Jay Full Interview

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How
did
you
get
involved?
I’d
been
DJing
quite
successfully
in
Manchester
at
the
Thunderdome
which
was
a
real
seminal
underground
club
that
was
really
popular
and
I
think
we
just
heard
about
it
word-of-mouth.
really
err
Jimmy
who was
Tommy’s
brother.
He’d been
coming
to
the
Thunderdome,
but
there
was
just
massive
convoys
of
cars
anyway
going
up
to
Blackburn.
So
that’s
how
I
got
involved
really.
Had
you
even
heard
about
them
before?
Yeah,
I
think…
I
had
yeah,
yeah,
yeah
cotton mills
and
things
like
that
but
not
as far
as
a
music
scene
goes.
So
what
we’re
asking
people
generally…
what
are
your
best
memories
about
it?
Like
how
do
you
remember
that
time?
In
general
or
at
Blackburn?
Blackburn.
It
was
it
was
very
free
it
was
it
was
us
against
them
society
it really
was
really a
time
that
you
really
felt
a part
of
something
I bet
a
lot
of
people
have
said
that
but
even
even
for
you
know
as
a
DJ
and
you
know,
you
had
quite
a
following…
to
see
that
massive
huge
influx
of
people
from
all
over
the
country
was
still
an
unbelievable
sight
and
an
unbelievable
thing
to
feel
like
you
were
part
of…
it
sort
of
blew
blew
your
mind.
It
it
really
made
you
feel
like
you
were
part
of
something
quite
special.
What
were
the
key
parties
from
Backburn
for you?
To
be
honest,
I
have
the
horrific
memories
of
where
and
when
even of
me,
you
know,
a
lot
of
me…
me
own
gigs
that…
I
wouldn’t
say
I
have
any
particular
names
of
it
because
everything’s
a
blur
don’t
forget
before
I’d
go
to
Blackburn
I’d
be
playing
for
4
6
7
8
hours
and
then
I’d
go
up
there
so
specifics
of
the
names
of
the
parties…
that
I
can’t
really
recall
so
that…
Are
there
any
moment
in
any
of
them
that
you
would
recall
call?
Yeah,
I
mean
there
was
there
was…
there
was…
lots
of
moments
I
think
when
my
friend
Suddi
Ravel
when
they
played
his
tune
Hardcore
Uproar
that…
really
sticks
out
for
me.
I
think
it
sort of
blurs
into
one
it
was
just
that
that
it’s
like
a
lot
of
gigs
that
i’ve
done
anyway
the
it’s
just
the
overall
feeling
of
it.
You
know
that
massive
huge
amount
of
people
it’s
almost
like
being
at a
football
stadium,
but
it’s
a
club
and
that
was
before
the
days
of…
sort
of…
super
clubs
and
and
huge
massive
venues
it
was
the
biggest
group
of
people
just
going
absolutely
wild
they
had
no
worries.
It
was
just
pure
gay
abandon
which
you
probably
couldn’t
use
gay
abandon
in
the
same
context,
back
then
but you
can
nowadays
really.
Are there
any
dark
memories
associated
with
any
of
it?
Yeah.
I
think
you
know
that
the
way
that
the
police
treated
you
the
police
brutality
I
mean
it
was
some
funny
stories
with
the
police,
but
then
you
know
the
the
how
brutal
they
were
because
I
think
they
had
to
find
a
way
of
containing
us
and
they
sort
of
contained
us
in
the
same
way
the
contain
football
hooligans
the
same
way
they
contain
try
to
contain
the
miners
with
just
with
violence
and
force
realy
but
I
remember
after
one
party
it
was
it
was
like
I had
actually
was
being
driven
there
in
a
car
by
Tommy’s
brother
Jimmy
and
it
was
really
icy
and
the
the
mini
actually
as
we
drove
up
it
did
a
full
360
we
thought
we
were
going
to
we
were
going
to
die
and
he
did
a
full
360
stops
and
we
got
out
of
the
car
couldn’t
believe
we
were
alive
and
then
the
police
are
asking
all
the
party
heads
that
were coming
out
completely
out
of
the
mines,
but
trying
to
take
surveys
of
them.
