
‘We joke about who's getting their knees done': the rock veterans still touring into their late 70s
'There was a time when I thought, maybe it's time to gracefully bow out,' the prog keyboard caped crusader explains, before his latest gig in Bradford. 'But unfortunately I can't. Music is the world to me. It's just become blatantly obvious that I'm going to keep doing it until they put an epitaph on my gravestone reading: 'It's not fair. I'm not finished yet.''
Elkie Brooks knows exactly how he feels. The 'Queen of British blues' (whose hits include Pearl's a Singer and Lilac Wine) has had 13 Top 75 albums in total and is on the road again at 80, having performed a 'farewell tour' when she was 40. 'The promoter thought it might be a nice idea,' she chuckles. 'I've been saying 'farewell' ever since.'
The pair are not alone in rocking way past pensionable age. When rock'n'roll was considered a young person's game, the young Mick Jagger once said: 'I don't wanna be singing Satisfaction when I'm 30,' but he still tours with the Rolling Stones at 81, while other venerable rockers treading the boards include Bob Dylan (83), Paul McCartney (82), Bruce Springsteen (75) and Mavis Staples (85). Folk legend Peggy Seeger is even touring this year aged 89. 'It's like a drug,' Wakeman explains. 'Once it's inside you, you can't do without it.'
The top stars don't need the money but perform because it is rooted in their psyche and the demand is there. For Graham Nash, the Blackpool-born co-founder of the Hollies and supergroup Crosby, Stills and Nash, it's about 'the passion of music, and the energy I get from performing a new song to an audience. And when it's a song I've sung a million times, I'm going to sing it with the same passion I had when I wrote it.'
Seventy-five-year-old, California-born roots singer Bonnie Raitt has spent 54 years on the road and says she can't think of anything more fun. 'When I started out, my heroes were the jazz, blues and classical people who played well into their 70s and 80s. But touring is like a travelling summer camp. Then every night I get to have a party with the audience.'
Stars get hooked young. Wakeman first performed in childhood and Salford-born Brooks got the bug through singing in her uncle's wedding band. Raitt watched audiences going 'nuts' when her father sang in musicals such as Oklahoma! 'None of us could believe this was his job,' she remembers. 'So once I took to it and got to open for James Taylor and Muddy Waters there was no turning back.'
Nash was a teenager when he entered a talent contest at Manchester Hippodrome with his pal Allan Clarke. 'On that show were myself and Allan, who later formed the Hollies, Freddie Garrity, who became Freddie and the Dreamers, Ron Wycherley, who became Billy Fury, and Johnny and the Moondogs, who became the Beatles.' John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison had dashed for the last bus back to Liverpool by the time Nash and Clarke were declared the winners, but Nash says '2,000 people going crazy was the moment I knew I loved singing for people'.
In the Hollies, he experienced the archetypal touring life: 'Five of us in the back of a Transit, trying to get to sleep on the amps and drum cases. One night the doors flew open and I fell out of the van.' Aged 20, Wakeman lived similarly during his time in the Strawbs. He chuckles. 'You couldn't get my keyboard rig in a Transit now.'
Joining prog rock giants Yes in 1971 took his touring experiences to a very different level. 'Staying on Sunset Strip with a whole bathroom and a shag pile carpet. I thought: 'Bloody hell. I could move in here.'' But for older artists comfort is essential, rather than a luxury. 'I wouldn't want to be running around in a van trying to break into the business, loading the equipment and not getting decent hotels or food,' Raitt says. 'The trick is to pace yourself.' She's been touring for the last four years, and she does five months on the road out of every 12. 'Enough to keep my band and crew working with me and to keep it fun.'
In her youth, Brooks hated touring. 'Just me in my little Mini with a little suitcase, driving everywhere, finding my own bed and breakfasts. I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy.' Now she tours the country with long gaps between gigs, pointing out that her vocal warmup, soundcheck and show still add up to more than three hours of exertion. 'You wouldn't ask Mo Farah to run the marathon again the next day, would you?' On show days, she avoids speaking to rest her voice. Raitt concurs: 'One of the great gifts has been texting and email to save your voice during the day.'
