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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,160 --> 00:00:06,600 [crowd cheering] 2 00:00:08,160 --> 00:00:10,400 -[♪ "Help!" playing] -♪ …not so self-assured ♪ 3 00:00:10,480 --> 00:00:12,440 ♪ Now, I find I've changed my mind ♪ 4 00:00:12,520 --> 00:00:14,600 ♪ I've opened up the doors ♪ 5 00:00:15,080 --> 00:00:18,800 ♪ Help me if you can, I'm feeling down ♪ 6 00:00:19,560 --> 00:00:23,880 ♪ And I do appreciate you being 'round… ♪ 7 00:00:23,960 --> 00:00:26,000 [♪ music concludes] 8 00:00:35,360 --> 00:00:37,720 The Beatles made a statement in all the newspapers 9 00:00:37,800 --> 00:00:41,200 that they're getting more better than, uh, Jesus himself 10 00:00:41,280 --> 00:00:44,120 and the Ku Klux Klan, being a religious order, 11 00:00:44,200 --> 00:00:45,600 is gonna come out here 12 00:00:45,680 --> 00:00:47,880 the night that they appear at the Coliseum here, 13 00:00:48,600 --> 00:00:51,200 and we're gonna demonstrate with, uh… 14 00:00:52,320 --> 00:00:56,040 different ways and tactics to stop this performance. 15 00:00:56,120 --> 00:00:57,960 The Klan is gonna come out here, 16 00:00:58,040 --> 00:01:00,280 because we're the only organization that will come out, 17 00:01:00,360 --> 00:01:02,480 and make a stop to these accusations. 18 00:01:02,560 --> 00:01:04,120 This is nothing but blasphemy. 19 00:01:04,720 --> 00:01:06,680 I mean, early in 1966, 20 00:01:06,760 --> 00:01:08,480 John gave an interview to Maureen Cleave, 21 00:01:08,560 --> 00:01:10,920 do you remember her? Of the Evening Standard, 22 00:01:11,000 --> 00:01:13,200 in which he made the chance remark saying, 23 00:01:13,280 --> 00:01:16,280 "'We are-- Je-- The Beatles are more popular than Jesus Christ." 24 00:01:16,360 --> 00:01:21,520 I have prepared a statement, which I will read, which has had 25 00:01:21,600 --> 00:01:25,280 John Lennon's absolute approval this afternoon, 26 00:01:25,360 --> 00:01:29,720 uh, with myself, by telephone, uh, and this is as follows… 27 00:01:30,440 --> 00:01:34,520 "The quote which John Lennon made to a London columnist 28 00:01:34,600 --> 00:01:37,840 more than three months ago, has been quoted 29 00:01:37,920 --> 00:01:41,440 and represented entirely out of context." 30 00:01:41,520 --> 00:01:43,120 He said, "Oh, I don't know what's wrong with the Church. 31 00:01:43,200 --> 00:01:44,960 At the moment, the Beatles are bigger than Jesus Christ," 32 00:01:45,040 --> 00:01:47,160 you know, like, they're not building Jesus enough. 33 00:01:47,240 --> 00:01:49,600 They ought to do more like gospel and all this stuff. 34 00:01:49,680 --> 00:01:52,360 Well, that was taken out of context over in America. 35 00:01:52,440 --> 00:01:54,680 The repercussions were big. 36 00:01:54,760 --> 00:01:56,080 I mean, there was… 37 00:01:58,320 --> 00:02:01,040 particularly in what they call the Bible Belt, 38 00:02:01,960 --> 00:02:03,680 you know, these, um… 39 00:02:04,640 --> 00:02:07,840 down in the South there, they were having a field day, 40 00:02:07,920 --> 00:02:12,000 and, you know, we've got this footage as well, of the disc jockey saying, 41 00:02:12,080 --> 00:02:15,080 "Come and bring your Beatle trash and deposit it here." 42 00:02:15,160 --> 00:02:18,240 Don't forget to take your Beatle records and your Beatle paraphernalia 43 00:02:18,320 --> 00:02:21,600 to any one of our 14 pick-up points in Birmingham, Alabama, 44 00:02:21,680 --> 00:02:23,480 and turn 'em in this week, if possible. 45 00:02:23,560 --> 00:02:27,320 [George] So, there was, you know, all this big palaver going on, 46 00:02:27,400 --> 00:02:30,560 and I think we did a press conference 47 00:02:30,640 --> 00:02:34,160 where John basically, under the pressure of, um, 48 00:02:34,240 --> 00:02:35,800 the cameras and the press, 49 00:02:36,880 --> 00:02:42,760 and, uh, you know, just the stress of having to deal with this thing 50 00:02:42,840 --> 00:02:44,360 that he, in effect, had caused. 51 00:02:44,440 --> 00:02:48,840 If it had said, "We're more, uh-- Television is more popular than Jesus," 52 00:02:48,920 --> 00:02:50,560 I might have got away with it. 53 00:02:50,640 --> 00:02:51,920 -[laughter] -You know? 54 00:02:52,000 --> 00:02:53,880 But as I just happened to be talking to a friend, 55 00:02:53,960 --> 00:02:57,920 I used the word "Beatles" as a remote thing, not as what I think, 56 00:02:58,000 --> 00:03:00,200 as Beatles as though those other Beatles, 57 00:03:00,280 --> 00:03:01,720 like other people see us. 58 00:03:01,800 --> 00:03:06,440 I just said, "They are having more in-- more influence on kids and things 59 00:03:06,520 --> 00:03:08,320 than anything else, including Jesus." 60 00:03:08,400 --> 00:03:10,600 But I said it in that way, 61 00:03:10,680 --> 00:03:12,680 which was the wrong way, yeah, yeah. Mm-hmm. 62 00:03:12,760 --> 00:03:14,280 [interviewer] Well, some teenagers have said that-- 63 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:15,960 have repeated your statement, said, "The Beatles… 64 00:03:16,040 --> 00:03:17,880 I like the Beatles more than Jesus Christ." 65 00:03:17,960 --> 00:03:19,120 What do you think about that? 66 00:03:19,200 --> 00:03:21,920 Well, originally, I was, um… I was pointed out that fact 67 00:03:22,000 --> 00:03:23,680 in reference to England, 68 00:03:23,760 --> 00:03:26,760 that we meant more to kids than Jesus did, 69 00:03:26,840 --> 00:03:30,440 or religion, at that time. I wasn't knocking it or putting it down, 70 00:03:30,520 --> 00:03:33,920 I was just saying it as a fact, and it sort of-- 71 00:03:34,000 --> 00:03:37,640 It is true, esp-- more for England than here, you know? 72 00:03:37,720 --> 00:03:40,200 But I'm not saying that we're better, or greater, 73 00:03:40,280 --> 00:03:43,120 or comparing us with Jesus Christ as a person, 74 00:03:43,200 --> 00:03:45,400 or God as a thing, or whatever it is. 75 00:03:45,480 --> 00:03:47,680 You know, I just said what I said and it was wrong, 76 00:03:47,760 --> 00:03:50,120 or was taken wrong, and now it's all this. 77 00:03:50,200 --> 00:03:51,640 [♪ "I'm Only Sleeping" playing] 78 00:03:51,720 --> 00:03:54,320 ♪ When I wake up early in the morning ♪ 79 00:03:55,040 --> 00:03:59,520 ♪ Lift my head, I'm still yawning ♪ 80 00:03:59,600 --> 00:04:02,800 ♪ When I'm in the middle of a dream ♪ 81 00:04:04,200 --> 00:04:08,880 ♪ Stay in bed, float upstream ♪ 82 00:04:08,960 --> 00:04:10,720 ♪ Float upstream ♪ 83 00:04:11,320 --> 00:04:15,640 ♪ Please don't wake me, no, don't shake me ♪ 84 00:04:15,720 --> 00:04:18,680 ♪ Leave me where I am ♪ 85 00:04:19,160 --> 00:04:22,240 ♪ I'm only sleeping ♪ 86 00:04:25,200 --> 00:04:28,600 ♪ Everybody seems to think I'm lazy ♪ 87 00:04:29,800 --> 00:04:34,240 ♪ I don't mind, I think they're crazy ♪ 88 00:04:34,320 --> 00:04:37,640 ♪ Running everywhere at such a speed ♪ 89 00:04:39,120 --> 00:04:43,800 ♪ Till they find there's no need ♪ 90 00:04:43,880 --> 00:04:46,040 ♪ There's no need ♪ 91 00:04:46,120 --> 00:04:51,200 ♪ Please don't spoil my day, I'm miles away ♪ 92 00:04:51,280 --> 00:04:57,080 ♪ And after all, I'm only sleeping ♪ 93 00:04:59,800 --> 00:05:02,680 [♪ music concludes] 94 00:05:02,760 --> 00:05:05,840 [John] People always got the image I was anti-Christ or anti-religious. 95 00:05:05,920 --> 00:05:08,480 I'm not at all. I'm a most religious fellow. 96 00:05:09,080 --> 00:05:10,280 All along this time, 97 00:05:10,360 --> 00:05:12,240 there were also death threats they were getting. 98 00:05:12,320 --> 00:05:14,240 I mean, it wasn't long since President Kennedy 99 00:05:14,320 --> 00:05:15,600 had been assassinated. 100 00:05:16,400 --> 00:05:19,440 And I remember going to one of their concerts 101 00:05:19,520 --> 00:05:21,920 at the Red Rock stadium, uh, 102 00:05:22,000 --> 00:05:24,480 where I climbed up on one of the gantries 103 00:05:24,560 --> 00:05:27,520 overlooking the stage with Brian, 104 00:05:27,600 --> 00:05:29,720 and looked down at the boys below me 105 00:05:29,800 --> 00:05:31,400 during the-- during the performance, 106 00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:35,280 and the amphitheater at Red Rocks is such that 107 00:05:35,360 --> 00:05:37,440 you could have a sniper on the hill 108 00:05:37,520 --> 00:05:41,080 who'd pick off any of those fellows at any time, no problem. 109 00:05:41,160 --> 00:05:45,240 And I was very aware of this, and so was Brian, and so were the boys. 110 00:05:45,320 --> 00:05:47,760 You know, I was always on that… on a high riser, 111 00:05:49,040 --> 00:05:51,480 and I had a cop, plainclothes policeman, 112 00:05:51,560 --> 00:05:54,000 sitting there with me. 113 00:05:55,560 --> 00:05:58,440 Now, I was worried. It's the first time-- 114 00:05:58,520 --> 00:05:59,960 It's one of the times I was really worried, 115 00:06:00,040 --> 00:06:03,120 'cause I had the cymbals a bit like this, you know, so-- 116 00:06:03,200 --> 00:06:04,760 give me a bit of protection. 117 00:06:04,840 --> 00:06:06,880 You know, usually they're like this, but I had 'em up. 118 00:06:06,960 --> 00:06:09,240 But this guy-- And then I started getting hysterical, 119 00:06:09,320 --> 00:06:11,040 because I thought, "Well, you know, 120 00:06:11,120 --> 00:06:14,600 if someone in the audience has a pop at me, what is this guy gonna do? 121 00:06:14,680 --> 00:06:17,200 I mean, is he gonna catch the bullet? What is he gonna do?" 122 00:06:17,280 --> 00:06:18,720 You know? And I… I just found this… 123 00:06:18,800 --> 00:06:20,560 It was getting funnier and funnier all the time. 124 00:06:20,640 --> 00:06:22,440 And this guy was just sitting there. 125 00:06:23,200 --> 00:06:26,360 There were some people that would set off firecrackers in the hall, 126 00:06:26,440 --> 00:06:28,920 and you'd think one of the others had got shot, or something. 127 00:06:29,520 --> 00:06:32,560 [John] But on stage, I always… I always feel safe, you know. 128 00:06:32,640 --> 00:06:35,560 I just feel as though I'm all right when… when I'm plugged in 129 00:06:35,640 --> 00:06:38,000 and I don't feel as though they'll get me. 130 00:06:39,320 --> 00:06:41,200 Now, tell me the truth, are you really a Beatles fan, 131 00:06:41,280 --> 00:06:42,960 or are you here because it's the right thing to do? 132 00:06:43,040 --> 00:06:44,640 Oh, I love the Beatles. 133 00:06:44,720 --> 00:06:46,480 [reporter] I bet there's a group you like better now? 134 00:06:46,560 --> 00:06:48,480 No, I don't like any group better than the Beatles. 135 00:06:48,560 --> 00:06:50,720 [reporter] Honestly, aren't the Beatles on their way out? 136 00:06:50,800 --> 00:06:53,040 I don't think so. I think they're still strong. 