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How
did
you
get
involved
in
the
parties
in
Blackburn?
At
the
time,
it
was
all
about
drinking…
and
football
violence
seemed
to
be
the
thing
and
I
was
growing
up
around
that
and
wanting
to
be
around
some
of
the
older
people
that
were
involved
in
that
and
I
remember
a
friend
of
mine
his
brother
had
come
over
to
Blackburn
in
1989
somehow
and
he
was
a
kind
of
in
with
the
the
football
the
crowd
and
what
have
you
and
they wer’
hooligans
and
he
come
over
and
he’d…
and
he’d
told
his
brother
about
this
and
then
his
brother
had
been
and
then
he
said
to
me…
Oh
Damo
you’ve
got
to
come
over
you
want
to
come
and
see
these
parties
and
of
course
at
the
time
it
was
all
Farah
trousers
classically
worn
brogues
and
I
remember
coming
over
to
the
Red
Parrot
and
it’ll
been
1989
And
that
was
my
first
experience
of
Blackburn
so
I
remember
they
were
going
to
the
Red
Parrot
I
remember
the
doors
opening
and
then
I
just
remember
thinking
what
the
heck
is
this?
I
never
seen
anything
like
it
and
it’s really
difficult
to
even
try
to
explain
unless
you
were
actually
there
and
I
just
remember
the
whole
club
just
moving
just
the
whole
club
just
rocking
and
it
was
a
it
was
a
massive
shock
to
me
that
and
then
that
was
the
first
night.
I
was
introduced
to
the
party
afterwards
off
we
went
and
followed
the
rest
and
I..
I
ended
up
in
my
first
warehouse
party
that
night
and
that
was
it.
I
was
converted
hooked
and
that
this…
this
whole
new
scene
was
just
incredible
to
me
I
couldn’t
even
believe
it
was
happening
it
didn’t
seem
real
and
that
was
my
first
experience
of
what
got
me
there
So
it
was
a
friend’s
older
brother
who
to
to
think
back
as
well,
when
you
think
of
the
type
of
people
that
were
going
to
these
parties
because
it
brought
everybody
together
is
the
most
bizarre
thing,
so
yeah,
I
was
introduced
from
it
from
there,
and
then
that
was
it.
I
was
hooked
on
the
scene
from
then
And
were
you
traveling
every
weekend then?
Traveling
every
weekend
driving
down
from
Harrogate
in
little
old
battered
Escorts
4
Speeders
with
half
of
the
stuff
not
working
and
yeah
traveling
down
and
literally
waiting
the
full
week
for
the
weekend
and
I
think
it’s
really
bizarre
that
yours
full
mind…
my
full
mindset
and
mentality
changed
in
a
very
short
period
of
time
which
was…
it’s
pretty
surreal
when
you
think
about
it
now
when
you
sort
of
think
about.
Yeah
my
whole
mindset
changed
It
was
it
became
the
priority
wasn’t
it really?
It
was
the
priority.
Yeah.
It
was
almost
what
you
lived
for
and
you
it’s
very
strange
because
you
very
quickly
felt
like
you
were
part
of
something
that
was
that
was
happening
and
it
but
you
weren’t
only
part
of
something
it
was
yours
it’s
was a
very
strange
thing
to
to
be
involved
in
and
especially
when
you
look
at
the
time
like
I
say
that
you
know,
people
were
just
going
out
drinking
and
violence
was
the
norm.
So
to
pull
all
these
people
together
I mean
to
a
place
like
Blackburn….
Blackburn,
you
know,
where
was
it
on
the
map
and
all
of
a
sudden
we’ve
got
people
traveling
for
everywhere
to
be
here
you
you’re
talking
about
a
time
when
if
you
had
a
group
of
guys
males
that
went
to
another
city
or
town
the
chances
are
you
even
went
for
a
fight
or
you’re
going
to
get
in
one
when
you
went
there…
and
that
was
what
you
want…
and
then
all
of
a
sudden
you’ve
got
a
1000s
and
1000s
of
people
from
every
different
background
coming
together
in
one
place
it
was
yeah
it
was
it
was
a
very
strange
thing
and
as
you
say
you
lived
for
the
weekend
you
were
counting
the
days
down,
you
know,
when
you
got
to
mid-week
you
knew
it
wasn’t
long
you
knew
it
was
coming
and
it
was
happening
and
when
you’ve
been
to
a
party
for
me
when
I’d
finished,
I
used
to
think
I
had
this
real
light
reflecting
on
it
now
and
looking
back.
I
know
I’d
kind
of
think
I’ve done it
another
one
like
a
real
sense
of
achievement
like
yes,
I’ve
done
that.
That’s
it
I’ve
done
it
great.
Yeah
brilliant
another
one
yeah
When’s
the
next?
So
loads
of
good
memories
for
you?
For
me?
Yeah
So
where there any
dark
memories
from
time?
Dark
memories
from
that particular
time?
No
I
don’t…
I
don’t
think
that
I’d
call
them
dark
memories,
I
think
I…
would
I
change
anything
that
happened?
Probably
not
but
I
was
sent
to
a
Youth
Offender
Center
for it
Youth
Custody.
it
was
for
attending
one
of
the
parties
which
was
when
the
whole
scene
died
down
in
Blackburn
and
everybody
was
in
desperation
because
it
was
where
you
where
are we
going
to
go
and
do
this
now
where
are
we
going
to
go
and
doing
now
and
lot
of
the
clubs
opened
up
and
they
try
to
sort
of
capitalise
on
that
and
get
people
in
but
it
wasn’t
the
same
it
wasn’t
what
was
happening
and
then
of
course
we
had
this
brave
new
world
that…
that
was
done
for
me…
and
that
was
great
and
everybody
was
like
yes!
Brilliant
that
was
amazing
and
then
we
had
the
Love
Decade
which
came
but
that
was
obviously
West
Yorkshire
and
obviously
the
police
had
started
to
do
what
the
done
down
in
this
area
then
anyway,
and
then
when
you’re
taking
something
like
what you have
here
moving
it
into
somewhere
like
West
Yorkshire
where
they’ve
got
the
resources
the
money
the
police.
I
think
they
literally
turned
around
and
said
that’s
not
happening
not
here
and
they’d
also
just
change
the
laws.
I
think
they
said
it
was
going
to
be
laws
about
not
only
promoting
and
running
the
parties
but
attending
them
as
well.
I
think
they
tried
to
put
on
saying
it
was
going
to
be
you
could
be
charged
for
attending
an
illegal
gathering.
There
was
also
a
law
brought
inbetween…
inbetween
the
Love
Decade
and
the
time
we
got
to
court
which
is
the
allowance
of
video
evidence
when
you
don’t
know
you’re
being
filmed
and
they
brought
that
in…
Yeah
like
2
weeks
before
the
court
case
because
they
had
video
evidence
I
presume…
Yeah,
they
were
so
They
weren’t
allowed
to
use
video evidence
know,
So let’s
just
let’s
so
this
is
West
Yorkshire.
This
is
West
Yorkshire.
So
this would have
been the
police force
who’d dealt
with the
Miner’s Strikes
in the
early mid 80s
What
happened
to
you?
Well
it
was
a
wealthy
police
force
they
came
and
as
I’m
sure
you’re
aware
what
they
did
they
decided
that
we’re
going
to
stop
that
party
and…
and
they
did
they
tried
to
stop
it
at
the
start
and
they
eventually
did
manage
to
get
in
and
stop
it
and
I
can
remember
being
….
stood
outside
in
a
huge…
huge…
huge
group
of
people
a
big
line
of
people
watching
people
go
into
these
old
Transit
police
vans
and
thinking
say
to
my
friend
We’re
all
right,
van is full
We’re
okay
and
then
another
van would
come
back
and
another
and
then
it
became
apparent…
everyone’s
getting
arrested
which
they
did
and
then
they
released
me
later
the
next
day
because
they
couldn’t
confirm
who
I
was
because
they
couldn’t
get
in
touch
with
anybody.
So
I
didn’t
get
released
to
maybe
6
o’clock
the
next
day
and
then
it
had
been
about
8
weeks
later.
I
was
getting
ready
to
go..
to
work.
I
remember
opening
the
door
and
then
just
getting
pushed
back
into
my
house
by
4
like
really
burly
police
officers.
They
said…
You
are
under
arrest
for..
I think
it
was
an
affray
to
start
with
I
think
they
said
you’re
under
arrest
for
affray
or
inciting
a
riot
took
me
over
to
Leeds
police
station
interviewed
me
and
said
we
know
you
were
there
and
I
said,
yeah
I’m not
going
to
deny it
I
was
at
the
party.
And
then
they…
they
said
Did
you
help
incite
a
riot?
Were
you
aggressive
towards
police.
Did
you
hit
them?
