Julie Good Memories Part 3

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So
well
it
were
like
89
I
was
like
17
going
on
18,
Right
and
you
just
said
you’re
on
a
Y.T.S
Yeah
Which
was
27
pound
a
week.
Yeah,
And
I
think
it
went
up
to
35
if
you
stayed
on
for
a
second
year
didn’t
it?
Yeah
Or something like that
Yeah
Because
I
was
doing
the
same
and
yeah,
well,
what
was…
what
was
Blackburn
like
at
the
time
you’ve
got…
if
you’re
on
27
a
week
it’s
the
80s
in
Blackburn.
Oh,
yeah
Blackburn
was
busy
wasn’t
it
but
what
else
would
well,
what
did
you
think
it…
was
it…
was
it…
a
poor
town?
Oh
yeah.
Or
was it
an okay
town?
I
mean
obviously
it
had
a
really
good
night
life
always
had
a
good
reputation
of
a
really
good
night
life
so
even
before
the
parties
came,
it
was
pub
crawls
nightclubs
and there
were a
few
nightclubs
to
go
to
weren’t there.
There
were
Ce La Vie
there
were
Mr G’s
there
were
Peppermint Place
which
changed
its
name
a
few
times
And it was
there
was
Manhattan
Heights
as
well
which were
brilliant
that
was
another.
Yeah
good…
really
good
place
to
go.
And
it
was
busy
Thursday
Friday
Saturday.
Yeah
I were
out
nearly
every
night
apart from
bar
one.
I were
out
nearly
every
night
bar
one.
Bar
1?
Bar
one…
night
you
know.
Oh right.
Sorry.
I
know…
I
know.
Yeah
probably
1
night
a week
I wouldn’t
go
out
but
most of
the time
we
did
and
we
just
bought
a little bottles
of
vodka
and
a
coke
and
Yeah
on
27
a
week
you could
do it
Yeah,
that’s
how
you
did
it
you
drank
before
you
went
out
and
then
I
think
Mr G’s
had
like
doubles
for
a
pound
and..
yeah.
Things
like
that
and
yeah,
we used
to get
our
clothes off
market
fer a
fiver
for
this
and
a
fiver for
that
and
I
worked
on an
ice
cream
van
as well
at
weekend.
You
worked
on
an
ice-cream
van?
At
weekend.
Wow.
Yeah,
Where abouts
just
in
Blackburn?
Yeah,
with…
no
till…
no
nothing
just
all
mental
maths
and
in ye’ head.
No
way
that’s
fantastic.
I
used to
work on that
and go
parties
and
then
day
after
go
home
at
10
o’clock
at
morning
and
then
get
up
at
12
and
then
go
on
ice
cream
van
at
1…
have
a
couple
of
hours
sleep
and
then
go out.
No way
do a
tour
of
Blackburn.
Yeah
That’s
amazing…
wow.
I
don’t
know
how
I
did
it.
But
you
had
to…
but
you
have
to
do
didn’t
you…
which was?
Well
that’s
it
that
you
know,
that’s
how
you
pay
for
things though
innit
because
I used
to
buy
records
every
week
12-inch
singles
every
week.
I
mean
some
of
them
back
then
like
white
labels
were like
15
quid
well
that
I
mean
15
quid
now
is
a
lot
of
money
but back
then
it
was
a
Yeah
it
was
really
expensive
wasn’t
it.
Well
I didn’t
buy
15
one
every week
week
you
know,
just
the
odd…
So
why
didn’t
become
a
DJ?
I
don’t
know
Well
probably
because
you
weren’t
allowed.
Probably
not.
But
it’s
interesting
I’ve
not
met
anybody
else
who
said…
Yeah,
every week
I bought..
said
I bought
12 inch
every
week.
A 12 inch?
At
least
one
every
week
and
you
used to
have
to
order
them
as
well.
That’s
very interesting
Because
of
Italian
import
some
stuff
weren’t it
Yeah, they were
this
is
interesting
because
you
didn’t
really
know,
well
if
you
went
to
the
only
way
to
do
it
was
to
listen
wasn’t
it?
Listen
and
then
I
ask
Lee
Stan…
What’s
this
called?
