Ok kids make a note this is The Who in their mid 50's, 37 years into their stellar career's and still out there!!! Thank you Zach for your incredible talent, Uncle Keith would be so Proud!
Damn right! I was awestruck seeing the Ox work his magic with those thunder fingers of his for the first time….every other time seeing the Who in concert!
Agree with all of you! Watched it live on TV at the time. Knew from the intro that the organizers should have had them close. How could you follow that?! Pete cupping the mic saying "We are honored to be here!" shows that this band was truly there for the right reason.
One of the greatest live performances ever. You can tell it was important to Daltry and Townsend to put on the best performance they could and the connection to the audience was magical.
I always thought Queen at Live Aid was the greatest live performance by a band ever, but this topped it by a mile, the emotions of the moment and reactions of the band and crowd. Still moves to tears 21 years later.
I remember watching this live. Just seeing the joy on the faces of the first responders, knowing what they were still going through, still moves me whenever I watch this. What a performance!
NYC The Who gave you their very best, strongest 27 mins I've ever seen. No way, No way I would want to even attempt to follow that performance. Could you imagine walking on stage after that whew!! Wow!!!!!!!!!!!!!
THE best Who performance I have ever seen on video. Absolute fire coming out of Pete's guitar and the Ox' bass. John did not have long to live, but he made it count.
The Who ruled that concert. They were the right band, with the right songs, for that moment. They channeled all the anger and the hurt and the sadness, and they turned it into a set of pure musical catharsis.
The Who and their performance owned this event! They and the songs they played that night were the right band at the right time to play for New York and the world.
I remember the radio broadcast of this show at MSG. An emotional time in this nation’s history for sure. We got a kick in the nuts for sure on 9/11 and after we buried our dead and cleaned up the rubble, the cops and firefighters and EMTs needed a party. Just a night to drink a little too much and allow themselves to have a good time. I remember when The Who took the stage, they were like a smoking flamethrower of awesome brain shaking rock. An invisible fist grabbed me by the throat and I was frozen in place for this entire show…I didn’t move an inch. The power and anger and eventually the joy of this music held me. The greatest moment in rock and roll history.
@@threalismaradona9899I’ve always thought of Pete and John as one lead instrument. I know they were all leads, but Pete and John’s sounds just blended together and played off each other so well. It sounds like one godly player sometimes.
What impressed me the most about the Who's performance here was how they simply played their biggest hits, and rocked their arses off in a way to make people happy. No new material, no proselytizing, no fluff - just a straight dose of what those people needed. For that, I call this the greatest concert I've ever seen.
@@Wokko1963What you on about, they’ve sang those hits for nearly 40 years at that time & everyone does sound checks so of course they rehearsed. But they’ve always been one of the best live rock & roll bands there’s ever been. The fact you question anything proves you know nothing about The Who.
I am Ret. NYPD lived thru the attacks on September 11th 2001, I called in cpl of favors and was sitting 1st row on Pete's side - I was dumb struck by the power of THE WHO that night, Damn near tears, They blew the fffn doors off The Garden that night, ALL the bands were terrific but THE WHO stole the show,
This was an astonishing evening. Some acts came in and misunderstood the moment and suffered from thinking it was about themselves. The Who gave themselves to the moment and to the heroes in attendance.
When The Who started in 1964/65 Pete always said they wanted to be a mirror of their audience. Equals. This is what they achieved this night. They were on stage, but that music had them walking around That crowd hugging and shouting and screaming and crying with everyone.
The greatest *classic* rock band. The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, and the Rolling Stones are, like, *the* classic classic rock bands, and although they don't get more credit than they deserve, it often seems like The Who gets *less*, which is a shame, since I put The Who and Who's Next as the greatest examples of classic rock band and album, respectively. Now, as far as rock as a genre (and here I am including classic rock, alternative rock, and hard rock (and including heavy metal too, maybe? Maybe not), I think there are a number of modern rock bands that kick as much ass as anything put out by any band from the '60s up to today. Say, The 1975, Angels & Airwaves, All-Amercan rejects, Nate Ruess (either solo or with fun.), Twenty-One Pilots, Goo Goo Dolls, Counting Crows, Dave Matthews Band, Queen (who should really probably be included as classic rock)... I could go on and on and on. Now, this does *not* necessarily mean that all -- or any -- of the musicians I listed are as good as or better than The Who. I could not in good conscience claim that *any* of the bands listed are *the* greatest rock band (or band of *any* kind for that matter). But, they are *all* definitely legitimate competitors for the title. That having been said, Who's Next was my absolute favorite album when it first came out (Pop Goes the World by Men Without Hats was probably a second). Now, is Baba O'Riley the Who's best *song*? Ehhhh... yeah, I'd probably say yes (if I didn't, I'd probably say Behind Blue Eyes).
Roger Ramjet yes, that's the reason cause i don't like 1989/90 tours....i prefer just the band on stage, just the original members Daltrey-Entwistle-Townshend!
I was in the 10th MTN, getting ready to deploy, when I saw this. I used to recruit in NYC. My 3 and 5 year old boys loved it. Like everyone, they felt 9/11 personally. 90% of our division deployed in the next few months. It seemed like wherever there might be a fight, we were going. This night was special to all of us. God bless The Who.
Makes me proud to be British, Lifelong fan of the boys and what a great reception from the NYC crowd, R.I.P To all the victims of 9/11 especially the NYPD, NYFD and Emergency Medical Crews, Never Forgotten🇬🇧🙏🇺🇸♥️🎸✌️X
There are some things that cannot be f$&@& with. Michael Jordan in the finals. Secretariat at the Belmont. And the Who, live, with something to stand for. This is the greatest live band ever.
I read that Pete Townshend came offstage worried that he overdid it in this performance, effectively having, in his words, “machine-gunned” the audience, and not showing the proper reverence for both the occasion and the First Responders. He expressed his worry to Elton John, who set him straight by having him look at the crowd from behind the curtain. Pete’s concerns were put to rest when he saw the crowd’s response to The Who’s performance. Cathartic indeed.
I normally try to limit any negative commentary, but I feel compelled to say the people who gave a thumbs down don't know a fucking thing about the power of rock and roll.