Did
you
and
I
said
no.
I
didn’t
do
any
of
that
and
I
remember
there
was
like
a
almost
like
a
…
what do you call
it
in
a
warehouse…
was
like
a
drop-down
bit
where they
must
have
done
deliveries
loaded up…
loading bay…
loading….
like
a
loading
bay
and
I
can
remember
them
trying
to
get
in
there
and
I
can
remember
that
being
that
that
bit
there
and
shouting,
you
know,
you
know,
we
didn’t
really
want
them
to
stop
our
party
we wanted
to
carry
on…
leave us
alone.
I
remember
shouting
and
then
they
asked
me
if
I’d
thrown
a piece fo
wood
and
thrown
this
that
and
the
other…
which
I
denied
and
then
they
produce
some
stills
which
had
been
taken
off
a
video
camera,
but
wer’
on
like
a
grid
reference
and
he
said
I
put
it
to
you
that.
D7
is
you
and
you
could
see
a
still
shot
of
me
with
my
hands
in
the
air
and
then
there
was
another
still
shot…
and
another
still
shot…
and
there
was
a
piece
of
wood
that
…
looked
like
it
came
out
of
my
hand
and
yeah,
it
went
from
there.
So
then
I
was
charged
with
I’m sure
it
was
an
affray
they then
charged
me
with
and
then
when
I
got
to
court
they
said
there
was
27
or
28
of
us
on
the
day.
The
majority
of
them
had
to
be
adjourned
for
social
inquiry
…
or
other
things
I
had
mine
done
because
I
was
in
trouble
at
the
time
for
other
things…
and
so
they
sentenced
me
on
that
day
for
8
weeks,
2
months
in
Youth
Custody
and
then
another
person
who
I
actually
knew…
who
was
a
friend
of
mine.
He
got
sentenced
after
me
and
then
1
other
person
and
then
a
person
came
back…
went
back
to
court
and
he
got
sentenced
and
I
actually
met
him
in
Weatherby
Youth
Custody
so
he came
back,
like
a
matter
of…
a
couple
of
weeks
later
and
got
sentenced
for
other
charges
as
well
and
I
met
him
in
Youth
Custody
in
Weatherby’s.
So
you
were
the
first…
I
would
have
been
the
first
person
in
the
UK
to
be
sentenced
to
any
type
of
prison
sentence
custodial
sentence
for
attending
an
illegal
gathering.
What
happened
to
you
afterwards?
The
other
parties
were
they
finishing?
They
What
do
you do
with
your
life
after
the
party?
I
came
out
and
I
…
I
dropped
straight
back
into
the
party
scene
usually
dropped
straight
back
into
the
party
scene
and
then
we
started
traveling
the
country
and
every
area
any
area
we
could
to
find
this
and
I
was
involved
in
the
in
the
party
scene
for
quite
a
long
time,
until
I
felt
like
it
was
no
longer
the
thing
for
me
to
do.
Not
only
the party
scene
but
everything
that
went
with
it.
So
I
left…
I
left
England
and
left
for
quite
a
number
of
years
for
a
good
10
years
before
I
came
back
and
then
carved
out
and
did
a
different
life
when
I
when
I
came
back
but
the
party
scene
after
that.
I
probably
stayed
involved
for
it
from
up
until
the
age
of
about
23
24
I
think
so
we
were
chasing
around
the
UK
to
as
many
clubs
as
we
could
we’d
had
been
around
Quadrant
Park
had
been
around
Club
of
Anna.
I’ve
been
to
Shelley’s
and
we’ve
done
all
of
them.
Looking
to
try
but
it
was
never
the
same
it
was
it’s
a
bizarre
thing
to
explain
to
people
as
well.
I’d
find
it
difficult
now
if
I
try
to
people
that
were
never
there
each
part
of
that
that
party
that
we
that I
went
to
had
something
different
the
anticipation
at
the
start
of
it
waiting
for
it
to
happen
then
when
the
music
came
on
that
was
a
separate
part
and
then
perhaps
there
was
some
favorite
tune
that
would
come
on
at
the
night
and
it’s
send
the
place
wild
and
then
the
morning
times
which
were
just
everything
that
linked in
to
make
that
party
special
was
yeah,
they
were
in
an
incredible
time.
I
think.
Yeah,
I
don’t
think
there
could
ever
be
replicated
when
they
tried
to
do
it
in
clubs
because
when
you
went
into
the
club’s
they’d
always
be
a
little
bit
dodgy
a
bit
moody
you
know,
people
would
be
taxing
people
you
might
have
some
people
that
were
big
drinkers
in
there
so
there’s
going
to
be
a
bit
of
an
issue
and
a
risk
around
them
having
a
go
at
you.
It
was
never
the
same.
It
was…
it
was
never
the
same as
same
as
that
as
that
party
never
quite
the
same.
This
is
going
on
archive
as
you
known
and
our
project
is
about
telling
a
working-class
post-industrial
story
with
the
a
few
100
years
of
what’s
happened
in
mills
and
warehouses
and
what
young
people
have
done
particularly
in
this
area.
I
really
love
the
idea
that
in
a
100
year’s
time
like
our
Mitchell
and
Kenyon
archive
that
some
kids
going
to
be
listening
to
all
of
you
like
telling
your
stories
not
in
someone
else’s
book
or
somewhere
else’s
film
you
can
say
something
to
em
what
would
you
say?
I’d
say
it
was
probably
one
of
the
most
amazing
times
that
happened
throughout
the
80s
and
it
was
something
that
people
actually
made
their
own
It’s
really…
really
hard
to
explain
what
it
was
but
for
people
to
come
together,
like
I
say
from
all
different
areas
inhibitions
were
just
released.
It
didn’t
matter
what
you
look
like
or
what
you
carried
on
like
you
were
accepted
you
could
go
from
one
group
of
people
to
the
next…
you could
spend
your
whole
night
doing
that
and
you
could
interact
instantly
get
on
and
become
that
person’s
best
friend.
It
was
literally
that
good.
And
now…
and
one
thing
I
do
kind
of
wish…
I
wish…
I
had
got
a
few
more
a
few
more
memories
I
could
look
back
on
because
we
didn’t
have
the
technology…
the
technology
wasn’t
there.
I’ve
got
probably
half
a
dozen
photographs
which
would
have
been
nice,
but
then
the
memories
I
guess
everybody
says
a
probably
stronger
of
certain
parts
the
years
kind
of
amalgamate
mix
…
for
me,
but
there
are
certain
aspects
of
them
years.
I
can
pick
out
and
you
know
what
the
biggest
thing
for
me
was
I’m
kind
of
glad
that
the
whole
social
media
technology
wasn’t
there
no
narcissism
with
it.
Everybody
was
just
being
themselves
and
I
think
that’s
what
you’ve
got
a
lack
of
now
so
I
dread
to
think
what
it’ll
be
like
when
these
are
listened
to.
Full Transcript:
How
did
you
get
involved
in
the
parties
in
Blackburn?
At
the
time,
it
was
all
about
drinking…
and
football
violence
seemed
to
be
the
thing
and
I
was
growing
up
around
that
and
wanting
to
be
around
some
of
the
older
people
that
were
involved
in
that
and
I
remember
a
friend
of
mine
his
brother
had
come
over
to
Blackburn
in
1989
somehow
and
he
was
a
kind
of
in
with
the
the
football
the
crowd
and
what
have
you
and
they wer’
hooligans
and
he
come
over
and
he’d…
and
he’d
told
his
brother
about
this
and
then
his
brother
had
been
and
then
he
said
to
me…
Oh
Damo
you’ve
got
to
come
over
you
want
to
come
and
see
these
parties
and
of
course
at
the
time
it
was
all
Farah
trousers
classically
worn
brogues
and
I
remember
coming
over
to
the
Red
Parrot
and
it’ll
been
1989
And
that
was
my
first
experience
of
Blackburn
so
I
remember
they
were
going
to
the
Red
Parrot
I
remember
the
doors
opening
and
then
I
just
remember
thinking
what
the
heck
is
this?
I
never
seen
anything
like
it
and
it’s really
difficult
to
even
try
to
explain
unless
you
were
actually
there
and
I
just
remember
the
whole
club
just
moving
just
the
whole
club
just
rocking
and
it
was
a
it
was
a
massive
shock
to
me
that
and
then
that
was
the
first
night.
I
was
introduced
to
the
party
afterwards
off
we
went
and
followed
the
rest
and
I..
I
ended
up
in
my
first
warehouse
party
that
night
and
that
was
it.
