Daryll Good Memories Part 2

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But
this
is
another
thing
all
that
attitude
changed
as
well.
Because
we
used
to go
football
that
we’re
all
about
having
a
kick
off.
All
that
died
away.
But
even
lads
we’d
had
runnings
wi’
down,
down
them
years,
turned
up
at
parties.
I
remember
he
used
to
have
a
blue
stripey
jumper
and
he
did
this..
and
he
took
me
trainers
off
and
wiz’d
em
over the
wall.
And
they
were…
all
things
that
happened.
And
you
sort
of
like
got
this
feedback
of
stories,
and
you
thought…
How
do
they
remember
that?
Because
you
sort
of
forget
it.
It
happens.
It’s
that
Saturday
thing,
it’s
gone.
But
yet
you’re
getting
haunted
by
it
3
or 4
year
later
and
you’re
going…
yeah,
but
I
think
we’re in
Blackpool.
One
of the
lads
had
robbed
this
jumper
off
somebody,
and
we’re
in
a
club
in
Blackpool
and
a
lad
come
over
and
tapped
him
on’shoulder
and went…
Excuse
me.
I
think
that’s
my
jumper
you’ve
got
on.
He’d
stolen
it
off
him
about
2
seasons
before
at
football.
And
ye’
like
go…
Really?
But
expensive
stuff
stands
out
doesn’t
it
and
that’s
why
you
wear
it.
But
no
we
had
some…
So
you
think
the,
the
parties
was
something
that
the
poor,
the
poorer
generation
had?
I
think
it
was,
I
think
it
was
an
outlet
that
was
needed
long
before
it
happened.
Because
I
don’t
think
we
had
all
that
back
end,
that
middle,
back end
of
the
80s
where
it
were
all
football
violence
and
animosity.
I
think
if
it had
happened,
I
don’t
even
think
you’d
have
had
all that…
I
think
there’d
still
been
some
terrace
culture
but
I
don’t
think
there’d
have been
a violence
attached
to
it.
Well,
I
can
remember
going
Hacienda,
80
87
used
to
tek
coaches
to
the
Hacienda
back
then.
And
you
could
walk
in
and
Morrissey
be sat
at
one
end
of
bar
and
Mick
Hucknall
be
sat at
other end
of
bar,
and
it
were
just
freezing
you’d
walk in
be like
only
way
to
get
warm
were
to
jig
about
abit.
But there
wer’ only
you
jigging
about.
You’re
a
few
years
later
on
you
like
wall-to-wall.
You
can’t
get
in
the
gaff.
They’re
turning
you
away.
And
but
that
also
had
a
knock
on.
You
got,
we
got
the
Saturdays
but
they
were
all
full of
posers.
So
then
we
started
goin’
Kitchen.
Get
up
on’
Crescents.
and
watch…
Whoa.
It’s
like
a
different
world.
You
walk
in…
blanket
weed.
Yeah.
Yeah
just
blanket
weed,
and
they’d
go
oh
this
club’s
not
big
enough
and
they’d
pull
a
sledge
hammer
out
and
knock
another
flat
through.
yeah,
yeah
for
all
the
kids
on’
estate
and
that,
and
as
they
started
pulling
it
down,
it
opened
up
into
a
club,
two
floors.
You
just
kept
smashing
it.
I
can’t
remember
how
many
I
think
it
were
about
6
5
or
6
rooms
last
time
I
went.
But,
yeah,
the
older
lads
that i…
John
Witty
and
Joker
and
you
know,
all
the
lads
I
knew
that
we’re
going
to
them
sorta
gaffs,
were
sorta
like
an
impetus.
Have
you not
been
here?
And
then
you
get
there.
And
first
time
we
ever
went
we
were
witness
to…
they’d
launched
someone
off
a
second
floor
balcony
into
a
you
know,
the
big
skips.
Like
that…
head
first…
he’d
landed.
We
come
out
of
the
club
at
like
5
o’clock
in
the
morning,
he’s still
there
wi’ his
legs
sticking
out,
we
thought
he
were
dead.
Just
unconscious,
full
of
E
like
that.
Done.
Just
took
that
much
tackle.
This
is
before
the Blackburn
parties
started.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
87?
88?
yeah
because
there
were
bits
of
it
going
on.
Little
pockets
here
and
there.
I
mean
even
even
here,
what
would
it
have
been
here
when
we
seen
them?
89
were
back
end
of
88
early
89
when
we seen
the
lads
that
we
sorta
like
looked
up
too
and
they
were
faces
of
the
town.
And
like
I
looked
at
them
and
though…
There’s
summat
pertaining
here,
there’s
summat
you
could
see
the
change
coming.
Yeah,
you
could
see
it
coming.
Now Playing:
Daryll
Good memories part 2. (4:24 mins)
Daryll
Life afterwards. (9:50 mins)