It also helps to stay fit. Brooks became a black belt in aikido when she was 50. Raitt does yoga and weights, hikes and takes a bike on tour. Wakeman merely walks his dogs. 'We recently sold a house and in one of the outbuildings I came across this strange equipment,' he chuckles. 'My wife said: 'That's the gym you built four years ago.''
As a member of Yes, he enjoyed excesses such as mocking a studio up like a farmyard, after which his keyboard had to go for repair because it was full of woodlice. 'We'd come up with mad suggestions,' he chuckles. ''Why don't we travel by camel?!' It was ridiculous, but it was the 70s.' His own excess stopped at drugs – 'I've never popped a pill or smoked a joint' – but, he says, too much booze and cigarettes gave him a series of heart attacks by the age of 25, so he quit both. 'I try not to think about all that,' he admits, more seriously, 'because you ask yourself: 'Should I still be here?''
'Honestly, to go on at the Newcastle Fiesta in 1964 or 65 you needed half a bottle of brandy,' argues Brooks, who admits that in Vinegar Joe, the band she formed with Robert Palmer in the 1970s, taking cocaine was like having a cup of coffee. 'The thing was, we'd go on in Sheffield at 10pm, then we'd be doing a gig in the London Roundhouse at 3am. Two shows a night. I often wondered why the record company were taking cocaine but we were taking it just to stay bloody awake.' She stopped after meeting Trevor, her sound engineer husband of 47 years, who didn't touch the stuff. 'I wanted him to like me,' she says. She last drank alcohol before a show in 1979, when 'a stomach upset meant I couldn't keep anything down'.
Sign up to Inside Saturday
The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend.
after newsletter promotion
'By your 30s, staying up drinking and doing drugs and not sleeping aren't wearing so well,' considers Raitt, who had also got 'sucked in' to the rock'n'roll lifestyle. 'The next thing you know your liver is shot or you're not recovering from colds or you lose your voice, say stuff you don't mean or you're sloppy on stage.' After a 1987 skiing accident, she had to take two months off after surgery so took the opportunity to get sober, go on a diet and lose weight, in preparation for a video shoot with Prince. 'The biggest change was not partying all night after the show but it proved serendipitous: I got famous at the same time I got sober. Then I saw other people who'd got sober and they were singing and playing better than ever, so my last excuse was gone.'
In Nash's autobiography Wild Tales, he describes mind-boggling 70s tours involving helicopters, limousines, coke dealers and five-hour shows that went on past midnight, but life is different now. 'I was never really an addict,' he insists, 'but I stopped taking cocaine 40 years ago after I went to an aftershow party and saw everybody smiling, but the smiles never reached their eyes. I realised they must be looking at me and seeing the same thing.' He still uses marijuana before shows, but says, 'I'm about to turn 83. I don't have a vocal coach, I do 22 songs a night, 25 shows a tour. Songs such as Military Madness or Immigration Man are still relevant and I'm singing as well as ever.'
Some older stars carry scars from a lifetime on the road. Along with those heart attacks, Wakeman has had 'double pleurisy, double pneumonia, arthritis, diabetes' and has to plunge his throbbing arthritic hands into an ice bath after every show. 'I had some health problems in America this year and if it wasn't for the show I'd have been in bed or calling the medics,' he reveals. 'But when you go on stage, something takes over – adrenaline or whatever – and you feel great, until you're back in the dressing room and you feel dreadful.'
Raitt has had to postpone shows in recent years because of laryngitis or 'wear and tear' and says her older musician pals joke about 'who's getting their knees done or who's got tendonitis and so on. But in every city there are parks I love to go to, friends I love to see. And there are people who saw me in the 1970s who still come and see me now.'
