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[camera shutters clicking]
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[man] The dream's over.
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{\an8}-[man 2] In 1971...
-[woman] Music said something.
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[protestors chant]
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[woman] The world was changing.
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{\an8}[man 3]
We were creating the 21st century in 1971.
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[rock music playing]
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{\an8}[man] In England back then,
no one spoke when they got stoned.
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{\an8}You could sit in a room with 12 people
for three hours, listen to music.
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They'd all leave, and you would have had
no idea who any of them were.
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{\an8}I remember I went to a flat in Battersea,
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and one of them had a friend of his over,
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and it was a guy in long hair
who looked like Lauren Bacall,
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who rolled the most perfect five-paper
hash joints I've ever seen in my life.
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I tell you this story
because this was Bowie, okay...
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and I didn't know who he was.
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In 1971 in London,
I don't think Bowie was Bowie... yet.
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{\an8}I didn't really feel like a rock singer
or a rock star or whatever.
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{\an8}There was a real feeling of inadequacy
in that era.
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But I was so single-minded
about doing what I wanted to do,
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and it really was looking
for something new.
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What do I wanna see on a stage
that would really make me excited?
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And it just seemed to be interesting,
at that time,
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to try and devise
something radically different.
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Because there was a kind of, um,
hardening of the arteries in England.
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[woman] I want to love this country,
because this is my husband's country
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and I think
it is a very interesting country.
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But you're so nostalgic, you know,
and you are always talking about the past,
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but we have to live in the present,
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and you can burn the past.
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Excuse me, sir, the West German
economics minister has said that--
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-Oh, I'm sorry, no.
-You're a bit rushed, are you?
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[interviewer] Excuse me, sir. The--
The West German economics minister
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has said that British businessmen
who wear bowlers
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tend to be rather too traditional
in their business method. Would you agree?
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[chuckles] I don't think so, no.
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Do you think that if we do
go to the common market,
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we would have to drop
our bowler hat image?
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No, I don't think so at all.
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Um, he said that pe-- British business--
businessmen who wore bowler hats are--
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What the hell is it to do with you?
Get out!
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{\an8}["Open Your Box" playing]
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[interviewer] Can I put something
to both of you about this creative phase
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that you're both going through at present?
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I think you've got to accept,
especially you, John,
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that it's alienated you from the people
who originally loved you in this country.
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-[Lennon] A lot of them?
-Yes.
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I think they don't understand you anymore.
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[screaming]
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{\an8}John and Yoko
were just considered weirdos.
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{\an8}People were deeply suspicious of them.
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{\an8}It was part of that feeling that the whole
counterculture was being put on trial.
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What I feared was that the establishment
was gonna claw back youth culture
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to where it had been pre-Beatles.
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And that we'd go back to everything being
nice and safe and middle-of-the-road.
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I had to encourage people not to feel
nostalgic and wistful about the '60s.
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That's not good at all.
You've got to make now happen.
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[man] At that time I was 15 years old.
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{\an8}I was just trying to work out
where do I fit in, you know?
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{\an8}[man, through megaphone]
This is the National Front.
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The party that says, "Put Britain
and the British people first."
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[Letts] I was a first-generation
British-born Black youth.
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And the graffiti back then would be,
like, six-foot white letters:
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"Keep Britain white."
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And you'd walk past this stuff every day.
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I'd grown up with civil rights in America.
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But we obviously weren't American.
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I was of the age, you know, when music
and style was really important.
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So we're looking for our own version
through the music we had access to.
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And we looked to the land of our parents.
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[reggae music playing]
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{\an8}♪ One good thing about music ♪
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{\an8}-♪ When it hits you ♪
-♪ You feel no pain ♪
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{\an8}♪ Oh, oh, I say ♪
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{\an8}♪ One good thing about music
When it hits you ♪
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♪ You feel no pain ♪
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{\an8}♪ Hit me with music, yeah
Hit me with music now ♪
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{\an8}-♪ This is ♪
-♪ Trench town rock ♪
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{\an8}♪ Don't watch that ♪
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{\an8}♪ Trench town rock ♪
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♪ Big fish or sprat now ♪
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-♪ Trench town rock ♪
-♪ You reap what you sow ♪
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-♪ Trench town rock ♪
-♪ And only Jah, Jah know ♪
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-♪ Trench town rock ♪
-♪ I'd never turn my back ♪
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-♪ Trench town rock ♪
-♪ I'd give the slum a try ♪
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[male reporter] It is a music
born of intense human suffering,
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in another land, among a people
with revolution on their side.
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-♪ Groovin' ♪
-♪ It's Kingston 12 ♪
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-♪ Groovin' ♪
-♪ It's Kingston 12 ♪
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{\an8}[man] Music is good, you know?
Music is soothing, but...
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{\an8}we're dealing with now,
reggae music, Rasta music.
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This music is a dangerous music.
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♪ You want come cold I up ♪
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♪ Ska-ba-dibby-dip
Ska-ba-doop, ska-ba-doop ♪
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[Marley] I don't see which music get
the type of fight that reggae music get.
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Why they don't like to play it is because
it educating the people to be themself.
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Reggae is a music that fight
for the oppressed people
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anywhere upon the earth.
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It show them freedom.
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♪ You feel no pain ♪
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♪ Hit me with music now, oh, now
Hit me with music now ♪
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{\an8}In the late '60s, early '70s, there wasn't
a lot of Jamaican music on the radio.
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{\an8}You realized the establishment was trying
to squash these alternative voices.
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[male interviewer] People always
talk about how difficult it is
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to get reggae records played on the radio,
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but did you find there is definitely
a sort of a hostility against the music?
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{\an8}Let's be honest, I mean, it's difficult
getting any record played on the BBC,
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{\an8}let alone whether it be reggae
or anything else.
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Every other form of music has--
has their own program,
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whereas reggae doesn't have
its own program on the radio.
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{\an8}You don't get that three or four plays
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{\an8}that would let the people decide
whether they want it or not.
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{\an8}If our music had an open door,
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{\an8}like, let's say, a freeway,
we could be wide in any part of the world.
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Because we are class, we have class music.
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{\an8}♪ Sun is shining ♪
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{\an8}♪ The weather is sweet, yeah ♪
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{\an8}♪ Make you want to move
Your dancing feet ♪
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[Letts] Reggae was in the fringes,
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but it started to give us
a kind of equity with our white mates.
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Kind of showed us a way forward.
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♪ Want you to know ya ♪
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I grew up with this kind of weird duality.
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Growing up in a Black community as I did,
you don't listen to rock music.
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But I never really thought about
why it was that I liked certain music.
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All I know is it resonated with me.
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So at home I had reggae coming in one ear,
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but going to school I was listening to
the Stones, the Kinks and the Beatles.
