London, England – July 12: Roger Dalty of WHO occurs at O2 Arena on July 12, 2023 … More
WHO singer Roger Daltrey announced serious health news during a performance of the group during the weekend in London.
WHOOf course, is the legendary rock group which was formed in 1964 with singer Dalty, the singer-guitarist Pete TownshendBassist John Entwistle and Keith Moon drummer. Moon died in 1978 at the age of 32 and was replaced by the drummer of small faces become Keney Jones – who then left the group in 1988. Entwistle died in 2002 at the age of 57.
DalTrey and Townshend always occur like the one to date. The tubes of the Rock and Roll temple group include “My Generation”, “Baba O’Reilly”, “I can see for Miles”, “Squeeze Box”, “did not pass again” and “Wizard Pinball”.
This last song is from the legendary OMS rock opera Tommy. The title of title is a deaf, silent and blind – pinwriting champion that DalTrey referred when he revealed his last health condition to the crowd at Teenage Cancer Trust Concert Saturday at the Royal Albert Hall in London.
“The joys of aging mean that you get deaf, I also now have the joy of becoming blind. Fortunately, I always have my voice, because then I will have a complete tommy,” said Daltrey, 81 years old The sun.
DalTrey apparently did not give details on what caused his blindness.
The sun said the group had previously announced that they were ending their tours this year, but would continue with the performance of Trust cancer adolescents. The WHO has been playing the Charité concert event since its training in 2000.
Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey of the rock group The Who Perforce on stage during teen cancer … More
Who’s Roger Daltrey announced that it was “very, very deaf” in 2018
Roger DalTrey The announcement of the blind manages the singer’s second major health condition that he has made public in the past seven years.
During a solo performance in 2018, DalTrey announced that he was “very very deaf”, ” Tmz reported, and said to his concert crown: “Take your ear plugs F — ING with you at the concerts.”
WHO has been known for a long time for playing the noisiest rock concerts. The WHO made the Guinness Book of World Records on May 31, 1976, when the group of the group of the group at Valley Stadium in Charlton, London, struck 126 decibels, Ultimate classic rock reported.
Before the WHO record, the legendary rock group Deep Purple Purple held the strongest concert record when the group’s sound struck 117 decibels in 1972 at the Rainbow Theater in London, Ultimate classic rock note.