In November 1973, Scot Halpin, a 19-year-old kid, scalped tickets to The Who concert in San Francisco, California. Little did he know that he’d wind up playing drums for the band that night — that his name would end up etched in the annals of rock ’n’ roll.
The Who came to California with its album Quadrophenia topping the charts. But despite that, Keith Moon, the band’s drummer, had a case of the nerves. It was, after all, their first show on American soil in two years. When Moon vomited before the concert, he ended up taking some tranquilizers to calm down. The drugs worked all too well. During the show, Moon’s drumming became sloppy and slow, writes his biographer Tony Fletcher. Then, halfway through “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” he slumped onto his drums. Moon was out cold. As the roadies tried to bring him back to form, The Who played as a trio. The drummer returned, but only briefly and collapsed again, this time heading off to the hospital to get his stomach pumped.
Scot Halpin watched the action from near the stage. Years later, he told an NPR interviewer, “my friend got real excited when he saw that [Moon was going to pass out again]. And he started telling the security guy, you know, this guy can help out. And all of a sudden, out of nowhere comes Bill Graham,” the great concert promoter. Graham asked Halpin straight up, “Can you do it?,” and Halpin shot back “yes.”
When Pete Townshend asked the crowd, “Can anybody play the drums?” Halpin mounted the stage, settled into Moon’s drum kit, and began playing the blues jam “Smokestack Lighting” that soon segued into “Spoonful.” It was a way of testing the kid out. Then came a nine minute version of “Naked Eye.” By the time it was over, Halpin was physically spent.
The show ended with Roger Daltrey, Pete Townshend, John Entwistle and Scot Halpin taking a bow center stage. And, to thank him for his efforts, The Who gave him a concert jacket that was promptly stolen.
As a sad footnote to the story, Halpin died in 2008. The cause, a brain tumor. He was only 54 years old.
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Too bad about revisionist history. I was at that Civic Center concert, the theater now named after Bill Graham, and I’m not sure what research was done for this screed.
Moon was taking Antabuse, a drug used to deter alcohol use. If you drink alcohol with it in your system, there is a severe reaction. Horse tranquilizers? What an ass.
I’ve got dozens of great concert stories. As a teenager and into my thirties I worked as a stagehand stage builder security etc. There’s one on YouTube. This bag once held Springsteen’s jacket. Check it out.
Yours is the story I remember. It WAS Antabuse.
I grew up in the Bay Area, and while I didn’t attend, some my friends did, and came back with the story too tell.
Strange how at that time, my friends and I found it amusing. Now that I am way, way (one more way) older, I find the situation tragic and sad.
Blessings to the late Mr Halpin who saved the day!
What dies horse tranquilizer have to do with the story
I love you, Michael G, but you’re.. you’re crazy, man!
So sad. At that time, Moon was one of world’s best drummers. I’ve never seen them in concert, i wish i had.