Full Transcript:

But
this
is
another
thing
all
that
attitude
changed
as
well.
Because
we
used
to go
football
that
we’re
all
about
having
a
kick
off.
All
that
died
away.
But
even
lads
we’d
had
runnings
wi’
down,
down
them
years,
turned
up
at
parties.
I
remember
he
used
to
have
a
blue
stripey
jumper
and
he
did
this..
and
he
took
me
trainers
off
and
wiz’d
em
over the
wall.
And
they
were…
all
things
that
happened.
And
you
sort
of
like
got
this
feedback
of
stories,
and
you
thought…
How
do
they
remember
that?
Because
you
sort
of
forget
it.
It
happens.
It’s
that
Saturday
thing,
it’s
gone.
But
yet
you’re
getting
haunted
by
it
3
or 4
year
later
and
you’re
going…
yeah,
but
I
think
we’re in
Blackpool.
One
of the
lads
had
robbed
this
jumper
off
somebody,
and
we’re
in
a
club
in
Blackpool
and
a
lad
come
over
and
tapped
him
on’shoulder
and went…
Excuse
me.
I
think
that’s
my
jumper
you’ve
got
on.
He’d
stolen
it
off
him
about
2
seasons
before
at
football.
And
ye’
like
go…
Really?
But
expensive
stuff
stands
out
doesn’t
it
and
that’s
why
you
wear
it.
But
no
we
had
some…
So
you
think
the,
the
parties
was
something
that
the
poor,
the
poorer
generation
had?
I
think
it
was,
I
think
it
was
an
outlet
that
was
needed
long
before
it
happened.
Because
I
don’t
think
we
had
all
that
back
end,
that
middle,
back end
of
the
80s
where
it
were
all
football
violence
and
animosity.
I
think
if
it had
happened,
I
don’t
even
think
you’d
have
had
all that…
I
think
there’d
still
been
some
terrace
culture
but
I
don’t
think
there’d
have been
a violence
attached
to
it.
Well,
I
can
remember
going
Hacienda,
80
87
used
to
tek
coaches
to
the
Hacienda
back
then.
And
you
could
walk
in
and
Morrissey
be sat
at
one
end
of
bar
and
Mick
Hucknall
be
sat at
other end
of
bar,
and
it
were
just
freezing
you’d
walk in
be like
only
way
to
get
warm
were
to
jig
about
abit.
But there
wer’ only
you
jigging
about.
You’re
a
few
years
later
on
you
like
wall-to-wall.
You
can’t
get
in
the
gaff.
They’re
turning
you
away.
And
but
that
also
had
a
knock
on.
You
got,
we
got
the
Saturdays
but
they
were
all
full of
posers.
So
then
we
started
goin’
Kitchen.
Get
up
on’
Crescents.
and
watch…
Whoa.
It’s
like
a
different
world.
You
walk
in…
blanket
weed.
Yeah.
Yeah
just
blanket
weed,
and
they’d
go
oh
this
club’s
not
big
enough
and
they’d
pull
a
sledge
hammer
out
and
knock
another
flat
through.
yeah,
yeah
for
all
the
kids
on’
estate
and
that,
and
as
they
started
pulling
it
down,
it
opened
up
into
a
club,
two
floors.
You
just
kept
smashing
it.
I
can’t
remember
how
many
I
think
it
were
about
6
5
or
6
rooms
last
time
I
went.
But,
yeah,
the
older
lads
that i…
John
Witty
and
Joker
and
you
know,
all
the
lads
I
knew
that
we’re
going
to
them
sorta
gaffs,
were
sorta
like
an
impetus.
Have
you not
been
here?
And
then
you
get
there.
And
first
time
we
ever
went
we
were
witness
to…
they’d
launched
someone
off
a
second
floor
balcony
into
a
you
know,
the
big
skips.
Like
that…
head
first…
he’d
landed.
We
come
out
of
the
club
at
like
5
o’clock
in
the
morning,
he’s still
there
wi’ his
legs
sticking
out,
we
thought
he
were
dead.
Just
unconscious,
full
of
E
like
that.
Done.
Just
took
that
much
tackle.
This
is
before
the Blackburn
parties
started.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
87?
88?
yeah
because
there
were
bits
of
it
going
on.
Little
pockets
here
and
there.
I
mean
even
even
here,
what
would
it
have
been
here
when
we
seen
them?
89
were
back
end
of
88
early
89
when
we seen
the
lads
that
we
sorta
like
looked
up
too
and
they
were
faces
of
the
town.
And
like
I
looked
at
them
and
though…
There’s
summat
pertaining
here,
there’s
summat
you
could
see
the
change
coming.
Yeah,
you
could
see
it
coming.