Can
you
imagine
people
have
been
up
for
all
night
and
it’s
like
6
or
7
it’s
like
bright
light
and
everybody’s
coming
out
with
huge
eyes
and
what
it
was
just
the
most
bizarre
ridiculous
thing.
I
can’t
remember
its
30-odd
years
ago
and
it’s
30
years
ago
so
they
were
just
asking
are
there
was
it
was
a
questionnaire
so
you’ve
got
all
these
police
asking
that
probably
where
the
where
they’d
come
from
how
far
they
traveled
who
the
knew
there
and
I’d
of
loved
they
must
be
in
an
archive
somewhere
I’d
love
to
see
some
of
the
answers
that
actually
came
back
from
that
it
was
a
it
was
probably
the
most
bizarre
thing
I’ve
ever
seen
there.
I
think
I
think
they
were
really
really
confused
at
the
time
like
this
is
suddenly
happening
here
why
you
know,
I
remember
those
I
remember
people
being
interviewed
interviewed
afterwards
on
the
way
out.
Yeah,
and
it
was
where
have you driven
from?
But
you
were
never
going
to
get
you
know,
a
sensible
answer
no
matter
how
it
was
it
was
just
ridiculous
but
they
couldn’t
understand
it.
Like you
say
it
was
just
this
is
like
any
cultural
revolution
the
people
of
a
certain
age
just
haven’t
got
a
clue
they
just
can’t
understand
why
all
these
people
are
coming
here
doing
this
and
it
just
blew
their
minds
really
and
they
couldn’t
cope
That
you
talked
about
cultural
revolution
for
you
it
was
it
was
more
than
playing records
and
music
and
clothes
it
was
a
full
it
was
a
big
thing
for
you
wasn’t
it
was
more
than
just
going
out.
Oh,
definitely.
I
mean,
I’ve
been
very
lucky
I’ve
experienced,
you
know
the
other
side
of
it
and
to
play,
you
know,
in
somewhere
like
that
to
have
that
much
contained
energy.
It’s
a
very
hard
feeling
to
describe.
It’s
such
a
positive
thing.
It’s
such
a
healing
thing
really
for
society
and
and
it
was
quite
dark
times
really
in
in
you
know
in
the
late
80s
and
mid
to
late
eighties
it
in
the
Northwest,
you
know,
we’d
had
you
know
years
of
you
know
unemployment
and
football
hooliganism,
you
know,
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
violence
really
happening
and
you
know
factories
and
it
It
wasn’t
so
to
to
have
that
release
and
to
have
that
unbelievable
positivity
and
have
all
these
groups
you
I
mean
Blackburn
you
add
gangsters
you
had
football
Hooligans,
you
know
from
all
over
the
place
you
would
never
want
to
mix
with
in
a
club
or
if
you
did
if
you
knocked
nudged
em
the
kick
the
s***
out
of
you,
but
they
didn’t
everybody
was
together
everybody
didn’t
care
nobody
was
interested
in
copping
off
with
other
people.
It
was
just
all
about
the
moment.
It
was
very
primeval
very
tribal.
I
mean,
I’ve
looked
at
my
own
kids,
you
know,
there’s
something
inside
you
that
wants
to
dance,
you
know,
nobody’s
taught
my
baby
daughter
to
dance
but
she
hears
some
music
and
she
and
and
it
stirs
something
inside
your
and
and
and
I
think
what
the
guys
did
was
such
an
important
such
a
brave
thing
I
mean
they
suffered,
you
know
for
years
for
what
they
did
and
don’t
really
get
the
plaudits
for
you know
how
brave
and
how
what
innovator
they
were
really
a
lot
of
the
scene
now
is
it
was
built
on
what
these
guys
did
what
what
what
do
you
mean
by
that
for
someone
listening
to
this
is
hundred
years?