Utterly brilliant. I fell out of love with The Who for a while, just listening to Live At Leeds, and thinking they've forgotten how to be a workingman's band. I saw this and remembered how all those working-class guys from New York put their lives on the line to save other people. The firemen. The ambulance service and nurses. The ordinary Americans trying to do what they can. The police. At this concert The Who reconnected with the working class men and women who were always their fan-base. I saw them in 1975 in Manchester for £1.50. It was good to see that that they hadn't forgotten their roots.
Let’s put this into context: This is about a month after 9/11. Our nation - the world - was still extremely sad. Terribly, terribly sad. Paul McCartney had witnessed the attacks first hand - he was sitting on a plane on the runway at JFK when he saw the planes hit with his own two eyes. He wrote that song “Freedom” which he closed this concert with right then and there in his seat in the plane while it was happening. So he organized this concert to support 9/11 first responders, their families, and survivors. Paul’s dad was actually a volunteer firefighter during WWII in Liverpool which took heavy bombing from Germany. Paul’s heart was in this full tilt. Paul brought in as many pop and rock acts he could. He got everyone from The Who to Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to David Bowie and Jon Bonjiovi to Melissa Ethridge, Elton John, John Mellencamp, Eric Clapton, John Lee Hooker..... and even Destiny’s Child. Yeah, they were out of their league in this show to say the least. There were some entertainers who were better than others, some were pathetic, but in the spirit of what it was all about it was intended as a reprieve from the solemnity of the situation and as well as a fund raiser for those families. For one night, everyone could at least try to forget what was happening (again - this is one month after..... there were still uncontrollable fires at ground zero and an almost zero-visibility haze above the tip of Manhattan) But for the 4 hour concert, all the acts that night….. when The Who played to close the first half of it…. Well, as you can see here they owned it. They just fucking owned the entire show. They blew everyone else on that show out the building and that night watching it live myself I felt The Who fucking blew Bin Laden and those mother fuckers who attacked us out too. It was such a HUGE fuck you to terrorism and those animals who tried to destroy our way of life, and The Who were like a goddamned nuke on them. At least, that’s what it felt like. And then when Roger first refused the fire helmet (which a lot of the “stars” that night were wearing) and then said “we could never follow what you did”, it was so cathartic I lost it. I cried like a baby. God Bless The Who. They still might not know what they did for America that night.
@@sarahbgln Yes he did. As it unfolded he got out a pen and jotted down his thoughts at that moment, that it was obviously an attack on freedom and our way of life. Before it was over he had the song "Freedom" which you can find the video of him playing it at this concert on youtube.
This is the best damn reply on this whole thread! You put everything I felt about this band, this particular performance, and the way all of us felt inside.
This performance was badly needed. By the date of this concert things were still bleak. The clouds had not yet lifted. This show was a noble effort and featured some heavyweights. Then The Who, with a version post-the loss of Keith Moon, the purest form of the band, came out and told everybody, "Fuck it! That hurt, but you will learn how strong we are." Baba O'Rielly and New York City were born of the same spirit. That night, The Who, in front of an audience one generation younger, The Who showed them what legends are capable of!
As a 9/11 survivor- while I wasn’t at this show, I watched from my apt in NYC and this performance was such an extraordinary comfort during such a horrific time.
This is, hands down, THE BEST performance of that evening. This entire set should go down as one of the top 3 best Who performances (in my humble opinion). We lived in a town home at the time and when I turned this up, it literally sounded like you were at the concert. I played it during the summer with my front door open and every neighbor could hear it... especially the ones on the other side of the wall in the living room.
Agreed and whoever produced it deserves to be heaped with praise. Every time Zak Starkey hit the drums, every note of Entwistle's bass, every strum of Townsend's guitar ... the sound balance and production was outstanding as was the camera work - the lights, the screen imagery, the editing - before you even start on their actual performance - they played out of their skins. There is an old saying 'cometh the hour, cometh the man'. As far as this performance goes it's a case of 'cometh the hour, cometh the band'. Just so perfect from song choice to each individual on that stage and totally in communion with that audience and the occasion. I come back to this video again and again and again.
I watched this as it aired. I said to my father The Who stole the show. All the performers this night were great but The Who just blew the roof off of MSG. You can hear the anger and support in their playing.
When Daltrey said he wasn't worthy to wear the fireman's helmet, he showed true humility and respect. They then followed that with 30 minutes of rock genius. The best rock band ever and certainly one of the greatest live performances
Another one who never saw The Who, just an apparition. But without the Ox, Pete's songs had no balls and still don't. Without John to put the power in Pete's music, it's pretty ordinary.
@@petebradt While John Entwistle is simply irreplaceable, and a lot of the musical lifting that he did has since been shared by John Button (their touring Bassist since 2015), Pete and even Simon (Pete’s brother), I wouldn’t go as far as saying that Pete’s songs have no balls without him. That’s actually a bit of a lame thing to say.
The Who really stepped up and knocked it out of the park with an amazing set. "Who Are You?", "Baba O'Reilly", "Behind Blue Eyes", and "Won't Get Fooled Again", all played with incredible power and love for the very special audience of the surviving 9/11 first-responders that emotional evening. When Daltrey simply states at the end "We could never follow what you did", what an incredible tribute, indeed.
Absolutely one of their best performances post Keith moon and abt a year before John's passing. This concert did for the who what live aid did for Queen - reintroduced them to a new generation.
I watched this with my father when this aired. I felt the same exact way. After The Who walked off, I said to my father...The Who f&$king stole the show! Powerful performance and sadly Entwistle's last time at MSG.
They headlined all the greatest festivals. Monterey……Woodstock…….Isle of Wight…….Live Aid Wembley…….Concert for New York. The Ultimate legendary live Rock Band, of All time!
@@WolfKing-dv6xd One of them - and what gets me is that, after this show, he took his own band to B.B. King's NY club and played another set. They called him the Ox for a reason but I wish he could have put his addictions behind him.
Right band for the right time. People were feeling angry and the music was an outlet for that anger. You can't ask for a better pick me up. Well done the Who. Probably the best I have ever seen them
The lyric was timely, "I get on my knees and pray that we don't get fooled again." The officers or firefighters at 25:42 - they got a second on the broadcast and it was very empowering to see their exuberance in the aftermath... the power of music and the power the resolve of the American people when united as one against our enemies and for our fellow American. The line from Daltry at the end is beyond perfect... and a great honor... "We can never follow what you did."