What’s
the
name
of
it
and
somehow
I
remembered
it.
I
don’t
know
how
I
even
remember
the
name
of
the
tune,
but
it
were
in
there
and
then
I
go
down
the
following
week
and
go buy it.
I
didn’t
have
a
right
lot.
I
don’t
know.
I might of
had
about
about
200
or
something
like
that
not…
that’s
a
lot.
I don’t know
maybe…
maybe
about
100
I
don’t
know.
It
were..
I
had
a
quite
a
lot
and
I
know
I
can
see
a
record
sleeve
now
and I
know
what
song
that
is
even
now
I
could…
I
could
probably
say
yeah,
I
know…
I
know
what
that
is.
But
do
you
not
think
it
was
interesting
music
because
it
didn’t
really
have
a
image
with
it
did
it
didn’t
get
a
poster…
they
weren’t
in
Smash
Hits
you
didn’t
know
who they
were
did you?
No.
And they
weren’t
really
selling
themselves,
their
egos,
it
was
just
the
music
wasn’t
it?
Yeah
You
didn’t…
Yeah
know
who they
were
never
heard of ’em
especially…
and
even
the
same
people
they
bring…
bring
out
3
12 inch
and
but
they’d
been
under
different
names
wouldn’t
they?
Yes.
Cos’ that
was
the
same
guys.
Yeah
yeah.
But
that
was the
thing
that
sold
it
was
the
music
wasn’t it.
Yeah
Which
is…
which
is…
really
which
is
what..
how
it
should
be
shouldn’t it?
Oh,
yeah,
I mean
it
were
brilliant
and
then
obviously
there were
Manhattan
Heights
as
well
which
were
which
were
great
and
even
like
Adamski
came
to
Manhattan
Heights
and
Yeah
I remember
Guru
Josh
and
there were
coach
loads
coming
from
Manchester
and
that
were
brilliant
as
as
well.
and
that were
a good
a
good
night
That wasn’t
it
carried
on
a
bit
after
didn’t it
as
well?
Yeah
With the….
with
the…
Yeah.
Started
at the Hacienda
on
Thursday.
nights
Yeah
as
well.
Yeah,
Which
was
good
wasn’t it.
Yeah,
it
was
a
bit
political
as
well
wasn’t
it,
you
know,
there
was
abit
much,
it
was
a
bit
anti Tory
wasn’t
it.
Because
obviously
Thatcher
was
the
one
that
you
know,
there
was
a
lot
of
disused
mills
and
that’s
how
your
music
ended
up
in
there.
Un-employment
of
course,
un-employment
and
then
obviously
then
she
brought
the
bills
in
to
stop
the
parties
and,
you
know
the
police
got
a
bit
heavy
handed,
a
bit,
and
it
did
you
know
it
is
it
does
correlate
with
the
miners
and,
it’s
a
bit
kind
of
that,
very
similar
to
that.
I
think
where
they
got
vilified
and,
and
we
got
vilified
as
well,
you
know
the
media,
the
Telegraph
even.
I
mean
it
made
me
laugh
because
recently
the
Telegraph
said,
oh
look
at
this
that
happened
20
years
ago,
and
I
thought
hang
on
a
minute
you
were,
you
were
slagging
everybody
20
years
ago
you
were
saying
there
were
people
having
sex
and
there
were
all
sorts
of
all
that
stuff
going
on
and
you
were
slagging
it
off.
And
similarly
on
the,
Radio
Lancashire
were
doing
interviews
on
you
know,
about
commemorating
30
years
of
Acid
House
and
they
were
totally
against
it
as
well
all
the
yeah,
they
all
were.
Yeah
and
they
demonised
us
made us
look
bad,
you
know,
me’ Mum
and Dad
were
like…
What
you
doing,
doing
this?
I said
I’m
not
doing
anything.
You
know
what
it
was.
It
was
very
very
political.
They
made
a
big
thing
of
the
drug
side
of
it
but
as
you
know,
having
been
on
20
a
week.
It
was
a
lot
less
than
people
make
out
wasn’t
it,
there
was
a
lot
less
of
course…
course,
there
was
drugs
there.
But
yeah
there
was a lot
less than
the media
made
out
at
the
time
that’s
for
sure.