137 00:06:53,120 --> 00:06:54,400 Well, that's really surprising, 138 00:06:54,480 --> 00:06:57,720 because I thought we only played there once. [laughs] 139 00:06:57,800 --> 00:06:59,720 You mean we played Shea Stadium twice? 140 00:06:59,800 --> 00:07:00,920 You know, I'll get… 141 00:07:01,000 --> 00:07:03,240 It was just getting all blended here. 142 00:07:03,720 --> 00:07:06,000 Okay, I don't ever remember going there twice. 143 00:07:07,160 --> 00:07:08,480 How was it? 144 00:07:08,560 --> 00:07:11,920 Last year, not an empty seat in Shea Stadium. 145 00:07:12,000 --> 00:07:13,840 This year, thousands. 146 00:07:13,920 --> 00:07:19,680 Perhaps 15 or 20,000 empty seats in this arena that holds 56,000. 147 00:07:20,480 --> 00:07:23,640 Oh, dear, what a failure. We only sold 50,000? 148 00:07:24,480 --> 00:07:25,480 Miserable. 149 00:07:25,560 --> 00:07:29,040 See, we were… we were dying, dying on our feet out there. 150 00:07:29,800 --> 00:07:33,400 Yeah, and… and there was big news about that, you know. 151 00:07:33,480 --> 00:07:35,480 "They've only sold 50,000 seats!" 152 00:07:35,560 --> 00:07:38,640 [laughs] You know? "It's all over for the Beatles!" 153 00:07:38,720 --> 00:07:40,680 [reporter] I bet there's another group you like better now 154 00:07:40,760 --> 00:07:42,240 -than the Beatles. Is there? -There is. 155 00:07:42,320 --> 00:07:44,080 -[reporter] Which one? -Herman and the Hermits. 156 00:07:44,160 --> 00:07:45,160 [reporter] Tell me the truth now, 157 00:07:45,240 --> 00:07:46,600 which group do you like better than the Beatles? 158 00:07:46,680 --> 00:07:48,760 The Beatles all the time. I love them! 159 00:07:48,840 --> 00:07:51,800 [reporter] Tell me this, how long do you think the Beatles can last? 160 00:07:51,880 --> 00:07:55,040 Well, I wish they'd last forever. They could bring happiness to everybody. 161 00:07:55,120 --> 00:07:56,720 How long do you think they're gonna last? 162 00:07:57,840 --> 00:07:59,720 As long as they keep playing, they'll last. 163 00:07:59,800 --> 00:08:02,440 Even going back to '65, 164 00:08:03,040 --> 00:08:04,240 that's when I was saying, 165 00:08:04,320 --> 00:08:06,600 "I don't wanna do this anymore. I don't like this," you know, 166 00:08:06,680 --> 00:08:09,120 these ticker-tape parades that they were trying to do 167 00:08:09,200 --> 00:08:12,880 and the… You know, I mean, it was that, um… 168 00:08:13,520 --> 00:08:17,440 It was nice to be popular, but when you saw the size of it, 169 00:08:17,520 --> 00:08:19,880 it was just ridiculous. It was dangerous. 170 00:08:20,520 --> 00:08:22,440 It felt dangerous, you know, 171 00:08:22,520 --> 00:08:25,760 because everybody was out of hand and out of line, 172 00:08:25,840 --> 00:08:28,480 -even the cops were out of line, you know. -[♪ "Run For Your Life" playing] 173 00:08:28,560 --> 00:08:31,200 They were all just caught up in the mania. 174 00:08:31,280 --> 00:08:33,280 You know, it was like they were in this big movie, 175 00:08:33,360 --> 00:08:36,480 and it was like we were the ones trapped in the middle of it 176 00:08:36,560 --> 00:08:38,720 while everybody else was going mad. 177 00:08:38,800 --> 00:08:41,280 So, for a year or… or so, you know, 178 00:08:41,360 --> 00:08:43,680 I'd been saying, "Let's not do this anymore." 179 00:08:43,760 --> 00:08:45,720 And then, anyway, it played itself out. 180 00:08:45,800 --> 00:08:49,160 But by '66, everybody was feeling that that's it, 181 00:08:49,240 --> 00:08:51,520 you know, we've gotta, um, stop this. 182 00:08:51,600 --> 00:08:54,240 I don't think anyone didn't wanna stop touring, 183 00:08:54,320 --> 00:08:56,000 uh, probably… 184 00:08:56,080 --> 00:08:59,240 Paul would've gone on longer than George and I. 185 00:09:00,320 --> 00:09:02,000 But you'll have to ask Paul about that. 186 00:09:02,080 --> 00:09:04,160 Yeah, I'd been trying to say, "Ah, no, you know, 187 00:09:04,240 --> 00:09:05,880 touring's good and it keeps us sharp, 188 00:09:05,960 --> 00:09:08,520 and we need touring, and musicians need to play," 189 00:09:08,600 --> 00:09:10,240 you know, I'd… "Keep music live!" 190 00:09:10,320 --> 00:09:12,400 I'd been sort of a bit that attitude. 191 00:09:12,480 --> 00:09:14,560 Well, finally, I agreed with them, you know, 192 00:09:14,640 --> 00:09:16,280 and it was like, "Oh, you were right." 193 00:09:16,360 --> 00:09:19,800 You know, I think it was George and John who were particularly against it, 194 00:09:19,880 --> 00:09:21,280 you know, particularly got fed up. 195 00:09:21,360 --> 00:09:23,160 [John] We might have been waxworks for half… 196 00:09:23,240 --> 00:09:25,280 for half the… you know, what the good we did there. 197 00:09:25,360 --> 00:09:26,720 You know, nobody heard anything, 198 00:09:26,800 --> 00:09:29,400 or not even, you know, a basic beat, I don't think. 199 00:09:29,480 --> 00:09:31,560 They were too busy tearing each other up. 200 00:09:31,640 --> 00:09:34,040 [George] We were just tired, you know. It had been… 201 00:09:34,600 --> 00:09:35,600 uh, how many? 202 00:09:35,680 --> 00:09:40,440 four years for us, of legging around, you know, 203 00:09:40,520 --> 00:09:42,240 screaming in this mania. 204 00:09:42,720 --> 00:09:44,560 You know, we were tired, we needed a rest. 205 00:09:44,640 --> 00:09:46,360 By the time we got to Candlestick Park, 206 00:09:46,440 --> 00:09:48,880 I think we… we knew now, "Yeah, sure," you know, 207 00:09:49,480 --> 00:09:52,160 this wasn't, uh… this wasn't fun anymore. 208 00:09:52,240 --> 00:09:53,400 I think that was the main point. 209 00:09:53,480 --> 00:09:56,600 And, you know, we'd… we'd always try to keep-- 210 00:09:56,680 --> 00:09:59,200 You've got to, really, try and keep some fun in it 211 00:09:59,280 --> 00:10:01,960 for yourself in anything you do, you know? 212 00:10:02,040 --> 00:10:04,080 So, by then it was like, "Yeah, well, don't tell anyone, 213 00:10:04,160 --> 00:10:05,840 but this is probably our last gig." 214 00:10:05,920 --> 00:10:08,880 [George] I certainly felt that that was it, you know, 215 00:10:08,960 --> 00:10:11,240 that we weren't gonna tour again like that. 216 00:10:11,960 --> 00:10:14,400 I never really projected into the future. 217 00:10:15,000 --> 00:10:17,720 I was just thinking, "This is gonna be such a relief 218 00:10:18,800 --> 00:10:24,040 to… you know, to not have to go and go through that madness." 219 00:10:24,560 --> 00:10:26,400 [Paul] I don't remember having a negative feeling 220 00:10:26,480 --> 00:10:28,240 about the band, but about touring. 221 00:10:28,320 --> 00:10:30,720 But you always forget the bad bits anyway. 222 00:10:30,800 --> 00:10:32,520 So, I generally, about the band, 223 00:10:32,600 --> 00:10:34,400 remember it being quite good. 224 00:10:34,480 --> 00:10:37,560 [John] You know, I'm just sorry for the people that can't see us live. 225 00:10:38,080 --> 00:10:39,840 You know, sometimes you haven't missed anything, 226 00:10:39,920 --> 00:10:41,280 -because you… you wouldn't have heard us… -[♪ music concludes] 227 00:10:41,360 --> 00:10:43,120 …but sometimes I think you might have enjoyed it. 228 00:10:43,200 --> 00:10:44,520 I'm sorry for them, yeah. 229 00:10:45,640 --> 00:10:47,000 [♪ "For No One" playing] 230 00:10:47,080 --> 00:10:49,040 ♪ Your day breaks, your mind aches ♪ 231 00:10:49,120 --> 00:10:53,560 ♪ You find that all her words of kindness linger on ♪ 232 00:10:53,640 --> 00:10:56,440 ♪ When she no longer needs you ♪ 233 00:10:58,120 --> 00:11:01,040 ♪ She wakes up, she makes up ♪ 234 00:11:01,120 --> 00:11:05,800 ♪ She takes her time and doesn't feel she has to hurry ♪ 235 00:11:05,880 --> 00:11:08,440 ♪ She no longer needs you ♪ 236 00:11:08,520 --> 00:11:12,120 ♪ And in her eyes you see nothing ♪ 237 00:11:12,760 --> 00:11:15,880 ♪ No sign of love behind the tears ♪ 238 00:11:15,960 --> 00:11:17,920 ♪ Cried for no one ♪ 239 00:11:18,480 --> 00:11:22,000 ♪ A love that should have lasted years ♪ 240 00:11:24,400 --> 00:11:27,240 ♪ You stay home, she goes out ♪ 241 00:11:27,320 --> 00:11:31,200 ♪ She says that long ago she knew someone ♪ 242 00:11:31,280 --> 00:11:34,640 ♪ But now he's gone, she doesn't need him ♪ 243 00:11:36,280 --> 00:11:39,160 ♪ Your day breaks, your mind aches ♪ 244 00:11:39,240 --> 00:11:42,800 ♪ There will be times when all the things she said ♪ 245 00:11:42,880 --> 00:11:46,320 ♪ Will fill your head, you won't forget her ♪ 246 00:11:46,800 --> 00:11:50,160 ♪ And in her eyes you see nothing ♪ 247 00:11:50,800 --> 00:11:55,720 ♪ No sign of love behind the tears cried for no one ♪ 248 00:11:56,520 --> 00:12:00,160 ♪ A love that should have lasted years ♪ 249 00:12:00,480 --> 00:12:02,400 [♪ music concludes] 250 00:12:02,480 --> 00:12:05,560 [Brian Epstein] The Beatles were then just four lads 251 00:12:05,640 --> 00:12:08,360 on that rather dimly-lit stage. 252 00:12:11,920 --> 00:12:15,520 You know, you're saying, like, we were getting worse and worse as a band, 253 00:12:15,600 --> 00:12:17,480 while all those people were screaming. 254 00:12:17,560 --> 00:12:19,680 It was lovely that they liked us, but… 255 00:12:19,760 --> 00:12:21,200 we couldn't hear to play. 256 00:12:21,280 --> 00:12:23,440 So, the only place we could develop was in the studio 257 00:12:23,520 --> 00:12:25,400 -where we could hear ourselves. -But also, we were losing interest 258 00:12:25,480 --> 00:12:27,840 -to play on stage. Was just no fun. -And I think the most important thing 259 00:12:27,920 --> 00:12:29,200 was the safety aspect, 260 00:12:29,280 --> 00:12:32,120 'cause soon after that, it became terrorism, 261 00:12:32,200 --> 00:12:33,720 and all that kind of stuff. 262 00:12:33,800 --> 00:12:36,640 When we were going, there was only us and two people. 263 00:12:37,160 --> 00:12:38,800 We said all those things that happened, 264 00:12:38,880 --> 00:12:42,200 like people threatening Ringo, or threatening us, 265 00:12:42,280 --> 00:12:43,480 or saying the plane… 266 00:12:43,560 --> 00:12:45,240 Snipping bits of hair off and stuff, and all that. 267 00:12:45,320 --> 00:12:47,360 …the plane was gonna crash, hurricanes hitting, 268 00:12:47,440 --> 00:12:49,920 -race riots, student riots. -[Paul] Wings on fire. 269 00:12:50,000 --> 00:12:52,480 There was always something that we pulled into town. 270 00:12:52,560 --> 00:12:54,760 There was always some big thing going on, 271 00:12:54,840 --> 00:12:56,840 and we'd come in the middle with this mania, 272 00:12:56,920 --> 00:12:59,240 and then it'd just be like chaos. 