Keith Moon was more than just rock's greatest drummer, he was a phenomenal character and an extravagant hell raiser who - in a final, uncharacteristic act of grace - actually did die before he got old. This new edition includes a newly written After word that consiers Moon's lasting legacy, the death of John Entwistle and The Who's ongoing career in the new millennium. In this astonishing biography, Tony Fletcher questions the myths, avoids the time-honoured anecdotes and talks afresh to those who where closest to Moon including Kim, his wife of eight years, and Linda, his sister and Annette Walter-Lax, his main girlfriend of the final years. Also interviewed are Oliver Reed, Larry Hagman, David Putnam, Alice Cooper, Dave Edmunds, Jeff Beck, John Entwistle and many others who worked and partied with him. In interviewing over 100 people who knew Moon, Fletcher reveals the truth behind the 'famous' stunts that never occured - and the more outrageous ones that did! He also uncovers astonishing details about Moon's outrageous extravagance which was financed by The Who's American success.
Tony Fletcher has been writing about music since 1977 when, at the age of 13, he started a 6-page fanzine, Jamming, at school in London. Jamming grew to become a major music monthly, landing exclusive interviews with Paul McCartney, Pete Townshend and U2 and helping to introduce the likes of Scritti Politti, Aztec Camera and the Homosexuals to a wider audience (or not). The success of Jamming also propelled Fletcher into the world of freelance journalism and television work before the magazine folded in 1986 (having optimistically attempted to expand in the middle of a deep recession) and Fletcher discovered the joy of writing books.
Falling in love at first sight with New York, Fletcher moved across the Atlantic in 1988, living in various roach-infested apartments on the East Side of Manhattan while contributing regularly to New York Newsday, New York Press, Spin, and Details - back when print media was still considered cutting edge - and bringing his love of music into a stint as resident DJ for Communion, an acclaimed weekly alternative music night at the Limelight club. He continued freelancing as a television journalist and producer, mainly for the cult classic Rapido and its various offspring, and found himself with an expense account for the first (and last) time in his life when hired as a major record company A&R consultant during the music industry's lucrative swan song period of the mid-nineties.
But his main love has always been the written word. He has contributed to countless magazines and newspapers on several continents, some of which even paid him on time, and is the author of several books. These include the best-selling biography on Keith Moon ("Dear Boy" in the UK, just "Moon" in the States), the first ever biography of R.E.M. (updated and expanded into something of a director's cut, as "Remarks Remade"), a song-by-song chronology of The Clash, a biography of the highly influential Liverpool band Echo and The Bunnymen, plus a novel of New York nightlife, "Hedonism," which would come with a Parental Advisory sticker except that, thankfully, publishers don't believe in such things.
In 2005, Fletcher left the funk and soul of brownstone Brooklyn, where he'd been living since 1996, for the relative peace and quiet of New York State's beautiful Catskills. There, tucked into a mountainside between Woodstock and Phoenicia, he resides with his wife, two sons, Rickenbacker, Hammond B-3, cat, and various wildlife. Ironically for such a bucolic existence, his most recently published book is entitled "All Hopped Up and Ready To Go: Music from the Streets of New York 1927-77," which was published by W. W. Norton in October 2009 to a significantly positive reception.
Since the year 2000, Fletcher has been posting regularly at his web site, www.ijamming.net, where he muses upon his love of running, skiing, writing, wine, women - and, of course, song. More recently, he has shown up on http://twitter.com/TonyFletcher. In the year 2010, he completed a memoir of his schooldays, entitled Boy About Town, and began work on a major biography of The Smiths, for publication by William Heinemann (UK) and Crown (USA) in 2012.