Yeah.
I
think
it
it,
cos,
you
know,
at
that
time
I
was
like
young
and
impressionable
and
I
thought
you
know,
like
Margaret
Thatcher,
woman
Prime
Minister
it
kinda,
it
kind
of
a
kind
of,
not,
I
didn’t
idolise
her, but
I
thought,
wow
a
woman
Prime
Minister.
Because
obviously
she
was
the
first
and
last
wasn’t
she.
So
she
was
to
be
admired
I
thought
until
that
happened
and
then
I
look
back
at
all
the
things
that
happened
and
it
did
change
my
view
politically
because
I
was
a
bit
sliding
towards
that
way.
I
was…
and
it’s
changed
me
completely.
I
went
completely
the
other
way.
I’ve
gone
completely
the
other
way.
I
mean,
I’m
not
really
far
left,
but
I
am
kind
of
more
that
way.
Definitely
changed
me
politically.
Definitely.
When
I
see
like
social
media
and
Facebook
and
things
like
that
and
I
see
like
Mixmag
post
stuff
and
things
like
that
and
if
I
ever
see
kind
of
racist
comments
or…
and
I
think
you
know,
did
you
really
understand
what
that
scene
was
about?
These
are
people
from
that
scene
and
from
what
happened
back
then.
And
I
think
you
know,
do
you
really
truly
remember
what
that
was
about,
cos
I
just
can’t
believe
that
you’ve
got
those
political
views
and
those
views
about,
I
can’t
understand
it,
it
I
can’t,
and
that’s
what
I
see
today
I
think
it’s…
So my
message
for
young
people
is,
is
don’t,
don’t
ever
judge
a
book
by
it’s
cover
Don’t
believe
everything
you
hear
or
read
or
see,
you
know,
because
there’s,
you’ve
to
kinda
be
in
it
to
kinda
believe
it
kind
of
thing.
Yeah,
you
have
to
be
there
to
see
what,
to
appreciate
it.
Yeah.
Don’t
you
know,
don’t
knock
it
till
you’ve
tried
it.
Now Playing:
Julie
Good memories part 3. (7:39 mins)
Julie
Advice for future generations. (9 secs)

Full Transcript:

So
well
it
were
like
89
I
was
like
17
going
on
18,
Right
and
you
just
said
you’re
on
a
Y.T.S
Yeah
Which
was
27
pound
a
week.
Yeah,
And
I
think
it
went
up
to
35
if
you
stayed
on
for
a
second
year
didn’t
it?
Yeah
Or something like that
Yeah
Because
I
was
doing
the
same
and
yeah,
well,
what
was…
what
was
Blackburn
like
at
the
time
you’ve
got…
if
you’re
on
27
a
week
it’s
the
80s
in
Blackburn.
Oh,
yeah
Blackburn
was
busy
wasn’t
it
but
what
else
would
well,
what
did
you
think
it…
was
it…
was
it…
a
poor
town?
Oh
yeah.
Or
was it
an okay
town?
I
mean
obviously
it
had
a
really
good
night
life
always
had
a
good
reputation
of
a
really
good
night
life
so
even
before
the
parties
came,
it
was
pub
crawls
nightclubs
and there
were a
few
nightclubs
to
go
to
weren’t there.
There
were
Ce La Vie
there
were
Mr G’s
there
were
Peppermint Place
which
changed
its
name
a
few
times
And it was
there
was
Manhattan
Heights
as
well
which were
brilliant
that
was
another.
Yeah
good…
really
good
place
to
go.
And
it
was
busy
Thursday
Friday
Saturday.
Yeah
I were
out
nearly
every
night
apart from
bar
one.
I were
out
nearly
every
night
bar
one.
Bar
1?
Bar
one…
night
you
know.
Oh right.
Sorry.
I
know…
I
know.
Yeah
probably
1
night
a week
I wouldn’t
go
out
but
most of
the time
we
did
and
we
just
bought
a little bottles
of
vodka
and
a
coke
and
Yeah
on
27
a
week
you could
do it
Yeah,
that’s
how
you
did
it
you
drank
before
you
went
out
and
then
I
think
Mr G’s
had
like
doubles
for
a
pound
and..
yeah.