273 00:13:00,480 --> 00:13:03,840 So, it was just becoming too difficult, um, you know, 274 00:13:03,920 --> 00:13:05,560 on the nervous system, that's what I felt. 275 00:13:05,640 --> 00:13:07,600 And remember, when we'd all decided it, 276 00:13:07,680 --> 00:13:10,040 we said, "Well, how… what are we gonna do, like, announce it? 277 00:13:10,120 --> 00:13:13,200 'The Beatles have given up touring'?" We said, "No. Just don't say anything." 278 00:13:13,280 --> 00:13:15,640 [John] But I was really too scared to walk away. 279 00:13:15,720 --> 00:13:18,320 I was thinking, "Well, this is like the end really, you know. 280 00:13:18,400 --> 00:13:19,960 There's no more touring." 281 00:13:20,040 --> 00:13:23,360 And I was dead nervous, so I… I said "yes" to Dick Lester, 282 00:13:23,440 --> 00:13:24,840 that I would make this movie with him. 283 00:13:24,920 --> 00:13:27,880 I went to Almería, Spain, for six weeks just to… 284 00:13:27,960 --> 00:13:29,880 because I didn't know what to do, you know. 285 00:13:29,960 --> 00:13:32,400 What do you do when you don't tour? There's no life. 286 00:13:32,480 --> 00:13:34,480 Well, our officer calls me up, and he says to me, 287 00:13:34,560 --> 00:13:36,280 he says, "Musketeer Gripweed?" 288 00:13:36,920 --> 00:13:39,360 He was a tall chap. Some would call him weedy. 289 00:13:39,440 --> 00:13:41,880 I did. He said to me, and bear in mind, 290 00:13:41,960 --> 00:13:44,440 we were some few hundred miles behind enemy lines, 291 00:13:44,520 --> 00:13:46,760 he said, "Green, green, green." So, I did. 292 00:13:48,240 --> 00:13:50,960 [Neil Aspinall] Ringo came to… to Spain, 293 00:13:51,040 --> 00:13:54,240 right, to Almería, when John and I were down there. 294 00:13:54,320 --> 00:13:56,720 Yeah, I went and hung out 'cause he was lonely. 295 00:13:57,600 --> 00:14:00,880 And, you know, we really supported each other a lot, 296 00:14:00,960 --> 00:14:04,960 and so, you know, he was out there being this… this actor. 297 00:14:05,040 --> 00:14:07,040 You know, John was doing How I Won the War. 298 00:14:07,120 --> 00:14:10,040 So, I went to India. And I think I went for about six weeks. 299 00:14:10,120 --> 00:14:12,960 -And, uh, it was a fantastic time. -[♪"Raga Charu Keshi" playing] 300 00:14:13,040 --> 00:14:15,600 [George] I just would go out and look at temples 301 00:14:15,680 --> 00:14:18,840 and go shopping, and, you know, we traveled all over. 302 00:14:18,920 --> 00:14:21,000 We went to various places. 303 00:14:21,600 --> 00:14:23,760 And eventually, we went up to Kashmir, 304 00:14:23,840 --> 00:14:28,240 and stayed on these houseboats up in the middle of the Himalayas. 305 00:14:28,320 --> 00:14:31,120 It was incredible, you know, I'd wake up in the morning, 306 00:14:31,200 --> 00:14:35,840 this little, um, Kashmiri fella would bring us tea and biscuits, 307 00:14:35,920 --> 00:14:38,360 and then I could hear Ravi in the next room, 308 00:14:38,440 --> 00:14:40,360 he'd be doing his practice, 309 00:14:40,840 --> 00:14:44,280 -and that was incredible times for me. -[♪ music concludes] 310 00:14:44,360 --> 00:14:47,040 George, like he said, was doing the Indian stuff, 311 00:14:47,120 --> 00:14:50,120 and-- and what was Paul doing? I don't know what he was doing. 312 00:14:50,200 --> 00:14:52,160 [♪ "The Family Way" (Incidental Music) playing] 313 00:14:52,240 --> 00:14:54,920 [Paul] To me, you know, if you are blessed 314 00:14:55,000 --> 00:14:57,280 with the ability to sort of write music… 315 00:14:57,840 --> 00:15:02,200 like, film scores were kind of an interesting diversion. 316 00:15:02,280 --> 00:15:05,200 And George Martin, being able to write 317 00:15:05,280 --> 00:15:07,720 and being able to orchestrate and being pretty good at that, 318 00:15:08,240 --> 00:15:11,320 um, I think got an offer through the Boulting brothers… 319 00:15:11,400 --> 00:15:12,560 [♪ music concludes] 320 00:15:12,680 --> 00:15:15,480 …to-- for him and me to do some film music for The Family Way. 321 00:15:15,560 --> 00:15:17,960 So, I had a look at the film. I thought it was a great film. I still do. 322 00:15:18,040 --> 00:15:20,280 It's a very powerful, emotional, 323 00:15:20,360 --> 00:15:23,600 soppy, but good film, I think, for its time. 324 00:15:23,680 --> 00:15:28,160 We actually even got an Ivor Novello Award for the "Best Film Song" that year 325 00:15:28,240 --> 00:15:30,120 for a thing called "Love in the Open Air". 326 00:15:30,200 --> 00:15:34,200 [♪ "Love In The Open Air" playing] 327 00:15:59,120 --> 00:16:00,840 [♪ music concludes] 328 00:16:03,680 --> 00:16:05,200 [interviewer] Hey, can I have a word? 329 00:16:05,280 --> 00:16:06,520 -Yeah. -[interviewer chuckles] 330 00:16:06,600 --> 00:16:09,440 Are the Beatles gonna go their own ways in 1967? 331 00:16:09,920 --> 00:16:12,360 We could be, uh, you know, on our own or together. 332 00:16:12,440 --> 00:16:15,000 We're always involved with each other, whatever we're doing, really. 333 00:16:15,080 --> 00:16:18,360 Could you ever see a time when, in fact, you weren't working together? 334 00:16:19,120 --> 00:16:21,320 I could see us working not together for a period, 335 00:16:21,400 --> 00:16:23,320 but we'd always get together for one reason or another. 336 00:16:23,400 --> 00:16:24,720 Like, I mean, you… [scoffs] 337 00:16:24,800 --> 00:16:26,960 You need other people for ideas as well, 338 00:16:27,040 --> 00:16:29,960 but you know, um, we all get along fine. 339 00:16:30,040 --> 00:16:31,160 Will you… will you be… 340 00:16:31,240 --> 00:16:33,400 will you be doing films on your own next year? 341 00:16:33,480 --> 00:16:35,280 Uh, no, I don't wanna make a career of it. 342 00:16:35,360 --> 00:16:38,440 I did it just 'cause I felt like doing it, and if some-- 343 00:16:38,520 --> 00:16:41,000 And Dick Lester asked me, and I said "yes". 344 00:16:41,520 --> 00:16:44,240 And I wouldn't have done it if the others hadn't liked it, you know. 345 00:16:44,320 --> 00:16:46,400 But they said, "Fine, 'cause we were on holiday anyway." 346 00:16:46,480 --> 00:16:49,120 [interviewer] Do you foresee a time when, in fact, the Beatles won't be together, 347 00:16:49,200 --> 00:16:51,560 -and that you'll all be on your own? -No, no. 348 00:16:51,640 --> 00:16:53,440 [interviewer] Do you get-- Have you got tired of each other? 349 00:16:53,520 --> 00:16:55,840 -No. [chuckles] No. -[interviewer] No? 350 00:16:55,920 --> 00:16:57,520 Have you got anything lined up on your own? 351 00:16:57,600 --> 00:16:58,800 -Film parts, for example? -No… 352 00:16:58,880 --> 00:17:02,080 Um, well, there may be one if we don't do one together 353 00:17:02,160 --> 00:17:03,160 early next year. 354 00:17:03,640 --> 00:17:06,600 To say-- See, I'm sort of out of it there, 355 00:17:06,680 --> 00:17:08,640 because with John and Paul, they can still write 356 00:17:08,720 --> 00:17:11,000 even though we're sort of not working together, 357 00:17:11,080 --> 00:17:14,320 and George can, you know, learn his sitar and do things like that. 358 00:17:14,400 --> 00:17:16,600 -And I've just been sitting 'round. -[interviewer] Getting bored? 359 00:17:16,680 --> 00:17:18,760 Uh, no. Getting fat. [chuckles] 360 00:17:18,840 --> 00:17:20,280 [interviewer] Do you think that, in the New Year, 361 00:17:20,360 --> 00:17:22,320 that you're gonna be going your own ways instead of 362 00:17:22,400 --> 00:17:24,160 -being in the group? No? -No, no. 363 00:17:24,240 --> 00:17:26,800 -No. Definitely not. -[interviewer] What about another word? 364 00:17:26,880 --> 00:17:28,240 -Can I just have a brief word with you? -Yeah. 365 00:17:28,320 --> 00:17:30,000 [interviewer] If you never toured again, would it worry you? 366 00:17:31,000 --> 00:17:33,560 Uh… I dunno. No, I don't think so. 367 00:17:33,640 --> 00:17:34,880 -[interviewer] Wouldn't worry you? -But… 368 00:17:34,960 --> 00:17:37,760 Because the only thing about that, you see, is that, uh… 369 00:17:38,240 --> 00:17:42,840 performance for us… see, it's… it's gone downhill, performance, 370 00:17:42,920 --> 00:17:45,360 'cause we can't develop when no one can hear us, you know what I mean? 371 00:17:45,440 --> 00:17:48,280 So, for us to perform is, uh, it's difficult, 372 00:17:48,360 --> 00:17:50,800 -gets difficult each time. More difficult. -You mean they don't listen to you, 373 00:17:50,880 --> 00:17:52,720 and therefore you don't want to do that? 374 00:17:52,800 --> 00:17:55,680 Oh, yeah, we wanna do it, but, uh, if we're not listened to, 375 00:17:55,760 --> 00:17:57,440 then… and we can't even hear ourselves, 376 00:17:57,520 --> 00:18:00,440 then we can't improve in that. We can't get any better. 377 00:18:00,520 --> 00:18:04,000 But it meant we could get into the studio and start with, uh, 378 00:18:04,080 --> 00:18:06,800 "Strawberry Fields" and "Penny Lane" and that, and then Pepper. 379 00:18:06,880 --> 00:18:08,320 Were they the first ones out, do you remember? 380 00:18:08,400 --> 00:18:10,160 I don't know. Where they? I mean, I seem to remember 381 00:18:10,240 --> 00:18:13,720 that was like what happened once we'd get full-time into the studio, 382 00:18:13,800 --> 00:18:15,880 and… and saying, at the time, 383 00:18:15,960 --> 00:18:18,680 "Now, our performance is that record." 384 00:18:18,760 --> 00:18:22,280 And that new record started with "Strawberry Fields". 385 00:18:23,440 --> 00:18:25,720 And that was going to be what became Pepper. 386 00:18:25,800 --> 00:18:28,680 It wasn't Pepper. No one heard of Pepper. 387 00:18:28,760 --> 00:18:32,000 But it was gonna be a record that was gonna be made in the studio, 388 00:18:32,080 --> 00:18:35,360 and they… it was gonna be songs which they had written, 389 00:18:35,440 --> 00:18:37,440 which couldn't be performed live. 390 00:18:37,520 --> 00:18:41,480 They were designed to be, um, studio productions. 391 00:18:42,160 --> 00:18:43,480 And that was the difference. 392 00:18:43,560 --> 00:18:45,960 Well, "Strawberry Fields" is a song that John had, 393 00:18:46,040 --> 00:18:48,680 because he used to live next door to this place called Strawberry Fields, 394 00:18:48,760 --> 00:18:51,360 which was a Salvation Army place for kids. 395 00:18:51,440 --> 00:18:54,120 And he used to bunk over, and it was his little magic garden 396 00:18:54,200 --> 00:18:55,360 to sort of play in. 397 00:18:55,440 --> 00:18:57,360 So, whenever I went to visit him, he'd sort of say, 398 00:18:57,440 --> 00:18:59,120 "Hey, you know, there…" and we'd go past, and he'd say, 399 00:18:59,200 --> 00:19:01,560 "This is Strawberry Fields," and he'd give me the gen on it. 400 00:19:01,640 --> 00:19:03,320 [John] "Strawberry Fields" I wrote when I was making 401 00:19:03,400 --> 00:19:06,240 How I Won the War in Almería, Spain. 402 00:19:06,320 --> 00:19:08,720 It's a, um, Salvation Army home… 403 00:19:09,840 --> 00:19:13,120 that was near the house I lived in with my auntie in the suburbs, 404 00:19:13,760 --> 00:19:16,480 although I took the name as a… as an image. 