THE PILL THAT WAS SUPPOSED TO SAVE HIS LIFE KILLED HIM AT 32. Keith Moon — the wild, untamable drummer of The Who — was trying to get better. He’d been prescribed Heminevrin, a powerful sedative to fight his alcohol addiction. His friends noticed he’d calmed down. He was even talking about getting married. On the night of September 6, 1978, Keith attended a party hosted by Paul McCartney, then went to watch “The Buddy Holly Story” — a film about a rock star who died young. No one thought twice about it. He came home around 4 a.m. Ate a steak. Took his pills. Went to sleep. When his girlfriend tried to wake him the next afternoon… silence. 32 Heminevrin tablets in his system. 26 hadn’t even dissolved. The drug designed to save him from one addiction became the thing that took everything. Pete Townshend later called it “a silly mistake.” Keith always swallowed pills by the handful. That was just who he was. But what Townshend said next — about those final phone calls Keith made every night at 11:30 — that part still haunts everyone who heard it.
The Night Keith Moon Took the Pill That Was Supposed to Save Him Keith Moon was the kind of drummer…