Try GOLD - Free
‘My dad can’t even go to Waitrose. D’you want that?’
The Independent
|June 30, 2025
Zak Starkey, drumming dynamo and son of Ringo Starr, is soon to rejoin Oasis. But, he explains to Mark Beaumont, he is still not entirely sure if he’s a member of The Who or not
At the age of 14 or 15, Zak Starkey disowned The Beatles. “It’s like a wall,” he says in a very mod-like mutter that would have no one guessing he was the son of Ringo Starr. “Can’t get over it.
Can’t get through it, can’t get under it.” He used to “fucking hate” and “totally reject” the idea of the band. Instead, he knuckled down to forge a drumming career of his own, encouraged by “uncle” Keith Moon (who bought Starkey his first drum kit when the boy was eight) and tutored by the Faces’ Kenney Jones. It was 10 more years before he finally returned to his father’s rhythmic oeuvre. “When I was 25, I listened to The Beatles and went, ‘Fucking hell, these guys were amazing. I should have been listening to this years ago’. And then I got over it.”
Now 59, Starkey settles into the quietest corner of a Soho bar (“This ear isn’t very good,” he says, jabbing the left) as an alumnus of Johnny Marr & The Healers, Oasis and - until his very recent, very public departure - The Who. He’s also the fulcrum of his own all-star band, Mantra of the Cosmos, featuring main players Shaun Ryder, Bez (both Happy Mondays mainstays) and Andy Bell of Ride. “To me, he was a great drummer and that was it,” Ryder says of Starkey over the phone. “I didn’t know he was a fucking amazing producer. Then when I got in the studio and he stuck a load of beats and tunes on, I fucking loved it. It’s different from the Mondays, it’s different from what I do in Black Grape, it’s a fucking buzz.”
This story is from the June 30, 2025 edition of The Independent.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Independent
The Independent
Streeting is a predator and he smells blood in the water
What is Wes up to...? This is a question that we'll probably be asking ourselves a good deal in the coming weeks – and by “us”, I mean Streeting’s comrades in the Labour Party.
3 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
William’s Duchy sale is the stuff of a truly radical royal
The Prince of Wales’s pledge to sell off land and property shows his change agenda is serious, says Harry Mount
5 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
Rai’s PGA win is a feelgood story the game really needs
Aaron Rai’s putter swung like a pendulum back down towards the 17th green after the ball dropped – and the mildest of fist pumps followed, while the surrounding fans roared in shock.
5 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
Surprise guests at preview of Chelsea Flower Show
Event lifts ban on gnomes for only second time in history
3 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
Tube strikes called off but dispute with TFL ‘not over’
Strikes planned for today and Thursday by London Underground drivers have been called off, the RMT has confirmed.
1 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
Arsenal quell nerves – just – to stay on course for title
Still one hand on the title, but only after Arsenal dragged themselves that bit closer.
3 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
We want to believe: how UFOs went mainstream
As more and more people are willing to discuss experiences once dismissed as fantasy, Jonathan Margolis looks at what makes someone think aliens and flying saucers truly exist
8 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
Prove my mother is alive, Suu Kyi’s son tells Myanmar
Concerns about the wellbeing of Aung San Suu Kyi continue to persist more than a fortnight after she was put under house arrest, with her son calling on Myanmar’s new government to “show proof of life”.
3 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
Why right to trial by jury is set to be a hot topic again
As presaged in the King’s Speech, the government’s highly controversial Courts and Tribunals Bill has been reintroduced to parliament.
2 mins
May 19, 2026
The Independent
Brittin needs to Farage-proof the BBC – here’s how to do it
Welcome to the worst job in the world, Matt Brittin. Only kidding – being director-general of the BBC is not quite that, whatever some people might have you believe, Gordon Brown included.
4 mins
May 19, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