What
does
that
mean
what
did
they
do?
What
was
this?
What
what
was
brave about
they
did?
Well,
they
committed
crimes
in
the
for
the
Youth
really
for
us
us
to
have
good
times
and
and
got
arrested
and
they
were
much
braver
than
you
know
than
I
wouldn’t
have
done
that
personally
you
know,
I
as
you
can
probably
tell
from
my
accent
I
didn’t
grow
from
in
like
the
poshest
part
of
the
city in
Manchester,
but
they
they
were
really
at
the
edge.
They
were
they
were
they
really
wanted
and
believed
in
the
scene
and
believed
it,
you
know
fighting
for
the
right
to
party,
you
know
they
wanted
to
fight
against
society
and
what
was
sort
of
dumbing
us
down
and
I
think
we
are
changed
from
that
moment
the
society
changed
the
kids
change
with
I
think
you
believed
you
could
you
could
do
things
you
could
mix
more
I
know
myself
and
in
the
city
that
I
left
in
you
were
very
separate
you
were
you
lived
in
there
you
lived
in
there.
You’re
very
rarely
mixed
with
other
people
from
and
even
with
your
own
even
the
towns
within
Manchester
you
had
your
own
gangs
and
your
own
that
wouldn’t
that
wouldn’t
mix
with
each
other
and
that
was
exacerbated
by
the
Hip
Hop
scene
as
well
in
Manchester
the
difference
between
the
Hip
Hop
and
an
Acid
House
was
that
Hip
Hop
you
were
sort
of
against
each
other
you
were
dancing
against
each
other the
DJ’s
were
rivals
you
didn’t
have
that
in
the
Acid
House
in
you
were
all
one
family
were
all
one
people
you
were
all
dancing
together
you
weren’t
it
wasn’t
a
competition.
You
didn’t
have
to
be
a
great
dancer
I
dance
like
a
right
knob
head
but
you
could
you
know
you
it
didn’t
matter
you
just
expressed
yourself
you
didn’t
have
to
body
pop
there
was
no
there
was
no
structure
to
it
and
I
think
that
was
what
was
so
good
that
was
the
freedom
that
you
got,
you
know,
you
could
just
be
free
and
in
a
time
where
you
were
being
pushed
down
and
knuckle
down
and
and
and
and
a
lot
of
the
youth
was
a
bit
lost
and
you
probably
didn’t
have
any
prospects,
you
know,
and
that
time
and
a
lot
of
people
didn’t
work
but
people
live
for
that
weekend
and
it
gave
them
hope
I
think
if
we
didn’t
have
that
and
I
always
remember,
you
know,
Tommy
saying
how
we’re
high
on
hope
and
we
were
you
know,
I
think
it
was
such
an
important
and
you
can
speak to
anybody
who went
it
was
such
an
important
part
of
people’s
lives,
it
really
was
And when
it
stops
at
least
in
Blackburn,
what
was
your
story
you
at least
you
carried
on
going?
I
carried
on
Yeah
carried
on
DJing
yeah
I’d
DJ
for
really
successfully
for
years
and
what
one
of
the
main
things
that
stopped
me
was
was
the
crime
in
Manchester
the
gun
crime
and
and
clubs
clubs
closed
down
and
I
got
tired
I
was
like
I
was
a
young
a
young
boy
I
stopped
DJing
when I
was
23
I’d
started
when
I
was
18
and
I
was
dealing
with
gangsters
and
scum
and I
had to have
scum
working
on
the
door
for
me
to
stop
stop
the
scum
coming
in
so
so
I
stopped
at
23
and
then
started
up
again
about
10
years
ago
and
have
been
successful,
you
know
again,
but
it
was
it
was
it
was
hard
really
anything
where
there’s
you
know
money
involved
and
that
creeped
in
to
Blackburn
as
well
where
you
know,
the
gangs
from
Manchester
came
in
and
started
you know
taking
money
on
the
on
the
doors
but
when
that
started
for
me,
I
stopped
going
to
Blackburn
to
be
honest
because
it
it
it
become
something
that
you
know
that
I
didn’t
want
to
be
part
of
really
in
the
end
and
I’ve
and
it
wasn’t
the
same
scene
for
me.