Things
like
that
and
yeah,
we used
to get
our
clothes off
market
fer a
fiver
for
this
and
a
fiver for
that
and
I
worked
on an
ice
cream
van
as well
at
weekend.
You
worked
on
an
ice-cream
van?
At
weekend.
Wow.
Yeah,
Where abouts
just
in
Blackburn?
Yeah,
with…
no
till…
no
nothing
just
all
mental
maths
and
in ye’ head.
No
way
that’s
fantastic.
I
used to
work on that
and go
parties
and
then
day
after
go
home
at
10
o’clock
at
morning
and
then
get
up
at
12
and
then
go
on
ice
cream
van
at
1…
have
a
couple
of
hours
sleep
and
then
go out.
No way
do a
tour
of
Blackburn.
Yeah
That’s
amazing…
wow.
I
don’t
know
how
I
did
it.
But
you
had
to…
but
you
have
to
do
didn’t
you…
which was?
Well
that’s
it
that
you
know,
that’s
how
you
pay
for
things though
innit
because
I used
to
buy
records
every
week
12-inch
singles
every
week.
I
mean
some
of
them
back
then
like
white
labels
were like
15
quid
well
that
I
mean
15
quid
now
is
a
lot
of
money
but back
then
it
was
a
Yeah
it
was
really
expensive
wasn’t
it.
Well
I didn’t
buy
15
one
every week
week
you
know,
just
the
odd…
So
why
didn’t
become
a
DJ?
I
don’t
know
Well
probably
because
you
weren’t
allowed.
Probably
not.
But
it’s
interesting
I’ve
not
met
anybody
else
who
said…
Yeah,
every week
I bought..
said
I bought
12 inch
every
week.
A 12 inch?
At
least
one
every
week
and
you
used to
have
to
order
them
as
well.
That’s
very interesting
Because
of
Italian
import
some
stuff
weren’t it
Yeah, they were
this
is
interesting
because
you
didn’t
really
know,
well
if
you
went
to
the
only
way
to
do
it
was
to
listen
wasn’t
it?
Listen
and
then
I
ask
Lee
Stan…
What’s
this
called?
What’s
the
name
of
it
and
somehow
I
remembered
it.
I
don’t
know
how
I
even
remember
the
name
of
the
tune,
but
it
were
in
there
and
then
I
go
down
the
following
week
and
go buy it.
I
didn’t
have
a
right
lot.
I
don’t
know.
I might of
had
about
about
200
or
something
like
that
not…
that’s
a
lot.
I don’t know
maybe…
maybe
about
100
I
don’t
know.
It
were..
I
had
a
quite
a
lot
and
I
know
I
can
see
a
record
sleeve
now
and I
know
what
song
that
is
even
now
I
could…
I
could
probably
say
yeah,
I
know…
I
know
what
that
is.
But
do
you
not
think
it
was
interesting
music
because
it
didn’t
really
have
a
image
with
it
did
it
didn’t
get
a
poster…
they
weren’t
in
Smash
Hits
you
didn’t
know
who they
were
did you?
No.
And they
weren’t
really
selling
themselves,
their
egos,
it
was
just
the
music
wasn’t
it?
Yeah
You
didn’t…
Yeah
know
who they
were
never
heard of ’em
especially…
and
even
the
same
people
they
bring…
bring
out
3
12 inch
and
but
they’d
been
under
different
names
wouldn’t
they?
Yes.
Cos’ that
was
the
same
guys.
Yeah
yeah.
But
that
was the
thing
that
sold
it
was
the
music
wasn’t it.
Yeah
Which
is…
which
is…
really
which
is
what..
how
it
should
be
shouldn’t it?
Oh,
yeah,
I mean
it
were
brilliant
and
then
obviously
there were
Manhattan
Heights
as
well
which
were
which
were
great
and
even
like
Adamski
came
to
Manhattan
Heights
and
Yeah
I remember
Guru
Josh
and
there were
coach
loads
coming
from
Manchester
and
that
were
brilliant
as
as
well.
and
that were
a good
a
good
night
That wasn’t
it
carried
on
a
bit
after
didn’t it
as
well?
Yeah
With the….
with
the…
Yeah.
