Yungblud & Roger Daltrey
Rolling Stone UK|February/March 2023
On staying fashionable in music, how ego ruined social media, and saying no fucking way’ to The Voice
By Hannah Ewens.
Yungblud & Roger Daltrey

Roger Daltrey walks through Kore Studios near London's Shepherd's Bush, opening doors and looking for Yungblud. "Is he here?" the Who frontman asks. Yes, he is. "A young musician on time! Unheard of," Daltrey booms. Everyone within earshot laughs.

This location was chosen for its familiarity (Daltrey has recorded here) and for ease - the 78-year-old lives not too far from Kore, just outside London. On the contrary, the much younger star he's meeting has flown in from Paris, where he played a show last night, and will soon hop on a flight to LA.

It's the first in-person meeting for Daltrey, one of the quintessential frontmen of British rock music, and the 25-year-old Yungblud - real name Dominic Harrison - the new face of British pop rock. Both are invested in this conversation in their own way: Daltrey is genuinely curious about how Yungblud manages the modern music industry and social media, both of which he finds disagreeable, and has questions from his granddaughters, two big Yungblud fans. Yungblud, a new UK style icon who released his self-titled album in September, is simply in awe of Daltrey, having grown up listening to his music being played by his dad and granddad.

DALTREY: I feel sorry for young people now there's so much real style, sharp style in the past.

YUNGBLUD: I remember when I was kind of figuring out what I wanted to look like. It was you lads, the Clash. It was Jamie Reid, who did all the Sex Pistols designs. And it was just like, 'How the hell can I bring that to young people today?' Everyone I was seeing in music was just wearing jeans and a T-shirt.

DALTREY: I've got to tell you, when Axl [Rose] first appeared with shorts and T-shirts onstage, we all fucking laughed.

YUNGBLUD: I want people to have identity because there were so many [sub]cultures back then.

This story is from the February/March 2023 edition of Rolling Stone UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the February/March 2023 edition of Rolling Stone UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM ROLLING STONE UKView All
Declan McKenna Breaks Free
Rolling Stone UK

Declan McKenna Breaks Free

The singer-songwriter discusses the more chilled vibe that defines his third album, the pressure on artists to engage with social media, and how he's becoming the artist he always wanted to be

time-read
9 mins  |
February/March 2024
BIG BOI & J.I.D
Rolling Stone UK

BIG BOI & J.I.D

Two of the sharpest lyricists in Atlanta meet up at Stankonia Studios the birthplace of too many classic verses to count to trade industry stories and favourite bars, and talk about how they want to see hip-hop keep evolving

time-read
9 mins  |
February/March 2024
SNOOP DOGG & LATTO
Rolling Stone UK

SNOOP DOGG & LATTO

Two uniquely charismatic rappers, from two different generations, sit down and go deep on their come-up, their studio secrets, the importance of fighting hate with love, and that time Pharrell got too high and left Snoop alone to produce Stevie Wonder

time-read
10+ mins  |
February/March 2024
DJ KHALED CAN'T STOP WINNING
Rolling Stone UK

DJ KHALED CAN'T STOP WINNING

LATELY, DJ KHALED has been listening to a lot of Jay-Z. Namely The Blueprint, the 2001 opus that helped solidify Hov as a commercial juggernaut in hip-hop.

time-read
10+ mins  |
February/March 2024
THE WORLD BELONGS TO 21 SAVAGE
Rolling Stone UK

THE WORLD BELONGS TO 21 SAVAGE

He became your favourite rapper’s favourite rapper while overcoming all manner of turbulence. We ride along as Savage heads to Europe and starts a new chapter in one of hip-hop’s most unique stories

time-read
10+ mins  |
February/March 2024
BETWEEN DREAMS AND REALITY
Rolling Stone UK

BETWEEN DREAMS AND REALITY

Yard Act are back with a new sound for their second album, Where's My Utopia? Here, they discuss the record's more personal focus, and how the fantasy of making it big measures up to living through it

time-read
8 mins  |
February/March 2024
TO CAPTURE A FIRE
Rolling Stone UK

TO CAPTURE A FIRE

Actor Kingsley Ben-Adir on playing Jamaica's most famous son, reggae icon Bob Marley - a role he embodies with the full support of the Marley family-in forthcoming biopic, One Love

time-read
10+ mins  |
February/March 2024
IT MUST BE LOVE
Rolling Stone UK

IT MUST BE LOVE

On their fifth album, TANGK, rock band IDLES lean further into experimentation and softer textures while focusing on a central theme: love. At his home in Bristol, frontman Joe Talbot explains how making an album of love songs helped him to heal, while the band's guitarist and producer Mark Bowen explains the key to their writing partnership

time-read
10+ mins  |
February/March 2024
DUA LIPA IS GIVING US EVERYTHING
Rolling Stone UK

DUA LIPA IS GIVING US EVERYTHING

After a whirlwind couple of years, the wildly ambitious pop star is embracing freedom and fun both in her life and on her upcoming album. As she kicks off a new era, she lets us into her dreams, her anxieties, and what she wants to stand for

time-read
10+ mins  |
February/March 2024
The greatest show on earth!
Rolling Stone UK

The greatest show on earth!

The inaugural Rolling Stone UK Awards, in collaboration with Rémy Martin, were presented at Camden's legendary Roundhouse in November. The stars came out to play, and with Munya Chawawa as host-for one night only - we rocked the world a little bit harder...

time-read
3 mins  |
February/March 2024