I
was
converted
hooked
and
that
this…
this
whole
new
scene
was
just
incredible
to
me
I
couldn’t
even
believe
it
was
happening
it
didn’t
seem
real
and
that
was
my
first
experience
of
what
got
me
there
So
it
was
a
friend’s
older
brother
who
to
to
think
back
as
well,
when
you
think
of
the
type
of
people
that
were
going
to
these
parties
because
it
brought
everybody
together
is
the
most
bizarre
thing,
so
yeah,
I
was
introduced
from
it
from
there,
and
then
that
was
it.
I
was
hooked
on
the
scene
from
then
And
were
you
traveling
every
weekend then?
Traveling
every
weekend
driving
down
from
Harrogate
in
little
old
battered
Escorts
4
Speeders
with
half
of
the
stuff
not
working
and
yeah
traveling
down
and
literally
waiting
the
full
week
for
the
weekend
and
I
think
it’s
really
bizarre
that
yours
full
mind…
my
full
mindset
and
mentality
changed
in
a
very
short
period
of
time
which
was…
it’s
pretty
surreal
when
you
think
about
it
now
when
you
sort
of
think
about.
Yeah
my
whole
mindset
changed
It
was
it
became
the
priority
wasn’t
it really?
It
was
the
priority.
Yeah.
It
was
almost
what
you
lived
for
and
you
it’s
very
strange
because
you
very
quickly
felt
like
you
were
part
of
something
that
was
that
was
happening
and
it
but
you
weren’t
only
part
of
something
it
was
yours
it’s
was a
very
strange
thing
to
to
be
involved
in
and
especially
when
you
look
at
the
time
like
I
say
that
you
know,
people
were
just
going
out
drinking
and
violence
was
the
norm.
So
to
pull
all
these
people
together
I mean
to
a
place
like
Blackburn….
Blackburn,
you
know,
where
was
it
on
the
map
and
all
of
a
sudden
we’ve
got
people
traveling
for
everywhere
to
be
here
you
you’re
talking
about
a
time
when
if
you
had
a
group
of
guys
males
that
went
to
another
city
or
town
the
chances
are
you
even
went
for
a
fight
or
you’re
going
to
get
in
one
when
you
went
there…
and
that
was
what
you
want…
and
then
all
of
a
sudden
you’ve
got
a
1000s
and
1000s
of
people
from
every
different
background
coming
together
in
one
place
it
was
yeah
it
was
it
was
a
very
strange
thing
and
as
you
say
you
lived
for
the
weekend
you
were
counting
the
days
down,
you
know,
when
you
got
to
mid-week
you
knew
it
wasn’t
long
you
knew
it
was
coming
and
it
was
happening
and
when
you’ve
been
to
a
party
for
me
when
I’d
finished,
I
used
to
think
I
had
this
real
light
reflecting
on
it
now
and
looking
back.
I
know
I’d
kind
of
think
I’ve done it
another
one
like
a
real
sense
of
achievement
like
yes,
I’ve
done
that.
That’s
it
I’ve
done
it
great.
Yeah
brilliant
another
one
yeah
When’s
the
next?
So
loads
of
good
memories
for
you?
For
me?
Yeah
So
where there any
dark
memories
from
time?
Dark
memories
from
that particular
time?
No
I
don’t…
I
don’t
think
that
I’d
call
them
dark
memories,
I
think
I…
would
I
change
anything
that
happened?
Probably
not
but
I
was
sent
to
a
Youth
Offender
Center
for it
Youth
Custody.
it
was
for
attending
one
of
the
parties
which
was
when
the
whole
scene
died
down
in
Blackburn
and
everybody
was
in
desperation
because
it
was
where
you
where
are we
going
to
go
and
do
this
now
where
are
we
going
to
go
and
doing
now
and
lot
of
the
clubs
opened
up
and
they
try
to
sort
of
capitalise
on
that
and
get
people
in
but
it
wasn’t
the
same
it
wasn’t
what
was
happening
and
then
of
course
we
had
this
brave
new
world
that…
that
was
done
for
me…
and
that
was
great
and
everybody
was
like
yes!
Brilliant
that
was
amazing
and
then
we
had
the
Love
Decade
which
came
but
that
was
obviously
West
Yorkshire
and
obviously
the
police
had
started
to
do
what
the
done
down
in
this
area
then
anyway,
and
then
when
you’re
taking
something
like
what you have
here
moving
it
into
somewhere
like
West
Yorkshire
where
they’ve
got
the
resources
the
money
the
police.
I
think
they
literally
turned
around
and
said
that’s
not
happening
not
here
and
they’d
also
just
change
the
laws.
I
think
they
said
it
was
going
to
be
laws
about
not
only
promoting
and
running
the
parties
but
attending
them
as
well.
I
think
they
tried
to
put
on
saying
it
was
going
to
be
you
could
be
charged
for
attending
an
illegal
gathering.
There
was
also
a
law
brought
inbetween…
inbetween
the
Love
Decade
and
the
time
we
got
to
court
which
is
the
allowance
of
video
evidence
when
you
don’t
know
you’re
being
filmed
and
they
brought
that
in…
Yeah
like
2
weeks
before
the
court
case
because
they
had
video
evidence
I
presume…
Yeah,
they
were
so
They
weren’t
allowed
to
use
video evidence
know,
So let’s
just
let’s
so
this
is
West
Yorkshire.
This
is
West
Yorkshire.
So
this would have
been the
police force
who’d dealt
with the
Miner’s Strikes
in the
early mid 80s
What
happened
to
you?
Well
it
was
a
wealthy
police
force
they
came
and
as
I’m
sure
you’re
aware
what
they
did
they
decided
that
we’re
going
to
stop
that
party
and…
and
they
did
they
tried
to
stop
it
at
the
start
and
they
eventually
did
manage
to
get
in
and
stop
it
and
I
can
remember
being
….
stood
outside
in
a
huge…
huge…
huge
group
of
people
a
big
line
of
people
watching
people
go
into
these
old
Transit
police
vans
and
thinking
say
to
my
friend
We’re
all
right,
van is full
We’re
okay
and
then
another
van would
come
back
and
another
and
then
it
became
apparent…
everyone’s
getting
arrested
which
they
did
and
then
they
released
me
later
the
next
day
because
they
couldn’t
confirm
who
I
was
because
they
couldn’t
get
in
touch
with
anybody.
So
I
didn’t
get
released
to
maybe
6
o’clock
the
next
day
and
then
it
had
been
about
8
weeks
later.
I
was
getting
ready
to
go..
to
work.
I
remember
opening
the
door
and
then
just
getting
pushed
back
into
my
house
by
4
like
really
burly
police
officers.
They
said…
You
are
under
arrest
for..
I think
it
was
an
affray
to
start
with
I
think
they
said
you’re
under
arrest
for
affray
or
inciting
a
riot
took
me
over
to
Leeds
police
station
interviewed
me
and
said
we
know
you
were
there
and
I
said,
yeah
I’m not
going
to
deny it
I
was
at
the
party.
And
then
they…
they
said
Did
you
help
incite
a
riot?
Were
you
aggressive
towards
police.
Did
you
hit
them?
Did
you
and
I
said
no.
I
didn’t
do
any
of
that
and
I
remember
there
was
like
a
almost
like
a
…
what do you call
it
in
a
warehouse…
was
like
a
drop-down
bit
where they
must
have
done
deliveries
loaded up…
loading bay…
loading….
like
a
loading
bay
and
I
can
remember
them
trying
to
get
in
there
and
I
can
remember
that
being
that
that
bit
there
and
shouting,
you
know,
you
know,
we
didn’t
really
want
them
to
stop
our
party
we wanted
to
carry
on…
leave us
alone.
I
remember
shouting
and
then
they
asked
me
if
I’d
thrown
a piece fo
wood
and
thrown
this
that
and
the
other…
which
I
denied
and
then
they
produce
some
stills
which
had
been
taken
off
a
video
camera,
but
wer’
on
like
a
grid
reference
and
he
said
I
put
it
to
you
that.
D7
is
you
and
you
could
see
a
still
shot
of
me
with
my
hands
in
the
air
and
then
there
was
another
still
shot…
and
another
still
shot…
and
there
was
a
piece
of
wood
that
…
looked
like
it
came
out
of
my
hand
and
yeah,
it
went
from
there.
So
then
I
was
charged
with
I’m sure
it
was
an
affray
they then
charged
me
with
and
then
when
I
got
to
court
they
said
there
was
27
or
28
of
us
on
the
day.
The
majority
of
them
had
to
be
adjourned
for
social
inquiry
…
or
other
things
I
had
mine
done
because
I
was
in
trouble
at
the
time
for
other
things…
and
so
they
sentenced
me
on
that
day
for
8
weeks,
2
months
in
Youth
Custody
and
then
another
person
who
I
actually
knew…
who
was
a
friend
of
mine.