Started
at the Hacienda
on
Thursday.
nights
Yeah
as
well.
Yeah,
Which
was
good
wasn’t it.
Yeah,
it
was
a
bit
political
as
well
wasn’t
it,
you
know,
there
was
abit
much,
it
was
a
bit
anti Tory
wasn’t
it.
Because
obviously
Thatcher
was
the
one
that
you
know,
there
was
a
lot
of
disused
mills
and
that’s
how
your
music
ended
up
in
there.
Un-employment
of
course,
un-employment
and
then
obviously
then
she
brought
the
bills
in
to
stop
the
parties
and,
you
know
the
police
got
a
bit
heavy
handed,
a
bit,
and
it
did
you
know
it
is
it
does
correlate
with
the
miners
and,
it’s
a
bit
kind
of
that,
very
similar
to
that.
I
think
where
they
got
vilified
and,
and
we
got
vilified
as
well,
you
know
the
media,
the
Telegraph
even.
I
mean
it
made
me
laugh
because
recently
the
Telegraph
said,
oh
look
at
this
that
happened
20
years
ago,
and
I
thought
hang
on
a
minute
you
were,
you
were
slagging
everybody
20
years
ago
you
were
saying
there
were
people
having
sex
and
there
were
all
sorts
of
all
that
stuff
going
on
and
you
were
slagging
it
off.
And
similarly
on
the,
Radio
Lancashire
were
doing
interviews
on
you
know,
about
commemorating
30
years
of
Acid
House
and
they
were
totally
against
it
as
well
all
the
yeah,
they
all
were.
Yeah
and
they
demonised
us
made us
look
bad,
you
know,
me’ Mum
and Dad
were
like…
What
you
doing,
doing
this?
I said
I’m
not
doing
anything.
You
know
what
it
was.
It
was
very
very
political.
They
made
a
big
thing
of
the
drug
side
of
it
but
as
you
know,
having
been
on
20
a
week.
It
was
a
lot
less
than
people
make
out
wasn’t
it,
there
was
a
lot
less
of
course…
course,
there
was
drugs
there.
But
yeah
there
was a lot
less than
the media
made
out
at
the
time
that’s
for
sure.
Yeah.
I
think
it
it,
cos,
you
know,
at
that
time
I
was
like
young
and
impressionable
and
I
thought
you
know,
like
Margaret
Thatcher,
woman
Prime
Minister
it
kinda,
it
kind
of
a
kind
of,
not,
I
didn’t
idolise
her, but
I
thought,
wow
a
woman
Prime
Minister.
Because
obviously
she
was
the
first
and
last
wasn’t
she.
So
she
was
to
be
admired
I
thought
until
that
happened
and
then
I
look
back
at
all
the
things
that
happened
and
it
did
change
my
view
politically
because
I
was
a
bit
sliding
towards
that
way.
I
was…
and
it’s
changed
me
completely.
I
went
completely
the
other
way.
I’ve
gone
completely
the
other
way.
I
mean,
I’m
not
really
far
left,
but
I
am
kind
of
more
that
way.
Definitely
changed
me
politically.
Definitely.
When
I
see
like
social
media
and
Facebook
and
things
like
that
and
I
see
like
Mixmag
post
stuff
and
things
like
that
and
if
I
ever
see
kind
of
racist
comments
or…
and
I
think
you
know,
did
you
really
understand
what
that
scene
was
about?
These
are
people
from
that
scene
and
from
what
happened
back
then.
And
I
think
you
know,
do
you
really
truly
remember
what
that
was
about,
cos
I
just
can’t
believe
that
you’ve
got
those
political
views
and
those
views
about,
I
can’t
understand
it,
it
I
can’t,
and
that’s
what
I
see
today
I
think
it’s…
So my
message
for
young
people
is,
is
don’t,
don’t
ever
judge
a
book
by
it’s
cover
Don’t
believe
everything
you
hear
or
read
or
see,
you
know,
because
there’s,
you’ve
to
kinda
be
in
it
to
kinda
believe
it
kind
of
thing.
Yeah,
you
have
to
be
there
to
see
what,
to
appreciate
it.
Yeah.
Don’t
you
know,
don’t
knock
it
till
you’ve
tried
it.