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And in 1971, 15 years old, I saw the Who.
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This is a very different sonic experiment
to what I'm used to. You gotta dig it.
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I'm, like, 15 feet from the stage.
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I'm seeing this thing explode
in front of me, and it was life-changing.
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["See Me, Feel Me/ Listening to You"
playing]
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Who are the Who? Well, the Who
are the Who, that's who they are.
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[male reporter]
The Who stood for the young generation.
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They stood for rebellion, for noise,
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and also for a seriousness about
what they themselves took seriously: rock.
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Pete Townshend.
He writes the songs. He wrote Tommy.
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{\an8}Tommy was incredibly difficult to follow,
you know?
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{\an8}It was huge.
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It changed us, but it left us
with another big job, you know?
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Which was, "What do we do next?"
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[male interviewer]
Have you done anything very special
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with the money
that you've now accumulated?
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[Townshend] The only thing
that I've done of merit really
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is to build myself a studio.
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Which is, like, absolutely
the biggest single thing in my life
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next to the group, you know?
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It enables me to channel
all the best of my individual ideas.
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{\an8}[man] It's the same with any creative soul
who has huge success.
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{\an8}Once you've achieved that,
it's, "How the hell do I go on?
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{\an8}What do I do now?"
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The changes that were going on
in the recording process in 1971
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gave you more flexibility
in the manner in which you recorded.
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And Pete exploited it.
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[Townshend] I've always felt
that maybe I took rock too seriously,
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but it's hard to really figure out
why I feel so strongly,
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why I feel so involved.
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And committed to rock
as a sort of a, if you'd like,
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a society changer. You know?
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I'd heard about synthesizers.
I'd heard about music computers.
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And I could see
this new revolution coming.
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[male interviewer] You've written about
the world of electronic all-at-onceness.
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The global village in which everybody
is gathered together
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by means of television or the--
the new electronic media.
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{\an8}[man] The way this machine works is...
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{\an8}you set up these little switches
to a pattern, and then you turn it on.
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{\an8}And it plays a tune according
to whatever pattern you set up.
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Every home is going to have a computer,
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{\an8}and you'll have access to all
the films, and all the entertainment
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{\an8}and all the information that ever was.
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{\an8}Electronics is the most appropriate
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{\an8}technological material
of the 20th century.
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{\an8}And there's no reason
why musicians of the 20th century
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shouldn't utilize electronic instruments.
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{\an8}I believe that electronic treatment
by the improvising musicians
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is the wave of the future,
most probably the music of the '70s.
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{\an8}[Townshend] At the time I was working
on a very, very ambitious piece
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{\an8}called Lifehouse,
which was gonna be a movie.
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{\an8}It was a dystopian idea about the way
that media, electronics
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{\an8}and technology would change society.
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I imagined this world in which
there was incredible pollution,
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incredible difficulty
with living in the outside world.
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And so what the government did
is it stuck us in our houses,
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and then fed us entertainment
to keep us happy
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while they cleaned up the air.
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[woman] I start watching television
at 4:30 until about 12 o'clock.
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And then I go to bed.
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That's all my entertainment really.
That's the only thing I've got.
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[Townshend] I called it "the grid."
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This global communication system where
everybody would be fed similar stuff...
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The human brain is an electrical machine.
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...that would be surreptitiously policed
and censored.
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[man] The data bank that's got
your complete medical history,
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your complete financial history,
your parking tickets, everything in it.
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This is a, a pretty, uh,
appalling thing to contemplate.
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[Townshend] Once they got us in
and they were feeding us the programs,
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we would imagine that we had access
to everything
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because of its richness,
and its persuasiveness and its beauty.
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[McLuhan] The whole Western world
is taking an inner trip,
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only this time wide awake.
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We're all technologically stoned.
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[Townshend]
It was an anticipation of the idea
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that everything would go wrong,
but that music would prevail.
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{\an8}[Johns] He'd sent me a bunch of demos
and a script
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{\an8}for a film that he wanted to make
called Lifehouse.
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I read the script, and I'm-- I didn't re--
I didn't really understand it.
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And it turns out that no one else
in the room did either.
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[Townshend] A few too many people went,
"This is bollocks, and he's mad."
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I couldn't sell this idea to the band.
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[Johns] The music that he'd written
was extremely innovative,
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using a synthesizer in that manner.
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00:14:05,804 --> 00:14:08,724
I thought that we should make
an album anyway.
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There was some difficultly in translating
what Pete had captured on his demos
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and the Who making it the Who.
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[Townshend] People in the band,
particularly Keith and Roger,
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00:14:20,944 --> 00:14:24,244
always wanted to write the way
that other bands wrote, you know.
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00:14:24,323 --> 00:14:26,033
"We sit round, man, and we jam."
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[Johns] I took the 8-track tape and stole
his synthesizer recording off of it.
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[Townshend] And then I cut it up
and started to turn it into a song.
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00:14:34,958 --> 00:14:37,418
You know, with scissors
I cut it into something.
222
00:14:37,503 --> 00:14:39,213
And then Glyn Johns cut it again,
223
00:14:39,296 --> 00:14:42,416
and then we added drums and guitars,
and then I wrote this lyric.
224
00:14:42,508 --> 00:14:44,928
["Baba O'Riley" playing]
225
00:14:46,345 --> 00:14:48,305
And we got it closer and closer
to something
226
00:14:48,388 --> 00:14:51,228
that started to feel like
a four-minute rock song.
227
00:14:51,308 --> 00:14:54,348
[Johns] I played it in to the band
on the earphones,
228
00:14:54,436 --> 00:14:59,066
and the band played along with
the synthesizer that had been prerecorded.
229
00:15:16,875 --> 00:15:19,165
♪ Out here in the fields ♪
230
00:15:21,129 --> 00:15:23,629
♪ I fight for my meals ♪
231
00:15:25,843 --> 00:15:30,263
♪ I get my back into my living ♪
232
00:15:34,434 --> 00:15:36,604
♪ I don't need to fight ♪
233
00:15:38,647 --> 00:15:41,067
♪ To prove I'm right ♪
234
00:15:43,277 --> 00:15:47,447
♪ I don't need to be forgiven ♪
235
00:15:47,531 --> 00:15:50,911
♪ Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah ♪
236
00:16:20,564 --> 00:16:24,534
♪ Don't cry ♪
237
00:16:24,610 --> 00:16:28,320
♪ Don't raise your eye ♪
238
00:16:29,198 --> 00:16:36,038
♪ It's only teenage wasteland ♪
239
00:16:38,081 --> 00:16:40,461
[song plays through recording]
240
00:16:40,542 --> 00:16:42,212
{\an8}[Nightingale]
It was becoming increasingly difficult
241
00:16:42,294 --> 00:16:45,514
{\an8}to make something original
with guitar, bass and drums.