405 00:19:16,560 --> 00:19:19,320 We had this thing called a Mellotron that we, uh, 406 00:19:19,400 --> 00:19:21,880 did the intro of "Strawberry Fields" on. 407 00:19:21,960 --> 00:19:24,280 This, in fact, is one of them. We had flutes on there, 408 00:19:24,800 --> 00:19:26,000 and, uh… 409 00:19:27,080 --> 00:19:28,240 this was the intro. 410 00:19:28,320 --> 00:19:31,040 [♪ plays "Strawberry Fields Forever"] 411 00:19:39,640 --> 00:19:45,240 ♪ Let me take you down 'cause I'm going to ♪ 412 00:19:45,320 --> 00:19:48,640 -[♪ "Strawberry Fields Forever" playing] -♪ Strawberry Fields ♪ 413 00:19:51,120 --> 00:19:53,280 ♪ Nothing is real ♪ 414 00:19:54,720 --> 00:19:57,560 ♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪ 415 00:19:59,120 --> 00:20:02,360 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 416 00:20:03,880 --> 00:20:08,320 ♪ Living is easy with eyes closed ♪ 417 00:20:09,480 --> 00:20:12,600 ♪ Misunderstanding all you see ♪ 418 00:20:14,680 --> 00:20:17,440 ♪ It's getting hard to be someone ♪ 419 00:20:17,520 --> 00:20:18,920 ♪ But it all works out ♪ 420 00:20:20,080 --> 00:20:23,440 ♪ It doesn't matter much to me ♪ 421 00:20:25,800 --> 00:20:30,880 ♪ Let me take you down 'cause I'm going to ♪ 422 00:20:31,440 --> 00:20:34,280 ♪ Strawberry Fields ♪ 423 00:20:36,280 --> 00:20:38,760 ♪ Nothing is real ♪ 424 00:20:39,680 --> 00:20:42,400 ♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪ 425 00:20:43,600 --> 00:20:46,440 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 426 00:20:50,600 --> 00:20:55,280 ♪ No one, I think, is in my tree ♪ 427 00:20:56,280 --> 00:20:59,400 ♪ I mean, it must be high or low ♪ 428 00:21:01,360 --> 00:21:03,960 ♪ That is, you can't, you know, tune in ♪ 429 00:21:04,040 --> 00:21:05,680 ♪ But it's all right ♪ 430 00:21:06,520 --> 00:21:09,840 ♪ That is, I think it's not too bad ♪ 431 00:21:11,720 --> 00:21:16,720 ♪ Let me take you down 'cause I'm going to ♪ 432 00:21:17,280 --> 00:21:19,960 ♪ Strawberry Fields ♪ 433 00:21:22,160 --> 00:21:24,400 ♪ Nothing is real ♪ 434 00:21:25,480 --> 00:21:28,200 ♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪ 435 00:21:29,400 --> 00:21:32,240 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 436 00:21:36,600 --> 00:21:41,280 ♪ Always, no, sometimes, think it's me ♪ 437 00:21:42,280 --> 00:21:45,360 ♪ But, you know, I know when it's a dream ♪ 438 00:21:47,360 --> 00:21:50,000 ♪ I think, er, no, I mean, er, yes ♪ 439 00:21:50,080 --> 00:21:52,200 ♪ But it's all wrong ♪ 440 00:21:52,280 --> 00:21:55,480 ♪ That is, I think I disagree ♪ 441 00:21:57,680 --> 00:22:02,880 ♪ Let me take you down 'cause I'm going to ♪ 442 00:22:03,520 --> 00:22:06,400 ♪ Strawberry Fields ♪ 443 00:22:08,160 --> 00:22:11,000 ♪ Nothing is real ♪ 444 00:22:12,080 --> 00:22:14,560 ♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪ 445 00:22:15,840 --> 00:22:18,880 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 446 00:22:20,280 --> 00:22:23,320 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 447 00:22:24,240 --> 00:22:27,400 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 448 00:22:29,760 --> 00:22:32,280 [♪ music continues] 449 00:22:45,400 --> 00:22:47,160 [Paul] And then, you know, the nice thing is then 450 00:22:47,240 --> 00:22:50,400 a lot of our stuff then started to get a little bit more surreal. 451 00:22:50,960 --> 00:22:53,480 And then "Penny Lane" was a little bit more surreal too, 452 00:22:53,560 --> 00:22:55,040 -although a sort of cleaner thing. -[♪ music concludes] 453 00:22:55,120 --> 00:22:57,600 I was into-- I remember saying to George Martin I wanted, like, 454 00:22:57,680 --> 00:22:59,440 a very clean recording. 455 00:22:59,920 --> 00:23:02,320 I was into, um, "clean" sounds, 456 00:23:02,400 --> 00:23:04,800 maybe Beach Boy-y kind of things, at that point. 457 00:23:05,280 --> 00:23:07,320 But, you know, "the fireman with his hourglass", 458 00:23:07,400 --> 00:23:10,920 and all of that sort of stuff, um, was us trying to get into 459 00:23:11,000 --> 00:23:12,800 a bit of art, a bit of surrealism, 460 00:23:12,880 --> 00:23:15,560 and they were all based on real things. 461 00:23:15,640 --> 00:23:17,720 But I mean, whereas there was a barber called-- 462 00:23:17,800 --> 00:23:20,440 What was he called? Bioletti? Something like that. 463 00:23:20,960 --> 00:23:22,160 Um, a little barber. 464 00:23:22,240 --> 00:23:24,120 I think he's still there, actually, in Penny Lane. 465 00:23:24,200 --> 00:23:27,120 And he had these pictures that all the barbers have 466 00:23:27,200 --> 00:23:28,880 of the haircut you can have if you ask for, 467 00:23:28,960 --> 00:23:32,160 "I'll have Number Three there," you know. Um, and-- 468 00:23:32,240 --> 00:23:33,280 Only, instead of saying, 469 00:23:33,360 --> 00:23:36,000 "The barber with pictures of haircuts in his windows", 470 00:23:36,560 --> 00:23:39,360 you know, then it was-- you'd change it 'round to, uh, 471 00:23:39,440 --> 00:23:41,600 "Every head he's had the pleasure to know". 472 00:23:41,680 --> 00:23:44,680 "A barber showing photographs", like it's an exhibition. 473 00:23:44,760 --> 00:23:48,440 It was all just twisting it to a little bit slightly more artsy angle. 474 00:23:48,520 --> 00:23:51,680 [John] Penny Lane is not only a street, but it's a district. 475 00:23:51,760 --> 00:23:54,880 I lived in Penny Lane in a street called Newcastle Road, 476 00:23:54,960 --> 00:23:58,000 so I was the only actual person that lived in Penny Lane. 477 00:23:58,560 --> 00:23:59,640 [♪ "Penny Lane" playing] 478 00:23:59,720 --> 00:24:02,720 ♪ In Penny Lane there is a barber showing photographs ♪ 479 00:24:02,800 --> 00:24:06,400 ♪ Of every head he's had the pleasure to know ♪ 480 00:24:07,360 --> 00:24:10,800 ♪ And all the people that come and go ♪ 481 00:24:11,520 --> 00:24:13,560 ♪ Stop and say hello ♪ 482 00:24:15,960 --> 00:24:19,560 ♪ On the corner is a banker with a motor car ♪ 483 00:24:20,160 --> 00:24:23,800 ♪ The little children laugh at him behind his back ♪ 484 00:24:24,480 --> 00:24:28,080 ♪ And the banker never wears a mac ♪ 485 00:24:28,680 --> 00:24:32,960 ♪ In the pouring rain, very strange ♪ 486 00:24:33,040 --> 00:24:39,000 ♪ Penny Lane is in my ears and in my eyes ♪ 487 00:24:41,920 --> 00:24:46,640 ♪ There, beneath the blue suburban skies ♪ 488 00:24:46,720 --> 00:24:49,960 ♪ I sit, and meanwhile back ♪ 489 00:24:50,040 --> 00:24:53,640 ♪ In Penny Lane there is a fireman with an hourglass ♪ 490 00:24:53,720 --> 00:24:57,200 ♪ And in his pocket is a portrait of the Queen ♪ 491 00:24:58,120 --> 00:25:01,480 ♪ He likes to keep his fire engine clean ♪ 492 00:25:02,560 --> 00:25:04,520 ♪ It's a clean machine ♪ 493 00:25:07,240 --> 00:25:09,920 [♪ music continues] 494 00:25:23,600 --> 00:25:29,760 ♪ Penny Lane is in my ears and in my eyes ♪ 495 00:25:33,560 --> 00:25:37,280 ♪ A four of fish and finger pies ♪ 496 00:25:37,360 --> 00:25:40,360 ♪ In summer, meanwhile back ♪ 497 00:25:40,440 --> 00:25:43,960 ♪ Behind the shelter in the middle of the roundabout ♪ 498 00:25:44,600 --> 00:25:47,960 ♪ The pretty nurse is selling poppies from a tray ♪ 499 00:25:48,920 --> 00:25:53,040 ♪ And though she feels as if she's in a play ♪ 500 00:25:53,120 --> 00:25:55,200 ♪ She is, anyway ♪ 501 00:25:57,520 --> 00:26:01,120 ♪ In Penny Lane the barber shaves another customer ♪ 502 00:26:01,560 --> 00:26:04,960 ♪ We see the banker sitting, waiting for a trim ♪ 503 00:26:05,840 --> 00:26:09,080 ♪ And then the fireman rushes in ♪ 504 00:26:09,960 --> 00:26:14,400 ♪ From the pouring rain, very strange ♪ 505 00:26:14,480 --> 00:26:20,400 ♪ Penny Lane is in my ears and in my eyes ♪ 506 00:26:23,440 --> 00:26:28,000 ♪ There, beneath the blue suburban skies ♪ 507 00:26:28,080 --> 00:26:31,160 ♪ I sit, and meanwhile back ♪ 508 00:26:31,240 --> 00:26:36,920 ♪ Penny Lane is in my ears and in my eyes ♪ 509 00:26:40,280 --> 00:26:45,240 ♪ There, beneath the blue suburban skies ♪ 510 00:26:47,560 --> 00:26:49,560 -♪ Penny Lane ♪ -[♪ music concludes] 511 00:26:49,640 --> 00:26:51,800 [Brian Matthew] And right now, we're going to say hello 512 00:26:51,880 --> 00:26:54,560 -to John Lennon and Paul McCartney. -[John and Paul] Look out! Look out! 513 00:26:54,640 --> 00:26:56,160 [Brian Matthew] Now, that number, Penny Lane, 514 00:26:56,240 --> 00:26:58,480 failed to make No. 1 in Britain, fellas. 515 00:26:58,560 --> 00:27:00,200 Did you feel at all put out by that? 516 00:27:00,280 --> 00:27:02,320 [Paul] No. It's-- I don't know. The main thing is, 517 00:27:02,400 --> 00:27:07,840 it's fine if you're kept sort of from being number one by, uh, 518 00:27:07,920 --> 00:27:10,280 -sort of a record like "Release Me"… -[♪ "Release Me" playing] 519 00:27:10,360 --> 00:27:12,560 …'cause, uh, you're not trying to do the same kind of thing 520 00:27:12,640 --> 00:27:14,560 as "Release Me" is trying to do, you know. 521 00:27:14,640 --> 00:27:17,360 So, that's a completely different scene altogether, 522 00:27:17,440 --> 00:27:18,920 that kind of thing. Uh… 523 00:27:19,000 --> 00:27:20,240 [Brian Matthew] But you have a little… 524 00:27:20,320 --> 00:27:21,720 [Paul] So, it do-- doesn't really matter anyway. 525 00:27:21,800 --> 00:27:23,040 [Brian Matthew] But you have in the past said, 526 00:27:23,120 --> 00:27:25,040 or at least been recorded as having said, 527 00:27:25,120 --> 00:27:27,280 that in the event of a record not going to No. 1, 528 00:27:27,360 --> 00:27:29,160 you'd seriously think about packing it all in. 529 00:27:29,240 --> 00:27:30,440 Do you feel like that? 530 00:27:30,520 --> 00:27:32,080 It was a relief. 531 00:27:33,080 --> 00:27:35,960 Uh, you know, everything we did just went straight to No. 1. 532 00:27:36,040 --> 00:27:37,960 And, of course, then you have that pressure, 533 00:27:38,040 --> 00:27:40,480 and I… I believe we had, like, seven on the row, 534 00:27:40,560 --> 00:27:42,000 -I'm… I'm not really sure. -[♪ music concludes] 535 00:27:42,080 --> 00:27:44,680 It was something, six or seven, uh, was out, was in, 536 00:27:44,760 --> 00:27:46,440 was out, was one, you know. 537 00:27:47,000 --> 00:27:51,400 So, actually, uh, within the group, it… it took the pressure off. 538 00:27:51,480 --> 00:27:53,440 [Brian Matthew] The thing is, I mean, you've obviously reached the stage 539 00:27:53,520 --> 00:27:56,560 where you don't have to write any more songs for any reason at all 540 00:27:56,640 --> 00:27:59,400 -other than you like doing it, so… -[Paul] But it's always been like that, 541 00:27:59,480 --> 00:28:00,720 -that's the good thing. -[Brian Matthew] Yeah? 542 00:28:00,800 --> 00:28:03,240 [Paul] That's the-- You know, 'cause it has been a hobby… 543 00:28:03,320 --> 00:28:05,080 -[Brian Matthew] Mm-hmm. -…and it still is, you know. 544 00:28:05,160 --> 00:28:06,880 [Brian Matthew] Can you, without giving away any trade secrets, 545 00:28:06,960 --> 00:28:10,000 tell us anything about the numbers that you're engaged on at the moment? 