He
got
sentenced
after
me
and
then
1
other
person
and
then
a
person
came
back…
went
back
to
court
and
he
got
sentenced
and
I
actually
met
him
in
Weatherby
Youth
Custody
so
he came
back,
like
a
matter
of…
a
couple
of
weeks
later
and
got
sentenced
for
other
charges
as
well
and
I
met
him
in
Youth
Custody
in
Weatherby’s.
So
you
were
the
first…
I
would
have
been
the
first
person
in
the
UK
to
be
sentenced
to
any
type
of
prison
sentence
custodial
sentence
for
attending
an
illegal
gathering.
What
happened
to
you
afterwards?
The
other
parties
were
they
finishing?
They
What
do
you do
with
your
life
after
the
party?
I
came
out
and
I
…
I
dropped
straight
back
into
the
party
scene
usually
dropped
straight
back
into
the
party
scene
and
then
we
started
traveling
the
country
and
every
area
any
area
we
could
to
find
this
and
I
was
involved
in
the
in
the
party
scene
for
quite
a
long
time,
until
I
felt
like
it
was
no
longer
the
thing
for
me
to
do.
Not
only
the party
scene
but
everything
that
went
with
it.
So
I
left…
I
left
England
and
left
for
quite
a
number
of
years
for
a
good
10
years
before
I
came
back
and
then
carved
out
and
did
a
different
life
when
I
when
I
came
back
but
the
party
scene
after
that.
I
probably
stayed
involved
for
it
from
up
until
the
age
of
about
23
24
I
think
so
we
were
chasing
around
the
UK
to
as
many
clubs
as
we
could
we’d
had
been
around
Quadrant
Park
had
been
around
Club
of
Anna.
I’ve
been
to
Shelley’s
and
we’ve
done
all
of
them.
Looking
to
try
but
it
was
never
the
same
it
was
it’s
a
bizarre
thing
to
explain
to
people
as
well.
I’d
find
it
difficult
now
if
I
try
to
people
that
were
never
there
each
part
of
that
that
party
that
we
that I
went
to
had
something
different
the
anticipation
at
the
start
of
it
waiting
for
it
to
happen
then
when
the
music
came
on
that
was
a
separate
part
and
then
perhaps
there
was
some
favorite
tune
that
would
come
on
at
the
night
and
it’s
send
the
place
wild
and
then
the
morning
times
which
were
just
everything
that
linked in
to
make
that
party
special
was
yeah,
they
were
in
an
incredible
time.
I
think.
Yeah,
I
don’t
think
there
could
ever
be
replicated
when
they
tried
to
do
it
in
clubs
because
when
you
went
into
the
club’s
they’d
always
be
a
little
bit
dodgy
a
bit
moody
you
know,
people
would
be
taxing
people
you
might
have
some
people
that
were
big
drinkers
in
there
so
there’s
going
to
be
a
bit
of
an
issue
and
a
risk
around
them
having
a
go
at
you.
It
was
never
the
same.
It
was…
it
was
never
the
same as
same
as
that
as
that
party
never
quite
the
same.
This
is
going
on
archive
as
you
known
and
our
project
is
about
telling
a
working-class
post-industrial
story
with
the
a
few
100
years
of
what’s
happened
in
mills
and
warehouses
and
what
young
people
have
done
particularly
in
this
area.
I
really
love
the
idea
that
in
a
100
year’s
time
like
our
Mitchell
and
Kenyon
archive
that
some
kids
going
to
be
listening
to
all
of
you
like
telling
your
stories
not
in
someone
else’s
book
or
somewhere
else’s
film
you
can
say
something
to
em
what
would
you
say?
I’d
say
it
was
probably
one
of
the
most
amazing
times
that
happened
throughout
the
80s
and
it
was
something
that
people
actually
made
their
own
It’s
really…
really
hard
to
explain
what
it
was
but
for
people
to
come
together,
like
I
say
from
all
different
areas
inhibitions
were
just
released.
It
didn’t
matter
what
you
look
like
or
what
you
carried
on
like
you
were
accepted
you
could
go
from
one
group
of
people
to
the
next…
you could
spend
your
whole
night
doing
that
and
you
could
interact
instantly
get
on
and
become
that
person’s
best
friend.
It
was
literally
that
good.
And
now…
and
one
thing
I
do
kind
of
wish…
I
wish…
I
had
got
a
few
more
a
few
more
memories
I
could
look
back
on
because
we
didn’t
have
the
technology…
the
technology
wasn’t
there.
I’ve
got
probably
half
a
dozen
photographs
which
would
have
been
nice,
but
then
the
memories
I
guess
everybody
says
a
probably
stronger
of
certain
parts
the
years
kind
of
amalgamate
mix
…
for
me,
but
there
are
certain
aspects
of
them
years.
I
can
pick
out
and
you
know
what
the
biggest
thing
for
me
was
I’m
kind
of
glad
that
the
whole
social
media
technology
wasn’t
there
no
narcissism
with
it.
Everybody
was
just
being
themselves
and
I
think
that’s
what
you’ve
got
a
lack
of
now
so
I
dread
to
think
what
it’ll
be
like
when
these
are
listened
to.
Damo 2 Bad Memories
Click to play
One
of
the
worst
parts
for
me were
a
bad
experience
on
acid
had
a bad
trip
had
a
bad do
one
day.
I
thought
monsters
were
chasing
me
and
shot
out
the
door
and
off
home
and
tried
to
forget
about
it
all…
But
you
still
carried
on
going
after
that?
Oh,
yeah,
we
still
carried
on
after
that
just
stayed
away
from
the
acid
and
went
on
to
the
Ecstasy.
Full Transcript:
One
of
the
worst
parts
for
me were
a
bad
experience
on
acid
had
a bad
trip
had
a
bad do
one
day.
I
thought
monsters
were
chasing
me
and
shot
out
the
door
and
off
home
and
tried
to
forget
about
it
all…
But
you
still
carried
on
going
after
that?
Oh,
yeah,
we
still
carried
on
after
that
just
stayed
away
from
the
acid
and
went
on
to
the
Ecstasy.
Damo 2 Getting Involved
Click to play
What
were
you
doing
back
in
89
90?
What’s
your
connection
with
Acid
House?
Well
I
were
like
a
punter…
So
really
it
went
from
the
Hacienda
days
then
obviously
on
to
Sett
End
days,
buy
in
what
you
bought,
taking
what
you
took
out
for
a
good
time
really.
So
more
of
a
punter
than
er
anything
to
do
with
organising
but
really
first
discovered
it
through
through
mates
really
get
on
this
listen
to
that.
And
then
it
turned
out
right
well
they’re
playing
this
in
this
club
and
we
used
to
go
down
to
…
Hacienda
88-89
then
Sett
End…
didn’t
go
to
every
one
of
them
but
went
to
most
of
them
Unit 7
…
…
the
mill
across
from
Infirmary
that’s
now
a
boxing
gym.
Oh
yeah.
Pump
Street
that’s
another
one.
Yes.
A
great
time.
Well it were
electrifying
everybody
laughing
smiling
having
a
good
time.
No
trouble.
Absolutely
fantastic.
Full Transcript:
What
were
you
doing
back
in
89
90?
What’s
your
connection
with
Acid
House?
Well
I
were
like
a
punter…
So
really
it
went
from
the
Hacienda
days
then
obviously
on
to
Sett
End
days,
buy
in
what
you
bought,
taking
what
you
took
out
for
a
good
time
really.
So
more
of
a
punter
than
er
anything
to
do
with
organising
but
really
first
discovered
it
through
through
mates
really
get
on
this
listen
to
that.
And
then
it
turned
out
right
well
they’re
playing
this
in
this
club
and
we
used
to
go
down
to
…
Hacienda
88-89
then
Sett
End…
didn’t
go
to
every
one
of
them
but
went
to
most
of
them
Unit 7
…
…
the
mill
across
from
Infirmary
that’s
now
a
boxing
gym.
Oh
yeah.
Pump
Street
that’s
another
one.
Yes.
A
great
time.
Well it were
electrifying
everybody
laughing
smiling
having
a
good
time.
No
trouble.
Absolutely
fantastic.
Damo 2 Good Memories
Click to play
My
most
vivid
memory
that
stands
out
is
once
errr
not
being
able
to
get
a
lift
with
3
mates
to
a
party
after
the
Sett
End.
So
we
decided
to
get
a
taxi
into
town
and
nick
a car
off
Kav
carpark
join
the
convoy.
I
don’t
know
what
happened
to
the
car
the
morning
after
because
we
all
got
lifts
back
to
where
we were
going.
So
so
that’s
one
of
the
most
vivid
memories
of
it.
Happy
days.
It
happened
a
couple
of
times
from
with
myself,
but
I
think
it
would be
more like
Okay…
so
we’re
going
to
these
parties
and
we
don’t
care
how
we’re
going
to
get
there…
and
I
think
out
out
of
the
1000’s
that
they
attended
I
don’t
think
we’d
be
the
only
ones
that
stole
cars
and
made
our way
their
in
them.
