape. Their own bus, “equipped with all modern conveniences like scotch and beer”.  Even the fact that they’re staying in poky hotels hasn’t dampened his enthusiasm. As we follow the group deeper into the year we find them developing some challenging new work, the rock opera Tommy, at this stage provisionally entitled “Dead Dumb And Blind Boy”.

Our other favourite groups are changing too. After 1967’s colourful revelations and occasionally grandiose musical experimentation, 1968 has its feet more firmly planted on the ground. The gurus and the hallucinogens of the past twelve months have imparted their knowledge, and The Beatles are for the most part slightly more suspicious of whim and fancy.

No-one precisely says this is their plan (although Paul McCartney has been murmuring about “getting back” for a while), but there is a palpable swing away from the head trips of the studio and towards the heart: to early inspirations, live music. Later in the year, the double album released by the Beatles will contain strong flavours of blues and rock ‘n’ roll, the year’s two principal revivals. Does this now mean the Beatles are taking a step backwards? As Ringo Starr philosophically remarks: “It’s not forwards or backwards. It’s just a step.”

Bob Dylan also sets an anomalous tempo, established early in the year with the bucolic minimalism of John Wesley Harding. Dylan’s continued absence from the promotional scene allows him to move with a freedom not permitted his British contemporaries, and his absence creates a vacuum that myth, and under-the-counter recordings, step in to fill. Elsewhere in the mag you’ll find John Peel, Aretha Franklin, Cream…even George Best!

This is the world of The History Of Rock, a monthly magazine which reaps the benefits of their reporting for the reader decades later, one year at a time. Inside, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, compiled into long and illuminating reads. You can catch up on any you’ve missed here. Enjoy!

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The Who announce farewell North American tour

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The Who have revealed that their upcoming North American tour will be their last. At a press conference today (May 8) at London’s Iconic Gallery, Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend announced details of The Song Is Over: The North American Farewell Tour, which kicks off in Florida on August 16, ending in Las Vegas on September 28.

THE JUNE 2025 ISSUE OF UNCUT IS AVAILABLE TO ORDER NOW: STARRING R.E.M., A DOORS RARITIES CD, BON IVER, PRINCE, SHACK, AMY WINEHOUSE, DIRE STRAITS, STEREOLAB AND MORE

“Well, all good things must come to an end,” said Pete Townshend. “It is a poignant time. For me, playing to American audiences and those in Canada has always been incredible… Roger and I are in a good place, despite our age, eager to throw our weight behind this fond farewell to all our faithful fans, and hopefully to new ones who might jump in to see what they have been missing for the last 57 years. This tour will be about fond memories, love and laughter.”

“To me, America has always been great,” added Roger Daltrey. “The cultural differences had a huge impact on me, this was the land of the possible. It’s not easy to end the big part of my life that touring with The Who has been. Thanks for being there for us and look forward to seeing you one last time.”

Asked about the possibility of a similar farewell tour in the UK, Daltrey simply said: “Let’s see if we survive this one…”

Peruse the North American tourdates below:

Aug 16 – Sunrise, FL – Amerant Bank Arena
Aug 19 – Newark, NJ – Prudential Center
Aug 21 – Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center
Aug 23 – Atlantic City, NJ – Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall
Aug 26 – Boston, MA – Fenway Park
Aug 28 – Wantagh, NY – Northwell at Jones Beach Theater
Aug 30 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden
Sep 2 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage
Sep 4 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage
Sep 7 – Chicago, IL – United Center
Sep 17 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl
Sep 19 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl
Sep 21 – Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre
Sep 23 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena|
Sep 25 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena
Sep 28 – Las Vegas, NV – MGM Grand Garden Arena

Tickets go on general sale on Friday, May 16 at 10am local time from here. There is a pre-sale for Citi cardmembers and Whooligan Fan Club members.

Read more from The Who’s press conference in the next issue of Uncut.

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The Who Announce Farewell Tour … Again

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The Who announced their first farewell tour in 1982, but the rock legends are saying goodbye for good on a North American jaunt cleverly dubbed The Song Is Over. Anchored by 81-year-old vocalist Roger Daltrey and nearly 80-year-old guitarist Pete Townshend, the tour will run from Aug. 16 in Sunrise, Fl., through Sept. 28 in Las Vegas; for now, no international dates have been confirmed.

“Every musician’s dream in the early ’60s was to make it big in the U.S. charts. For The Who, that dream came true in 1967 and our lives were changed forever,” Daltrey said today (May 8) at a London press event. “The warmth of the American audiences over the years have been inspirational to me, and reflect the feeling I remember getting after hearing the first rock records coming across the radio. Musical freedom! Rock gave us a feeling of generational rebellion. To me, America has always been great. The cultural differences had a huge impact on me. This was the land of the possible. It’s not easy to end the big part of my life that touring with The Who has been. Thanks for being there for us and look forward to seeing you one last time.”

More from Spin:

“Well, all good things must come to an end,” Townshend added. “It is a poignant time. For me, playing to American audiences and those in Canada has always been incredible. The warmth and engagement of those audiences began back in 1967 with hippies smoking dope, sitting on their blankets and listening deeply and intensely. Music was everywhere. We all felt equal. Today, Roger and I still carry the banner for the late Keith Moon and John Entwistle and of course, all of our longtime Who fans. I must say that although the road has not always been enjoyable for me, it is usually easy: the best job I could ever have had. I keep coming back. Every time I do, I meet new fans and feel new energy. Roger and I are in a good place, despite our age, eager to throw our weight behind this fond farewell to all our faithful fans, and hopefully to new ones who might jump in to see what they have been missing for the last 57 years. This tour will be about fond memories, love and laughter. Make sure you join in.”

The news follows the band’s two late March London shows in support of Teenage Cancer Trust, after which longtime drummer Zak Starkey was fired and then quickly rehired.

During the press conference, Townshend said, “This wasn’t a career that I chose. It chose me. Creativity has been what sustained me, rather than performing. It has been about the relationship between the audience and us. What’s so interesting is that the fans have patiently waited. The longevity has been something that just happened. When we look at artists like the Stones, like Bruce Springsteen and other, much older artists like,Bob Dylan, one is inspired in a sense to think, what could we do that would be new and different? Whatever we play, the chances are, I will have written it. There’s that sense of closing a circle and having one last grab of trying to bring that thing to life.”

Here are The Who’s tour dates:

Aug 16 – Sunrise, FL – Amerant Bank Arena
Aug 19 – Newark, NJ – Prudential Center
Aug 21 – Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center
Aug 23 – Atlantic City, NJ – Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall
Aug 26 – Boston, MA – Fenway Park
Aug 28 – Wantagh, NY – Northwell at Jones Beach Theater
Aug 30 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden
Sep 2, 4 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage
Sep 7 – Chicago, IL – United Center
Sep 17, 19 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl
Sep 21 – Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre
Sep 23 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena
Sep 25 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena
Sep 28 – Las Vegas, NV – MGM Grand Garden Arena

To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here.