Thank you Leonardo! Possibly The Best live Who!! They played their Hearts out with the perfect playlist! The emotional atmosphere already evident and built-up, just waiting for release... and The Who delivered! Thank you WHO for helping ease that terrible personal and National pain we were going through. We knew then our world may never be the same again, yet you managed to bring us back to The Familar. Thanks to all the bands and entertainment that evening helping as all get back.
The power of rock'n roll in 27 minutes. Gave me goosebumbs watching this live in 2001 and still moves me to tears watching these cops and firemen jumping around and going crazy. Probably one of the Who's best gigs ever - they really wanted this. Amazing!
Yes! Yes! Yes! Me too! They deserved a night out. One said he expected to have his spirits lifted, instead his feet were lifted 6 inches from the floor!! Sheer joy!! That’s how music should be. NEVER FORGET- EVER!! Watch the audience.
My best mate past away 5 year ago he was older than me I his 60s im 45 he was always sayin chris get into the who you will love it I never did when he passed I thought right on you tube started listen Jesus christ I'm glad I did what an awesome band !!!
They just effin’ killed it at this show. You can tell they gave this performance everything they had in them. Queen had their Live Aid; The Who had their Concert for New York City.
Their greatest performance since Keith died. I was living in Baltimore when 9/11 happened. We all went to our local pub to watch the Concert for New York. Almost all of the acts were absolutely terrible. The Who stole the show just like Queen at Live Aid. I’ve never understood why this performance isn’t recognised.
@@lesliepoole8705 I saw them in the early 70s when they were going through a phase of playing smaller venues. They were at our local concert hall - which to be fair has superb acoustics but has a capacity of around 900. I was still at school, just a kid really and didn't really appreciate what I was seeing and hearing, but I do now!
The Who upstaged the Stones at their Rock Circus, and they came here decades later and upstaged McCartney at this concert. Probably the best rock performance I’ve ever seen. I remember watching this live and thinking “God help whoever has to follow this act” So damn awesome . . .
The Stones organized a huge charity concert in Toronto 18 years ago and got upstaged by AcDc. I like their music but they can’t match the energy of a Angus Young or Pete and Roger. Sadly, The Who’s most interesting guy to watch on stage was Moon.
One of The Who’s most incendiary performances. Sadly, one of the last times Entwistle played in concert. The set list and performance is absolutely mesmerising.
This performance always made me proud to be British. That’s a big compliment to the states as I look at us as allies and always relish their affection for their little brother across the pond!
If you have ever seen a exorcism this was it, we were there, Ox, Roger, Pete and Zach chased the demons from the the concert with one mighty scream of Roger during We won't get fooled again, the negative energy was banished and people learned to live God Bless the Who in what is one of their greatest shows ever!
Indeed. I'll say just a few words. In December of 1968, The Who showed John Lennon and Mick Jagger the one band in the world that their bands could never touch live...before Tommy, before Who's Next. Check out: The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus
AKA, the finest bass guitarist who will EVER live. No other bassist even deserves mention in ROLLING STONE, or anywhere else. I miss the Ox every day and will be until I join the Great Orchestra.
Really an emotional performance. The Who completely crushed it that night... a real reminder of what the band could do when playing with peak passion and intensity.
From a hard core Stones fan - your words are 100% true - this performance was far more important and incredible than Queen...nothing else comes close not even Mick and Keith who reunited that night
I agree. Something about the combined energy of the band, euphoric energy of the audience, underlined with people's pain and loss from 9/11. Makes my eyes leak everytime I see this brilliant performance by The Who.
Simply put, the greatest 30 minute live performance in the history of rock and roll. Pete's songwriting mix of snarl and vulnerability perfectly fit the moment. From Cusack's intro to the final note, pure bliss. Watching the cops, EMS and firefighters in the audience mourn but simultaneously rejoice still gives me goosebumps. Only the Who could kick ass but heal the broken spirits that night.
Its gone down in rock folklore as being the best cameo gigs ever! And who cud argue on the strength of that epic performance. What a fucking brilliant band the who are!
We had the privilege of picking John E up after this performance and driving him up to BB Kings blues club . Where he preformed with the JEB band for another 3 hours . John miss you my friend!
Saw this live via satellite. The Who OWNED this concert. Outstanding performance. U2 was next on stage, and Bono’s first words on a hot mic were “How do you follow THAT? Lord almighty.”
There was a moment in the beginning of this song when the drums kicked in and you knew that everything was going to be alright. From a New Yorker. God bless the memories of our fallen heroes. Gone but not Forgotten
this was not just another gig for the Who. They were moved by 9/11 and their hearts went out to the lost, to their survivors, to the first responders, to the people of NYC, and to all of us in America. The Who loves America and took that attack personally. They expressed themselves by delivering one of their most electric and powerful performances ever. Also, Pete and the band are very competitive ( ala Hendrix at Monterey Festival ). There were other legendary bands there that night and the Who came out on fire to prove they are the best. Townshend was feeling it....extremely animated.
@@lesliepoole8705 I loved this performance so much. I really felt like the UK was giving us a gift that night. All the UK-origin acts were fantastic but the Who just took the roof off the Garden.
@@dvchel I remember it being a mixed bag. Jay-Z rather bombed; Melissa Etheridge had trouble getting her song started. By and large the American acts just weren’t a match for the moment with the exception of Billy Joel, whose NYC connection and cred were unimpeachable. David Bowie’s opening, where he sat crosslegged on the stage singing Simon & Garfunkel’s “America” while strumming an Omnichord and launching into his own “Heroes” was absolutely perfect. But no one could touch The Who that night.
Still the most brilliant performance that night. Even after almost 20 years, I still FEEL this. This WAS the band of the night and the one that the audience needed.
The greatest 1/2 hour set this century! Legend has it, Townsend went out there before they went on and pushed the board output up to "11" , taped it down and said, "if anyone touches these knobs I'll break their fingers".
This is why the Rolling Stones had a stipulation before they would perform in concert festivals like this. Under no circumstances would they follow The Who. We Won't Get Upstaged Again
GOD Save The Who! Unforgettable! I was so shocked by 9/11 attacks and this concert came up. I was expecting U2 perform but, before that, The Who appeared on stage first; they played those 4 magnificent songs like The world was going to The end the next day. I became an absolute Who fan. Huge Masters of live perfomance. I was only able to enjoy them live in 2017. Blessings to all of You from Santiago City from Chile.