Full Transcript:
My
most
vivid
memory
that
stands
out
is
once
errr
not
being
able
to
get
a
lift
with
3
mates
to
a
party
after
the
Sett
End.
So
we
decided
to
get
a
taxi
into
town
and
nick
a car
off
Kav
carpark
join
the
convoy.
I
don’t
know
what
happened
to
the
car
the
morning
after
because
we
all
got
lifts
back
to
where
we were
going.
So
so
that’s
one
of
the
most
vivid
memories
of
it.
Happy
days.
It
happened
a
couple
of
times
from
with
myself,
but
I
think
it
would be
more like
Okay…
so
we’re
going
to
these
parties
and
we
don’t
care
how
we’re
going
to
get
there…
and
I
think
out
out
of
the
1000’s
that
they
attended
I
don’t
think
we’d
be
the
only
ones
that
stole
cars
and
made
our way
their
in
them.
Damo 2 Advice For Future Generations
Click to play
Advice…
advice…
enjoy
yourselves
while
you’re
young
You only
do it
once.
Full Transcript:
Advice…
advice…
enjoy
yourselves
while
you’re
young
You only
do it
once.
Damo 2 Full Interview
Click to play
What
were
you
doing
back
in
89
90?
What’s
your
connection
with
Acid
House?
Well
I
were
like
a
punter…
So
really
it
went
from
Hacienda
days
then
obviously
on
to
Sett
End
days,
buy
in
what
you
bought,
taking
what
you
took
out
for
a
good
time
really.
So
more
of
a
punter
than
…
er
anything
to
do
with
organising
but
really
first
discovered
it
through
through
mates
really
get
on
this
listen
to
that.
Then
it
turned
out
right
well
they’re
playing
this
in
this
club
and
we
used
to
go
down
to
Hacienda
…
…
88-89
then
Sett
End…
didn’t
go
to
every
one
of
them
but
went
to
most
of
them
Unit 7
…
…
the
mill
across
from
Infirmary
that’s
now
a
boxing
gym.
Oh
yeah.
Pump
Street
that’s
another
one.
Yes.
A
great
time.
Well it were
electrifying
everybody
laughing
smiling
having a
good time.
No
trouble.
Absolutely
fantastic.
My
most
vivid
memory
that
stands
out
is
once
errr
not
being
able
to
get
a
lift
with
3
mates
to
a
party
after
the
Sett
End.
So
we
decided
to
get
a
taxi
into
town
and
nick
a car
off
Kav
carpark
join
the
convoy.
I
don’t
know
what
happened
to
the
car
the
morning
after
because
we
all
got
lifts
back
to
where
we were
going.
So
so
that’s
one
of
the
most
vivid
memories
of
it.
Happy
days.
It
happened
a
couple
of
times
from
with
myself,
but
I
think
it
would be
more a case of
Okay…
so
we’re
going
to
these
parties
and
we
don’t
care
how
we’re
going
to
get
there…
and
I
think
out
out
of
the
1000’s
that
they
attended
I
don’t
think
we’d
be
the
only
ones
that
stole
cars
and
made
our way
there
in
them.
One
of
the
worst
parts
for
me
were
a
bad
experience
on
acid
had
a bad
trip
had
a
bad do
one
day.
I
thought
monsters
were
chasing
me
and
shot
out
the
door
and
off
home
and
tried
to
forget
about
it
all…
But
you
still
carried
on
going
after
that?
Oh,
yeah,
we
still
carried
on
after
that
just
stayed
away
from
the
acid
and
went
on
to
the
Ecstasy.
I’m
feis.
Advice…
Advice…
Enjoy
yourselves
while
you’re
young
you only
do
it
once.
Full Transcript:
What
were
you
doing
back
in
89
90?
What’s
your
connection
with
Acid
House?
Well
I
were
like
a
punter…
So
really
it
went
from
Hacienda
days
then
obviously
on
to
Sett
End
days,
buy
in
what
you
bought,
taking
what
you
took
out
for
a
good
time
really.
So
more
of
a
punter
than
…
er
anything
to
do
with
organising
but
really
first
discovered
it
through
through
mates
really
get
on
this
listen
to
that.
Then
it
turned
out
right
well
they’re
playing
this
in
this
club
and
we
used
to
go
down
to
Hacienda
…
…
88-89
then
Sett
End…
didn’t
go
to
every
one
of
them
but
went
to
most
of
them
Unit 7
…
…
the
mill
across
from
Infirmary
that’s
now
a
boxing
gym.
Oh
yeah.
Pump
Street
that’s
another
one.
Yes.
A
great
time.
Well it were
electrifying
everybody
laughing
smiling
having a
good time.
No
trouble.
Absolutely
fantastic.
My
most
vivid
memory
that
stands
out
is
once
errr
not
being
able
to
get
a
lift
with
3
mates
to
a
party
after
the
Sett
End.
So
we
decided
to
get
a
taxi
into
town
and
nick
a car
off
Kav
carpark
join
the
convoy.
I
don’t
know
what
happened
to
the
car
the
morning
after
because
we
all
got
lifts
back
to
where
we were
going.
So
so
that’s
one
of
the
most
vivid
memories
of
it.
Happy
days.
It
happened
a
couple
of
times
from
with
myself,
but
I
think
it
would be
more a case of
Okay…
so
we’re
going
to
these
parties
and
we
don’t
care
how
we’re
going
to
get
there…
and
I
think
out
out
of
the
1000’s
that
they
attended
I
don’t
think
we’d
be
the
only
ones
that
stole
cars
and
made
our way
there
in
them.
One
of
the
worst
parts
for
me
were
a
bad
experience
on
acid
had
a bad
trip
had
a
bad do
one
day.
I
thought
monsters
were
chasing
me
and
shot
out
the
door
and
off
home
and
tried
to
forget
about
it
all…
But
you
still
carried
on
going
after
that?
Oh,
yeah,
we
still
carried
on
after
that
just
stayed
away
from
the
acid
and
went
on
to
the
Ecstasy.
I’m
feis.
Advice…
Advice…
Enjoy
yourselves
while
you’re
young
you only
do
it
once.
Damien Getting Involved
Click to play
So
I
was
living
in
Blackburn
and I grew
up
there
and
was
into
all
sorts
of
music
all
different
kinds
of
music
growing
up
but
I
was
15
in
1989
I
was
still
at
school
and I
started
going
out
and
about
and
I
don’t
know
how
we
found
Crackers
I
don’t
know
how
someone
told
us
to
go
to
Crackers
I
can’t
remember how
that
happened
but
anyway,
we
did
me
and me mate
I
think
in
about
March
1989
and
I
felt
totally
at
home
because
I
think
going
out
for
me
then
if
you
went
other
places,
it
was
like
a
it was
either
like
a
cattle
market
and
it
was
really
commercial
or
you
went
out
to
like
a
village
outside
of
town
or
village
down
the
road
and
people
just
wanted
to
beat
you
up
cos
you
didn’t
come
from
that
village
so
when
I
went
to
Crackers
and
it
was
like
you
couldn’t
see
what
was
going
on.
It
was
full
of
smoke.
It’s
full
of
strobe
lights
I
was
saying
in
the
conversation
with
Jules
before
you
didn’t
actually
know
I
didn’t
actually
know
how
big
the
room
was
because
there
was a
mirror
at one
end
so
you
couldn’t
see
what
I
didn’t
you
didn’t
know
what
the
room
actually
look
like
it
was
just
a
mass
of
people
and
smoke
and
strobes
so
no
one
was
bothered
about
you,
you
know,
and
I
really
liked
that,
you
know,
you
just
got
on
and
did
your
thing
and
the
music
was
I
loved
House
music
and
I
loved
what
I
was
hearing
of
Acid
House,
you
know
we were
into
lots
of
different
kinds
of
music,
but
we’re
really
really
starting
to
get
into
House
music,
but
it
was
really
exotic
because
you
didn’t
know
most
of
the
tunes
you
know
for
me
it
was
new,
you
know,
there was
a
whole
world
that
you were
diving
into
so
that
was
the
beginning
of
my
connection
and we
went
there
a
couple
of
times
and
probably
the
third
time
I
turned
up
there
they
said
oh
it’s
not
on
tonight
and
a
van
pulled
up
and
they
said
this
van
is gonna
go
to
an
Acid
House
party
and
if
you
want
to
go
get
in
quick
so
we
jumped
in
the van
and didn’t
know
who
it
was
didn’t
know
who
said
anything.
