![]() Racing legend Mario Andretti and The Who frontman Roger Daltrey, at the Long Beach Grand Prix, April. Worry doesn’t really produce anything anyway.Ĭlash: I know that you took a thrill ride in a two-seat lndy car with Mario Andretti at the Long Beach Grand Prix a few years back. You know what I’m saying? It’s basically beyond my comprehension. Your physical being will change, but some part of you can never leave, even if it’s just dust floating about in Nebula 1115XBXYZZ. The universe will remain constant, and you move on. But when they go off to market, I’m aware of where they’re going. In my will, it should say to put me in a paper bag and take me down to the dump. ![]() Then I’ll ask you, What do you want your epitaph to be?ĭaltrey: “Gone”. But I lived in the ignorance of it - we all do when we’re young.Ĭlash: So you’re not afraid of death. The pain never left them, I do know that. How my parents got through the war, losing brothers and sisters, I don’t know. That really terrifies me, that they’ll have to go through a terrible time. They are the most important thing in my life. Things that really frighten me are what might hurt my family. I’m not afraid of death, that’s for sure. And like attracts like, there’s no doubt about that.Ĭlash: How do you deal with fear, and what are you afraid of?ĭaltrey: I’m afraid of the things that everybody else is. In the back of your head, if you think lucky, be lucky, it’s incredibly positive. You can either be someone who has a negative outlook on life, or someone who has a positive one. There was this North London saying that, when you used to go into a bank to rob it, be lucky, get away with it. It’s actually a saying I got from a friend, John McVicar, when I acted in a film about his life. Are you a lucky guy?ĭaltrey: I do believe in that. Clash: You always put the words “be lucky” at the end of your e-mails.
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