Best that Baba O’Riley sounded since Keith Moon. Pete’s solo was fantastic. They brought it so hard for this performance, I remember watching it live and just been floored. They’ll forever be my all time favorite band.
Ok kids make a note this is The Who in their mid 50's, 37 years into their stellar career's and still out there!!! Thank you Zach for your incredible talent, Uncle Keith would be so Proud!
Keith gave Zak his first kit for Zak's birthday. Ringo wanted to kick Keith's ass...
Uncle Keith *IS* proud.
@@rscott2187 Damn straight! 🤘🏻🤘🏻
I always thought that Zak looked like Andrea Bocelli on drums.
You'd never want to come on after these guys.
Only Hendrix at Monterey!
The only person who could was Jimi Hendrix and he did. The Who became my all time favorite band back in 1980
@@goodwilj I loved them in their pre-Tommy days. 'The Who Sell Out" is one of the best Rock albums ever!
Who cud follow that epic performance. A truly GREAT BAND!
Yeah that smoked Rolling Stones
One of the best bass players you are ever likely to see in your lifetime ... on that stage, right there.
I remember seeing it live when released on cable through TV channel.
In any lifetime, I doubt he'll be bettered.
I do believe this may be their greatest live performance...if not it's damn close
Damn right! I was awestruck seeing the Ox work his magic with those thunder fingers of his for the first time….every other time seeing the Who in concert!
absolutely
Those bass lines during Won't Get Fooled Again.... My Lord.
RIP, Thunderfingers.
I love the phrase he plays leading into the key change at 21:23, after which plays so authoritatively behind the solo as a heel turn.
Entwistle was on fire here, especially Won't Get Fooled Again. His last US gig.
Yeah they were all really up for this gig.
He died about eight months later of a heart attack. He was with a stripper and had cocaine in his system. Now that’s how a rock star lives and dies!
Who is still listening 🎧🎧🎧 in 2024
When I watched this live, as a huge who fan , it gave me goosebumps!
The British Band kicked ass and supported our country. Love it
Never forget ❤
Agree with all of you!
Watched it live on TV at the time. Knew from the intro that the organizers should have had them close. How could you follow that?!
Pete cupping the mic saying "We are honored to be here!" shows that this band was truly there for the right reason.
One of the greatest live performances ever. You can tell it was important to Daltry and Townsend to put on the best performance they could and the connection to the audience was magical.
I always thought Queen at Live Aid was the greatest live performance by a band ever, but this topped it by a mile, the emotions of the moment and reactions of the band and crowd. Still moves to tears 21 years later.
Both were powerful in their own right. Each band conquered their own day. One could not be compared to the other...
I remember watching this live. Just seeing the joy on the faces of the first responders, knowing what they were still going through, still moves me whenever I watch this. What a performance!
These guys simply rock !! But cameraman could have given organ player a lil love....
This was John's last performance and i think that adds to it. I agree this is the gig I always go back to. Pure greatness.
queen sucks!
NYC The Who gave you their very best, strongest 27 mins I've ever seen. No way, No way I would want to even attempt to follow that performance. Could you imagine walking on stage after that whew!! Wow!!!!!!!!!!!!!
THE best Who performance I have ever seen on video. Absolute fire coming out of Pete's guitar and the Ox' bass.
John did not have long to live, but he made it count.
I bought my wife a pair of blue Dr Martin shoes after I saw this in 2001, she still has them.
The Who ruled that concert. They were the right band, with the right songs, for that moment. They channeled all the anger and the hurt and the sadness, and they turned it into a set of pure musical catharsis.
well put sir!
I LOST MY BROTHER IN LAW THAT DAY AND THIS CONCERT CONVEYS THE ANGER BUT HOPE FOR THE FUTURE
@@edbavoso7679 So sorry to hear that, Ed. It's 20 years this gone this year, but it still seems recent.
@@edbavoso7679 lost my brother and cousin I feel it man
Absolutely
Man, Entwistle was such a fucking beast. He's to bass what Hendrix was to guitar.
The Who and their performance owned this event! They and the songs they played that night were the right band at the right time to play for New York and the world.
Yeah they smoked everyone else.
"We could never follow what YOU did" 😭❤
I remember the radio broadcast of this show at MSG. An emotional time in this nation’s history for sure. We got a kick in the nuts for sure on 9/11 and after we buried our dead and cleaned up the rubble, the cops and firefighters and EMTs needed a party. Just a night to drink a little too much and allow themselves to have a good time. I remember when The Who took the stage, they were like a smoking flamethrower of awesome brain shaking rock. An invisible fist grabbed me by the throat and I was frozen in place for this entire show…I didn’t move an inch. The power and anger and eventually the joy of this music held me. The greatest moment in rock and roll history.
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Fuck I love Entwistle. The man had no equal.
Nobody sounds like him! He drove that band.
ua-cam.com/video/80dsyo2Ox-0/v-deo.html
He was truly the lead instrumentalist in this band no dis to Pete but ffs his bass leads kicked ass
@@threalismaradona9899I’ve always thought of Pete and John as one lead instrument. I know they were all leads, but Pete and John’s sounds just blended together and played off each other so well. It sounds like one godly player sometimes.
And *NEVER* will.
What impressed me the most about the Who's performance here was how they simply played their biggest hits, and rocked their arses off in a way to make people happy. No new material, no proselytizing, no fluff - just a straight dose of what those people needed. For that, I call this the greatest concert I've ever seen.
Sadly The Who at Live Aid were very under rehearsed & it showed.@@Wokko1963
The messages in their songs are perfect for that time. We are all angry and wants to take vengeance against the terrorists!
@@Wokko1963I first saw the Who in 1969 at the Fillmore east before they released Tommy. They have always been like this.
@@Gnofg Spot on. They were always amazing live, FAR better than the studio versions. They were 4 solo maestros that put it together as a band.
@@Wokko1963What you on about, they’ve sang those hits for nearly 40 years at that time & everyone does sound checks so of course they rehearsed. But they’ve always been one of the best live rock & roll bands there’s ever been. The fact you question anything proves you know nothing about The Who.
Still to this day Chills
Raw power and emotion
I am Ret. NYPD lived thru the attacks on September 11th 2001, I called in cpl of favors and was sitting 1st row on Pete's side - I was dumb struck by the power of THE WHO that night, Damn near tears, They blew the fffn doors off The Garden that night, ALL the bands were terrific but THE WHO stole the show,
Blew EVERY other band clear out of the garden. Absolutely crushed it.