546 00:28:10,080 --> 00:28:13,880 Well, really, it was Paul who'd been on a train journey, 547 00:28:13,960 --> 00:28:16,320 or a plane journey, with Mal Evans, 548 00:28:17,120 --> 00:28:21,720 and come up with this idea of Sgt. Pepper, and he was just kind of… 549 00:28:21,800 --> 00:28:25,520 To… To me, we were just in the studio to make the next record, 550 00:28:25,600 --> 00:28:28,560 and he was going on about this idea of, um, 551 00:28:29,400 --> 00:28:31,400 you know, some fictitious band. 552 00:28:32,000 --> 00:28:34,840 [Paul] At the time, there were lots of those sort of bands that were, 553 00:28:34,920 --> 00:28:37,440 you know-- Laughing Joe and his Medicine Band, 554 00:28:37,520 --> 00:28:41,360 "Thank you! Wham! Bam! Ma'am!" kind of group names, you know. 555 00:28:41,440 --> 00:28:44,920 Colonel Tucker's Medicinal Brew and Compound. 556 00:28:45,000 --> 00:28:47,480 So, I just thought, "Oh well, you know, if there was a band, 557 00:28:47,560 --> 00:28:49,240 what would be a mad name for it?" 558 00:28:49,320 --> 00:28:50,680 [♪ "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" playing] 559 00:28:50,800 --> 00:28:54,080 ♪ Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band! ♪ 560 00:28:54,160 --> 00:28:57,320 It was basically Paul's idea to… to call Pepper-- 561 00:28:57,400 --> 00:29:00,480 He came in and said, you know, he had this song, 562 00:29:01,000 --> 00:29:03,040 -[♪ music concludes] -"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band", 563 00:29:03,120 --> 00:29:06,560 and he… he… he was kind of identifying it with the band, 564 00:29:06,640 --> 00:29:08,200 the Beatles, themselves. 565 00:29:08,760 --> 00:29:12,080 And the… the… I think we recorded the song first, 566 00:29:12,160 --> 00:29:15,440 and then the idea came to make it into a… 567 00:29:15,520 --> 00:29:17,360 an idea for the album, 568 00:29:17,920 --> 00:29:21,480 which was also triggered by Neil, Neil Aspinall, 569 00:29:22,120 --> 00:29:23,880 who said at that time… 570 00:29:23,960 --> 00:29:27,240 "Why don't we have Sgt. Pepper as the compère? 571 00:29:27,320 --> 00:29:29,560 You know, he comes on at the beginning of the show, 572 00:29:29,640 --> 00:29:31,880 he introduces the band, right?" 573 00:29:31,960 --> 00:29:34,120 And then at the end of every Beatles show, 574 00:29:34,200 --> 00:29:36,560 Paul always used to say, "It's, uh…" 575 00:29:37,160 --> 00:29:39,880 You know, "It's time to go," you know, "We've gotta go to bed," 576 00:29:39,960 --> 00:29:41,120 and, uh, you know, 577 00:29:41,200 --> 00:29:42,840 "This is our last number," you know. 578 00:29:42,920 --> 00:29:44,840 Do the last number and go. 579 00:29:44,920 --> 00:29:46,760 And, uh, I said to… to Paul, 580 00:29:46,840 --> 00:29:50,000 "Why doesn't Sgt. Pepper come on at the end of the album, 581 00:29:50,080 --> 00:29:52,880 and say, you know, 'Well, that's it, we've gotta go,' 582 00:29:52,960 --> 00:29:55,440 you know, 'Here's our last number,' right, 583 00:29:55,520 --> 00:29:57,840 and, uh, send the album on tour 584 00:29:57,920 --> 00:29:59,760 instead of the band, right?" 585 00:29:59,840 --> 00:30:02,320 So, uh, we liked that idea. 586 00:30:02,400 --> 00:30:06,720 It was gonna be, uh, a "show" album. 587 00:30:06,800 --> 00:30:09,280 I mean, it was Sgt. Pepper and his Lonely Hearts Club Band, 588 00:30:09,360 --> 00:30:11,000 and all these other acts. 589 00:30:11,080 --> 00:30:15,320 And it was gonna all run, you know, like a rock opera. 590 00:30:15,920 --> 00:30:18,800 And, uh, we got as far as, uh, Sgt. Pepper, 591 00:30:18,880 --> 00:30:21,720 and then Billy Shears. [chuckles] 592 00:30:21,800 --> 00:30:24,200 "A Little Help From My Friends", and then everyone said, 593 00:30:24,280 --> 00:30:26,760 "Oh, sod it! Let's just do tracks." 594 00:30:27,280 --> 00:30:29,760 So, it started out with its own, you know… 595 00:30:29,840 --> 00:30:32,200 that it was gonna be something totally different. 596 00:30:32,280 --> 00:30:35,160 But it still then kept the title, 597 00:30:35,800 --> 00:30:37,160 and… and… like, uh, 598 00:30:37,240 --> 00:30:40,080 also the feel that it's… it's all connected. 599 00:30:40,560 --> 00:30:42,240 [John] It's called the first "concept" album. 600 00:30:42,320 --> 00:30:43,440 It doesn't go anywhere. 601 00:30:43,520 --> 00:30:47,320 "Mr. Kite!", all my contributions have abs-- absolutely nothing 602 00:30:47,400 --> 00:30:50,120 to do with this idea of Sgt. Pepper and his band. 603 00:30:50,200 --> 00:30:53,360 But it works 'cause we said it worked, and that's how it appeared. 604 00:30:53,440 --> 00:30:56,720 [♪ "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" playing] 605 00:31:03,400 --> 00:31:05,600 ♪ It was twenty years ago today ♪ 606 00:31:06,080 --> 00:31:08,560 ♪ Sergeant Pepper taught the band to play ♪ 607 00:31:08,640 --> 00:31:11,120 ♪ They've been going in and out of style ♪ 608 00:31:11,200 --> 00:31:13,640 ♪ But they're guaranteed to raise a smile ♪ 609 00:31:13,720 --> 00:31:16,200 ♪ So, may I introduce to you ♪ 610 00:31:16,280 --> 00:31:19,000 ♪ The act you've known for all these years? ♪ 611 00:31:19,080 --> 00:31:24,080 ♪ Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ♪ 612 00:31:24,160 --> 00:31:26,800 [crowd cheering, applauding] 613 00:31:29,080 --> 00:31:35,480 ♪ Billy Shears ♪ 614 00:31:35,560 --> 00:31:37,680 [♪ "With A Little Help From My Friends" playing] 615 00:31:37,760 --> 00:31:41,400 ♪ What would you think if I sang out of tune? ♪ 616 00:31:41,480 --> 00:31:45,000 ♪ Would you stand up and walk out on me? ♪ 617 00:31:46,400 --> 00:31:50,160 ♪ Lend me your ears and I'll sing you a song ♪ 618 00:31:50,240 --> 00:31:53,480 ♪ And I'll try not to sing out of key ♪ 619 00:31:54,120 --> 00:31:57,960 ♪ Oh, I get by with a little help from my friends ♪ 620 00:31:58,480 --> 00:32:02,320 ♪ Mm, I get high with a little help from my friends ♪ 621 00:32:02,840 --> 00:32:07,040 ♪ Mm, gonna try with a little help from my friends ♪ 622 00:32:07,480 --> 00:32:08,920 [♪ music concludes] 623 00:32:09,160 --> 00:32:11,880 [John] It starts out with Sgt. Pepper and introduces Billy Shears, 624 00:32:11,960 --> 00:32:14,360 and that's the end, apart from the so-called reprise. 625 00:32:14,440 --> 00:32:16,880 Otherwise, every other song could have been on any other album. 626 00:32:16,960 --> 00:32:18,720 "Mr. Kite!" could have gone anywhere. 627 00:32:18,800 --> 00:32:20,160 [♪ "Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite!" playing] 628 00:32:20,240 --> 00:32:22,040 ♪ For the benefit of Mister Kite ♪ 629 00:32:22,120 --> 00:32:25,560 ♪ There will be a show tonight on trampoline ♪ 630 00:32:28,640 --> 00:32:30,760 ♪ The Hendersons will all be there ♪ 631 00:32:30,840 --> 00:32:32,840 ♪ Late of Pablo Fanque's fair ♪ 632 00:32:32,920 --> 00:32:34,000 ♪ What a scene ♪ 633 00:32:34,760 --> 00:32:37,280 ♪ Over men and horses, hoops and garters ♪ 634 00:32:37,360 --> 00:32:40,400 ♪ Lastly through a hogshead of real fire ♪ 635 00:32:41,000 --> 00:32:45,080 ♪ In this way, Mister K. will challenge the world ♪ 636 00:32:49,840 --> 00:32:53,920 ♪ The celebrated Mister K. performs his feat on Saturday ♪ 637 00:32:54,000 --> 00:32:55,360 ♪ At Bishopsgate ♪ 638 00:32:58,520 --> 00:33:00,640 ♪ The Hendersons will dance and sing ♪ 639 00:33:00,720 --> 00:33:02,680 ♪ As Mister Kite flies through the ring ♪ 640 00:33:02,760 --> 00:33:03,840 ♪ Don't be late ♪ 641 00:33:04,960 --> 00:33:07,160 ♪ Messrs K. and H. assure the public ♪ 642 00:33:07,240 --> 00:33:10,320 ♪ Their production will be second to none ♪ 643 00:33:10,840 --> 00:33:12,920 ♪ And, of course, Henry the Horse ♪ 644 00:33:13,000 --> 00:33:14,880 ♪ Dances the waltz! ♪ 645 00:33:17,800 --> 00:33:20,600 [Ringo] We were really spending a long time in the studio, 646 00:33:21,120 --> 00:33:24,320 and we were still doing the basic tracks like we always did, 647 00:33:25,560 --> 00:33:29,200 and then it would take weeks for the overdubs. 648 00:33:29,280 --> 00:33:31,400 And also the great thing about this band was, 649 00:33:31,480 --> 00:33:35,040 whoever had the idea, that was okay. 650 00:33:35,120 --> 00:33:37,560 Whoever had the best idea, it didn't matter who, 651 00:33:37,640 --> 00:33:39,200 that's the one we'd use. 652 00:33:40,080 --> 00:33:41,600 [♪ music concludes] 653 00:33:41,680 --> 00:33:44,040 [Paul] For instance, "Day in the Life", John and I sat down, 654 00:33:44,120 --> 00:33:47,680 and he had, um, this opening verse, 655 00:33:47,760 --> 00:33:50,400 I think he'd got the idea, or-- or-- or we then took 656 00:33:50,480 --> 00:33:52,200 the idea from like the Daily Mirror, or something. 657 00:33:52,840 --> 00:33:55,200 [John] So, it had two stories, one was the Guinness child 658 00:33:55,280 --> 00:33:56,880 that killed himself in a car, 659 00:33:57,520 --> 00:33:59,000 that was the main headline story. 660 00:33:59,080 --> 00:34:03,480 Uh, on the next page was about 4,000 holes in Blackburn, Lancashire. 661 00:34:03,560 --> 00:34:04,960 [Paul] So, the-- the-- the… 662 00:34:05,040 --> 00:34:06,480 [in Lancashire accent] …Blackburn, Lancashire… 663 00:34:06,560 --> 00:34:08,640 [in normal accent] …the holes, Albert Hall, 664 00:34:08,720 --> 00:34:10,680 all just sort of-- just got mixed, you know. 665 00:34:10,760 --> 00:34:12,880 Just a little poetic jumble that sounded nice. 666 00:34:13,600 --> 00:34:16,560 And we've got the rehearsal take, Take 1, 667 00:34:16,640 --> 00:34:18,560 the very first time we heard it, 668 00:34:18,640 --> 00:34:22,200 um, with John giving a few instructions to people, 669 00:34:22,280 --> 00:34:24,280 as usual, just before he starts it. 670 00:34:24,800 --> 00:34:25,880 [crew member] Is the mic not too...? 671 00:34:25,960 --> 00:34:27,920 [John] Grab the mic on the piano, and quite low, 672 00:34:28,000 --> 00:34:30,480 just-- Just keep it beside maracas, you know. 673 00:34:30,560 --> 00:34:33,800 John was singing while he was playing his acoustic guitar. 674 00:34:33,880 --> 00:34:37,400 Paul was on piano. George was playing maracas, I think, 675 00:34:37,480 --> 00:34:39,360 and certainly Ringo was on bongos. 676 00:34:40,160 --> 00:34:41,520 John counts in by saying, 677 00:34:41,600 --> 00:34:43,680 "Sugar plum fairy, sugar plum fairy." 