Younger fans discover veteran artists through parents, radio, magazines or streaming. It amazes Nash that he can pack a hall at his age and Wakeman appreciates every second in ways he could never have done when he was younger. What would make him stop performing? 'If I couldn't play like I want to. I never want to hear people walk out of a concert and go: 'He used to be really good.''
Raitt wants to prove that she's as 'badass' as ever, but insists: 'I'm not slowing down and I'm not going to stop until I can't do it any more.' Brooks jokes that when she can no longer hit the high notes, 'they'll find a place for me in Tesco on the tills'. Nash saw Spanish guitar giant Andrés Segovia play when he was 92. 'And he knocked me on my ass with the energy and brilliance of his performance. So I think: 'Why not me?''
Perhaps there's a life lesson here for all of us. As Raitt puts it: 'If you find something you love doing, keep doing it.'
Elkie Brooks plays the Lowry, Salford, 16 March, and is touring until 2026; Bonnie Raitt tours the UK from 1 to 17 June, starting at the Usher Hall, Belfast; Graham Nash is touring from 4 to 19 October, starting at the Glasshouse, Gateshead; Rick Wakeman and the English Rock Ensemble tour the UK from 12 to 29 October.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Record
7 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Patrick Kielty 'in dark place' if fears over Cat Deeley moving back to US come true
Patrick Kielty and Cat Deeley announced this week they are to split after 13 years of marriage Insiders have expressed concern that Patrick Kielty could be "in a very dark place" if his ex-wife Cat Deeley decides to return to the US with their children. The couple, who were married for 13 years, announced their separation this week, causing shockwaves and concern among their close circles. Residents in Dundrum, County Down - Patrick's hometown - have voiced their worry for the 54 year old star, who tied the knot with Cat in Rome back in September 2012. Those close to Patrick, father of two children with Cat, fear he would be heartbroken if his former spouse returns to the US, where they previously resided. An insider revealed: "Everyone is worried about Paddy. The fear is that Cat will go back to America with the little ones. That will leave him in a very dark place," reports the Mirror. Cat took over presenting duties on ITV's This Morning last year alongside Ben Shephard, following the departures of Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby. However, since confirming her split from Patrick, it has come to light that 48 year old Cat found the transition back to the UK challenging. There are growing concerns that Cat, who began her career hosting SMTV Live on Saturday mornings, might quit her role at ITV and head back to the US. Television insiders told Mail Online: "Cat's time on This Morning has not been a failure, but it has hardly been a roaring success. "It is a job which puts her under so much scrutiny, day-in and day-out, and unlike most British presenters she has plenty more lucrative options to choose from in the States... there is concern that all of this family drama could lead her to walk away." Cat and Patrick, a comedian and TV host, resided in Los Angeles for over 14 years, where Cat hosted the reality TV show, So You Think You Can Dance. They returned to the UK and Cat promptly began on This Morning, believed to be one of several ITV daytime shows facing budget cuts. The broadcaster recently unveiled plans for a revamp, including reducing Lorraine by 30 minutes and discontinuing it entirely during school holidays from January. It's thought that This Morning will relocate from its White City base in west London to a smaller, less expensive studio in central London. Cat has been candid about her struggles adjusting to the 5am starts for the four days a week she presents This Morning, revealing that it resulted in her and Patrick sleeping in separate beds most nights. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. Last September, Patrick, who presents The Late Late Show which is recorded in Dublin, dismissed suggestions that the couple were finding it hard to make time for each other. Patrick and Cat announced their split in a joint statement to the PA News agency which read: "We have taken the decision to end our marriage and are now separated. There is no other party involved. We will continue to be united as loving parents to our children and would therefore kindly ask for our family privacy to be respected."