@@mtnstpt Damn, I’m so glad you got to be there!!
Great you got to be there and thank you for your service Officer. ☮
Well said!
I was there too -- every word you said is 200% correct
This is the greatest live performance any band ever gave. God bless John Entwistle. - 9-11-23
Yes, indeed, indeed. The greatest of it all.
Have loved the Who since I was a kid back in the 70’s. They gave it everything they had that night. Epic
This was an astonishing evening. Some acts came in and misunderstood the moment and suffered from thinking it was about themselves. The Who gave themselves to the moment and to the heroes in attendance.
@@jeffreySEEhawkins Well put.
When The Who started in 1964/65 Pete always said they wanted to be a mirror of their audience. Equals. This is what they achieved this night. They were on stage, but that music had them walking around
That crowd hugging and shouting and screaming and crying with everyone.
No backing dancers, no high tech visuals, no lip synching, ladies and gentlemen, the greatest ever rock and roll band.
well put
Damn right, the best rock band ever!
the Beatles were the greatest Pop band...but the WHO are the greatest Rock band ever!
The greatest *classic* rock band. The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, and the Rolling Stones are, like, *the* classic classic rock bands, and although they don't get more credit than they deserve, it often seems like The Who gets *less*, which is a shame, since I put The Who and Who's Next as the greatest examples of classic rock band and album, respectively.
Now, as far as rock as a genre (and here I am including classic rock, alternative rock, and hard rock (and including heavy metal too, maybe? Maybe not), I think there are a number of modern rock bands that kick as much ass as anything put out by any band from the '60s up to today. Say, The 1975, Angels & Airwaves, All-Amercan rejects, Nate Ruess (either solo or with fun.), Twenty-One Pilots, Goo Goo Dolls, Counting Crows, Dave Matthews Band, Queen (who should really probably be included as classic rock)... I could go on and on and on.
Now, this does *not* necessarily mean that all -- or any -- of the musicians I listed are as good as or better than The Who. I could not in good conscience claim that *any* of the bands listed are *the* greatest rock band (or band of *any* kind for that matter). But, they are *all* definitely legitimate competitors for the title.
That having been said, Who's Next was my absolute favorite album when it first came out (Pop Goes the World by Men Without Hats was probably a second).
Now, is Baba O'Riley the Who's best *song*? Ehhhh... yeah, I'd probably say yes (if I didn't, I'd probably say Behind Blue Eyes).
Roger Ramjet yes, that's the reason cause i don't like 1989/90 tours....i prefer just the band on stage, just the original members Daltrey-Entwistle-Townshend!
So surrealistically sad with the people holding up pictures. Still unbelievable 22 yrs later.
Behind Blue Eyes captured the essence of those who were lost on 911
One of their best ever live performances and that’s saying something
Ttue fuckin true mate
Totally agree one of the best sets ever by any band.
The Who blew all the other bands off the stage that night... #Perfection
It is their best...the time ..the place..the line up..the world watching....no one came close that night and it was....Beautiful.
Agreed ! unbelievable emotion
Honestly. one of the best performances in rock and roll history.
It is the best
British as well
Just incredible!!
The best 27 minutes ever!
THE WHO qui ?
I was in the 10th MTN, getting ready to deploy, when I saw this. I used to recruit in NYC. My 3 and 5 year old boys loved it. Like everyone, they felt 9/11 personally. 90% of our division deployed in the next few months. It seemed like wherever there might be a fight, we were going. This night was special to all of us. God bless The Who.
God bless you and the 10th Mountain division.
Always a huge buzz to hear the Who firing on all cylinders!!
Makes me proud to be British, Lifelong fan of the boys and what a great reception from the NYC crowd, R.I.P To all the victims of 9/11 especially the NYPD, NYFD and Emergency Medical Crews, Never Forgotten🇬🇧🙏🇺🇸♥️🎸✌️X
I was there!!! Loved the British and American flags together!!! We are friends forever with the UK.....
There are some things that cannot be f$&@& with. Michael Jordan in the finals. Secretariat at the Belmont. And the Who, live, with something to stand for. This is the greatest live band ever.
Secretariat!!!!!!!
The greatest band ever, period.
I read that Pete Townshend came offstage worried that he overdid it in this performance, effectively having, in his words, “machine-gunned” the audience, and not showing the proper reverence for both the occasion and the First Responders.
He expressed his worry to Elton John, who set him straight by having him look at the crowd from behind the curtain. Pete’s concerns were put to rest when he saw the crowd’s response to The Who’s performance.
Cathartic indeed.
I normally try to limit any negative commentary, but I feel compelled to say the people who gave a thumbs down don't know a fucking thing about the power of rock and roll.
For anyone who was ever in doubt, here's confirmation. No other group comes near. Absolute fucking dynamite.
Utterly brilliant. I fell out of love with The Who for a while, just listening to Live At Leeds, and thinking they've forgotten how to be a workingman's band. I saw this and remembered how all those working-class guys from New York put their lives on the line to save other people. The firemen. The ambulance service and nurses. The ordinary Americans trying to do what they can. The police. At this concert The Who reconnected with the working class men and women who were always their fan-base. I saw them in 1975 in Manchester for £1.50. It was good to see that that they hadn't forgotten their roots.
Best show The Who ever did. For the right reason.
Let’s put this into context:
This is about a month after 9/11. Our nation - the world - was still extremely sad. Terribly, terribly sad. Paul McCartney had witnessed the attacks first hand - he was sitting on a plane on the runway at JFK when he saw the planes hit with his own two eyes. He wrote that song “Freedom” which he closed this concert with right then and there in his seat in the plane while it was happening.
So he organized this concert to support 9/11 first responders, their families, and survivors. Paul’s dad was actually a volunteer firefighter during WWII in Liverpool which took heavy bombing from Germany. Paul’s heart was in this full tilt.
