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In a surprise move, just days after the Who announced that it had parted ways with Zak Starkey — Ringo Starr’s son and the band’s drummer for nearly 30 years — the group’s Pete Townshend announced that he has been un-fired.
“News flash! Who back Zak!,” Townshend wrote in two posts on his official Instagram account, which is comically titled “Yaggerdang.” “Zak is not being asked to step down from The Who. There have been some communication issues, personal and private on all sides that needed to be dealt with, and these have been aired happily.
“Please check thewho.com for the full statement.”
However, an hour after Townshend posted, there was still no statement on the band’s website, but sources close to the band confirmed the authenticity of the posts and the news. One source told Variety on Thursday that Starkey was said to be returning to the band, but had no further information.
The band announced on Wednesday in a statement that it had parted ways with Starkey in what appears to be a dispute over his playing at the group’s concert last month at London’s Royal Albert Hall.
“The band made a collective decision to part ways with Zak after this round of shows at the Royal Albert Hall,” a representative for the band said in a statement to the Guardian. “They have nothing but admiration for him and wish him the very best for his future.”
In a statement to Variety, Starkey said: “I’m very proud of my near thirty years with The Who. Filling the shoes of my Godfather, ‘uncle Keith’ has been the biggest honor and I remain their biggest fan,” he said, referencing original Who drummer Keith Moon, who died in 1978 and was a close friend of Zak’s father and a mentor to the young Starkey. “They’ve been like family to me. In January, I suffered a serious medical emergency with blood clots in my right bass drum calf. This is now completely healed and does not affect my drumming or running. After playing those songs with the band for so many decades, I’m surprised and saddened anyone would have an issue with my performance that night, but what can you do?
“I plan to take some much needed time off with my family, and focus on the release of ‘Domino Bones’ by Mantra Of The Cosmos with Noel Gallagher in May and finishing my autobiography written solely by me,” he concluded. “29 years at any job is a good old run, and I wish them the best.”
The breaking point seems to have stemmed from frontman Roger Daltrey’s apparent displeasure with Starkey’s playing during the concert last month, which was a benefit for the Teenage Cancer Trust. According to a report in the U.K.’s Metro, Daltrey, 81, paused the group’s final song, “The Song Is Over,” saying, “To sing that song I do need to hear the key, and I can’t. All I’ve got is drums going boom, boom, boom. I can’t sing to that. I’m sorry, guys.”
Some sources close to the band said that Daltrey was annoyed by Starkey’s “overplaying,” which many fans noted was almost comically ironic, as Moon was one of the most hyperactive — and musically brilliant — drummers in rock history.
The Who have been an infamously fractious band for their entire career, with frequent arguments between members that have even on occasion led to fistfights. In fact, the band name Led Zeppelin was first suggested by Moon after he and original bassist John Entwistle planned to leave the band in 1966 and regroup with guitarists Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck — then with the Yardbirds — and singer Steve Marriott. However, the manager of the Small Faces, Marriott’s band at the time, allegedly made threatening noises about the move and everyone returned to their previous bands (although Beck left the Yardbirds shortly afterward).
The group nearly split again after Moon’s death in 1978, but reunited with former Small Faces drummer Kenney Jones; he and Daltrey sparred and the group announced its split in 1982 and did a lucrative farewell tour, but reunited (without Jones) seven years later and have continued ever since. Entwistle died in 2002, but many fans feel that as long as Townshend and Daltrey are present, it’s still the Who.
Starkey, 59, had hinted at his impending ouster in a pun-filled Instagram post last weekend, in which he used his first name in place of the verb “sack,” British slang for being fired. In a caption a photo of himself with Daltrey, he wrote in all-caps: “Heard today from inside source within whose horses nose that Toger Daktrey lead singer and principal songwriter of the group unhappy with Zak the drummer’s performance at the Albert Hall a few weeks ago is bringing formal charges of overplaying and is literally going to zak the drummer and bring on a reserve from ‘the burwash carwash skiffle ‘n’ tickle glee club harmony without empathy allstars’ this has been confirmed by whose long time manager willya youwontyouknow.”
Given the band’s history and advanced age — Daltrey is 81 and Townshend turns 80 next month — it remains to be seen how much more touring the band will do, but Daltrey is currently on a solo U.K. tour, and neither musician shows any signs of slowing down in the immediate future.