Daily Mail
8 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Lola Young is overcome with emotion as she reveals she has bought her first house amid huge success ahead of second album
She soared to fame last year when her hit song Messy went viral and she made history after becoming the youngest British female artist to score a solo number-one single since Dua Lipa in 2017. Since then Lola Young's career has gone from strength to strength with the star preparing to release her second album in September. And the singer has now celebrated a huge milestone as she shared the news with fans that she has bought her first house. Taking to Instagram on Friday, Lola, 24, was overcome with emotion as she gushed how proud she is of herself after years of hard work. She told fans: 'I am currently sitting on the floor in one of the bedrooms of my new house that I have just bought. I am so proud of myself and emotional to be honest. 'I am so excited to start a new chapter of my life here and make memories, make so memories.' She added: 'So yeah working hard does pay off, it really does.' The star took to the stage at Glastonbury in June and is set to embark on shows across the UK and US in the autumn. Her latest single d£aler was released last week, with Elton John already 'betting his house' that it is going to be a number one single. 'It's unbelievable, it's the biggest smash I have heard in years,' said the legendary musician during a chat on Apple Music. He added: 'You are going to have the most incredible career, because you can sing live, you are just the whole deal.' Earlier this year Lola was forced to address allegations she is a 'nepo baby' or an 'industry plant ' after fans discovered her aunt is Julia Donaldson, the author behind the beloved children's book The Gruffalo. People also hit out, calling Lola an 'industry plant,' which is someone who presents as organically growing their fame but have actually been set up by a label. Appearing on Capital Buzz, host Sam Pearce asked the rising star: 'Something that happens any time an artist blows up, the term industry plant gets thrown around, and obviously people have no idea that you've been working since 2019. How do you feel about that term?' She continued: 'I am so excited to start a new chapter of my life here and make memories, make so memories' Hitting back at the 'losers that comment rubbish,' Lola quipped: 'No, they don't know, otherwise they wouldn't be saying that. I think it is just the most stupid term. 'I think there are cases of industry plants but so what? It doesn't mean they're not talented and it doesn't take away from anything. 'People are saying I'm a nepo baby because my great Aunt wrote The Gruffalo. I mean what kind of rubbish is that?' She continued: 'I have so much to say on that which I can't even talk about. But I'm not a nepo baby, I'm not an industry plant, there we go I said it. 'I've cleared that up for all those losers that want to comment rubbish on the internet. Just find something better to do, you're sad, you're lonely. 'The thing is industry plant is just a term for other artists and other people to use who just don't know what they're doing in life and feel upset that someone else is having their moment. 'And if you are an industry plant, you're not going to have your moment for that long, unfortunately. 'And maybe sometimes you will, it just doesn't matter, none of these things matter. If someone's got talent, then they've got talent.' She then clarified: 'Yeah, and I'm also not an industry plant at all by the way.'


Glasgow Times
12 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Pub Quiz August 2: How smart are you? Take our pub quiz
Perfect if you're taking a trip to the pub this weekend, this quiz will let you brush up on some of that unusual but essential knowledge for the occasion. With 10 fun questions, the pub quiz will get your brain cogs working and put your general knowledge skills to the test. From the spices at Nandos, to what year Tony Blair became Prime Minister, see how many questions you can guess correctly. Take last week's quiz now: Pub Quiz July 26: How smart are you? Take our pub quiz So, if you think you have what it takes to be the pub quiz master, find out now and take our quiz. If you liked that quiz, you can see how British you are with the UK's citizenship test. You can even test your Barbie knowledge with our Barbie quiz and find out if you're a Barbie or just Ken. Now that you've put your brain to the test, you'll want to start revising hard in preparation for the next pub quiz. Did you get 10/10, or was it a tough round for you? Keep an eye on the news and get ready for next week's pub quiz. How well did you do? Let us know in the comments below. What is the history of the pub quiz? The pub quiz is believed to have originated from a company called Burns and Porter, which would share its quizzes in the 1970s in order to encourage more regular visitors. The regular pub quizzes saw pub numbers rise from 30 teams a week to a peak of 10,000 teams. Burns and Porter went on to publish their own line of pub quiz books and would continue to host weekly quizzes.