Paul brought in as many pop and rock acts he could. He got everyone from The Who to Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to David Bowie and Jon Bonjiovi to Melissa Ethridge, Elton John, John Mellencamp, Eric Clapton, John Lee Hooker..... and even Destiny’s Child. Yeah, they were out of their league in this show to say the least. There were some entertainers who were better than others, some were pathetic, but in the spirit of what it was all about it was intended as a reprieve from the solemnity of the situation and as well as a fund raiser for those families. For one night, everyone could at least try to forget what was happening (again - this is one month after..... there were still uncontrollable fires at ground zero and an almost zero-visibility haze above the tip of Manhattan)
But for the 4 hour concert, all the acts that night….. when The Who played to close the first half of it…. Well, as you can see here they owned it. They just fucking owned the entire show. They blew everyone else on that show out the building and that night watching it live myself I felt The Who fucking blew Bin Laden and those mother fuckers who attacked us out too. It was such a HUGE fuck you to terrorism and those animals who tried to destroy our way of life, and The Who were like a goddamned nuke on them. At least, that’s what it felt like.
And then when Roger first refused the fire helmet (which a lot of the “stars” that night were wearing) and then said “we could never follow what you did”, it was so cathartic I lost it. I cried like a baby.
God Bless The Who. They still might not know what they did for America that night.
Holy crap, I didn't realize Paul McCartney saw the planes hit wtfff
thanks for sharing this, amazing testimony, I'm an "xennial" but grew up listening to the Who... God bless America
@@sarahbgln Yes he did. As it unfolded he got out a pen and jotted down his thoughts at that moment, that it was obviously an attack on freedom and our way of life. Before it was over he had the song "Freedom" which you can find the video of him playing it at this concert on youtube.
This is the best damn reply on this whole thread! You put everything I felt about this band, this particular performance, and the way all of us felt inside.
This and your essay here should be shared annually!
This performance was badly needed. By the date of this concert things were still bleak. The clouds had not yet lifted. This show was a noble effort and featured some heavyweights. Then The Who, with a version post-the loss of Keith Moon, the purest form of the band, came out and told everybody, "Fuck it! That hurt, but you will learn how strong we are." Baba O'Rielly and New York City were born of the same spirit. That night, The Who, in front of an audience one generation younger, The Who showed them what legends are capable of!
As a 9/11 survivor- while I wasn’t at this show, I watched from my apt in NYC and this performance was such an extraordinary comfort during such a horrific time.
God bless you.
@@javajen19 thank you and unto you 🙏🏼❤️
Mom survived the north tower attacks 29 Th floor . 9of her coworkers did not.
@@rickbaier1042 so happy to hear your dear Mom made it. May those who didn’t rest in eternal peace.
I hope you are well. Best wishes.
This is, hands down, THE BEST performance of that evening. This entire set should go down as one of the top 3 best Who performances (in my humble opinion). We lived in a town home at the time and when I turned this up, it literally sounded like you were at the concert. I played it during the summer with my front door open and every neighbor could hear it... especially the ones on the other side of the wall in the living room.
Agreed and whoever produced it deserves to be heaped with praise. Every time Zak Starkey hit the drums, every note of Entwistle's bass, every strum of Townsend's guitar ... the sound balance and production was outstanding as was the camera work - the lights, the screen imagery, the editing - before you even start on their actual performance - they played out of their skins. There is an old saying 'cometh the hour, cometh the man'. As far as this performance goes it's a case of 'cometh the hour, cometh the band'. Just so perfect from song choice to each individual on that stage and totally in communion with that audience and the occasion. I come back to this video again and again and again.
I was at the concert
Still an emotional and uplifting performance by The Who. RIP to all those who lost their lives in 9/11.
This performance was right up there with Queen at Live Aid. It was 27 minutes of cathartic rock n roll perfection.
Sorry, Better then Queen at Live Aid
queen: radio ga-ga ?
give me a break!
those people would of strangled any arab in the vicinity after hearing that set!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sorry to disagree, but Queen don't hold a candle to these guys. The Who are on another level.
One of the greatest performances in rock history.
I watched this as it aired. I said to my father The Who stole the show. All the performers this night were great but The Who just blew the roof off of MSG. You can hear the anger and support in their playing.
Possibly the greatest 30 minutes of live rock music ever. Astonishing. A fitting tribute...
When Daltrey said he wasn't worthy to wear the fireman's helmet, he showed true humility and respect. They then followed that with 30 minutes of rock genius. The best rock band ever and certainly one of the greatest live performances
Another one who never saw The Who, just an apparition. But without the Ox, Pete's songs had no balls and still don't. Without John to put the power in Pete's music, it's pretty ordinary.
@@petebradt what about PT's solo material. It kicks a different kind of ass.
Stunningly BOOtiful man...outside and inside.
@@petebradt who is the Ox?
@@petebradt While John Entwistle is simply irreplaceable, and a lot of the musical lifting that he did has since been shared by John Button (their touring Bassist since 2015), Pete and even Simon (Pete’s brother), I wouldn’t go as far as saying that Pete’s songs have no balls without him. That’s actually a bit of a lame thing to say.
The Who really stepped up and knocked it out of the park with an amazing set. "Who Are You?", "Baba O'Reilly", "Behind Blue Eyes", and "Won't Get Fooled Again", all played with incredible power and love for the very special audience of the surviving 9/11 first-responders that emotional evening. When Daltrey simply states at the end "We could never follow what you did", what an incredible tribute, indeed.
Made me tear up. Beautiful and touching. The emotion will always be here.
Spot on brother
Absolutely one of their best performances post Keith moon and abt a year before John's passing. This concert did for the who what live aid did for Queen - reintroduced them to a new generation.
superbly put
I watched this with my father when this aired. I felt the same exact way. After The Who walked off, I said to my father...The Who f&$king stole the show! Powerful performance and sadly Entwistle's last time at MSG.
They headlined all the greatest festivals. Monterey……Woodstock…….Isle of Wight…….Live Aid Wembley…….Concert for New York. The Ultimate legendary live Rock Band, of All time!
1000% Mate. Case closed, case re-opened, And case closed Again. Got to see them in 2009, Mind Blowing, sadly without The Ox though.
And live 8 2005
Zak is just wicked badass on those drums
John entwistle quietly like a boss on bass
I think that was his last performance with The Who.
@@WolfKing-dv6xd One of them - and what gets me is that, after this show, he took his own band to B.B. King's NY club and played another set. They called him the Ox for a reason but I wish he could have put his addictions behind him.