242
00:16:45,589 --> 00:16:47,759
{\an8}Traditional instruments.
243
00:16:48,592 --> 00:16:50,892
The people who had the vision
and technology
244
00:16:50,969 --> 00:16:56,479
were the people who were going to become
the creative pioneers of that time.
245
00:16:56,558 --> 00:16:59,978
You could be making sounds
that nobody had heard before.
246
00:17:00,062 --> 00:17:03,112
-[recording stops]
-[tape flaps in reel]
247
00:17:07,277 --> 00:17:09,027
{\an8}[male radio host]
You're listening to BBC Radio London
248
00:17:09,112 --> 00:17:12,532
{\an8}on this, uh, Tuesday, 29th of June,
and it's 20 minutes to six.
249
00:17:14,409 --> 00:17:17,659
[man] There's a trial going on where
people are actually being threatened
250
00:17:17,746 --> 00:17:23,246
with a prison sentence for allowing a
number of children to express themselves.
251
00:17:23,335 --> 00:17:25,085
This is the swing of the pendulum,
isn't it?
252
00:17:25,170 --> 00:17:28,170
It's the Victorian age
after the Regency age.
253
00:17:28,257 --> 00:17:30,927
We have probably reached
the end of the swing of the pendulum.
254
00:17:31,009 --> 00:17:33,429
Because you pushed things
just a little bit too far,
255
00:17:33,512 --> 00:17:36,062
the free atmosphere
is beginning to feel the pinch.
256
00:17:49,653 --> 00:17:53,453
{\an8}[man]
The Oz trial was the trial of the '60s.
257
00:17:53,532 --> 00:17:55,992
{\an8}All those dreadful things that happened.
258
00:17:56,076 --> 00:17:59,076
The dope, rock 'n' roll
and fucking in the streets
259
00:17:59,162 --> 00:18:02,672
was the... [laughs]
the claim of the prosecution
260
00:18:02,749 --> 00:18:05,999
that Oz was the standard-bearer for.
261
00:18:07,171 --> 00:18:11,881
Attempt to debauch the morals
of young persons within the realm.
262
00:18:14,761 --> 00:18:16,891
It was a very serious charge.
263
00:18:25,397 --> 00:18:30,857
{\an8}[Greenfield] Oz took an innocent, sweet
English tradition and made it pernicious.
264
00:18:30,944 --> 00:18:35,574
They took Rupert the Bear
and they made him into a sexual predator.
265
00:18:36,200 --> 00:18:38,910
And for this, they had to be punished.
266
00:18:39,870 --> 00:18:42,160
[bell tolling]
267
00:18:42,247 --> 00:18:47,247
It was quite a production, you know,
to go to the Old Bailey every day.
268
00:18:47,336 --> 00:18:50,546
It was incredibly dignified,
and, of course, they're wearing wigs.
269
00:18:51,215 --> 00:18:53,545
Everybody speaking was so highborn
270
00:18:53,634 --> 00:18:57,434
that whatever they said sounded like
an invitation for afternoon tea.
271
00:18:59,348 --> 00:19:04,438
{\an8}[woman] We would all arrive at the court,
and Louise and I would sit in the back.
272
00:19:04,520 --> 00:19:08,230
{\an8}There'd be the public gallery,
always packed.
273
00:19:08,315 --> 00:19:12,945
And it was actually very tense
and very strained a lot of the time.
274
00:19:13,028 --> 00:19:15,778
And then there were times
when it was just hilarious. [chuckles]
275
00:19:15,864 --> 00:19:17,574
There were these odd things happening.
276
00:19:17,658 --> 00:19:20,948
Quite a lot of attention was paid
to a tiny, small ad
277
00:19:21,036 --> 00:19:25,116
that I'd never even noticed
for a newspaper called Suck.
278
00:19:25,791 --> 00:19:30,001
It had a description of cunnilingus.
A woman saying she enjoyed it.
279
00:19:30,879 --> 00:19:35,969
{\an8}[Robertson] Our expert on sociology
was asked actually by Judge Argyle,
280
00:19:36,051 --> 00:19:40,641
{\an8}"What did you mean
by this word 'cunnilinctus'?"
281
00:19:40,722 --> 00:19:43,642
He was pronouncing it
as though it was a cough medicine.
282
00:19:43,725 --> 00:19:49,645
And, uh, he said, "Sucking, my Lord,
or 'blowing' or 'going down.'
283
00:19:49,731 --> 00:19:55,651
Or in my naval days, my Lord, we used
the phrase, 'yodeling in the canyon.'"
284
00:19:56,488 --> 00:19:59,028
{\an8}[man] The trial wore on
and on and on and on.
285
00:19:59,116 --> 00:20:02,326
{\an8}Everybody had talked themselves
to a standstill, I think.
286
00:20:02,411 --> 00:20:05,711
And so it came to an end
with the concluding speeches.
287
00:20:05,789 --> 00:20:07,039
[gavel raps]
288
00:20:07,124 --> 00:20:12,504
And from the moment the judge began,
he treated our witnesses with contempt.
289
00:20:12,588 --> 00:20:16,258
Didn't relay to the jury accurately
the evidence that they'd given.
290
00:20:16,341 --> 00:20:17,971
It just went on and on.
291
00:20:18,051 --> 00:20:20,891
{\an8}[Greenfield] It was apparent to everybody
who sat in the courtroom
292
00:20:20,971 --> 00:20:23,721
{\an8}that that judge, he just hated them.
293
00:20:23,807 --> 00:20:26,807
There was a fundamentalist kind
of movement
294
00:20:26,894 --> 00:20:30,774
to bring back traditional values
in purity and cleanliness
295
00:20:30,856 --> 00:20:32,516
and get rid of Oz magazine.
296
00:20:32,608 --> 00:20:36,398
And he was railroading them into jail
any way he could.
297
00:20:41,617 --> 00:20:43,947
[male reporter]
The end of this five-week trial,
298
00:20:44,036 --> 00:20:47,956
the longest obscenity hearing in British
legal history, came just before lunchtime.
299
00:20:48,540 --> 00:20:51,380
The establishment hails the verdict
as a long-overdue victory
300
00:20:51,460 --> 00:20:52,960
for the forces of good.
301
00:20:53,045 --> 00:20:54,955
To the young, it is a catastrophe,
302
00:20:55,047 --> 00:20:57,507
and they express their anger
and frustration
303
00:20:57,591 --> 00:21:00,341
in a pagan ritual of noise and fire.