678 00:34:43,760 --> 00:34:45,720 [John speaks indistinctly] 679 00:34:47,800 --> 00:34:50,760 [John] Sugar plum fairy, sugar plum fairy. 680 00:34:50,840 --> 00:34:53,960 [♪ "A Day In The Life" playing] 681 00:35:03,680 --> 00:35:07,880 ♪ I read the news today, oh boy ♪ 682 00:35:09,720 --> 00:35:12,280 ♪ About a lucky man… ♪ 683 00:35:12,360 --> 00:35:14,240 Even in this early take, 684 00:35:14,320 --> 00:35:18,400 he has a voice which sends shivers down the spine. 685 00:35:18,480 --> 00:35:20,160 ♪ …was rather sad ♪ 686 00:35:21,800 --> 00:35:25,080 ♪ Well, I just had to laugh ♪ 687 00:35:27,720 --> 00:35:31,080 ♪ I saw the photograph ♪ 688 00:35:33,720 --> 00:35:36,440 [Paul] It was mainly a John song, and he had the, uh… 689 00:35:36,520 --> 00:35:38,320 ♪ I read the news today, oh boy ♪ 690 00:35:38,400 --> 00:35:40,520 And he'd taken a lot of it from a newspaper. 691 00:35:40,600 --> 00:35:44,120 And then I had another bit, um… 692 00:35:44,200 --> 00:35:47,040 ♪ Woke up, fell out of bed, dragged a comb across my head ♪ 693 00:35:47,120 --> 00:35:49,560 That was a little bit I had, but it wasn't doing anything. 694 00:35:50,040 --> 00:35:52,440 And so we thought, "Well, that'd be good. We could put that in the middle." 695 00:35:52,520 --> 00:35:54,320 And we got the concept of sort of building it 696 00:35:54,400 --> 00:35:56,080 a little bit like a sort of mini operetta. 697 00:35:56,160 --> 00:35:59,080 [♪ "A Day In The Life" continues] 698 00:36:00,400 --> 00:36:03,360 ♪ Woke up, fell out of bed ♪ 699 00:36:03,440 --> 00:36:05,800 ♪ Dragged a comb across my head ♪ 700 00:36:07,560 --> 00:36:10,960 ♪ Found my way downstairs and drank a cup ♪ 701 00:36:11,040 --> 00:36:13,840 ♪ And, looking up, I noticed I was late ♪ 702 00:36:14,720 --> 00:36:16,480 [George Martin] John said, "Well, let's shove it in the middle 703 00:36:16,560 --> 00:36:18,680 and see if we can't connect them up in some way." 704 00:36:19,400 --> 00:36:20,880 -[♪ music concludes] -We connected them 705 00:36:21,000 --> 00:36:23,320 with a series of empty bars 706 00:36:23,520 --> 00:36:26,440 on either side of Paul's sec-- section before we came back 707 00:36:26,520 --> 00:36:28,160 into John's as a reprise, 708 00:36:28,800 --> 00:36:33,080 and we knew we had to fill those bars with something sensational, 709 00:36:33,160 --> 00:36:34,880 and we didn't know what it was going to be yet. 710 00:36:35,480 --> 00:36:37,240 And in order to keep the 24 bars 711 00:36:37,320 --> 00:36:39,680 so that everybody knew when to come back in again, 712 00:36:39,760 --> 00:36:42,600 dear old Mal Evans stood by the piano counting the bars. 713 00:36:42,680 --> 00:36:48,240 -[♪ piano playing] -[Mal Evans] …seven, eight, nine, ten. 714 00:36:48,320 --> 00:36:50,160 [George Martin] And just to add further weight to it, 715 00:36:50,240 --> 00:36:54,040 he set off an alarm clock at the end of it to trigger everybody back into it again. 716 00:36:54,760 --> 00:36:57,720 -[♪ piano continues] -[Mal Evans] …17, 18… 717 00:36:57,800 --> 00:37:00,320 -19, 20! -[alarm clock ringing] 718 00:37:00,520 --> 00:37:01,600 [♪ music concludes] 719 00:37:01,720 --> 00:37:04,120 They told me they wanted an orchestral climax 720 00:37:04,200 --> 00:37:05,800 to fill these empty bars, 721 00:37:05,880 --> 00:37:09,880 a giant orgasm of sound, rising from nothing at all 722 00:37:09,960 --> 00:37:11,520 to the most incredible noise. 723 00:37:12,040 --> 00:37:13,520 And this is what we came up with. 724 00:37:14,320 --> 00:37:17,520 [♪ orchestral cacophony playing] 725 00:37:20,760 --> 00:37:24,240 [♪ volume gradually increases] 726 00:37:34,840 --> 00:37:36,720 [♪ music climaxes] 727 00:37:36,800 --> 00:37:38,280 [♪ "A Day In The Life" playing] 728 00:37:38,360 --> 00:37:41,720 And with that, we joined up the two parts of the song. 729 00:37:41,800 --> 00:37:43,280 The moment I remember best 730 00:37:43,360 --> 00:37:45,960 outside of, say, him bringing the song, 731 00:37:46,040 --> 00:37:48,400 it was obviously a gorgeous song when he brought it. 732 00:37:48,480 --> 00:37:51,320 And I say, I was a big fan of John's. You've got to remember that, you know? 733 00:37:51,400 --> 00:37:54,920 It wouldn't just be, "Oh, yes, a professional person will write this." 734 00:37:55,000 --> 00:37:58,240 It'd be like, "Oh, yeah… I can't wait to get my hands on this." 735 00:37:58,320 --> 00:38:00,360 And we'd… we'd… I'd learn the chords off him, 736 00:38:00,440 --> 00:38:01,920 and we'd develop it. 737 00:38:02,000 --> 00:38:05,640 Um, but the moment I remember was when, um, 738 00:38:06,480 --> 00:38:08,840 we got to a little bit that he didn't have, 739 00:38:08,920 --> 00:38:10,760 where we sort of said… 740 00:38:10,840 --> 00:38:15,320 ♪ I'd love to turn you on ♪ 741 00:38:15,400 --> 00:38:17,440 And we, like, looked at each other, thinking like… [inhales sharply] 742 00:38:17,520 --> 00:38:19,320 "We know what we're doing here, don't we?" 743 00:38:19,400 --> 00:38:21,720 We were actually saying for the first time ever, like, 744 00:38:21,800 --> 00:38:24,560 words like "turn you on", you know, and-- which had-- 745 00:38:24,640 --> 00:38:26,200 which was in the culture anyway, 746 00:38:26,280 --> 00:38:28,840 but no one had actually said it on record yet. 747 00:38:28,920 --> 00:38:32,320 And there was a little sort of look of recog-- recognition between us, like, 748 00:38:32,960 --> 00:38:35,000 "Do it. Do it. Get it down!" 749 00:38:35,520 --> 00:38:39,480 -[♪ "A Day In The Life" continues] -♪ I read the news today, oh boy ♪ 750 00:38:41,480 --> 00:38:45,640 ♪ Four thousand holes in Blackburn, Lancashire ♪ 751 00:38:47,760 --> 00:38:51,440 ♪ And though the holes were rather small ♪ 752 00:38:53,240 --> 00:38:55,680 ♪ They had to count them all ♪ 753 00:38:55,760 --> 00:39:00,320 ♪ Now they know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall ♪ 754 00:39:01,280 --> 00:39:07,360 ♪ I'd love to turn you on ♪ 755 00:39:07,440 --> 00:39:13,120 ♪ Four, five, six, seven ♪ 756 00:39:13,200 --> 00:39:17,520 ♪ Eight, nine, ten ♪ 757 00:39:17,600 --> 00:39:24,040 ♪ 11, 12, 13, 14, 15… ♪ 758 00:39:24,120 --> 00:39:26,440 [♪ orchestral cacophony playing] 759 00:39:33,240 --> 00:39:36,600 The big, grand pianos at the end. I was very into… 760 00:39:36,680 --> 00:39:37,800 -[♪ music concludes] -If you… if you listen on-- 761 00:39:37,880 --> 00:39:40,120 [♪ resonating chord] 762 00:39:40,200 --> 00:39:41,800 Uh… If you stick a mic on that, 763 00:39:41,880 --> 00:39:44,960 that'll go on for about a minute and a half. 764 00:39:45,760 --> 00:39:47,080 Shall we listen? 765 00:39:47,160 --> 00:39:49,320 No, well, we, you know, we haven't got time. 766 00:39:49,400 --> 00:39:51,120 It's still there, and that'll go on forever. 767 00:39:51,200 --> 00:39:53,000 And that was just one of the little things that fascinated me, 768 00:39:53,080 --> 00:39:55,560 so I kind of brought that to the session. I said, "How about--" 769 00:39:55,640 --> 00:39:57,840 Still there. Can you hear it? Bring the mic in. 770 00:39:57,920 --> 00:39:59,800 And if you bring the mic in and in and in… 771 00:39:59,880 --> 00:40:01,160 -[♪ resonating chord] -…it's still there. 772 00:40:01,240 --> 00:40:02,920 So, you know, I did this thing, 773 00:40:03,000 --> 00:40:05,480 so-- so-- so we got everyone on grand pianos all doing a big… 774 00:40:05,560 --> 00:40:08,280 [♪ loud piano chord plays] 775 00:40:09,640 --> 00:40:12,040 [♪ chord fades gradually] 776 00:40:16,040 --> 00:40:19,240 [Ringo] So, you know, the sleeve came, and we wanted to dress up, 777 00:40:19,320 --> 00:40:21,880 and we wanted to be these people, you know, 778 00:40:21,960 --> 00:40:24,400 the Peppers. [chuckles] 779 00:40:24,480 --> 00:40:27,120 And, uh, you know, had to get suits, and, you know, 780 00:40:27,200 --> 00:40:30,120 it was Flower Power, I mean, coming into its fullest. 781 00:40:30,800 --> 00:40:33,520 You know, that's… that's what it was. 782 00:40:33,600 --> 00:40:35,960 And anyway, you know, then, uh, Mal and I 783 00:40:36,040 --> 00:40:39,560 just went to all the different libraries and got prints and, uh, 784 00:40:40,320 --> 00:40:44,160 Peter Blake blew 'em up and tinted them and, uh, made the collage. 785 00:40:44,240 --> 00:40:46,160 [♪ "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" playing] 786 00:40:46,240 --> 00:40:50,080 ♪ Sergeant Pepper's Lonely, Sergeant Pepper's Lonely ♪ 787 00:40:50,160 --> 00:40:54,520 ♪ Hearts Club ♪ 788 00:40:54,600 --> 00:40:56,200 ♪ Band ♪ 789 00:40:57,400 --> 00:40:58,840 ♪ Whoo! ♪ 790 00:41:00,640 --> 00:41:02,360 And if you look closely at the album cover, 791 00:41:02,440 --> 00:41:04,840 you'll see two people who are flying 792 00:41:04,920 --> 00:41:07,080 and two who aren't. [chuckles] 793 00:41:07,160 --> 00:41:08,520 That's just a little in-joke. 794 00:41:08,600 --> 00:41:09,920 [interviewer laughs] 795 00:41:10,000 --> 00:41:12,360 Two of them didn't share it with two others. 796 00:41:12,440 --> 00:41:15,440 And I remember the weekend it was, um, released, 797 00:41:16,000 --> 00:41:18,680 getting, like, a telegram off people like, sort of, James Fox, 798 00:41:18,760 --> 00:41:21,000 "Long Live Sgt. Pepper!" 799 00:41:21,080 --> 00:41:24,240 And, you know, people would come 'round and say, "Great album, man." 800 00:41:24,320 --> 00:41:26,440 So, it got very noticed as sort of… 801 00:41:26,520 --> 00:41:29,480 It was like you were making it for us, our crowd. 802 00:41:29,560 --> 00:41:32,720 It sort of linked up with Mary Quant and miniskirts 803 00:41:32,800 --> 00:41:34,120 and all that kind of thing. 804 00:41:34,200 --> 00:41:35,880 And dope, to a certain extent. 805 00:41:35,960 --> 00:41:38,440 You know, the… the freedom of sex, 806 00:41:38,520 --> 00:41:40,280 the freedom of-- of, um, 807 00:41:40,360 --> 00:41:42,200 soft drugs like marijuana and so on. 808 00:41:42,680 --> 00:41:45,280 Um, I suppose it was all a bit exciting and it… 809 00:41:45,360 --> 00:41:46,920 I think it did reflect its time. 810 00:41:47,000 --> 00:41:49,920 And the biggest single sort of tribute for me was that, 811 00:41:50,000 --> 00:41:51,920 uh, it was released on the Friday, 812 00:41:52,000 --> 00:41:54,200 and on the Sunday we went to the Saville Theatre 813 00:41:54,280 --> 00:41:57,360 which, uh, Brian Epstein, uh, rented on-- 814 00:41:57,440 --> 00:42:00,640 and ran some rock shows 'cause nothing ever happened on a Sunday, 815 00:42:00,720 --> 00:42:04,120 and Jimi Hendrix opened with "Sgt. Pepper", 816 00:42:04,200 --> 00:42:06,400 and he'd only had since the Friday to-- to learn it. 817 00:42:06,480 --> 00:42:08,720 ♪ So may I introduce to you ♪ 818 00:42:08,800 --> 00:42:10,680 ♪ The one and only Billy Shears ♪ 819 00:42:11,200 --> 00:42:14,200 ♪ Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ♪ 820 00:42:14,280 --> 00:42:16,240 Pepper… Of course, we're looking back on Pepper, 821 00:42:16,320 --> 00:42:19,480 it was quite an icon, it was the record of that time, 822 00:42:19,560 --> 00:42:22,160 and it probably did change the face of recording, 823 00:42:22,240 --> 00:42:23,560 but we didn't do it consciously. 