I
was
just
there
with
a
mate
he were
called
Jack
and I
think
he
were
a
bit
scared
because
I
said
we
were
15
we
weren’t
really
supposed
to
be
there,
you
know
what I
mean,
we
jumped
in
and
then
that
was
our
first
party
and
that
was
sometime
in
the
first
half
of ’89
I’d say
and,
you
know,
I
was
hooked.
I
was
just
totally
hooked
from
then
on
and
then
we
were
so
we
were
going
to
Sett
End
regularly.
I
wouldn’t
say
that
by
any
means
that I
went
to
every
party
but
I
went
to
a
fair
decent
amount
of
them
right
through
to
the
end
and
still
trying
to
go
to
ones
that
didn’t
happen
afterwards,
you
know,
because
there
was
plenty
of
attempts
afterwards
to
make
parties
happen.
So
I
don’t
live
in
Blackburn
anymore
but,
you
know,
it was a
huge
part
of
my
life,
so
yeah,
so
that
was
my
involvement
really
was
as
participant
as
a
punter
as
someone
who
attended
the
parties
and
from
a
young
age
and
I
was
so
passionate
about
it.
I
guess
that
I
was
keen
to
involve
and
encourage
as
many
people
as
I
could
to
come
which
was
mostly
at
that
time
like
other
mates
who
were
school
really
because
I
thought
it
was
just
the
best
thing
you
know,
the
best
thing
that
anyone
could
be
doing
and
the
most
exciting
thing
that
anyone
could
be
doing
because
it
takes
so many
different
boxes,
you
know,
you
were
in
rooms
and
in
warehouses
with
1000s
of
people
and
people
really
came
together
with
a
common
purpose
and
I
knew
absolutely
beautiful
experiences
and
it
made
you
realise
that
you
know,
like
you
didn’t
have
to
be
in
like
really
really
picturesque
locations.
You
didn’t
really
have
to
be
in
like
I’ve
been
in
some
amazing
clubs
in
like
Ibiza
and
other
parts
of
the
world
where
it’s
like it
feels
like
a
paradise
and
it’s
got
its own
special
atmosphere,
but
you
could
be
in
a
dirty
warehouse
in
Blackburn
with
people
jumping
up
and
down
on
JCB,
you
know,
diggers
and
things
like
that
or
ice
cream
vans
and
and
you
know
dilapidated
warehouses
and
that
was
that
was
Heaven.
That
was
as
good
as
it
got
for
me
because
it
was
created
by
all
the
people
there
and
it
wasn’t
about
you
know,
a
culture
of
like
Superstar
DJ’s
or
you
know
at
all
it
was
about
it
was
about
the
music
and
that
the
thing
that
was
amazing
was
the
party
itself
and
that
to
me
is
like
the
community
of
all
the
people
who’ve
come
together
to
make
that
and all the
special
things
that
happened
to
come
together,
so
yeah,
so
it
was
definitely
led
left
a
big
hole
for
me
when
it
when
the
parties
eventually
finished
but
I
was
so
grateful
to
to
be
a
part
of
that
and
I’m
glad
that
at
the
time
I
was
able
to
seize
it
and
see
it
for
what
it
was
because
I
guess
a
lot
of
other
people
I
knew
who
were
young,
you
know,
same
age
15, 16,
they
weren’t
in
situations
where
they
could
go
but
I
would
have
I
would
have
left
home,
you
know
to
be
part
of
them
the
parties
I
would
have
done
anything
because
I
think
I
knew
that
I
just
had
to
be
there,
you
know,
and
so
I’m
glad
that
I
could
see
it
have
the
conviction
and
see
it
for
what
it
was
at
the
time
which
was
like
a
really
unique
beautiful
thing
which
you
know
has
really
influenced
my
life
in
lots
of
ways
and
it
definitely
was
a
big
influence
on
me
wanting
to
make
music,
you
know
and
put
on
events
put
on
music
you
know
music
events,
but
it’s
influenced
me to
do
loads
and
loads
of
different
things
in
my
life.
Full Transcript:
So
I
was
living
in
Blackburn
and I grew
up
there
and
was
into
all
sorts
of
music
all
different
kinds
of
music
growing
up
but
I
was
15
in
1989
I
was
still
at
school
and I
started
going
out
and
about
and
I
don’t
know
how
we
found
Crackers
I
don’t
know
how
someone
told
us
to
go
to
Crackers
I
can’t
remember how
that
happened
but
anyway,
we
did
me
and me mate
I
think
in
about
March
1989
and
I
felt
totally
at
home
because
I
think
going
out
for
me
then
if
you
went
other
places,
it
was
like
a
it was
either
like
a
cattle
market
and
it
was
really
commercial
or
you
went
out
to
like
a
village
outside
of
town
or
village
down
the
road
and
people
just
wanted
to
beat
you
up
cos
you
didn’t
come
from
that
village
so
when
I
went
to
Crackers
and
it
was
like
you
couldn’t
see
what
was
going
on.
It
was
full
of
smoke.
It’s
full
of
strobe
lights
I
was
saying
in
the
conversation
with
Jules
before
you
didn’t
actually
know
I
didn’t
actually
know
how
big
the
room
was
because
there
was a
mirror
at one
end
so
you
couldn’t
see
what
I
didn’t
you
didn’t
know
what
the
room
actually
look
like
it
was
just
a
mass
of
people
and
smoke
and
strobes
so
no
one
was
bothered
about
you,
you
know,
and
I
really
liked
that,
you
know,
you
just
got
on
and
did
your
thing
and
the
music
was
I
loved
House
music
and
I
loved
what
I
was
hearing
of
Acid
House,
you
know
we were
into
lots
of
different
kinds
of
music,
but
we’re
really
really
starting
to
get
into
House
music,
but
it
was
really
exotic
because
you
didn’t
know
most
of
the
tunes
you
know
for
me
it
was
new,
you
know,
there was
a
whole
world
that
you were
diving
into
so
that
was
the
beginning
of
my
connection
and we
went
there
a
couple
of
times
and
probably
the
third
time
I
turned
up
there
they
said
oh
it’s
not
on
tonight
and
a
van
pulled
up
and
they
said
this
van
is gonna
go
to
an
Acid
House
party
and
if
you
want
to
go
get
in
quick
so
we
jumped
in
the van
and didn’t
know
who
it
was
didn’t
know
who
said
anything.
I
was
just
there
with
a
mate
he were
called
Jack
and I
think
he
were
a
bit
scared
because
I
said
we
were
15
we
weren’t
really
supposed
to
be
there,
you
know
what I
mean,
we
jumped
in
and
then
that
was
our
first
party
and
that
was
sometime
in
the
first
half
of ’89
I’d say
and,
you
know,
I
was
hooked.
I
was
just
totally
hooked
from
then
on
and
then
we
were
so
we
were
going
to
Sett
End
regularly.
I
wouldn’t
say
that
by
any
means
that I
went
to
every
party
but
I
went
to
a
fair
decent
amount
of
them
right
through
to
the
end
and
still
trying
to
go
to
ones
that
didn’t
happen
afterwards,
you
know,
because
there
was
plenty
of
attempts
afterwards
to
make
parties
happen.
So
I
don’t
live
in
Blackburn
anymore
but,
you
know,
it was a
huge
part
of
my
life,
so
yeah,
so
that
was
my
involvement
really
was
as
participant
as
a
punter
as
someone
who
attended
the
parties
and
from
a
young
age
and
I
was
so
passionate
about
it.
I
guess
that
I
was
keen
to
involve
and
encourage
as
many
people
as
I
could
to
come
which
was
mostly
at
that
time
like
other
mates
who
were
school
really
because
I
thought
it
was
just
the
best
thing
you
know,
the
best
thing
that
anyone
could
be
doing
and
the
most
exciting
thing
that
anyone
could
be
doing
because
it
takes
so many
different
boxes,
you
know,
you
were
in
rooms
and
in
warehouses
with
1000s
of
people
and
people
really
came
together
with
a
common
purpose
and
I
knew
absolutely
beautiful
experiences
and
it
made
you
realise
that
you
know,
like
you
didn’t
have
to
be
in
like
really
really
picturesque
locations.
You
didn’t
really
have
to
be
in
like
I’ve
been
in
some
amazing
clubs
in
like
Ibiza
and
other
parts
of
the
world
where
it’s
like it
feels
like
a
paradise
and
it’s
got
its own
special
atmosphere,
but
you
could
be
in
a
dirty
warehouse
in
Blackburn
with
people
jumping
up
and
down
on
JCB,
you
know,
diggers
and
things
like
that
or
ice
cream
vans
and
and
you
know
dilapidated
warehouses
and
that
was
that
was
Heaven.