304
00:21:00,427 --> 00:21:03,257
["Children of the Grave" playing]
305
00:21:26,954 --> 00:21:29,504
{\an8}[Anderson]
I'd never for a moment thought
306
00:21:29,581 --> 00:21:32,421
{\an8}that we would go to jail
for what we had done.
307
00:21:33,627 --> 00:21:36,377
And Judge Argyle
had instructed the jailers
308
00:21:36,463 --> 00:21:38,093
that our hair would be cut off.
309
00:21:38,924 --> 00:21:41,014
And there was outrage.
310
00:21:41,760 --> 00:21:44,510
We realized that we were
into something very serious,
311
00:21:44,596 --> 00:21:46,516
and we had very little money,
312
00:21:46,598 --> 00:21:50,098
{\an8}so the connection with John Lennon
was made use of.
313
00:21:50,686 --> 00:21:54,726
He suggested he would write something
for Oz, write a song.
314
00:21:54,815 --> 00:21:57,685
[Lennon]
We think it's just disgusting fascism.
315
00:21:57,776 --> 00:22:01,026
{\an8}And, uh, "God Save Us"
will help pay for their costs
316
00:22:01,113 --> 00:22:03,033
{\an8}or whatever kind of bread they need.
317
00:22:03,115 --> 00:22:07,575
I think we could get, uh, a few thousand
pounds out of that record.
318
00:22:07,661 --> 00:22:10,711
So, uh, buy it, folks, just to help Oz.
319
00:22:10,789 --> 00:22:12,419
And give it to your kid sister
or something,
320
00:22:12,499 --> 00:22:15,919
or keep it for a souvenir of an old trick.
321
00:22:20,465 --> 00:22:23,585
{\an8}[no audible dialogue]
322
00:22:30,809 --> 00:22:32,229
♪ Do the oz ♪
323
00:22:34,479 --> 00:22:37,399
-♪ Do the oz ♪
-♪ Whoo ♪
324
00:22:38,317 --> 00:22:41,857
-♪ Do the oz, babe ♪
-[vocalizing]
325
00:22:41,945 --> 00:22:44,025
♪ Do the oz ♪
326
00:22:45,282 --> 00:22:47,492
[male interviewer] Why do you think
they should have been sentenced?
327
00:22:47,576 --> 00:22:50,246
Well, I think it's an example
to everybody else. [stammers]
328
00:22:50,329 --> 00:22:53,619
Everything is becoming far too permissive,
there's no privacy.
329
00:22:53,707 --> 00:22:55,327
[male interviewer]
What's your reaction to the verdict?
330
00:22:55,417 --> 00:22:56,627
I think they asked for it.
331
00:22:56,710 --> 00:22:59,840
My reaction is that they should've been
put in prison and kept there.
332
00:23:01,089 --> 00:23:03,379
[Anderson]
The shit really had hit the fan.
333
00:23:03,467 --> 00:23:07,597
John Lennon and Yoko Ono
were demonstrating against the verdict.
334
00:23:07,679 --> 00:23:11,059
Nobody had ever been sent to prison
for such small offenses.
335
00:23:11,141 --> 00:23:12,561
We appealed immediately.
336
00:23:12,643 --> 00:23:15,903
[song continues through megaphone]
337
00:23:15,979 --> 00:23:18,819
[Greenfield]
It definitely was a road mark for England.
338
00:23:19,733 --> 00:23:24,663
You could've disapproved of what they did,
but you wanted to imprison them.
339
00:23:24,738 --> 00:23:29,618
You are trying to suppress something
that you have no control over.
340
00:23:29,701 --> 00:23:31,661
This is a cultural revolution.
341
00:23:31,745 --> 00:23:36,245
You're not aware of what's going on.
And it keeps going, see?
342
00:23:37,417 --> 00:23:42,457
Once Pandora's box has been opened,
you can't put the lid back on.
343
00:23:46,301 --> 00:23:50,891
[rock instrumental playing]
344
00:23:58,063 --> 00:24:02,033
[man] When you live in Berlin, you have
to get used to all unnormal situations.
345
00:24:02,109 --> 00:24:04,989
Standing here at the wall,
uh, is a good example.
346
00:24:05,821 --> 00:24:08,821
Every week somebody in East Germany
is trying to escape.
347
00:24:08,907 --> 00:24:10,197
Some people are shot.
348
00:24:10,284 --> 00:24:11,874
But if you live here in West Berlin,
349
00:24:11,952 --> 00:24:15,502
you have to get used to it
just to make your living here.
350
00:24:18,375 --> 00:24:25,255
{\an8}In Germany there was this
desperate need for a calm life.
351
00:24:26,008 --> 00:24:28,638
To keep everything under control
352
00:24:28,719 --> 00:24:32,009
and, yeah, just don't take any risks.
353
00:24:32,097 --> 00:24:35,227
Don't change anything. Just be secure.
354
00:24:36,935 --> 00:24:38,225
[male reporter] In West Berlin now,
355
00:24:38,312 --> 00:24:41,612
more than a quarter of the population
is over 65.
356
00:24:42,357 --> 00:24:46,947
It's a quieter, more provincial city
than it was even ten years ago.
357
00:24:47,029 --> 00:24:50,529
[Rother] I understand that
from a psychological perspective,
358
00:24:50,616 --> 00:24:56,496
many of these people
had connections to the Nazi past.
359
00:24:56,580 --> 00:25:00,290
The guilt, I mean,
it was, of course, beyond belief.
360
00:25:03,128 --> 00:25:07,468
But then there's always the eyes
of a new generation,
361
00:25:07,549 --> 00:25:10,589
and I was looking for my own identity.
362
00:25:18,393 --> 00:25:22,903
In 1971, a guitar player
who was invited to a session
363
00:25:22,981 --> 00:25:25,531
asked me whether I wanted to come along.
364
00:25:25,609 --> 00:25:28,319
And because I hadn't heard of the band,
365
00:25:28,403 --> 00:25:33,083
I first considered,
"Should I go home with my girlfriend?"
366
00:25:33,158 --> 00:25:37,538
And luckily I joined him
because it was the band Kraftwerk.
367
00:25:38,622 --> 00:25:43,212
-[electronic music playing]
-[whistle blowing]
368
00:26:01,019 --> 00:26:03,269
It was astonishing for me.
369
00:26:03,355 --> 00:26:07,065
I was totally surprised
because their approach to music
370
00:26:07,150 --> 00:26:12,660
was to sound different from anything
that had been done before.
371
00:26:12,739 --> 00:26:16,869
A few weeks later,
they invited me to play with the band.
372
00:26:30,174 --> 00:26:31,804
[man] We are another generation.
373
00:26:32,467 --> 00:26:36,097
{\an8}We are a more industrial generation.
374
00:26:43,353 --> 00:26:46,983
Music is always in relation to its time.