824 00:42:23,640 --> 00:42:25,160 It wasn't like nine months in the studio. 825 00:42:25,240 --> 00:42:27,880 It was nine months over a period and we'd do a section, and then stop, 826 00:42:27,960 --> 00:42:30,440 and then come back in, if I can remember it right. 827 00:42:31,080 --> 00:42:33,840 And, uh, I liked to just get in and out. 828 00:42:33,920 --> 00:42:35,440 You know, I get a bit bored. 829 00:42:35,520 --> 00:42:38,200 It's a fine album, but I did learn to play chess on it, 830 00:42:38,760 --> 00:42:42,080 because I'd have so much spare time, you know. 831 00:42:42,160 --> 00:42:45,480 We'd do the basic track, and then we'd put other stuff on, 832 00:42:45,560 --> 00:42:48,600 and then the percussion would be overdubbed later. 833 00:42:48,680 --> 00:42:50,120 -[♪ "Within You Without You" playing] -I had a few moments 834 00:42:50,240 --> 00:42:51,240 in there that I enjoyed, 835 00:42:51,320 --> 00:42:54,080 but generally, I didn't really like that album much. 836 00:42:54,160 --> 00:42:56,960 My heart was still in India, you know? 837 00:42:57,440 --> 00:43:02,560 I mean, that was the big thing for me, when that-- it happened in '66. 838 00:43:03,600 --> 00:43:05,560 Uh, it was the-- 839 00:43:05,640 --> 00:43:09,080 After that, everything else seemed like hard work. 840 00:43:09,160 --> 00:43:10,240 You know, it was a job. 841 00:43:10,320 --> 00:43:13,360 It was like doing something I didn't really, uh, want to do. 842 00:43:13,440 --> 00:43:17,800 I was losing interest in being "fab" at that point. 843 00:43:17,880 --> 00:43:20,600 [John] It wasn't that spectacular, I mean, when you look back on it. 844 00:43:20,680 --> 00:43:22,560 I mean, like anything, it was great then. 845 00:43:22,640 --> 00:43:25,560 But, uh, people just had this dream about Pepper, 846 00:43:25,640 --> 00:43:27,200 -and it was good for then, you know. -[♪ music concludes] 847 00:43:27,280 --> 00:43:31,560 I was very cross that the BBC, in their infinite wisdom, 848 00:43:31,640 --> 00:43:34,360 decided to ban some of the tracks and they wouldn't play it. 849 00:43:34,440 --> 00:43:36,160 They wouldn't play "A Day In The Life". 850 00:43:36,240 --> 00:43:38,120 Why? I don't know, but they wouldn't. 851 00:43:38,200 --> 00:43:39,960 And they wouldn't play "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds" 852 00:43:40,040 --> 00:43:41,840 because this rumor went round that 853 00:43:41,920 --> 00:43:43,920 it was all connected with drugs, and, uh, 854 00:43:44,000 --> 00:43:47,400 "Lucy In The Sky" actually stood for LSD, which wasn't true. 855 00:43:48,120 --> 00:43:50,800 And that it was, uh, a-- an album which actually 856 00:43:51,440 --> 00:43:54,000 was promoting the use of drugs amongst the young. 857 00:43:54,080 --> 00:43:56,120 [♪ "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds" playing] 858 00:43:56,200 --> 00:43:59,960 ♪ Lucy in the sky with diamonds ♪ 859 00:44:00,040 --> 00:44:02,680 [George Martin] I was aware of them smoking pot. 860 00:44:02,760 --> 00:44:05,760 I wasn't aware that they did anything really serious. 861 00:44:06,320 --> 00:44:10,280 Um, in fact, I was so innocent that I actually took John up 862 00:44:10,360 --> 00:44:13,480 onto the roof when he was having a… an LSD trip, 863 00:44:13,560 --> 00:44:15,280 not knowing what it was. 864 00:44:15,360 --> 00:44:17,120 [John] I never took it in the studio. 865 00:44:17,200 --> 00:44:19,920 Once I did, accidentally. I thought I was taking some uppers 866 00:44:20,480 --> 00:44:23,000 and, uh, I-- I was not in a state of handling it, 867 00:44:23,080 --> 00:44:26,320 you know, but I took it. And then I just-- I just, you know, 868 00:44:26,840 --> 00:44:29,840 I was so scared on the mic, you know. I said, "What was it?" 869 00:44:29,920 --> 00:44:32,160 You know, I said, "I feel ill." I thought I felt ill. And-- 870 00:44:33,920 --> 00:44:36,040 And I was goin'-- I thought I was goin' cracked, you know. 871 00:44:36,120 --> 00:44:38,200 And then I-- I said, "I must get some air." 872 00:44:38,280 --> 00:44:39,680 And they all took me upstairs on the roof, 873 00:44:39,760 --> 00:44:42,360 and George Martin was looking at me funny, you know. 874 00:44:42,440 --> 00:44:45,360 And then it dawned on me, "I must have taken acid!" 875 00:44:45,440 --> 00:44:47,440 [George Martin] So, the only place I could take him to get fresh air 876 00:44:47,520 --> 00:44:48,640 was on the roof. 877 00:44:48,760 --> 00:44:49,760 [♪ music concludes] 878 00:44:49,840 --> 00:44:52,080 And we went up there and it was a wonderful starry night, 879 00:44:52,160 --> 00:44:54,520 and he looked up, went to the edge of the, uh, 880 00:44:54,600 --> 00:44:57,920 about 18-inch parapet and looked up at the stars, 881 00:44:58,000 --> 00:45:00,800 and said, "Isn't-- Aren't they fantastic?" 882 00:45:01,360 --> 00:45:02,680 And, of course, to him, 883 00:45:02,760 --> 00:45:05,400 they would have been especially fantastic, I suppose. 884 00:45:05,480 --> 00:45:09,040 Um, they were just little stars to me at the time. 885 00:45:09,120 --> 00:45:13,240 ♪ Lucy in the sky with diamonds ♪ 886 00:45:14,480 --> 00:45:18,480 ♪ Lucy in the sky with diamonds ♪ 887 00:45:19,440 --> 00:45:23,840 ♪ Lucy in the sky with diamonds ♪ 888 00:45:24,520 --> 00:45:25,880 [♪ music fades] 889 00:45:25,960 --> 00:45:31,040 [Ringo] I feel to this day that, you know, we did take certain substances, 890 00:45:32,640 --> 00:45:36,600 uh, but never to a great extent at the sessions. 891 00:45:37,880 --> 00:45:40,160 At-- You know, we took a little, 892 00:45:40,240 --> 00:45:44,960 but whenever we'd overdid our intake, 893 00:45:46,400 --> 00:45:49,360 -the music we made was absolutely shit. -[♪ music concludes] 894 00:45:49,440 --> 00:45:53,200 And we… You know, we'd go home real happy with the tape, 895 00:45:53,280 --> 00:45:56,000 and we'd play it when we got home, and… 896 00:45:56,080 --> 00:45:57,880 you'd play it the next day, and… 897 00:45:57,960 --> 00:46:01,400 it was just every time we'd come back to record again, 898 00:46:02,000 --> 00:46:05,520 we'd all look at each other and say, "Well, we have to do that again," 899 00:46:05,600 --> 00:46:07,960 because, you know, it… didn't work. 900 00:46:08,040 --> 00:46:10,440 It didn't work for the… for the Beatles, uh, to be… 901 00:46:11,160 --> 00:46:13,400 too deranged when making music. 902 00:46:13,480 --> 00:46:16,040 [John] Now, the point about the whole drug scene was, 903 00:46:16,120 --> 00:46:18,520 the press asked Paul, 904 00:46:19,600 --> 00:46:21,960 "Have you taken LSD?" This is how it all came out, 905 00:46:22,040 --> 00:46:24,240 otherwise we didn't say a word about it, you know? 906 00:46:24,320 --> 00:46:27,160 I mean, it was just a-- a personal thing, right? 907 00:46:27,240 --> 00:46:28,440 But I did talk to him beforehand, 908 00:46:28,520 --> 00:46:30,160 and I said, "Look, you know what's gonna happen here. 909 00:46:30,240 --> 00:46:33,280 I'm gonna get the blame for telling everyone 'I take drugs'." 910 00:46:33,360 --> 00:46:35,640 I said, "But you're the people who are gonna-- 911 00:46:35,720 --> 00:46:37,640 to distribute this thing." 912 00:46:38,120 --> 00:46:39,360 I said, "I'll tell you," I said, 913 00:46:39,440 --> 00:46:41,160 "but if you've got any worries about this 914 00:46:41,240 --> 00:46:43,600 having an effect on kids, then you don't show it." 915 00:46:44,240 --> 00:46:46,000 [interviewer] Do you think you have now encouraged 916 00:46:46,080 --> 00:46:47,840 your fans to take drugs? 917 00:46:47,920 --> 00:46:49,840 I don't think it'll make any difference, you know. 918 00:46:49,920 --> 00:46:52,120 I don't think my fans are gonna take drugs 919 00:46:52,200 --> 00:46:53,560 just 'cause I did, you know. 920 00:46:53,640 --> 00:46:56,200 But the thing is, that's not the point anyway, you know. 921 00:46:56,280 --> 00:46:58,080 I was asked whether I had or not. 922 00:46:58,840 --> 00:47:01,680 And then from then on, the whole bit about w-- 923 00:47:01,760 --> 00:47:04,840 how far it's gonna go and how many people it's gonna encourage 924 00:47:04,920 --> 00:47:08,320 is up to the newspapers and up to you, you know, on television. 925 00:47:08,400 --> 00:47:11,160 I mean, you're spreading this now at this moment. 926 00:47:11,240 --> 00:47:12,840 This is going into all the homes, 927 00:47:12,920 --> 00:47:14,720 you know, in Britain, 928 00:47:14,800 --> 00:47:16,760 and I'd rather it didn't, you know. 929 00:47:16,840 --> 00:47:18,120 But you're asking me the question. 930 00:47:18,200 --> 00:47:20,320 You want me to be honest. I'll be honest, you know. 931 00:47:20,400 --> 00:47:22,680 I don't know, it just seemed strange to me 932 00:47:22,760 --> 00:47:26,400 because we'd been trying to get him to take it for about 18 months, 933 00:47:27,040 --> 00:47:28,960 and then it just seemed funny that one day 934 00:47:29,040 --> 00:47:31,560 he's on the television talking all about it. 935 00:47:33,440 --> 00:47:36,200 The problem was it then gave the press a field day, 936 00:47:37,160 --> 00:47:39,560 to be on all our cases, you know? 937 00:47:40,200 --> 00:47:42,520 I personally didn't think it was any of their business, 938 00:47:43,480 --> 00:47:46,560 uh, but, you know, once he said it, uh, 939 00:47:47,440 --> 00:47:49,080 you know, whoever said anything in the Beatles, 940 00:47:49,160 --> 00:47:51,520 the other three had to deal with it, you know, 941 00:47:51,600 --> 00:47:55,840 which we did in… with all love, because, you know, we loved each other. 942 00:47:55,920 --> 00:47:58,640 [♪ "All You Need Is Love" playing] 943 00:48:03,680 --> 00:48:05,760 [John] We're sorry, you know, but there's plenty of people in England 944 00:48:05,840 --> 00:48:09,000 who haven't seen us unless they get-- we do a world telly show 945 00:48:09,080 --> 00:48:11,320 and everybody watches at once through a satellite. 946 00:48:11,400 --> 00:48:13,280 That's the only way everybody'd see us. 947 00:48:13,360 --> 00:48:16,640 [George] It was supposedly the very first satellite hook-up 948 00:48:16,720 --> 00:48:18,120 around the world. 