Roger Daltrey said he had no idea why Keith Moon wanted to join the Who as he recalled the drummer’s impressive onstage audition.

The group were already rising stars on the London music scene when the future member asked to try out at a hotel venue in a move that changed their futures.

“He was in a band that used to do Beach Boys covers – and of course, in 1963, the Beach Boys, they were liked,” Daltrey told BBC Radio Scotland in a recent interview. “We were all into the blues and all that heavy stuff… I never got to ask him what made him think to come along and want to be our drummer, because we were so different.”

He continued: “We were playing with a session drummer that we employed for the night at the huge expense of two pounds. And all of a sudden, he appeared at the front of the stage with bright, ginger hair, and kind of a bright ginger suit on, with these great, big eyes – they were very, very dark, and they were very round. … He said, ‘I heard you were looking for a drummer. Do you think I could have a go?’ We asked the guy who was drumming, ‘Would you mind if this kid gets up and have a go on your kit?,’ and the guy said, ‘No, no, sure,’ so he had a break and we went back on.”

“I can never forget the song we played… Bo Diddley's ‘Road Runner.’ Halfway through, it was just the way he was drumming, the rhythms he was playing, just made us drive it. Instead of it being just like the record… it leaped into another realm, and it was like I said: it was like starting up a jet engine. He doubled the beat, and then Pete [Townshend] started the guitar a bit harder, and it just started what we used to call ‘drive.’ We would drive the music through the fans, and he was the missing link. Of course, within two years, it had all taken off and we had our first hit record.”

Daltrey further reflected on his relationship with Moon, admitting he "tried and tried" to prevent the drummer's descent into substance abuse. “I became very close to Keith in the last two years of his life," the singer explained. "My relationship with him was kind of very different than most people’s. We were kind of arch enemies at the beginning, and very close at the end, and I think he got close to me because I was the only constant in his life."

“I didn’t do the drugs; I wasn’t an alcoholic," Daltrey continued. "John [Entwistle] was an alcoholic by then and doing drugs, Pete was an alcoholic by then. I was the only straight one in the band trying to keep it together with three addicts, and it was a tough job.”

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