375
00:26:48,775 --> 00:26:53,565
And now we're living
in a completely different time.
376
00:27:03,832 --> 00:27:08,302
[Rother] American and British bands
introduced new lyrics,
377
00:27:08,378 --> 00:27:10,418
new sounds to the music.
378
00:27:10,506 --> 00:27:16,256
But it still stayed in that tradition
of American popular music.
379
00:27:16,345 --> 00:27:20,805
Rock music.
We wanted to be totally different.
380
00:27:20,891 --> 00:27:23,191
I don't think you'll really,
really have a new thing
381
00:27:23,268 --> 00:27:25,768
until you've gotten new music.
I mean, you know--
382
00:27:25,854 --> 00:27:29,484
while you're still basing yourself
on a sort of Chuck Berry, you know,
383
00:27:29,566 --> 00:27:32,106
y-you're still the same, unfortunately.
384
00:27:33,153 --> 00:27:37,413
I want something else, I mean--
don't want Chuck Berry until we die.
385
00:27:37,491 --> 00:27:39,031
We got to have something else, man.
386
00:27:39,117 --> 00:27:42,997
[Rother] It was an exciting half a year
playing with Kraftwerk.
387
00:27:43,080 --> 00:27:47,420
We played some TV shows,
some very exciting concerts.
388
00:27:47,501 --> 00:27:49,381
Some not so great concerts.
389
00:27:54,383 --> 00:27:58,053
But when we tried to record
the second Kraftwerk album,
390
00:27:58,136 --> 00:28:02,386
the music we had in our minds
didn't work in the studio.
391
00:28:04,977 --> 00:28:10,227
And there was constant tension between
Klaus Dinger and Florian Schneider.
392
00:28:12,776 --> 00:28:15,356
{\an8}[Hütter] The biggest problem
we always had was with drummers.
393
00:28:15,445 --> 00:28:18,565
{\an8}Because they were very much into
the whole physical thing.
394
00:28:18,657 --> 00:28:24,157
And they wouldn't stay with us because
we asked them to electrify...
395
00:28:24,246 --> 00:28:26,616
to get into electrical sound.
396
00:28:26,707 --> 00:28:29,747
They wouldn't do it, so one day we
found ourselves standing there
397
00:28:29,835 --> 00:28:31,335
on our own, just the two of us...
398
00:28:32,337 --> 00:28:37,627
and I just happened to have
an old rhythm box machine.
399
00:28:37,718 --> 00:28:40,468
So we started recording with that in 1971
400
00:28:40,554 --> 00:28:43,564
and from that day on,
there was no turning back.
401
00:28:48,687 --> 00:28:53,977
It makes no difference if you turn
a knob or turn a switch
402
00:28:54,067 --> 00:28:57,857
or if you pluck a string.
I mean, what is the difference?
403
00:28:57,946 --> 00:28:59,566
There is no difference.
404
00:28:59,656 --> 00:29:01,826
Who can say what music is?
405
00:29:25,766 --> 00:29:26,926
[song ends]
406
00:29:29,895 --> 00:29:33,265
[indistinct chattering, off-camera]
407
00:29:33,357 --> 00:29:36,067
[man] He came to New York in September.
408
00:29:36,735 --> 00:29:41,565
{\an8}With the manager, the wife,
and they wanted to sign to RCA Records.
409
00:29:42,866 --> 00:29:45,406
So that week,
I spent a lot of time with them.
410
00:29:48,580 --> 00:29:51,920
{\an8}The older folk at RCA had no clue,
411
00:29:52,000 --> 00:29:54,800
but they relied on their young A&R people
412
00:29:54,878 --> 00:29:58,418
to tell us what is new and exciting
'cause we don't know.
413
00:29:59,132 --> 00:30:06,012
They knew that if they didn't get Bowie,
they would lose a major opportunity.
414
00:30:06,098 --> 00:30:09,058
-[camera shutter clicks]
-[indistinct chattering, off-camera]
415
00:30:09,935 --> 00:30:13,645
For David,
it was a massive sense of freedom.
416
00:30:13,730 --> 00:30:17,940
Suddenly he has the possibility
to do whatever he wants.
417
00:30:18,026 --> 00:30:22,406
The idea was to create
a new set of possibilities.
418
00:30:22,489 --> 00:30:24,909
["Andy Warhol" playing]
419
00:30:31,331 --> 00:30:34,541
{\an8}[Zanetta]
I took them to the Factory to meet Andy.
420
00:30:34,626 --> 00:30:39,916
{\an8}♪ Like to take a cement fix
Be a standing cinema... ♪
421
00:30:40,007 --> 00:30:42,717
{\an8}Now you have to remember
this is not David Bowie yet.
422
00:30:42,801 --> 00:30:47,351
He wasn't a star, he's just this guy,
and it was a little awkward.
423
00:30:47,431 --> 00:30:50,181
'Cause then he went into
this long mime thing
424
00:30:50,267 --> 00:30:53,307
which is about as uncool as you can get.
[laughs]
425
00:30:53,395 --> 00:30:55,555
♪ Two new pence to have a go ♪
426
00:30:56,106 --> 00:30:58,356
♪ I'd like to be a gallery ♪
427
00:30:58,901 --> 00:31:02,241
♪ Put you all inside my show ♪
428
00:31:05,449 --> 00:31:08,369
♪ Andy Warhol looks a scream ♪
429
00:31:08,452 --> 00:31:09,702
♪ Hang him on my wall... ♪
430
00:31:09,786 --> 00:31:13,456
Andy always liked to be entertained,
431
00:31:13,540 --> 00:31:17,960
so he reacted more to very outrageous
or flamboyant people.
432
00:31:18,545 --> 00:31:20,545
[music fades]
433
00:31:20,631 --> 00:31:24,471
David may have worn this outfit,
or worn a little makeup,
434
00:31:24,551 --> 00:31:26,721
but he was not flamboyant at all.
435
00:31:26,803 --> 00:31:30,353
I mean, he was very charming,
but he wasn't the kind of person
436
00:31:30,432 --> 00:31:33,562
that walked into a room
and suddenly took over.
437
00:31:33,644 --> 00:31:35,734
[Bowie]
Sometimes we're recording, I try to...
438
00:31:35,812 --> 00:31:38,982
Well, I sing, actually,
and we say to him... you know.
439
00:31:39,733 --> 00:31:43,573
He's-- He's a designer and he spends
a lot of time being taken to Italy.
440
00:31:43,654 --> 00:31:45,454
[chuckling]
441
00:31:45,531 --> 00:31:49,831
And bringing back ideas and fashions.
I thought you might know.
442
00:31:49,910 --> 00:31:53,120
[Zanetta] But it was okay.