I also consider this the beggining of the comeback for The Who
@@benpezzot8805 They never left
They also had a hiatus for a while
Right band for the right time. People were feeling angry and the music was an outlet for that anger. You can't ask for a better pick me up. Well done the Who. Probably the best I have ever seen them
They keep going on and on, and people say they do great shows still.. to me this was the old The Who doing a last encore.
Kids this is the true power of real rock and roll. Just stunning.
Great show.
John Entwistle RIP the greatest rock bass player ever. He died that following summer.
The lyric was timely, "I get on my knees and pray that we don't get fooled again." The officers or firefighters at 25:42 - they got a second on the broadcast and it was very empowering to see their exuberance in the aftermath... the power of music and the power the resolve of the American people when united as one against our enemies and for our fellow American. The line from Daltry at the end is beyond perfect... and a great honor... "We can never follow what you did."
Remember watching this as a 16 year old, seeing it again now is still emotional. Can’t help but feel very proud to be British watching The Who here!
It is. It brings tears to my eyes to see this even now. So very cathartic.
Thank you Leonardo! Possibly The Best live Who!! They played their Hearts out with the perfect playlist!
The emotional atmosphere already evident and built-up, just waiting for release... and The Who delivered!
Thank you WHO for helping ease that terrible personal and National pain we were going through. We knew then our world may never be the same again, yet you managed to bring us back to The Familar.
Thanks to all the bands and entertainment that evening helping as all get back.
The power of rock'n roll in 27 minutes. Gave me goosebumbs watching this live in 2001 and still moves me to tears watching these cops and firemen jumping around and going crazy. Probably one of the Who's best gigs ever - they really wanted this. Amazing!
Yes! Yes! Yes! Me too!
They deserved a night out. One said he expected to have his spirits lifted, instead his feet were lifted 6 inches from the floor!! Sheer joy!! That’s how music should be. NEVER FORGET- EVER!! Watch the audience.
Clearly a huge emotional release for all…this performance was pitch perfect…a celebration for heroes👌 🤩
yes , even I'm from China
❤❤❤❤
The Who is ALWAYS great in concert, but this night was definitely special! They owned the night!
My best mate past away 5 year ago he was older than me I his 60s im 45 he was always sayin chris get into the who you will love it I never did when he passed I thought right on you tube started listen Jesus christ I'm glad I did what an awesome band !!!
They just effin’ killed it at this show. You can tell they gave this performance everything they had in them. Queen had their Live Aid; The Who had their Concert for New York City.
Their greatest performance since Keith died. I was living in Baltimore when 9/11 happened. We all went to our local pub to watch the Concert for New York.
Almost all of the acts were absolutely terrible.
The Who stole the show just like Queen at Live Aid.
I’ve never understood why this performance isn’t recognised.
There would never be a Keith successor but Zak was smoking here
I Watch this over and over again. There I something very special about this 4 song set.
The WHO at their sublime best, one of if not the greatest performance of all time
i am 66 years old. This is the most POWERFUL set i have ever seen!! The hairs on my arms came to life!!
I agree I am 75 , I was lucky enough to see them in the early sixties when they were starting out . Star quality even then
@@lesliepoole8705 I saw them in the early 70s when they were going through a phase of playing smaller venues. They were at our local concert hall - which to be fair has superb acoustics but has a capacity of around 900. I was still at school, just a kid really and didn't really appreciate what I was seeing and hearing, but I do now!
Fucking incredible
Almost 73. Likewise.
The Who upstaged the Stones at their Rock Circus, and they came here decades later and upstaged McCartney at this concert. Probably the best rock performance I’ve ever seen. I remember watching this live and thinking “God help whoever has to follow this act” So damn awesome . . .
U2.....Bono even Said it...how can we follow that. Shit.
The Stones organized a huge charity concert in Toronto 18 years ago and got upstaged by AcDc. I like their music but they can’t match the energy of a Angus Young or Pete and Roger. Sadly, The Who’s most interesting guy to watch on stage was Moon.
@@stephens9462 Yes! I saw The Who with Moon in the sixties! Wow!
Yeah they did but it was Paul McCartney who put this event up. So kudos to him too! 👏
Yes sir!!
One of The Who’s most incendiary performances. Sadly, one of the last times Entwistle played in concert. The set list and performance is absolutely mesmerising.
The Ox' very last performance.
@@petebradt No, they played gigs in the UK in 2002 before he died.
This was his last performance in America. He died the night before their first gig of their next tour in the States.
Yes! Heartbreaking that he was gone a few months later. 😭
@@joeflint7798 Was the Albert hall gig his last in the UK?
This performance always made me proud to be British. That’s a big compliment to the states as I look at us as allies and always relish their affection for their little brother across the pond!
At the time and still today, I feel like this was the UK giving us in the US a big giant 26-minute present.
The flags say it all Brother!
Thank you.
being from new york we were hurting and needed this, what a performance God bless The Who
I love those flags together.
Yes , Yes And yes
You better you bet. A match made in Heaven.
Me too!!! USA UK = LOVE!
John Entwistle was and is still the God of bass
He will ever be, the finest, most original, most powerful bassist who ever lived. Check that (sorry John), who will ever live.
Thank God the Ox was there for this, he would be gone soon after
@John Dew John makes Jaco sound like he had his first lesson five minutes ago.
If you have ever seen a exorcism this was it, we were there, Ox, Roger, Pete and Zach chased the demons from the the concert with one mighty scream of Roger during We won't get fooled again, the negative energy was banished and people learned to live God Bless the Who in what is one of their greatest shows ever!
Your comment brought tears to my eyes. It's absolutely true.
AMEN!
Whether it was their intention or not, they blew every other act off the stage.
Easily
They only have one speed. Full pelt.
Without a doubt.
Indeed. I'll say just a few words. In December of 1968, The Who showed John Lennon and Mick Jagger the one band in the world that their bands could never touch live...before Tommy, before Who's Next. Check out: The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus
You are absolutely correct.
My son was 11 and was BLOWN away by The Who that night. Now he's 30 and every so often we remember this !!
R.I.P. - John Entwistle - AKA, The Ox, Thunderfingers.
And The Quiet One.
AKA, the finest bass guitarist who will EVER live. No other bassist even deserves mention in ROLLING STONE, or anywhere else. I miss the Ox every day and will be until I join the Great Orchestra.
I can’t see the band for the tears in my eyes.thank you “chaps “ .
Really an emotional performance.