This
is
going
to
Archive
is
part
of
working
class
story.
It’s
a
post-industrial
story
things.
that had
been happening
in
Mills
and
warehouses.
Yeah,
then
the
Northwest
and
in
the
country
for
hundreds
of
years
in
a
hundred
years
time
some
kids
going
to
be
listening
to
this.
What
would
you
say to em?
What
would
I
say
to
them?
Be
brave
enjoy
your
life.
when
you’re
young
live
for
the
moment
life
is
to
be
enjoyed
and
appreciate
everything
around
you
appreciate
other
people
and
we’re
all
actually
the
same
if
I
think
that’s
another
thing
that
you
know,
it
taught
us
is that
we
are
all
the
same
and
and
it
and
with
it
took
away
race
at that
time
it
took
away
gender
it
took
it
took
away
religion
because
before
that
I
think
we
were
very
separate
as
I
said
so it
really
opened
a
lot
of
people’s
eyes
and
sadly
is
in
the
last
four
or
five
years.
I’ve
seen
that
really
come
back
come
back,
you
know
the
separation
and
division
of
people
for
a
number
of
years
after
sort
of
89
that
that
totally
disappeared
and
I
think
people
are
have
lost
sight
of
and
as
people
get
older
the
loose
sight
of
just
just
enjoying
life
just
enjoy
your
life
and
don’t
think
too
deeply
and
every
person
is
exactly
the
same
as
you
but
no
better
than
or
worse
That’s
what
I would
say
Now Playing:
Jay
Full interview. (13:11 mins)
Steven & Sigi
Getting involved part 1. (1:15 mins)

Full Transcript:

How
did
you
get
involved?
I’d
been
DJing
quite
successfully
in
Manchester
at
the
Thunderdome
which
was
a
real
seminal
underground
club
that
was
really
popular
and
I
think
we
just
heard
about
it
word-of-mouth.
really
err
Jimmy
who was
Tommy’s
brother.
He’d been
coming
to
the
Thunderdome,
but
there
was
just
massive
convoys
of
cars
anyway
going
up
to
Blackburn.
So
that’s
how
I
got
involved
really.
Had
you
even
heard
about
them
before?
Yeah,
I
think…
I
had
yeah,
yeah,
yeah
cotton mills
and
things
like
that
but
not
as far
as
a
music
scene
goes.
So
what
we’re
asking
people
generally…
what
are
your
best
memories
about
it?
Like
how
do
you
remember
that
time?
In
general
or
at
Blackburn?
Blackburn.
It
was
it
was
very
free
it
was
it
was
us
against
them
society
it really
was
really a
time
that
you
really
felt
a part
of
something
I bet
a
lot
of
people
have
said
that
but
even
even
for
you
know
as
a
DJ
and
you
know,
you
had
quite
a
following…
to
see
that
massive
huge
influx
of
people
from
all
over
the
country
was
still
an
unbelievable
sight
and
an
unbelievable
thing
to
feel
like
you
were
part
of…
it
sort
of
blew
blew
your
mind.
It
it
really
made
you
feel
like
you
were
part
of
something
quite
special.
What
were
the
key
parties
from
Backburn
for you?
To
be
honest,
I
have
the
horrific
memories
of
where
and
when
even of
me,
you
know,
a
lot
of
me…
me
own
gigs
that…
I
wouldn’t
say
I
have
any
particular
names
of
it
because
everything’s
a
blur
don’t
forget
before
I’d
go
to
Blackburn
I’d
be
playing
for
4
6
7
8
hours
and
then
I’d
go
up
there
so
specifics
of
the
names
of
the
parties…
that
I
can’t
really
recall
so
that…
Are
there
any
moment
in
any
of
them
that
you
would
recall
call?