They didn't throw us out. [chuckles]
443
00:31:54,331 --> 00:31:57,331
And he got into the epicenter
of where he wanted to go.
444
00:31:58,710 --> 00:32:00,670
[male reporter] Warhol and his followers
445
00:32:00,754 --> 00:32:03,224
do not think or live
in a conventional way.
446
00:32:03,298 --> 00:32:08,138
Some people may find his work or
his lifestyle unsympathetic or offensive.
447
00:32:08,220 --> 00:32:12,720
It is sometimes difficult to discover
where reality ends and fantasy begins.
448
00:32:12,808 --> 00:32:17,268
{\an8}♪ I'm up on the eleventh floor
And I'm watching the cruisers below ♪
449
00:32:19,815 --> 00:32:23,935
{\an8}♪ He's down on the street
And he's trying hard to pull sister Flo ♪
450
00:32:26,196 --> 00:32:28,236
{\an8}[Bowie] It was this other world, you know?
451
00:32:28,866 --> 00:32:31,826
{\an8}And, uh, for me, of course,
wanting this other world,
452
00:32:31,910 --> 00:32:34,250
{\an8}I mean, I just fell into it completely.
453
00:32:35,247 --> 00:32:38,497
Here was this alternative world
that I'd been talking about.
454
00:32:40,043 --> 00:32:43,513
And it had all the violence, and all
the strangeness and the bizarreness.
455
00:32:43,589 --> 00:32:45,469
And it was really happening.
456
00:32:45,549 --> 00:32:48,639
♪ She's so swishy in her satin and tat ♪
457
00:32:48,719 --> 00:32:52,139
♪ In her frock coat and
Bipperty-bopperty hat ♪
458
00:32:52,222 --> 00:32:55,852
♪ Oh, God, I could do better than that ♪
459
00:32:57,227 --> 00:33:00,107
[Zanetta] There was all kinds of
avant-garde theater happening in New York
460
00:33:00,189 --> 00:33:03,069
because everyone
was trying to create new forms.
461
00:33:03,150 --> 00:33:07,610
And a lot of it was outrageous,
it was just queer.
462
00:33:07,696 --> 00:33:11,406
It didn't fit into the mainstream society,
let's put it that way.
463
00:33:11,491 --> 00:33:15,081
There was a danger that David
was attracted to.
464
00:33:15,162 --> 00:33:16,792
Being a sexual outlaw.
465
00:33:20,792 --> 00:33:23,552
[chattering]
466
00:33:23,629 --> 00:33:26,049
{\an8}[Bowie]
The first time that I met Lou Reed,
467
00:33:26,131 --> 00:33:29,221
{\an8}it was at Max's Kansas City,
in the back room.
468
00:33:30,928 --> 00:33:33,928
Not only was Lou Reed at the table,
but Iggy at the same time.
469
00:33:34,014 --> 00:33:35,434
So it was Iggy and Lou.
470
00:33:37,184 --> 00:33:41,734
They represented the wild side
of existentialist America.
471
00:33:42,523 --> 00:33:45,033
It was this sort of mixture
of rock and avant-garde.
472
00:33:46,235 --> 00:33:49,525
That was everything that I thought
we should have in England,
473
00:33:49,613 --> 00:33:51,573
and I didn't know if we had it in England.
474
00:33:53,116 --> 00:33:56,826
{\an8}[Zanetta]
He definitely studied Iggy and Lou...
475
00:33:56,912 --> 00:33:59,582
{\an8}and absorbed certain qualities
that they had.
476
00:33:59,665 --> 00:34:01,875
A certain kind of stage performance.
477
00:34:01,959 --> 00:34:05,589
A kind of asexual ambiguity, an edge.
478
00:34:06,630 --> 00:34:09,760
I think there was a missing ingredient
in what he had been doing.
479
00:34:09,842 --> 00:34:12,262
And this was it. This was the path.
480
00:34:14,012 --> 00:34:17,602
The interesting thing about David
is that he wasn't a natural talent,
481
00:34:17,683 --> 00:34:20,393
but David was an actor.
482
00:34:20,476 --> 00:34:22,766
He did have the ability to play roles,
483
00:34:22,855 --> 00:34:26,015
and he worked at it
and worked at it and worked at it.
484
00:34:26,984 --> 00:34:30,244
You know, there was a buzz around Dave.
Something was percolating.
485
00:34:30,320 --> 00:34:31,610
[tape rewinds]
486
00:34:31,697 --> 00:34:34,867
[recording: band warms up]
487
00:34:35,742 --> 00:34:37,242
[Bowie]
Reckon we can cope with this one?
488
00:34:37,327 --> 00:34:41,367
{\an8}[Defries] In England,
David started deconstructing himself.
489
00:34:41,456 --> 00:34:42,536
[Bowie] Like now, man.
490
00:34:42,623 --> 00:34:47,343
[Defries] We needed new, strong songs
from a new, strong, different Bowie.
491
00:34:47,420 --> 00:34:50,090
[Bowie] Just belt it out like that again
and we're home and dry.
492
00:34:50,174 --> 00:34:54,894
[Defries] For David to become a performer
that people were desperate to see,
493
00:34:54,969 --> 00:34:57,679
he had to create a new entity.
494
00:34:57,764 --> 00:35:00,314
[Bowie] Ah, it's fun time, fun time.
495
00:35:00,392 --> 00:35:01,812
[Defries] A brand-new rock star.
496
00:35:01,894 --> 00:35:05,024
-[tape recorder clicks]
-One, two, three, four.
497
00:35:05,647 --> 00:35:08,067
{\an8}["Sweet Head" playing]
498
00:35:43,435 --> 00:35:46,015
[Bowie] I would blame, probably,
all of it on Kubrick.
499
00:35:46,104 --> 00:35:48,904
Because what I wanted to do
was create a culture
500
00:35:48,982 --> 00:35:51,992
around the music that I was writing.
501
00:35:52,069 --> 00:35:57,119
It was something fascinating
about this future nihilistic negativity,
502
00:35:57,199 --> 00:35:59,579
which was the culture of Clockwork Orange.
503
00:36:12,714 --> 00:36:16,644
[Letts] There's never been a gang film
or a youth film like it.
504
00:36:17,594 --> 00:36:20,314
Whether it's a spin on style,
or that dynamic
505
00:36:20,389 --> 00:36:24,429
{\an8}between the system
and the working-class youth,
506
00:36:24,518 --> 00:36:27,858
{\an8}it preempts so many things
that happened in its wake.
507
00:36:29,231 --> 00:36:30,651
'Cause you have to understand
508
00:36:30,732 --> 00:36:34,532
that the big subcultural youth movement
by then was skinheads.