949 00:48:19,560 --> 00:48:21,200 And I don't know how many millions of people, 950 00:48:21,280 --> 00:48:24,320 but it was supposed to be some phenomenal amount of people, 951 00:48:24,840 --> 00:48:28,800 and it was probably the very earliest technology 952 00:48:28,880 --> 00:48:31,720 -that enabled that kinda satellite link. -[♪ music concludes] 953 00:48:31,800 --> 00:48:35,320 It was a commission that was-- Brian suddenly wa-- whirled in and said, 954 00:48:35,400 --> 00:48:38,720 "We are to represent Britain in this round-the-world hook-up 955 00:48:38,800 --> 00:48:40,920 and you've got to… you've gotta write a song." 956 00:48:41,000 --> 00:48:44,480 And it was a challenge. Um, it was within two weeks, 957 00:48:44,560 --> 00:48:46,640 I think, we had to get it together. 958 00:48:46,720 --> 00:48:48,600 And then we learned it was going to be, 959 00:48:49,160 --> 00:48:53,280 for that time, uh, a phenomenal figure of over 200 million people watching. 960 00:48:53,360 --> 00:48:56,320 And I don't know if the song was written before that, 961 00:48:57,120 --> 00:48:59,480 because we were making an album at the time, 962 00:48:59,560 --> 00:49:03,120 so there was kind of lots of songs in circulation. 963 00:49:04,320 --> 00:49:07,240 Paul may know more about that. Over to you, Paul. 964 00:49:07,920 --> 00:49:09,760 Um, I'm not sure. 965 00:49:09,840 --> 00:49:12,280 It was John's song, mainly. 966 00:49:12,360 --> 00:49:15,520 Um, I don't think it was written specially for it, 967 00:49:16,280 --> 00:49:19,760 but it was one of the songs we had and… and… 968 00:49:19,840 --> 00:49:22,920 I don't know. Actually, George Martin might have a bit better idea on that. 969 00:49:25,360 --> 00:49:28,200 It was certainly tailored to it once we had it. 970 00:49:28,280 --> 00:49:31,520 But I've got a feeling it was just one of John's songs that was coming there. 971 00:49:31,600 --> 00:49:33,920 We went down to Olympic Studios in Barnes 972 00:49:34,480 --> 00:49:36,400 and, uh, recorded it, uh… 973 00:49:37,360 --> 00:49:40,000 Um, and then it became the song. 974 00:49:40,080 --> 00:49:41,920 They said, "Ah, this is the one we should use." 975 00:49:42,000 --> 00:49:43,960 I don't actually think it was written for it. 976 00:49:44,560 --> 00:49:46,720 Yeah, they wrote it specifically for that. 977 00:49:46,800 --> 00:49:48,000 And we all dressed up again. 978 00:49:48,080 --> 00:49:50,160 See, we were getting into-- We loved dressing up! 979 00:49:50,240 --> 00:49:51,920 [laughs] 980 00:49:52,000 --> 00:49:53,360 And we had another suit. 981 00:49:53,440 --> 00:49:56,480 But mine was so bloody heavy 'cause, you know, 982 00:49:56,560 --> 00:49:59,800 Simon and Marijke from The Fool was the company, 983 00:50:00,320 --> 00:50:03,320 and I had all this beading on, as we'll cut to right now, 984 00:50:04,280 --> 00:50:06,600 and, uh, it just weighed a ton. 985 00:50:06,680 --> 00:50:09,520 It was a fabulous time, musically and spiritually. 986 00:50:10,280 --> 00:50:13,280 We decided to get, um… 987 00:50:13,360 --> 00:50:17,000 some people in who looked like the Love Generation. 988 00:50:17,080 --> 00:50:20,320 And I think if you look close on the floor, I know there's-- 989 00:50:20,400 --> 00:50:22,160 Mick Jagger's there, 990 00:50:22,240 --> 00:50:24,800 but there's also Eric Clapton, I believe, 991 00:50:24,880 --> 00:50:30,040 in full psychedelic regalia and permed hair, 992 00:50:30,120 --> 00:50:31,600 sitting right there. 993 00:50:31,680 --> 00:50:34,120 And there was an orchestra that was live, and the singing was live 994 00:50:34,200 --> 00:50:36,720 and certain of audience, and so on. 995 00:50:36,800 --> 00:50:39,320 And we knew it was going to be a live television show. 996 00:50:39,400 --> 00:50:41,160 And just at the la-- And there was also a camera 997 00:50:41,240 --> 00:50:43,680 in the control room on us doing our bits. 998 00:50:44,880 --> 00:50:46,880 And just about 30 seconds to go on the air, 999 00:50:46,960 --> 00:50:48,280 and there was a phone call, 1000 00:50:48,360 --> 00:50:51,360 and it was the producer of the show on to me, saying, 1001 00:50:51,960 --> 00:50:54,680 "I'm afraid I've lost all contact with the… with the studio. 1002 00:50:54,760 --> 00:50:57,080 You're gonna have to relay instructions to them, 1003 00:50:57,160 --> 00:50:59,520 'cause we're going on air any moment now!" 1004 00:50:59,600 --> 00:51:01,160 And I thought, "My God! 1005 00:51:01,240 --> 00:51:03,720 If you're gonna make a fool of yourself, you might as well do it properly 1006 00:51:03,800 --> 00:51:05,960 in front of 200 million people!" 1007 00:51:07,720 --> 00:51:10,040 The man upstairs pointed his finger, 1008 00:51:10,120 --> 00:51:12,040 and that's it. We did it. One take. 1009 00:51:12,120 --> 00:51:14,040 [crew member] One, two, three. 1010 00:51:14,120 --> 00:51:17,280 [♪ "All You Need Is Love" playing] 1011 00:51:22,320 --> 00:51:25,600 ♪ Love, love, love ♪ 1012 00:51:26,840 --> 00:51:30,040 ♪ Love, love, love ♪ 1013 00:51:31,120 --> 00:51:34,440 ♪ Love, love, love ♪ 1014 00:51:40,880 --> 00:51:43,400 ♪ There's nothing you can do that can't be done ♪ 1015 00:51:45,120 --> 00:51:47,680 ♪ Nothing you can sing that can't be sung ♪ 1016 00:51:49,320 --> 00:51:52,680 ♪ Nothing you can say but you can learn how to play the game ♪ 1017 00:51:53,480 --> 00:51:54,880 ♪ It's easy ♪ 1018 00:51:58,320 --> 00:52:01,000 ♪ Nothing you can make that can't be made ♪ 1019 00:52:02,640 --> 00:52:05,480 ♪ No one you can save that can't be saved ♪ 1020 00:52:06,760 --> 00:52:10,400 ♪ Nothing you can do but you can learn how to be you in time ♪ 1021 00:52:10,880 --> 00:52:12,240 ♪ It's easy ♪ 1022 00:52:15,640 --> 00:52:17,960 ♪ All you need is love ♪ 1023 00:52:20,360 --> 00:52:22,640 ♪ All you need is love ♪ 1024 00:52:25,080 --> 00:52:28,400 ♪ All you need is love, love ♪ 1025 00:52:29,680 --> 00:52:31,520 ♪ Love is all you need ♪ 1026 00:52:32,720 --> 00:52:35,600 ♪ Love, love, love ♪ 1027 00:52:36,800 --> 00:52:39,720 ♪ Love, love, love ♪ 1028 00:52:40,840 --> 00:52:43,760 ♪ Love, love, love ♪ 1029 00:52:49,960 --> 00:52:52,280 ♪ All you need is love ♪ 1030 00:52:54,240 --> 00:52:56,760 -♪ Whoo! ♪ -♪ All you need is love ♪ 1031 00:52:56,880 --> 00:52:57,960 ♪ Yeah! ♪ 1032 00:52:58,920 --> 00:53:02,480 ♪ All you need is love, love ♪ 1033 00:53:03,760 --> 00:53:05,520 ♪ Love is all you need ♪ 1034 00:53:06,520 --> 00:53:07,560 ♪ Love ♪ 1035 00:53:07,640 --> 00:53:10,160 ♪ There's nothing you can know that isn't known ♪ 1036 00:53:11,240 --> 00:53:14,120 ♪ Nothing you can see that isn't shown ♪ 1037 00:53:15,280 --> 00:53:18,360 ♪ There's nowhere you can be that isn't where you're meant to be ♪ 1038 00:53:19,080 --> 00:53:20,560 ♪ It's easy ♪ 1039 00:53:23,880 --> 00:53:26,160 ♪ All you need is love ♪ 1040 00:53:28,400 --> 00:53:30,760 ♪ All you need is love ♪ 1041 00:53:33,000 --> 00:53:36,360 ♪ All you need is love, love ♪ 1042 00:53:37,560 --> 00:53:39,360 ♪ Love is all you need ♪ 1043 00:53:41,000 --> 00:53:43,200 ♪ All you need is love ♪ 1044 00:53:43,280 --> 00:53:45,000 ♪ All together now ♪ 1045 00:53:45,600 --> 00:53:47,720 ♪ All you need is love ♪ 1046 00:53:47,800 --> 00:53:49,400 ♪ Everybody ♪ 1047 00:53:50,080 --> 00:53:53,120 ♪ All you need is love, love ♪ 1048 00:53:54,560 --> 00:53:56,360 ♪ Love is all you need ♪ 1049 00:53:57,200 --> 00:53:59,160 ♪ Love is all you need Love is all you need ♪ 1050 00:53:59,240 --> 00:54:01,360 ♪ Love is all you need Love is all you need ♪ 1051 00:54:01,440 --> 00:54:03,680 ♪ Love is all you need Love is all you need ♪ 1052 00:54:03,760 --> 00:54:05,920 ♪ Love is all you need Love is all you need ♪ 1053 00:54:06,000 --> 00:54:08,240 ♪ Love is all you need Love is all you need ♪ 1054 00:54:08,320 --> 00:54:10,400 ♪ Love is all you need Love is all you need ♪ 1055 00:54:10,480 --> 00:54:12,280 ♪ Love is all you need Love is all… ♪ 1056 00:54:12,360 --> 00:54:14,280 Because the mood of the time, 1057 00:54:14,360 --> 00:54:17,920 it seemed to be a great idea to do that song 1058 00:54:18,000 --> 00:54:22,560 because while everybody else was showing people knitting in Canada 1059 00:54:22,640 --> 00:54:26,040 and Irish clog dancers in Venezuela, 1060 00:54:26,120 --> 00:54:28,760 we thought, "Well, we'll just sing 'All You Need Is Love' 1061 00:54:28,840 --> 00:54:34,000 because it's a kind of subtle bit of PR for, um, God." 1062 00:54:34,680 --> 00:54:36,280 ♪ Love is all you need ♪ 1063 00:54:36,360 --> 00:54:39,280 ♪ She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah ♪ 1064 00:54:39,360 --> 00:54:40,880 ♪ Love is all you need ♪ 1065 00:54:40,960 --> 00:54:43,000 ♪ She loves you, yeah, yeah… ♪ 1066 00:54:43,080 --> 00:54:44,520 [♪ music fades] 1067 00:54:45,920 --> 00:54:47,640 [♪ "Strawberry Fields Forever" playing] 1068 00:54:47,720 --> 00:54:50,440 ♪ Living is easy with eyes closed ♪ 1069 00:54:51,440 --> 00:54:54,520 ♪ Misunderstanding all you see ♪ 1070 00:54:56,400 --> 00:54:58,960 ♪ It's getting hard to be someone ♪ 1071 00:54:59,040 --> 00:55:00,640 ♪ But it all works out ♪ 1072 00:55:01,400 --> 00:55:04,560 ♪ It doesn't matter much to me ♪ 1073 00:55:06,120 --> 00:55:10,360 ♪ No one, I think, is in my tree ♪ 1074 00:55:11,640 --> 00:55:14,760 ♪ I mean, it must be high or low ♪ 1075 00:55:16,600 --> 00:55:19,080 ♪ That is, you can't, you know, tune in ♪ 1076 00:55:19,160 --> 00:55:20,960 ♪ But it's all right ♪ 1077 00:55:21,800 --> 00:55:24,880 ♪ That is, I think it's not too bad ♪ 1078 00:55:26,960 --> 00:55:29,320 ♪ Let me take you down ♪ 1079 00:55:29,400 --> 00:55:35,000 ♪ 'Cause I'm going to Strawberry Fields ♪ 1080 00:55:37,360 --> 00:55:39,720 ♪ Nothing is real ♪ 1081 00:55:40,800 --> 00:55:43,840 ♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪ 1082 00:55:44,840 --> 00:55:47,680 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 1083 00:55:49,160 --> 00:55:53,040 ♪ Always, no, sometimes, think it's me ♪ 1084 00:55:54,480 --> 00:55:57,400 ♪ But you know I know when it's a dream ♪ 1085 00:55:59,440 --> 00:56:01,920 ♪ I think, er, no, I mean, er, yes ♪ 1086 00:56:02,000 --> 00:56:03,680 ♪ But it's all wrong ♪ 1087 00:56:04,480 --> 00:56:07,320 ♪ That is, I think I disagree ♪ 1088 00:56:09,520 --> 00:56:11,880 ♪ Let me take you down ♪ 1089 00:56:11,960 --> 00:56:17,440 ♪ 'Cause I'm going to Strawberry Fields ♪ 1090 00:56:19,840 --> 00:56:22,080 ♪ Nothing is real ♪ 1091 00:56:23,240 --> 00:56:26,520 ♪ And nothing to get hung about ♪ 1092 00:56:27,280 --> 00:56:30,160 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 1093 00:56:31,680 --> 00:56:34,440 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 1094 00:56:36,160 --> 00:56:39,280 ♪ Strawberry Fields forever ♪ 1095 00:56:42,960 --> 00:56:46,680 [♪ music continues] 1096 00:57:18,000 --> 00:57:19,120 [♪ music concludes] 92544

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