Yeah,
I
mean
there
was
there
was…
there
was…
lots
of
moments
I
think
when
my
friend
Suddi
Ravel
when
they
played
his
tune
Hardcore
Uproar
that…
really
sticks
out
for
me.
I
think
it
sort of
blurs
into
one
it
was
just
that
that
it’s
like
a
lot
of
gigs
that
i’ve
done
anyway
the
it’s
just
the
overall
feeling
of
it.
You
know
that
massive
huge
amount
of
people
it’s
almost
like
being
at a
football
stadium,
but
it’s
a
club
and
that
was
before
the
days
of…
sort
of…
super
clubs
and
and
huge
massive
venues
it
was
the
biggest
group
of
people
just
going
absolutely
wild
they
had
no
worries.
It
was
just
pure
gay
abandon
which
you
probably
couldn’t
use
gay
abandon
in
the
same
context,
back
then
but you
can
nowadays
really.
Are there
any
dark
memories
associated
with
any
of
it?
Yeah.
I
think
you
know
that
the
way
that
the
police
treated
you
the
police
brutality
I
mean
it
was
some
funny
stories
with
the
police,
but
then
you
know
the
the
how
brutal
they
were
because
I
think
they
had
to
find
a
way
of
containing
us
and
they
sort
of
contained
us
in
the
same
way
the
contain
football
hooligans
the
same
way
they
contain
try
to
contain
the
miners
with
just
with
violence
and
force
realy
but
I
remember
after
one
party
it
was
it
was
like
I had
actually
was
being
driven
there
in
a
car
by
Tommy’s
brother
Jimmy
and
it
was
really
icy
and
the
the
mini
actually
as
we
drove
up
it
did
a
full
360
we
thought
we
were
going
to
we
were
going
to
die
and
he
did
a
full
360
stops
and
we
got
out
of
the
car
couldn’t
believe
we
were
alive
and
then
the
police
are
asking
all
the
party
heads
that
were coming
out
completely
out
of
the
mines,
but
trying
to
take
surveys
of
them.
Can
you
imagine
people
have
been
up
for
all
night
and
it’s
like
6
or
7
it’s
like
bright
light
and
everybody’s
coming
out
with
huge
eyes
and
what
it
was
just
the
most
bizarre
ridiculous
thing.
I
can’t
remember
its
30-odd
years
ago
and
it’s
30
years
ago
so
they
were
just
asking
are
there
was
it
was
a
questionnaire
so
you’ve
got
all
these
police
asking
that
probably
where
the
where
they’d
come
from
how
far
they
traveled
who
the
knew
there
and
I’d
of
loved
they
must
be
in
an
archive
somewhere
I’d
love
to
see
some
of
the
answers
that
actually
came
back
from
that
it
was
a
it
was
probably
the
most
bizarre
thing
I’ve
ever
seen
there.
I
think
I
think
they
were
really
really
confused
at
the
time
like
this
is
suddenly
happening
here
why
you
know,
I
remember
those
I
remember
people
being
interviewed
interviewed
afterwards
on
the
way
out.
Yeah,
and
it
was
where
have you driven
from?
But
you
were
never
going
to
get
you
know,
a
sensible
answer
no
matter
how
it
was
it
was
just
ridiculous
but
they
couldn’t
understand
it.
Like you
say
it
was
just
this
is
like
any
cultural
revolution
the
people
of
a
certain
age
just
haven’t
got
a
clue
they
just
can’t
understand
why
all
these
people
are
coming
here
doing
this
and
it
just
blew
their
minds
really
and
they
couldn’t
cope
That
you
talked
about
cultural
revolution
for
you
it
was
it
was
more
than
playing records
and
music
and
clothes
it
was
a
full
it
was
a
big
thing
for
you
wasn’t
it
was
more
than
just
going
out.