509
00:36:37,030 --> 00:36:38,910
[male reporter] Skinheads
like the Scotswood Aggro Boys
510
00:36:38,991 --> 00:36:41,741
with their uniform styles
and checked shirts,
511
00:36:41,827 --> 00:36:44,747
big polished boots,
and close cropped hairstyles.
512
00:36:44,830 --> 00:36:48,130
Many proud of their
headline reputation for violence.
513
00:36:48,208 --> 00:36:50,498
It's an almost puritanical outlook,
514
00:36:50,586 --> 00:36:55,126
and they strongly disapprove of drugs,
beads, and other hippie-style adornments.
515
00:36:55,215 --> 00:36:57,425
But they do have their own type of music.
516
00:36:57,509 --> 00:37:00,219
[reggae music playing]
517
00:37:21,867 --> 00:37:24,947
[male interviewer] Do they come
to rock concerts at all, the skinheads?
518
00:37:25,037 --> 00:37:27,457
{\an8}[Townshend] No, no.
I think the thing is the skinheads
519
00:37:27,539 --> 00:37:29,959
{\an8}really feel that they should have
their own music.
520
00:37:30,042 --> 00:37:31,752
[interviewer] What about reggae?
521
00:37:31,835 --> 00:37:34,545
[Townshend] And they should have
their say. Well, this is Jamaican stuff.
522
00:37:40,844 --> 00:37:43,314
[Townshend] They've adopted it,
but it's not really come from within.
523
00:37:43,388 --> 00:37:44,468
You know what I mean?
524
00:37:44,556 --> 00:37:45,716
[interviewer 2]
How do you get on with the West Indians?
525
00:37:45,807 --> 00:37:50,897
The West Indians? Great.
As if-- as if they were English.
526
00:37:50,979 --> 00:37:54,779
[interviewer 2] Why do the white toughs
never have a go at the West Indians?
527
00:37:54,858 --> 00:37:56,778
[man] 'Cause they get a right,
tasty beatin'.
528
00:37:58,237 --> 00:38:00,357
And another thing, like--
They like the music,
529
00:38:00,447 --> 00:38:02,447
but reggae, that is pure Jamaican music.
530
00:38:04,660 --> 00:38:07,450
♪ Where you gonna run to? ♪
531
00:38:07,829 --> 00:38:10,459
♪ Whoa, whoa, woii! ♪
532
00:38:10,999 --> 00:38:17,129
♪ You're gonna run to the Rock for rescue
There will be no Rock ♪
533
00:38:17,214 --> 00:38:18,974
[Letts]
A lot of my white mates were skinheads.
534
00:38:19,049 --> 00:38:22,259
To me, it was a massive testament
to the power of culture
535
00:38:22,344 --> 00:38:23,974
to bring people together.
536
00:38:24,054 --> 00:38:25,724
You know, music can do that.
537
00:38:25,806 --> 00:38:27,466
-[man] Excuse me.
-Oh, yes?
538
00:38:27,558 --> 00:38:28,928
Can we ask you a few questions?
539
00:38:29,017 --> 00:38:30,347
Oh, certainly. Yes, certainly.
540
00:38:30,894 --> 00:38:32,734
What about reggae...
is it your favorite music?
541
00:38:32,813 --> 00:38:33,813
But of course.
542
00:38:33,897 --> 00:38:35,567
-Reggae.
-Yeah, is it your favorite music?
543
00:38:35,649 --> 00:38:36,649
-Yeah.
-[boy] Yeah.
544
00:38:36,733 --> 00:38:38,113
[male reporter]
First, it was the mods and rockers,
545
00:38:38,193 --> 00:38:42,243
then the trogs and thunderbirds,
and now the skinheads and greasers.
546
00:38:42,322 --> 00:38:46,492
But to the townspeople,
they only have one name: troublemakers.
547
00:38:46,577 --> 00:38:48,577
[Letts]
If the media had written up headlines
548
00:38:48,662 --> 00:38:51,922
like, "Black and white kids unite
through music and style,"
549
00:38:51,999 --> 00:38:54,749
it wouldn't have sold any newspapers,
you know what I'm saying?
550
00:38:55,419 --> 00:38:58,089
They're always looking
for a new folk devil
551
00:38:58,172 --> 00:39:01,052
but every generation needs
its own identity,
552
00:39:01,133 --> 00:39:05,353
a new thing different enough
to totally captivate you.
553
00:39:19,193 --> 00:39:21,573
[male news reporter]
It all seems so totally contradictory,
554
00:39:21,653 --> 00:39:23,823
sex and death with rock music.
555
00:39:23,906 --> 00:39:25,026
What is it all about?
556
00:39:25,115 --> 00:39:27,485
{\an8}[man]
We are what America represents right now.
557
00:39:27,576 --> 00:39:30,446
{\an8}The parts they don't wanna see.
We're just bringing it out in the open
558
00:39:30,537 --> 00:39:32,657
{\an8}because it's there, you know,
and it's fun for us to do it.
559
00:39:32,748 --> 00:39:36,078
We don't go on just as a rock group,
we go on as a piece of kinetic art.
560
00:39:37,085 --> 00:39:38,955
It's sort of like taking
A Clockwork Orange
561
00:39:39,046 --> 00:39:40,256
and putting it onstage.
562
00:39:42,007 --> 00:39:45,217
{\an8}[Defries]
David saw Alice at the Rainbow in London.
563
00:39:45,302 --> 00:39:47,722
{\an8}I think what caught David's imagination
564
00:39:47,804 --> 00:39:52,684
{\an8}was, okay,
you can actually play-act onstage
565
00:39:52,768 --> 00:39:55,978
{\an8}and make music alongside it.
566
00:39:56,063 --> 00:39:57,983
[Cooper] This is just what I wanna be
when I'm onstage.
567
00:39:58,065 --> 00:40:00,145
Alice goes onstage
and just wants to be this.
568
00:40:00,234 --> 00:40:02,824
And so I let Alice do anything
he wants to do.
569
00:40:03,487 --> 00:40:06,067
And that's frightening,
and people like to be frightened.
570
00:40:06,156 --> 00:40:09,736
Parents don't like to be frightened
but kids love to be frightened. [laughs]
571
00:40:13,288 --> 00:40:15,958
[recording: baby crying, distorted]
572
00:40:21,797 --> 00:40:24,507
{\an8}[Bowie] It was still very hard
for anybody to realize
573
00:40:24,591 --> 00:40:26,431
{\an8}that a rock artist can go onstage
574
00:40:26,510 --> 00:40:29,050
{\an8}and be a different person
every time he goes onstage.
575
00:40:29,137 --> 00:40:31,677
You don't have to be the same personality.
576
00:40:32,266 --> 00:40:36,136
And I just trusted
in my own, um, conceptions.
