02 Mar Doug Sandom : Le premier batteur de The Who est mort
Doug Sandom, qui fut le batteur accompagnant Pete Townshend et Roger Daltrey avant que The Who ne devienne un monument du rock anglais, est mort à l’âge de 89 ans.
Sur le site officiel de The Who, Pete Townshend a officialisé la disparition de Doug Sandom, batteur originel de The Who. Le musicien était aux côtés de Townshend et Daltrey dans le groupe The Detours (dès 1962), qui deviendra The Who en février 1964. Deux mois plus tard, Sandom est évincé du groupe.
La raison officielle est qu’il est trop vieux (il avait plus de 30 ans alors que les autres membres sortaient à peine de l’adolescence). Officieusement, Chris Parmeinter (le producteur du groupe via le label Fontana Records) n’aimait pas sa manière de jouer et a exigé son départ, négocié avec le manager Helmut Gordon.
Doug Sandom sera remplacé par Keith Moon, iconique et controversé batteur des Who jusqu’à sa mort en 1978.
Dans un billet de blog, Pete Townshend a rendu hommage à celui qui fut bien le premier batteur des Who :
« Just heard from his son that Doug, drummer with the early Who, passed away yesterday at the age of 89. If you have read my book Who I Am you will know how kind Doug was to me, and how clumsily I dealt with his leaving the band to be replaced eventually by Keith Moon. A bricklayer by trade, Doug was an excellent drummer but was considered by our first record label to be too old for us. It was his age and his wisdom that made him important to me. He never sneered at my aspirations the way some of my peers tended to do (I was a bit of an egoistic handful sometimes). He encouraged me – as did my best friend in those days Richard Barnes. Doug took a while to forgive me, but did so in the end, and although I didn’t see much of him we remained friends. He would almost certainly have tried to visit with Roger and me at Wembley Stadium this year, and we will both miss seeing him.
Pete,
28 February 2019″
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