Oh,
definitely.
I
mean,
I’ve
been
very
lucky
I’ve
experienced,
you
know
the
other
side
of
it
and
to
play,
you
know,
in
somewhere
like
that
to
have
that
much
contained
energy.
It’s
a
very
hard
feeling
to
describe.
It’s
such
a
positive
thing.
It’s
such
a
healing
thing
really
for
society
and
and
it
was
quite
dark
times
really
in
in
you
know
in
the
late
80s
and
mid
to
late
eighties
it
in
the
Northwest,
you
know,
we’d
had
you
know
years
of
you
know
unemployment
and
football
hooliganism,
you
know,
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
violence
really
happening
and
you
know
factories
and
it
It
wasn’t
so
to
to
have
that
release
and
to
have
that
unbelievable
positivity
and
have
all
these
groups
you
I
mean
Blackburn
you
add
gangsters
you
had
football
Hooligans,
you
know
from
all
over
the
place
you
would
never
want
to
mix
with
in
a
club
or
if
you
did
if
you
knocked
nudged
em
the
kick
the
s***
out
of
you,
but
they
didn’t
everybody
was
together
everybody
didn’t
care
nobody
was
interested
in
copping
off
with
other
people.
It
was
just
all
about
the
moment.
It
was
very
primeval
very
tribal.
I
mean,
I’ve
looked
at
my
own
kids,
you
know,
there’s
something
inside
you
that
wants
to
dance,
you
know,
nobody’s
taught
my
baby
daughter
to
dance
but
she
hears
some
music
and
she
and
and
it
stirs
something
inside
your
and
and
and
I
think
what
the
guys
did
was
such
an
important
such
a
brave
thing
I
mean
they
suffered,
you
know
for
years
for
what
they
did
and
don’t
really
get
the
plaudits
for
you know
how
brave
and
how
what
innovator
they
were
really
a
lot
of
the
scene
now
is
it
was
built
on
what
these
guys
did
what
what
what
do
you
mean
by
that
for
someone
listening
to
this
is
hundred
years?
What
does
that
mean
what
did
they
do?
What
was
this?
What
what
was
brave about
they
did?
Well,
they
committed
crimes
in
the
for
the
Youth
really
for
us
us
to
have
good
times
and
and
got
arrested
and
they
were
much
braver
than
you
know
than
I
wouldn’t
have
done
that
personally
you
know,
I
as
you
can
probably
tell
from
my
accent
I
didn’t
grow
from
in
like
the
poshest
part
of
the
city in
Manchester,
but
they
they
were
really
at
the
edge.
They
were
they
were
they
really
wanted
and
believed
in
the
scene
and
believed
it,
you
know
fighting
for
the
right
to
party,
you
know
they
wanted
to
fight
against
society
and
what
was
sort
of
dumbing
us
down
and
I
think
we
are
changed
from
that
moment
the
society
changed
the
kids
change
with
I
think
you
believed
you
could
you
could
do
things
you
could
mix
more
I
know
myself
and
in
the
city
that
I
left
in
you
were
very
separate
you
were
you
lived
in
there
you
lived
in
there.
You’re
very
rarely
mixed
with
other
people
from
and
even
with
your
own
even
the
towns
within
Manchester
you
had
your
own
gangs
and
your
own
that
wouldn’t
that
wouldn’t
mix
with
each
other
and
that
was
exacerbated
by
the
Hip
Hop
scene
as
well
in
Manchester
the
difference
between
the
Hip
Hop
and
an
Acid
House
was
that
Hip
Hop
you
were
sort
of
against
each
other
you
were
dancing
against
each
other the
DJ’s
were
rivals
you
didn’t
have
that
in
the
Acid
House
in
you
were
all
one
family
were
all
one
people
you
were
all
dancing
together
you
weren’t
it
wasn’t
a
competition.
