
"Let's get together before we get much older."
It's not very likely. Last night the Who played Portland for what is probably going to be the final time, and it was, against virtually every odd in the book, absolutely fantastic. The original bandâs two surviving membersâRoger Daltrey, 72, and Pete Townshend, who turns 71 tomorrowâseem to know full well that bringing the Whoâs 52-year-old catalog out of mothballs is largely an exercise in nostalgia. But they have another hard fact on their side: That catalog is one of the most significant and sturdy in rock history, and it works marvelously when played at loud volumes in gigantic rooms. So rather than try to pretend that drummer Keith Moon and bassist John Entwistle never existed, or try to Xerox the vital elements those two contributed to the Whoâs sound, this 2016 iteration of the Who embraced the past warmly and respectfully, suggesting that the songs themselves are the stars, not the elderly Englishmen onstage playing them. Rather than try to airbrush out the years that have gone by, they let the passage of time work in the songsâ favor, and the result was powerful, affirming, and remarkably emotional.
It worked because Townshend and Daltrey acted their age, dammit. Yes, Townshend did a few windmills and Daltrey swung his mic around by its cable for a minute or two, but for the most part the pair approached the Whoâs gymnastics, both musical and physical, with a measured amount of caution. Daltrey capably hit the high notes when called upon to do so, and the fact that heâs still performing "Wonât Get Fooled Againâ and âLove, Reign Oâer Meââtwo of the most vocally demanding songs in the classic-rock canonâon a regular basis is pretty astounding. But he would often point the mic out to the crowd and let the audience do some of his work for himâas on, for instance, the well-worn âteenage wastelandâ lines of âBaba OâRiley.â And after hitting the sustained high note in the first chorus of âBargainâ (âthe best I ever haaaaadâ), he let guitarist Simon Townshend (Peteâs younger brother) take over those larynx-splitting lines for the rest of the song.
Indeed, Daltrey and Townshend have chosen their backing band wisely. Simon was a perfect foil for his brother, and they traded those etched-in-stone riffs back and forth with aplomb. Drummer Zak Starkey, Ringo Starrâs son, learned how to play directly from Moon when he was a child, but rather than copycat the Loonâs distinctive, surf-inspired parts, Starkey instead emulated his energy. And bassist Pino Palladino stood nearly motionless, almost invisible, in the thick of the sonic maelstrom, which almost certainly is a cue he picked up directly from Entwistleâs reserved stage presenceâbut he downplayed the flashiness of Entwistleâs treble-heavy style and quick fretboard runs, instead functioning as the band's steady anchor.
The setlist was bulletproof, the only weak spot being a run-through of 1981âs âYou Better You Bet,â which has always sounded to me like a lame rewrite of Townshendâs solo hit âLet My Love Open the Door.â Even the slight âSqueeze Boxâ turned out to be a lot of fun, especially when the big screen behind the band showed a delightful animation that brought Entwistleâs hand-drawn caricatures of the band members from the cover of 1975âs The Who by Numbers to life. Other highlights included a voracious, set-opening âWho Are You,â a lively âJoin Together,â and a surprisingly wistful âThe Kids Are Alright.â And, giving a two-fingered salute to the passage of time, Daltrey deliberately uttered the famous line in âMy Generationâ (âhope I die before I get oldâ) in an exaggerated wheezing growl.
The show's emotional highlight came during a mini-set of Quadrophenia songs, which centered around the instrumental suite âThe Rock,â in which all the musical motifs of the rock opera congeal. Townshend preceded it by talking about London's mod scene of the '60s, which inspired the albumâs plot; he also connected it to the punk culture that exploded out the Pacific Northwest in the early â80s. (When he told the crowd to âfuck off,â the cheers were deafening.) What remains remarkable about that unwieldy double album is how angry and nihilistic much of it is, as the young mod at the story's center loses faith in everything around himâand yet it concludes with a prayer (âLove, Reign Oâer Meâ) that is full of desperation and hope, and becomes a fully considered depiction of humanity.
A Tommy mini-set followed, and was almost as good, particularly during the âAmazing Journey/Sparksâ section, during which the band found some room to improvise. The show ended with the unkillable one-two of âBaba OâRileyâ and âWonât Get Fooled Again,â and Daltrey and Townshend expressed their gratitude it the crowd with some stage patter before calling it a night. There wasnât an encore, but it felt like the band had played everything they needed to; only a staunch advocate for their mid-'60s singles might've felt like anything was missing.
Before departing the stage, Townshend said to the crowd, âDo us a favor. Tell your friends they missed us⊠because tomorrow we die!!â It was a sly acknowledgement that this particular go-round is probably going to be the last weâll see of the Who. And if last night is any indication, theyâre going out with a proper bang, giving both their fans and their thunderous songbook a proper send-off. Putting the voices of their fans into the lyrics of their best songs has been the Whoâs trademark, and in the live setting it makes for remarkable communion. Itâs why a Who show feels different from that of almost any other band that performs on that scale. And in the case of last night, it made for one for the best musical performances Iâve ever seen inside a basketball arena.
Also read our preview article, "The Song Isn't OverâNot for the Who, Not Quite Yet."