The Who completely crushed it that night... a real reminder of what the band could do when playing with peak passion and intensity.
The guys were on fire that night and New York will never forget them for it.
The best live performance by any band anytime anywhere.
People talk about the queen performance at Live aid but to me this was more powerful
Just a personal view from a who fan !
From a hard core Stones fan - your words are 100% true - this performance was far more important and incredible than Queen...nothing else comes close not even Mick and Keith who reunited that night
I agree. Something about the combined energy of the band, euphoric energy of the audience, underlined with people's pain and loss from 9/11. Makes my eyes leak everytime I see this brilliant performance by The Who.
Yup!!
I was just thinking the same thing.
Totally agree. Rog. Pacific sunset records .
Back here in 2024.! Sad time(s) but great performance. Grew up with the Who. Great music. Love to all . I will be back . ;)
No band in rock history would dare follow this performance. This is a reminder of why they were the greatest rock band in history.
Simply put, the greatest 30 minute live performance in the history of rock and roll. Pete's songwriting mix of snarl and vulnerability perfectly fit the moment. From Cusack's intro to the final note, pure bliss. Watching the cops, EMS and firefighters in the audience mourn but simultaneously rejoice still gives me goosebumps. Only the Who could kick ass but heal the broken spirits that night.
Yes Sir!!!!!
Queen @ Live Aid ? Not knocking this performance at all
Amen
Lo sigo escuchando en el 2024.….....La Clase nunca se pierde.....sin palabras
No-one does Rock and Roll like the Brits, pure and simple.
@@davidb9213 You know, you are spot on. I can not think of an American band that approaches Rock like the Brits. Maybe Neil Young with Crazy Horse?
I think this was the best performance of the night. I remember being totally mesmerized
Its gone down in rock folklore as being the best cameo gigs ever! And who cud argue on the strength of that epic performance. What a fucking brilliant band the who are!
@@colingeddes2172 Not any more. John is long dead and the apparition they came up after John died, is as worthless as tits on a boar.
@@petebradt na. It was never going to be the same when 1st moon, then entwhistle sadly passed away, but pete and rog still do the band proud.
@@petebradt The Who stole the show again in 2012, for the Sandy concert. And that was without John. So, you're quite wrong.
Defo, stood out big time
We had the privilege of picking John E up after this performance and driving him up to BB Kings blues club . Where he preformed with the JEB band for another 3 hours . John miss you my friend!
Incredible!!!
I get chills remembering this. Almost 19 years
yes it's unbelievable how time rushes by.
Saw this live via satellite. The Who OWNED this concert. Outstanding performance. U2 was next on stage, and Bono’s first words on a hot mic were “How do you follow THAT? Lord almighty.”
U2 didn't play at that concert, but cool story.
There was a moment in the beginning of this song when the drums kicked in and you knew that everything was going to be alright. From a New Yorker. God bless the memories of our fallen heroes. Gone but not Forgotten
this was not just another gig for the Who. They were moved by 9/11 and their hearts went out to the lost, to their survivors, to the first responders, to the people of NYC, and to all of us in America. The Who loves America and took that attack personally. They expressed themselves by delivering one of their most electric and powerful performances ever. Also, Pete and the band are very competitive ( ala Hendrix at Monterey Festival ). There were other legendary bands there that night and the Who came out on fire to prove they are the best. Townshend was feeling it....extremely animated.
It made me feel proud to be British seeing these boys perform for those wonderful brave men and women . I still find it very moving
@@lesliepoole8705 I loved this performance so much. I really felt like the UK was giving us a gift that night. All the UK-origin acts were fantastic but the Who just took the roof off the Garden.
Sad that you cannot find the whole concert for NYC in full on YT anymore.
@@dvchel I remember it being a mixed bag. Jay-Z rather bombed; Melissa Etheridge had trouble getting her song started. By and large the American acts just weren’t a match for the moment with the exception of Billy Joel, whose NYC connection and cred were unimpeachable. David Bowie’s opening, where he sat crosslegged on the stage singing Simon & Garfunkel’s “America” while strumming an Omnichord and launching into his own “Heroes” was absolutely perfect. But no one could touch The Who that night.
Still the most brilliant performance that night. Even after almost 20 years, I still FEEL this. This WAS the band of the night and the one that the audience needed.
Pete's rhythm guitar playing is outstanding ...
They stole the show that night.
Dude... they steal the show any night.
No doubt right up there with Queen at live aid
you know all the younger bands who watched had to be amazed at the old guys...
Charles Oliva as always
There is having a good performance and then there is putting the other bands on the card to shame. This was the latter. Absolutely stole the show.
John lived long enough to be captured on HD... I miss him and his playing
The Shepperton Studios live version of Baba O’Riley is really good quality for 1978
if anyone ever asks me to define rock n roll, I'd point them to this four song set. just amazing.
The greatest 1/2 hour set this century! Legend has it, Townsend went out there before they went on and pushed the board output up to "11" , taped it down and said, "if anyone touches these knobs I'll break their fingers".
This is why the Rolling Stones had a stipulation before they would perform in concert festivals like this. Under no circumstances would they follow The Who. We Won't Get Upstaged Again
“We could never follow what you did!” Amen, Roger.
I would put it up there with Queen at Live Aid as one of the best live sets ever....
Best not to compare genius vs genius or legend vs legend. Let us be eternally grateful for both of them
Class stuff yeah, really on top form
Amen brother
Also Led Zep doing Kashmir at the O2. Equally awesome.
@Paul Jackson A run for their money? The Who wrote the book on live rock they are in their late 50s here in their prime nobody came close.
One of the greatest rock performances of all time.
GOD Save The Who! Unforgettable! I was so shocked by 9/11 attacks and this concert came up. I was expecting U2 perform but, before that, The Who appeared on stage first; they played those 4 magnificent songs like The world was going to The end the next day. I became an absolute Who fan. Huge Masters of live perfomance. I was only able to enjoy them live in 2017. Blessings to all of You from Santiago City from Chile.
The Who. , so incredibly unique . Like no other...
Best that Baba O’Riley sounded since Keith Moon. Pete’s solo was fantastic. They brought it so hard for this performance, I remember watching it live and just been floored. They’ll forever be my all time favorite band.
Electric performance sends shivers up my spine
The Ox makes it for me. Amazing bass !
RIP to the Big man and all the victims of that awful day