You
didn’t
have
to
be
a
great
dancer
I
dance
like
a
right
knob
head
but
you
could
you
know
you
it
didn’t
matter
you
just
expressed
yourself
you
didn’t
have
to
body
pop
there
was
no
there
was
no
structure
to
it
and
I
think
that
was
what
was
so
good
that
was
the
freedom
that
you
got,
you
know,
you
could
just
be
free
and
in
a
time
where
you
were
being
pushed
down
and
knuckle
down
and
and
and
and
a
lot
of
the
youth
was
a
bit
lost
and
you
probably
didn’t
have
any
prospects,
you
know,
and
that
time
and
a
lot
of
people
didn’t
work
but
people
live
for
that
weekend
and
it
gave
them
hope
I
think
if
we
didn’t
have
that
and
I
always
remember,
you
know,
Tommy
saying
how
we’re
high
on
hope
and
we
were
you
know,
I
think
it
was
such
an
important
and
you
can
speak to
anybody
who went
it
was
such
an
important
part
of
people’s
lives,
it
really
was
And when
it
stops
at
least
in
Blackburn,
what
was
your
story
you
at least
you
carried
on
going?
I
carried
on
Yeah
carried
on
DJing
yeah
I’d
DJ
for
really
successfully
for
years
and
what
one
of
the
main
things
that
stopped
me
was
was
the
crime
in
Manchester
the
gun
crime
and
and
clubs
clubs
closed
down
and
I
got
tired
I
was
like
I
was
a
young
a
young
boy
I
stopped
DJing
when I
was
23
I’d
started
when
I
was
18
and
I
was
dealing
with
gangsters
and
scum
and I
had to have
scum
working
on
the
door
for
me
to
stop
stop
the
scum
coming
in
so
so
I
stopped
at
23
and
then
started
up
again
about
10
years
ago
and
have
been
successful,
you
know
again,
but
it
was
it
was
it
was
hard
really
anything
where
there’s
you
know
money
involved
and
that
creeped
in
to
Blackburn
as
well
where
you
know,
the
gangs
from
Manchester
came
in
and
started
you know
taking
money
on
the
on
the
doors
but
when
that
started
for
me,
I
stopped
going
to
Blackburn
to
be
honest
because
it
it
it
become
something
that
you
know
that
I
didn’t
want
to
be
part
of
really
in
the
end
and
I’ve
and
it
wasn’t
the
same
scene
for
me.
This
is
going
to
Archive
is
part
of
working
class
story.
It’s
a
post-industrial
story
things.
that had
been happening
in
Mills
and
warehouses.
Yeah,
then
the
Northwest
and
in
the
country
for
hundreds
of
years
in
a
hundred
years
time
some
kids
going
to
be
listening
to
this.
What
would
you
say to em?
What
would
I
say
to
them?
Be
brave
enjoy
your
life.
when
you’re
young
live
for
the
moment
life
is
to
be
enjoyed
and
appreciate
everything
around
you
appreciate
other
people
and
we’re
all
actually
the
same
if
I
think
that’s
another
thing
that
you
know,
it
taught
us
is that
we
are
all
the
same
and
and
it
and
with
it
took
away
race
at that
time
it
took
away
gender
it
took
it
took
away
religion
because
before
that
I
think
we
were
very
separate
as
I
said
so it
really
opened
a
lot
of
people’s
eyes
and
sadly
is
in
the
last
four
or
five
years.
I’ve
seen
that
really
come
back
come
back,
you
know
the
separation
and
division
of
people
for
a
number
of
years
after
sort
of
89
that
that
totally
disappeared
and
I
think
people
are
have
lost
sight
of
and
as
people
get
older
the
loose
sight
of
just
just
enjoying
life
just
enjoy
your
life
and
don’t
think
too
deeply
and
every
person
is
exactly
the
same
as
you
but
no
better
than
or
worse
That’s
what
I would
say