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Are
there
any
more
dark
memories
of
that
time?
At
that
time.
No
it
felt
like…
It
felt
like
we
were
involved
in
a
revolution.
It
really
did
even
though
it
was
this
just
in
this
one
small
Northern
town.
It
did
feel
like
we were
going
to
take
over…
the
police
just
couldn’t
deal
with
it.
They
couldn’t
handle
it…
and
we
just
yeah
just
felt
revolutionary,
but
i’d
have
said
the
dark
bit
happened
…
later
obviously
the
Sett
End
closed
down
and
then
they
started
trying
to
get
it
going
at
the
you
Yutick’s
Nest.
So
we
were
hanging
around
there
a
lot
and
nothing
there
were
like
a
little
spell
where
nothing
seemed
to
happen.
And
I
think at
this
stage
aswell
…
the
queues
had
gone
mad
as
well.
So
Yu…
Yutick’s Nest
were
virtually
impossible
to
get
in..
well
by
the
time
that
happened
…
on
but
I’d
say it
started
getting
ugly
when
Monroe’s
…
when
it
moved
to
Monroe’s
because
obviously
they
did,
you
know,
the
drug
wars
and
everything
that
happened
there
and
you
know,
the
doorman
wanting
to
take
control
of
what
happened
and
…
I
think
there
were
a…
even
a
gun
pulled
at
Monroe’s
at
one
point
and
and
it
felt
you
know,
you
were
scared
going
there.
And
the
first…
I’d
say
the
first
few
months
going
up
Monroe’s
were
great,
you
know it
used
to
make
me
laugh
that
there
was
no
alcohol
license
there,
you
know,
it’s
a
nightclub
with
a
massive
bar
and
there’s
no
alcohol
license.
But
yeah,
it
just
started
getting
ugly
and
I
think…
I
think
like
I
said
before
it
did…
it
just…
it
did
just
stop
in
the
end.
But
then
for
me
in
its
last…
I
will
always…
and
I
wanted
to
be
into
the
next
big
thing
constantly
as
well.
So
between
me
and
my
friends,
it
had
lost
its
trendiness,
you
know
what
I
mean
by
that
point
as
well
…
And
it
just
became
full
of
d**heads
and
violence,
you
know,
so
we
thought
right..
well
we’ll
get
into
the
next
thing…
we’ll
find
what
the
next
thing
is
and
get
into
that.
So
yeah,
I
wouldn’t
say
it…
yeah,
obviously
there’s
the
underaged
element
to
it.
Obviously
like
me
being
in
there a
15 year
old,
you
know
me’ mum
had
no
idea
what
we were
doing.
She
thought
we’d gone
to
a
disco,
you
know,
and
then
on
obviously
when
they
trapped
us
all
in
Blackburn
town
centre
on
Darwen
Street
where
The
Minstrels
used
to
be…
they
boxed
us
all
in and
I
can
remember
us
being
shoulder
to
shoulder
on
that
crossroads.
It
might
even
have
been
Tommy…
there
was
I
remember
there
was a
lad stood
on
a
car
roof
going..
Nobody
run!
Nobody
run!
They
started
letting
dogs
go
1
or
2
cops
let
dogs go
you
know
there wer’
dogs
barking
they’re
letting
dogs
go
out in’t
crowd
and
I
can
remember
mounted
police
in
a
crowd
like
tryna’
round
everybody
up
in
middle
of
that…
That…
that
wer’
that wer’ a
ugly
side
to
it.
But
yeah
the…
the
most…
the
overall
memory
of
it
is
just
that
this
revolutionary
Punk
spirit
you
know,
it’s
like
the
youths
were
taking
it,
you
know,
we’re
taking
it
and
…
it’s
ours.
We’re
having
it,
you
know.
Yeah
great
days.
Full Transcript:
Are
there
any
more
dark
memories
of
that
time?
At
that
time.
No
it
felt
like…
It
felt
like
we
were
involved
in
a
revolution.
It
really
did
even
though
it
was
this
just
in
this
one
small
Northern
town.
It
did
feel
like
we were
going
to
take
over…
the
police
just
couldn’t
deal
with
it.
They
couldn’t
handle
it…
and
we
just
yeah
just
felt
revolutionary,
but
i’d
have
said
the
dark
bit
happened
…
later
obviously
the
Sett
End
closed
down
and
then
they
started
trying
to
get
it
going
at
the
you
Yutick’s
Nest.
So
we
were
hanging
around
there
a
lot
and
nothing
there
were
like
a
little
spell
where
nothing
seemed
to
happen.
And
I
think at
this
stage
aswell
…
the
queues
had
gone
mad
as
well.
So
Yu…
Yutick’s Nest
were
virtually
impossible
to
get
in..
well
by
the
time
that
happened
…
on
but
I’d
say it
started
getting
ugly
when
Monroe’s
…
when
it
moved
to
Monroe’s
because
obviously
they
did,
you
know,
the
drug
wars
and
everything
that
happened
there
and
you
know,
the
doorman
wanting
to
take
control
of
what
happened
and
…
I
think
there
were
a…
even
a
gun
pulled
at
Monroe’s
at
one
point
and
and
it
felt
you
know,
you
were
scared
going
there.
And
the
first…
I’d
say
the
first
few
months
going
up
Monroe’s
were
great,
you
know it
used
to
make
me
laugh
that
there
was
no
alcohol
license
there,
you
know,
it’s
a
nightclub
with
a
massive
bar
and
there’s
no
alcohol
license.
But
yeah,
it
just
started
getting
ugly
and
I
think…
I
think
like
I
said
before
it
did…
it
just…
it
did
just
stop
in
the
end.
But
then
for
me
in
its
last…
I
will
always…
and
I
wanted
to
be
into
the
next
big
thing
constantly
as
well.
So
between
me
and
my
friends,
it
had
lost
its
trendiness,
you
know
what
I
mean
by
that
point
as
well
…
And
it
just
became
full
of
d**heads
and
violence,
you
know,
so
we
thought
right..
well
we’ll
get
into
the
next
thing…
we’ll
find
what
the
next
thing
is
and
get
into
that.
So
yeah,
I
wouldn’t
say
it…
yeah,
obviously
there’s
the
underaged
element
to
it.
Obviously
like
me
being
in
there a
15 year
old,
you
know
me’ mum
had
no
idea
what
we were
doing.
She
thought
we’d gone
to
a
disco,
you
know,
and
then
on
obviously
when
they
trapped
us
all
in
Blackburn
town
centre
on
Darwen
Street
where
The
Minstrels
used
to
be…
they
boxed
us
all
in and
I
can
remember
us
being
shoulder
to
shoulder
on
that
crossroads.
It
might
even
have
been
Tommy…
there
was
I
remember
there
was a
lad stood
on
a
car
roof
going..
Nobody
run!
Nobody
run!
They
started
letting
dogs
go
1
or
2
cops
let
dogs go
you
know
there wer’
dogs
barking
they’re
letting
dogs
go
out in’t
crowd
and
I
can
remember
mounted
police
in
a
crowd
like
tryna’
round
everybody
up
in
middle
of
that…
That…
that
wer’
that wer’ a
ugly
side
to
it.
But
yeah
the…
the
most…
the
overall
memory
of
it
is
just
that
this
revolutionary
Punk
spirit
you
know,
it’s
like
the
youths
were
taking
it,
you
know,
we’re
taking
it
and
…
it’s
ours.
We’re
having
it,
you
know.
Yeah
great
days.