That
was
as
good
as
it
got
for
me
because
it
was
created
by
all
the
people
there
and
it
wasn’t
about
you
know,
a
culture
of
like
Superstar
DJ’s
or
you
know
at
all
it
was
about
it
was
about
the
music
and
that
the
thing
that
was
amazing
was
the
party
itself
and
that
to
me
is
like
the
community
of
all
the
people
who’ve
come
together
to
make
that
and all the
special
things
that
happened
to
come
together,
so
yeah,
so
it
was
definitely
led
left
a
big
hole
for
me
when
it
when
the
parties
eventually
finished
but
I
was
so
grateful
to
to
be
a
part
of
that
and
I’m
glad
that
at
the
time
I
was
able
to
seize
it
and
see
it
for
what
it
was
because
I
guess
a
lot
of
other
people
I
knew
who
were
young,
you
know,
same
age
15, 16,
they
weren’t
in
situations
where
they
could
go
but
I
would
have
I
would
have
left
home,
you
know
to
be
part
of
them
the
parties
I
would
have
done
anything
because
I
think
I
knew
that
I
just
had
to
be
there,
you
know,
and
so
I’m
glad
that
I
could
see
it
have
the
conviction
and
see
it
for
what
it
was
at
the
time
which
was
like
a
really
unique
beautiful
thing
which
you
know
has
really
influenced
my
life
in
lots
of
ways
and
it
definitely
was
a
big
influence
on
me
wanting
to
make
music,
you
know
and
put
on
events
put
on
music
you
know
music
events,
but
it’s
influenced
me to
do
loads
and
loads
of
different
things
in
my
life.
Damien Bad Memories
Click to play
Well,
the
parties
ending
was
a
bad
memory.
That
was
that
was
that
was
bad
because
it
it
was
really
depressing.
Because…
because
it
was
hard,
yeah,
definitely
hard
to
replace
something
like
that
because
it
was
such
a
euphoric
experience
and
because
it
brought
people
together
in
such
a
way
that
…
to
not
have
that
in
your
life…
and
also
because
it
felt
like
the
things…
even
though
as
I’m
older
I
can
see
that
it
…
it
needed
to
stop
probably
probably
probably,
because
of
the
elements
that
were at
play,
you
know,
at
the
time,
you
know,
the
influence
of
the
gangs
and
other
aspects,
maybe
greed
and
other
things
that
were
coming
into
it,
but
in
terms
of
like
the
you
know,
the
sort
of
the
sort
of
beauty
and
…
…
just
the
buzz
of
it
and
how
you
know
how
good
it
was.
It
was
such
a
hard
thing
for
it
to
not,
not
be
there,
and…
I
think…
and
also
it
felt
like
like
the
the
sort
of
old,
the
old
way
of
doing
things
was
kind
of
winging
out.
I
think
that’s
why
it
felt
like
a
negative
thing
because
it
fell
like
all
the
sort
of
traditional
aspects
of
culture
that
you
were
kind
of
rebelling
against,
and
didn’t
really,
you
know,
want
much
to
do
with
…
you
know,
how
you
have
fun,
where
you
do
it,
what
time
you
do
it
till,
you
know,
all
it
was
like
it
was
like
that
…
that
was
winging
out,
you
know,
in
a
way,
and
that
was
and
that
was…
so
that
felt
a
bit
depressing.
But
in
terms
of
like
actual
experiences
at
the
parties.
I
don’t
remember
having
any.
Full Transcript:
Well,
the
parties
ending
was
a
bad
memory.
That
was
that
was
that
was
bad
because
it
it
was
really
depressing.
Because…
because
it
was
hard,
yeah,
definitely
hard
to
replace
something
like
that
because
it
was
such
a
euphoric
experience
and
because
it
brought
people
together
in
such
a
way
that
…
to
not
have
that
in
your
life…
and
also
because
it
felt
like
the
things…
even
though
as
I’m
older
I
can
see
that
it
…
it
needed
to
stop
probably
probably
probably,
because
of
the
elements
that
were at
play,
you
know,
at
the
time,
you
know,
the
influence
of
the
gangs
and
other
aspects,
maybe
greed
and
other
things
that
were
coming
into
it,
but
in
terms
of
like
the
you
know,
the
sort
of
the
sort
of
beauty
and
…
…
just
the
buzz
of
it
and
how
you
know
how
good
it
was.
It
was
such
a
hard
thing
for
it
to
not,
not
be
there,
and…
I
think…
and
also
it
felt
like
like
the
the
sort
of
old,
the
old
way
of
doing
things
was
kind
of
winging
out.
I
think
that’s
why
it
felt
like
a
negative
thing
because
it
fell
like
all
the
sort
of
traditional
aspects
of
culture
that
you
were
kind
of
rebelling
against,
and
didn’t
really,
you
know,
want
much
to
do
with
…
you
know,
how
you
have
fun,
where
you
do
it,
what
time
you
do
it
till,
you
know,
all
it
was
like
it
was
like
that
…
that
was
winging
out,
you
know,
in
a
way,
and
that
was
and
that
was…
so
that
felt
a
bit
depressing.
But
in
terms
of
like
actual
experiences
at
the
parties.
I
don’t
remember
having
any.
Damien Good Memories Part 1
Click to play
The
one
that
really
stands
out
for
me,
I
guess
is
the
Altham
party.
And…
it
was
me
birthday.
I
think
the
day
after
my
birthday.
So
would’ve
been
me
16th
birthday.
And
it
was
special
for
a
load
of
different…
I’d
actually
gone
out
on
me
own.
None
of
me
mates
could
come
out.
So
yeah,
it
was
me
birthday
in
1990
and
it
just
seemed
like
a
very
euphoric
atmosphere
to
me…
cos
I
liked
the
really
dark
warehouses
…
…
…
I
liked
when
it
was
just
dark
and
a
strobe,
but
having
all
the
lights
and
the
projections
in
Altham…
you
could
see
the
crowd
in
a
different
way
and
it
just
looked…
when
you
looked
across
it
looked
epic.
What
I
can
remember
in
the
morning,
was
just
having
this
absolutely
amazing
night
being,
getting
in
there
really
early…
and
which
was
brilliant.
There’s
nothing
like
being
in
a
party
early
and
then
when
you
heard
the
sound
system,
come
on,
the
lights
are
on,
that
that…
I
mean.
Yeah,
that’s
the
thing.
I
think
I’m
pretty
sure
that
that
memory
for
me
is at
Altham…
being
in
there
with
the
lights
on
and
then
hearing
the
music,
the
lights
going
off
and
the
music
coming
on
then
the
cheer
that
went
up
like
it’s
like
someone
scored
at the
football.
It
was
amazing.
And
and
my
memory
in
the
morning
of
that
was
that
someone
came
on
the
mic
and
announced
that
Nelson
Mandela
was
gunna
be
released.
That’s
my
memory
of
Altham.
That
there
was
a
massive
cheer
from
the
from
the
crowd
that
people
were
going
mad.
So
someone
come
on
the
mic
and
announced
that
Nelson
Mandela’s
gunna
be
released.
So
to
me
it
felt
like
this
really
pivotal
time,
you
know,
it
was
like
…
…
I
can’t
remember
the
order
of
exactly
everything
but
in
that,
in
89,
I
think
there’d
have
been
like
the
Velvet
Revolution
in
Prague
in
Czech
Republic,
and
then
there
was
you
know,
the
Berlin
Wall
was
around
that
time
and
then…
so
the
idea…
because
to
me,
you
know,
that
there
was
a
lot
of
lyrics
in
a
lot
of
the
House
American
house
music
that
was
really
about
equality,
you
know,
for
all,
there’s
some
really
really
really
beautiful
messages
in
a
lot
of
those
songs
and…
and
it
felt
like
there
was
an
energy
of
that,
you
know,
within
the
parties,
you
know,
for
a
lot
of
people
anyway
that
we’re
really,
you
know,
it
was
a
great
leveler
…
…
there’s
no
greater
leveler
than
being
on
a
dance
floor
with
loads
of
people,
you
know,
to
me
because
you
don’t
need
words
to
express
what’s
going
on.
It’s
just
about
expression
of
who
you
are,
and
there’s
the
individuality
within
that.
But
you’re
coming
together
in
a
common
goal
with
other
people,
and
that’s
that’s
just
an
amazing
thing.
So
then
hearing
about
somebody
who
like,
you
know,
really
fought
for
freedom,
you
know,
being
released
in
that
in
that
context.
It
felt
like
it
was
connected.
You
know,
that
there
was
a
connection
to
the
kind
of
world
that
we
were
aspiring
…
you
know,
aspiring
for and
hoping
for.
So
that
that
felt
like
a
really
special
moment
for
me
…
at
Altham.
Full Transcript:
The
one
that
really
stands
out
for
me,
I
guess
is
the
Altham
party.
And…
it
was
me
birthday.
I
think
the
day
after
my
birthday.
