Keith Moon Practical Jokes

By editorial board on April 10, 2023

Keith Moon destroyed so many hotel rooms that the incidents tend to blend together into one big ball of devastation

 

One incident that particularly stands out, however, occurred on the afternoon of August 25th, 1972, when the Who were staying at a luxurious hotel in Copenhagen, Denmark. Moon, fascinated by the waterbed in his suite, attempted to enlist Pete Townshend to help him lug its water-filled mattress into the elevator, whereupon they would send it down to the lobby; unfortunately, it burst before the

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y could extricate it from its frame, unleashing foot-high waves out into the hallway. It looked like the Who were about to be on the hook for tens of thousands in damages, but Moon (realizing that the best defense was a good offense) quickly rang the manager, told him that the bed had burst and destroyed all of

his expensive stage clothes, and huffily asked what he planned to do about it. So good was Moon's act that the manager not only apologized, but also moved him to the hotel's antiques-filled Presidential Suite – which the Who, true to form, would completely demolish later that night.

k5One of Moon's favorite recurring pranks was to disk7rupt small British villages by blaring bogus public service announcements from a passing car. Though he occasionally used a police bullhorn for these occasions, he also had his own cars rigged up with hidden amplifiers and speakers, which allowed him to keep his windows rolled up while scaring the locals with bulletins about such nonexistent dangers as impending tidal waves or advancing throngs of poisonous snakes, or ruffling their feathers by informing them that the British government would soon be relocating the country's entire immigrant population to their neck of the woods.

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During the Who's U.K. tour in late 1967, Moon relished tormenting the Herd, their opening band. Though Herd guitarist Peter Frampton somehow managed to avoid becoming a target of Moon's japery, keyboardist Andy Bown once found his instrument wired with firecrackers, which Moon detonated k4electronically from backstage during the band's set. Moon and Who bassist John Entwistle also rigged up a wire-and-pulley system to the gong used by Herd drummer Andrew Steele; each time the hapless drummer would attempt to bang the going during the show, it would mysteriously move just out of his reach.

The Paris stop of the Who's '72 European tour saw Moon's hotel room get demolished, as well – though for once he actually wasn't the culprit. While the band were staying at the plush George V hotel, the drummer drunkenly invaded John "The Ox" Entwistle's room just as the bassist was sitting down with hisk11 wife to a lovely French repast. Oblivious to his intrusion, Moon ate some of Entwistle's steak, poured a bottle of vintage Bordeaux out onto the carpet and pissed against the wall of Entwistle's room before finally passing out. This was too much even for the typically unflappable Entwistle, who responded by trashing every last piece of furniture in Moon's room, depositing his unconscious bandmate amid the rubble, and storming off. Moon awoke the next morning with no memory of the previous evening; but the carnage around him was so convincingly Moon-esque, he went to his grave believing he'd been the one who destroyed the room.

Unlike the rest of his bandmates, Moon had no "off" switch – so when the Who were not on tour or in the studio, their drummer had to find other ways to perform. He loved to go out in public dressed in costume, especially if it meant getting a rise out of unsuspecting passersby. One of his favorite getups was that of a bald vicar, who wk12ould frighten old ladies by suddenly screaming torrents of obscenities at them. Once while Moon's "vicar" was strolling down London's crowded Oxford Street in the middle of the day, two "gangsters" set upon him and dragged him kicking and screaming into a waiting Rolls-Royce; the kidnapping was completely staged – members of the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band were reportedly involved – but it looked convincing enough to cause a k1police car to immediately intercept the Rolls (which actually belonged to Moon) before its occupants could even make their getaway.

In the fall of 1969, Moon teamed up with "Legs" Larry Smith of the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band to pull a twisted practical joke on the venerable British retailer Marks and Spencer. First, Smith entered the store's trouser department and asked to be shown their most durable work trousers; then, having examined the pair, Smith expressed concern that they might not be strong enough for his purposes – whereupon Moon entered the shop and cheerily offered to help him test them. Each taking a leg, the two men proceeded to completely tear the trousers in half, causing the freaked-out staff to call for the store detective. Then, right as Smith and Moon were about to be led away by the authorities, their limo driver appeared on the scene. "Are those one-legged trousers?" he asked. "They're just what I've been looking for!" ("He paid for the trousers, and everyone calmed down," Smith later told Moon biographer Tony Fletcher. "And we asked for each leg to be wrapped separately!")k9

 

source: More info @ rollingstone.com-

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