577
00:40:37,062 --> 00:40:39,272
[Zanetta]
By then Hunky Dory was coming out.
578
00:40:42,609 --> 00:40:45,449
{\an8}But David had started working
on a new album.
579
00:40:45,529 --> 00:40:50,739
He was really ambitious, and so was Tony.
They wanted world domination.
580
00:40:55,539 --> 00:40:57,579
{\an8}[male narrator]
From the earliest history of mankind,
581
00:40:57,666 --> 00:41:01,246
{\an8}there's been a great red speck of light
in the night sky.
582
00:41:01,336 --> 00:41:03,666
[Bowie] I was getting nearer
to what I wanted to do.
583
00:41:03,755 --> 00:41:07,295
{\an8}Hunky Dory was really stepping off
this planet and going somewhere else.
584
00:41:10,262 --> 00:41:14,312
{\an8}[narrator] Things were changing before
our very eyes on the Martian surface.
585
00:41:14,391 --> 00:41:18,351
[Bowie] The whole Hunky Dory album
reflected my newfound enthusiasm
586
00:41:18,437 --> 00:41:21,477
for this new continent
that had been opened up to me.
587
00:41:21,565 --> 00:41:24,275
Flash to Westminster
to get the great result.
588
00:41:24,359 --> 00:41:26,989
[male reporter] The majority is 112,
589
00:41:27,070 --> 00:41:30,240
{\an8}that is quite considerably bigger
than many people expected.
590
00:41:30,324 --> 00:41:33,914
{\an8}We've not only got something
which we shall gain from Europe,
591
00:41:33,994 --> 00:41:36,504
{\an8}but I think also,
we've got a great deal to put in.
592
00:41:36,580 --> 00:41:39,670
[Bowie] It really, for me,
felt like the new era had begun then.
593
00:41:43,337 --> 00:41:46,297
[male reporter 2] Did you really expect
to be let off like this?
594
00:41:46,381 --> 00:41:48,011
[Anderson]
Well, you always hope and pray, I suppose.
595
00:41:48,091 --> 00:41:51,051
All of us are very, very happy that
we'll-- don't have to go back to jail.
596
00:41:51,136 --> 00:41:54,056
[male journalist] There's been
a lot of talk about how the Oz trial
597
00:41:54,139 --> 00:41:57,349
has been a victory for the establishment
over the freedom of youth.
598
00:41:57,434 --> 00:42:00,024
-Do you see it in those terms?
-Well, not at all. I--
599
00:42:00,103 --> 00:42:03,233
I think the first thing I'd like to say
is that the fight is only just beginning.
600
00:42:03,315 --> 00:42:05,685
[man] If there is life on Mars,
601
00:42:05,776 --> 00:42:10,106
then there will be a simply fabulous
expansion of perspective,
602
00:42:10,197 --> 00:42:14,077
{\an8}because all the organisms on the Earth,
even though they seem to be different,
603
00:42:14,159 --> 00:42:15,409
{\an8}are fundamentally the same.
604
00:42:15,494 --> 00:42:18,004
{\an8}Their chemistry is all identical.
605
00:42:18,080 --> 00:42:21,670
And, uh, they're just wrapped
in different kinds of wrappings.
606
00:42:25,420 --> 00:42:27,420
[Queen Elizabeth II]
As the familiar pattern of Christmas
607
00:42:27,506 --> 00:42:29,296
and the New Year repeats itself,
608
00:42:30,342 --> 00:42:35,012
we may sometimes forget how much
the world about us has been changing
609
00:42:35,097 --> 00:42:37,887
with all the technological wonders
of this age.
610
00:42:38,600 --> 00:42:42,440
It makes me wonder what changes
there may be in the future.
611
00:42:42,521 --> 00:42:44,731
We cannot possibly tell.
612
00:42:49,361 --> 00:42:51,991
{\an8}[man through PA, indistinct]
613
00:42:53,156 --> 00:42:55,696
[man] ...how these kids
who care nothing about it at all,
614
00:42:55,784 --> 00:42:57,494
except to greet that New Year
615
00:42:57,578 --> 00:42:59,748
which may mean new hope
and promise for all of us.
616
00:42:59,830 --> 00:43:04,290
Seconds to go, just a few seconds
before the ball hits the bottom.
617
00:43:04,376 --> 00:43:09,046
And there's five, four, three, two, one.
618
00:43:09,131 --> 00:43:11,551
-There it is!
-[crowd cheering]
619
00:43:17,431 --> 00:43:21,731
[man] 1972. Happy New Year to you all.
620
00:43:28,901 --> 00:43:32,741
[cheering, faint]
621
00:43:42,289 --> 00:43:45,459
[cheering continues]
622
00:43:58,388 --> 00:44:00,768
-[cheering]
-[song begins]
623
00:44:11,527 --> 00:44:13,397
♪ Oh, yeah ♪
624
00:44:21,286 --> 00:44:23,536
♪ Now Ziggy played guitar ♪
625
00:44:24,081 --> 00:44:27,501
♪ Jamming good with Weird and Gilly ♪
626
00:44:27,584 --> 00:44:29,844
♪ And the Spiders from Mars ♪
627
00:44:30,337 --> 00:44:32,587
♪ He played it left hand ♪
628
00:44:33,966 --> 00:44:35,966
♪ But made it too far ♪
629
00:44:36,677 --> 00:44:41,677
♪ Became the special man
Then we were Ziggy's Band ♪
630
00:44:43,725 --> 00:44:46,595
[Bowie] It just came to me
that what I was doing, in fact,
631
00:44:46,687 --> 00:44:50,727
was what the next stage of things
was all about.
632
00:44:50,816 --> 00:44:53,236
♪ Like some cat from Japan ♪
633
00:44:53,902 --> 00:44:56,992
♪ He could lick 'em by smiling ♪
634
00:44:57,072 --> 00:44:59,282
[Bowie] Christ, what have we done?
635
00:44:59,366 --> 00:45:01,536
Fuck me, we've just killed the '60s.
636
00:45:01,618 --> 00:45:03,948
You know,
it was like it really felt like that.
637
00:45:04,872 --> 00:45:06,332
We are the future.
638
00:45:09,251 --> 00:45:12,711
♪ So where were the spiders ♪
639
00:45:14,715 --> 00:45:19,385
♪ While the fly tried to
Break our balls? ♪
640
00:45:20,846 --> 00:45:24,306
♪ Just the beer light to guide us ♪
641
00:45:25,392 --> 00:45:31,822
♪ So we bitched about his fans
And should we crush his sweet hands? ♪
642
00:45:31,899 --> 00:45:32,899
♪ Oh! ♪
643
00:45:37,821 --> 00:45:41,831
["Ball of Confusion" playing]