Gilly Bad Memories

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Any
darker
memories
to
record
bad
memories
No,
not
really.
No,
they’re
all
good
memories
because
everybody
was
honest
it
was
a
level
playing
field
it
was
same
for
everybody.
It
was
new
to
everybody
brought
a
lot
of
people
together who
wouldn’t
even
thought
they
might
have
got
into
that
music
because
it
was
stated int’
Telegraph,
you
know,
they
party to
after
2
o’clock,
you
know
in
the
morning
that’s
when
the
night
was
we
finished
so you’d
people
turn
up
in
shirts
and
ties
on
to
come
and
join
in
thinking
what’s
it
all
about
these
raves
and
these
illegal
raves
so
from
there
it
was
it
was
an
amazing
time
from
start
to
finish.
Well
when
the
rave
scene
kind
of
like
kind
of
like wer’
just
with
dampened
say
like
after
the
when
the
Nelson
parties
the
big
one
where
you
know,
like
that
was
like
kind
of
where
it
all
like
died
down
a
touch
well
especially
around
here,
but
it
did
carry
on
over
Wigan
way
and
St Helen’s
with
the
Revenge
parties
and
you
know
a
guy
called
Lockie
you
who’s
who’s
not
not
with
us
bless
his
cotton
socks
now,
but
he
was
behind
all
that
and
that
they’re
amazing
times
and
it
did
carry
on.
So
I..
I
personally
just
carried
on
following
the
music
from
when
all
the
rave
scene
finished.
I
carried
on
into
the
different
types
of
dance
music
carried
on Dj-ing
i’d say
its
only
the
last
few
years
I’ve
just
come
away
from
it.
So
if
in
in
all
of them
30
years,
I’ve
been
DJing
quite
a
lot
of
them
in
different
friends
bars
who own
bars
in
Blackburn
and
Burnley
and
done
loads
of
events
and
what
have
you
you
know
but
it
always
comes
back
to
when
I’m
doing
a
function
if
it’s
a
private
one..
put
some
old-school
on…
put
some
old-school
on!
And
you
know
that
when
you
put
that
music
on
it’s
got
great
memories
for
everybody
and
it
does
the
trick
every
time
so…
no
bad
memories
whatsoever.
Now Playing:
Gilly
Bad memories. (1:49 mins)
Gilly
Good memories. (2:28 mins)

Full Transcript:

Any
darker
memories
to
record
bad
memories
No,
not
really.
No,
they’re
all
good
memories
because
everybody
was
honest
it
was
a
level
playing
field
it
was
same
for
everybody.
It
was
new
to
everybody
brought
a
lot
of
people
together who
wouldn’t
even
thought
they
might
have
got
into
that
music
because
it
was
stated int’
Telegraph,
you
know,
they
party to
after
2
o’clock,
you
know
in
the
morning
that’s
when
the
night
was
we
finished
so you’d
people
turn
up
in
shirts
and
ties
on
to
come
and
join
in
thinking
what’s
it
all
about
these
raves
and
these
illegal
raves
so
from
there
it
was
it
was
an
amazing
time
from
start
to
finish.
Well
when
the
rave
scene
kind
of
like
kind
of
like wer’
just
with
dampened
say
like
after
the
when
the
Nelson
parties
the
big
one
where
you
know,
like
that
was
like
kind
of
where
it
all
like
died
down
a
touch
well
especially
around
here,
but
it
did
carry
on
over
Wigan
way
and
St Helen’s
with
the
Revenge
parties
and
you
know
a
guy
called
Lockie
you
who’s
who’s
not
not
with
us
bless
his
cotton
socks
now,
but
he
was
behind
all
that
and
that
they’re
amazing
times
and
it
did
carry
on.
So
I..
I
personally
just
carried
on
following
the
music
from
when
all
the
rave
scene
finished.
I
carried
on
into
the
different
types
of
dance
music
carried
on Dj-ing
i’d say
its
only
the
last
few
years
I’ve
just
come
away
from
it.
So
if
in
in
all
of them
30
years,
I’ve
been
DJing
quite
a
lot
of
them
in
different
friends
bars
who own
bars
in
Blackburn
and
Burnley
and
done
loads
of
events
and
what
have
you
you
know
but
it
always
comes
back
to
when
I’m
doing
a
function
if
it’s
a
private
one..
put
some
old-school
on…
put
some
old-school
on!
And
you
know
that
when
you
put
that
music
on
it’s
got
great
memories
for
everybody
and
it
does
the
trick
every
time
so…
no
bad
memories
whatsoever.