So
would’ve
been
me
16th
birthday.
And
it
was
special
for
a
load
of
different…
I’d
actually
gone
out
on
me
own.
None
of
me
mates
could
come
out.
So
yeah,
it
was
me
birthday
in
1990
and
it
just
seemed
like
a
very
euphoric
atmosphere
to
me…
cos
I
liked
the
really
dark
warehouses
…
…
…
I
liked
when
it
was
just
dark
and
a
strobe,
but
having
all
the
lights
and
the
projections
in
Altham…
you
could
see
the
crowd
in
a
different
way
and
it
just
looked…
when
you
looked
across
it
looked
epic.
What
I
can
remember
in
the
morning,
was
just
having
this
absolutely
amazing
night
being,
getting
in
there
really
early…
and
which
was
brilliant.
There’s
nothing
like
being
in
a
party
early
and
then
when
you
heard
the
sound
system,
come
on,
the
lights
are
on,
that
that…
I
mean.
Yeah,
that’s
the
thing.
I
think
I’m
pretty
sure
that
that
memory
for
me
is at
Altham…
being
in
there
with
the
lights
on
and
then
hearing
the
music,
the
lights
going
off
and
the
music
coming
on
then
the
cheer
that
went
up
like
it’s
like
someone
scored
at the
football.
It
was
amazing.
And
and
my
memory
in
the
morning
of
that
was
that
someone
came
on
the
mic
and
announced
that
Nelson
Mandela
was
gunna
be
released.
That’s
my
memory
of
Altham.
That
there
was
a
massive
cheer
from
the
from
the
crowd
that
people
were
going
mad.
So
someone
come
on
the
mic
and
announced
that
Nelson
Mandela’s
gunna
be
released.
So
to
me
it
felt
like
this
really
pivotal
time,
you
know,
it
was
like
…
…
I
can’t
remember
the
order
of
exactly
everything
but
in
that,
in
89,
I
think
there’d
have
been
like
the
Velvet
Revolution
in
Prague
in
Czech
Republic,
and
then
there
was
you
know,
the
Berlin
Wall
was
around
that
time
and
then…
so
the
idea…
because
to
me,
you
know,
that
there
was
a
lot
of
lyrics
in
a
lot
of
the
House
American
house
music
that
was
really
about
equality,
you
know,
for
all,
there’s
some
really
really
really
beautiful
messages
in
a
lot
of
those
songs
and…
and
it
felt
like
there
was
an
energy
of
that,
you
know,
within
the
parties,
you
know,
for
a
lot
of
people
anyway
that
we’re
really,
you
know,
it
was
a
great
leveler
…
…
there’s
no
greater
leveler
than
being
on
a
dance
floor
with
loads
of
people,
you
know,
to
me
because
you
don’t
need
words
to
express
what’s
going
on.
It’s
just
about
expression
of
who
you
are,
and
there’s
the
individuality
within
that.
But
you’re
coming
together
in
a
common
goal
with
other
people,
and
that’s
that’s
just
an
amazing
thing.
So
then
hearing
about
somebody
who
like,
you
know,
really
fought
for
freedom,
you
know,
being
released
in
that
in
that
context.
It
felt
like
it
was
connected.
You
know,
that
there
was
a
connection
to
the
kind
of
world
that
we
were
aspiring
…
you
know,
aspiring
for and
hoping
for.
So
that
that
felt
like
a
really
special
moment
for
me
…
at
Altham.
Damien Good Memories Part 2
Click to play
So
that
very
first
party
was
a
big
one
for
me,
because
it
was,
I’d,
you
know,
I
think
I
was
15
and
you
know,
it
was
like
right
there’s
nothing
to
tell,
there’s
no
one
telling
me
to
go
home.
I
shouldn’t
be
here.
This
is
crazy.
That
was
an
amazing
night
because
it
was
one
of
those,
you
know,
you’re
there
when
you’re
young
and
you’re
like,
I’m
actually
at an
Acid
House
party
…
y’know,
that
was
that’s
it.
…
…
that’s
it
…
cos
before
that,
it
was
only
things
that
you’d
read
about
in
the
paper,
you
know,
seeing
people
down
near
London
and
aircraft
hangars,
and
reading
all
these
like
sort
of
moral
panic
stories
and
thinking
wow,
that
looks
amazing.
I
want
to
be
at
something
like
that.
So
it
was
very
…
it
wasn’t
very
long
after
reading
those
sort
of
things,
that
you
know,
I
found
myself
at
something.
So
I
felt
I
felt
quite
lucky
really,
quite
blessed
being
in
the
right
place
at
the
right
time
to
jump
in
a
van
that
says
right.
We’re
off
to
an
Acid
House
party
and
you
don’t
know
where,
you
don’t
know
when,
you
don’t
know how
you’re
going
to
get
home,
and
you’ve
hardly
got
any
money
in
your
pocket,
you
know,
enough
money
to
get
to
a
phone
box
to
tell,
tell
your
folks
a
lie
about
who’s
house
you’re
staying
at..
in
order
to
be
out
for
the
night.
And
also
um
and
enough
money
to
to
buy
some
acid
and
and
get
on
it…
and
very
strong
acid
as
well,
strong
enough
for
to
be
to
feel
think
that
you’d
…
seen
the
room
get
busted
by
police
on
a
number
of
occasions
and
like
get
out
of
the
way
and
then
realise
that
that
…
…
…
…
that
hadn’t
happened
at
all.
So
to
me,
that
first
warehouse
was
special
because
it
was
also
a
room
full
of
…
people
with
like
very
weird
faces
and
vampires
and
police
trying
to
bust
it,
and
I
was
going
through
it
all,
and
then
you
realise
y’know
right
okay,
I’m
just
dancing
in
a
warehouse,
and
it
all
kind
of
went
on,
you
know,
on
many
levels
and
in
many
dimensions.
But
it
was
it
was
amazing…
and
it
just
felt
like
it
never
stopped.
If
you
know,
it
was
going
on
all
night,
and
it
was
relentless.
And
that
was
the
thing.
And
that’s
what
I
wanted.
I
didn’t
want
to
be
told
when
to
go
home.
Full Transcript:
So
that
very
first
party
was
a
big
one
for
me,
because
it
was,
I’d,
you
know,
I
think
I
was
15
and
you
know,
it
was
like
right
there’s
nothing
to
tell,
there’s
no
one
telling
me
to
go
home.
I
shouldn’t
be
here.
This
is
crazy.
That
was
an
amazing
night
because
it
was
one
of
those,
you
know,
you’re
there
when
you’re
young
and
you’re
like,
I’m
actually
at an
Acid
House
party
…
y’know,
that
was
that’s
it.
…
…
that’s
it
…
cos
before
that,
it
was
only
things
that
you’d
read
about
in
the
paper,
you
know,
seeing
people
down
near
London
and
aircraft
hangars,
and
reading
all
these
like
sort
of
moral
panic
stories
and
thinking
wow,
that
looks
amazing.
I
want
to
be
at
something
like
that.
So
it
was
very
…
it
wasn’t
very
long
after
reading
those
sort
of
things,
that
you
know,
I
found
myself
at
something.
So
I
felt
I
felt
quite
lucky
really,
quite
blessed
being
in
the
right
place
at
the
right
time
to
jump
in
a
van
that
says
right.
We’re
off
to
an
Acid
House
party
and
you
don’t
know
where,
you
don’t
know
when,
you
don’t
know how
you’re
going
to
get
home,
and
you’ve
hardly
got
any
money
in
your
pocket,
you
know,
enough
money
to
get
to
a
phone
box
to
tell,
tell
your
folks
a
lie
about
who’s
house
you’re
staying
at..
in
order
to
be
out
for
the
night.
And
also
um
and
enough
money
to
to
buy
some
acid
and
and
get
on
it…
and
very
strong
acid
as
well,
strong
enough
for
to
be
to
feel
think
that
you’d
…
seen
the
room
get
busted
by
police
on
a
number
of
occasions
and
like
get
out
of
the
way
and
then
realise
that
that
…
…
…
…
that
hadn’t
happened
at
all.
So
to
me,
that
first
warehouse
was
special
because
it
was
also
a
room
full
of
…
people
with
like
very
weird
faces
and
vampires
and
police
trying
to
bust
it,
and
I
was
going
through
it
all,
and
then
you
realise
y’know
right
okay,
I’m
just
dancing
in
a
warehouse,
and
it
all
kind
of
went
on,
you
know,
on
many
levels
and
in
many
dimensions.
But
it
was
it
was
amazing…
and
it
just
felt
like
it
never
stopped.
If
you
know,
it
was
going
on
all
night,
and
it
was
relentless.
And
that
was
the
thing.
And
that’s
what
I
wanted.
I
didn’t
want
to
be
told
when
to
go
home.