1973–1974 tour The band toured in support of
Quadrophenia but immediately encountered difficulties playing the material live. To achieve the rich overdubbed sound of the album on stage, Townshend wanted
Chris Stainton (who had played piano on some tracks) to join as a touring member. Daltrey objected to this and believed the Who's performances should only have the four core members. To obtain the required instrumentation without additional musicians, the group elected to employ taped backing tracks for live performance, as they had already done for "
Baba O'Riley" and "
Won't Get Fooled Again". Initial performances were plagued by malfunctioning equipment. Once the tapes started, the band had to play to them, which constrained their styles. Moon, in particular, found playing
Quadrophenia difficult as he was forced to stick to a click track instead of watching the rest of the band. The group only allowed two days of rehearsals with the tapes before touring, one of which was abandoned after Daltrey punched Townshend following an argument. The tour started on 28 October 1973. The original plan had been to play most of the album, but after the first gig at
Stoke-on-Trent, the band dropped "The Dirty Jobs", "Is It in My Head" and "I've Had Enough" from the set. Both Daltrey and Townshend felt they had to describe the plot in detail to the audience, which took up valuable time on stage. A few shows later in
Newcastle upon Tyne, the backing tapes to "5:15" came in late. Townshend stopped the show, grabbed Pridden, who was controlling the mixing desk, and dragged him onstage, shouting obscenities at him. Townshend subsequently picked up some of the tapes and threw them over the stage, kicked his amplifier over, and walked off. The band returned 20 minutes later, playing older material. Townshend and Moon appeared on local television the following day and attempted to brush things off. The Who played two other shows in Newcastle without incident. The US tour started on 20 November at the
Cow Palace in San Francisco. The group were nervous about playing
Quadrophenia after the British tour, especially Moon. Before the show, he was offered some
tranquillisers from a fan. Just after the show started, the fan collapsed and was hospitalised. Moon's playing, meanwhile, became incredibly erratic, particularly during
Quadrophenia where he did not seem to be able to keep time with the backing tapes. Towards the end of the show, during "Won't Get Fooled Again", he passed out over his drumkit. After a 20-minute wait, Moon reappeared onstage, but after a few bars of "Magic Bus", collapsed again, and was immediately taken to hospital.
Scot Halpin, an audience member, convinced promoter
Bill Graham to let him play drums, and the group closed the show with him. Moon had a day to recover, and by the next show at the
Los Angeles Forum, was playing at his usual strength. The group began to get used to the backing tapes, and the remainder of gigs for the US tour were successful. The tour continued in February 1974, with a short series of gigs in France. The final show at the Palais de Sports in
Lyon on the 24th was the last time
Quadrophenia was played as a stage piece with Moon, who died in 1978. Townshend later said that Daltrey "ended up hating
Quadrophenia – probably because it had bitten back". However, a small selection of songs remained in the set list; live performances of "Drowned" and "Bell Boy" filmed at
Charlton Athletic football ground on 18 May were later released on the
30 Years of Maximum R&B box set.
1996–1997 tour In June 1996, Daltrey, Townshend and Entwistle revived
Quadrophenia as a live concert. They performed at
Hyde Park, London as part of the
Prince's Trust "Masters of Music" benefit concert, playing most of the album for the first time since 1974. The concert was not billed as the Who, but credited to the three members individually. The performance also included
Gary Glitter as the Godfather,
Phil Daniels as the Narrator and Jimmy,
Trevor MacDonald as the newsreader,
Adrian Edmondson as the Bell Boy and
Stephen Fry as the hotel manager. The musical lineup included Townshend's brother
Simon,
Zak Starkey on drums (his first appearance with the Who), guitarists
David Gilmour (who played the bus driver) and
Geoff Whitehorn, keyboardists
John "Rabbit" Bundrick and
Jon Carin, percussionist
Jody Linscott,
Billy Nicholls leading a two-man/two-woman backing vocal section, and five brass players. During rehearsals, Daltrey was struck in the face by Glitter's microphone stand, and performed the concert wearing an
eyepatch. A subsequent tour of the US and UK followed, employing most of the same players but with
Billy Idol replacing Edmondson, Simon Townshend replacing Gilmour and
P. J. Proby replacing Glitter during the second half of the tour. 85,000 fans saw the ensemble perform
Quadrophenia at
Madison Square Garden over six nights in July 1996. A recording from the tour was subsequently released in 2005 as part of
Tommy and Quadrophenia Live.
2010s tours The Who performed Quadrophenia at the
Royal Albert Hall on 30 March 2010 as part of the
Teenage Cancer Trust series of ten gigs. This one-off performance of the rock opera featured guest appearances from
Pearl Jam's
Eddie Vedder and
Kasabian's
Tom Meighan. In November 2012, the Who started a U.S. tour of
Quadrophenia, dubbed "
Quadrophenia and More". The group played the entire album without any guest singers or announcements with the then regular Who line-up (including Starkey and bassist
Pino Palladino, who replaced Entwistle following his death in 2002) along with five additional musicians. The tour included additional video performances, including Moon singing "Bell Boy" from 1974 and Entwistle's bass solo in "5:15" from 2000. After Starkey injured his wrist, session drummer Scott Devours replaced him for part of the tour with minimal rehearsal. The tour progressed, with Devours drumming, to the UK in 2013, ending in a performance at
Wembley Arena in July. In September 2017, Townshend embarked on a short tour with
Billy Idol,
Alfie Boe, and an orchestra entitled "Classic Quadrophenia". == Adaptations ==