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["Turn, Turn, Turn" by The Byrds]
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[door opens, bell rings]
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TOM PETTY:
Too many variations of shit.
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- That's a Fender amp.
- Mm hmm.
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I wouldn't recognize that one,
Bassbreaker 45.
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JAKOB DYLAN: I have
a good question for you, though.
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In the 80s it was --
we said "Rickenbacher".
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- You guys all say Rickenbacker.
- "Rickenbacker"
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- It's "backer".
- Yeah.
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We already had a small debate earlier.
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We were from the South.
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- It's "backer", yeah.
- I think so.
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There's no "bachers." No.
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PETTY: Is that one yours, Jakob?
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DYLAN: No, we used this one
on the record, though.
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- REPAIRMAN: This is Andy's.
- Yeah, that's Andy's.
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- DYLAN: Want to have a look?
- PETTY: Bring it over here.
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[guitar amp hums]
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[strums guitar]
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This was the folk rock special.
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All you had to do
is move your little finger.
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[strumming melody]
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- You can't afford the rest.
- [Jakob chuckles]
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["Bells of Rhymney"
performed by Jakob Dylan]
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♪ Oh, what will you give me? ♪
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♪ Say the sad bells of Rhymney ♪
27
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♪ Is there hope for the future? ♪
28
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♪ Say the brown bells of Merther ♪
29
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♪ Who made the mine open? ♪
30
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♪ Say the black bells of Rhonda ♪
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♪ Ah...Ah... ♪
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♪ Ah...Ah... ♪
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["Wild Mountain Thyme" by The Byrds]
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♪ Oh, the summer time is coming ♪
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♪ And the leaves are sweetly turning ♪
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JACKSON BROWNE:
They gave it the name Laurel Canyon
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because it was the locus
for all these musicians.
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It's where a lot of musicians lived.
39
00:02:51,922 --> 00:02:53,507
But they came to L.A. from everywhere.
40
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They came from England
and from all over America.
41
00:02:57,261 --> 00:02:59,889
And probably because
of the record companies in L.A.
42
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They had to come to L.A.
and this was the one place
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that you could live
and it was the antithesis
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of this sort of plastic, straight world
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that you saw on television.
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[sweeping music]
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LOU ADLER: To be that close
to the Sunset Strip
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and yet you had a feel
that you were in the country
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and, you know,
and totally different feel. It's beautiful.
50
00:03:28,334 --> 00:03:30,794
["Expecting To Fly" by Buffalo Springfield]
51
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♪ There you stood on ♪
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♪ The edge of your feather ♪
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♪ Expecting to fly ♪
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DAVID CROSBY: I think I might
have been the first one to move there.
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I was living in one place, some--
some place way up the canyon.
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ROGER McGUlNN: There was
a lot of camaraderie in the bands.
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We got to know Brian Wilson
and The Beach Boys
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and, of course, The Mamas & Papas
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when they came along.
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I'd known John and Michelle
from New York
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and Mama Cass was great,
a great social hostess.
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MICHELLE PHILLIPS: Laurel Canyon
was always like a hangout for,
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00:04:05,746 --> 00:04:09,208
ah, bohemians and actors.
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It was full of charming little houses
65
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and it was a very joyful time.
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ERIC CLAPTON: I loved it, because
I've always loved eccentricity.
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I mean I'm attracted to eccentrics
and they were there.
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And they were all there.
69
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Everyone was writing
and writing together.
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And you'd go over to someone's house
71
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and you always brought your guitar
72
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and you'd sit around
and you'd start playing,
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and pretty soon you were writing a hit.
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GRAHAM NASH: People would not even call.
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They'd just knock on the door and go
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"Listen, hey, listen to this!"
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That's an incredible environment
for a musician to be in
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because it's incredibly healthy
and incredibly forward-looking
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and incredibly creative
and that's how I was feeling.
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STEPHEN STILLS: There was so much
great music floating around
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00:04:54,712 --> 00:04:57,006
that you got little snippets of it and they --
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00:04:57,006 --> 00:04:59,174
they just filtered through you, you know?
83
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[guitar strumming]
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00:05:06,932 --> 00:05:07,933
ANDREW SLATER: Good evening.
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[audience cheers]
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The great Los Angeles songwriter
Warren Zevon
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once said that...
88
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[audience hoots and whistles]
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I miss him every day.
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00:05:18,235 --> 00:05:22,364
He said if Roger McGuinn had
just played the opening notes
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to The Byrds' debut album
and dropped dead,
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00:05:25,326 --> 00:05:27,703
he would have still exercised
the most pronounced influence
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00:05:27,703 --> 00:05:30,456
over the folk rock movement in 25 years.
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00:05:30,456 --> 00:05:31,749
And he was right.
95
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Because in 1965 when
those songs went on the radio,
96
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it was the first time a song
of poetic depth and grace
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00:05:38,213 --> 00:05:40,966
had become a hit song
and it inspired a whole generation
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of writers to write differently
and to come to California,
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00:05:45,679 --> 00:05:48,599
which gave birth
to the Laurel Canyon scene.
100
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So, the fiftieth anniversary
of that moment was this summer.
101
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So Jakob and I decided,
102
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'cause nobody else was doing anything
[chuckles],
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that we would make a record
of those songwriters.
104
00:05:59,693 --> 00:06:02,321
So now we're doing a show
and you're all a part of it.
105
00:06:02,321 --> 00:06:05,032
[Audience cheers and applauds]
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And thanks for coming
and enjoy the show!
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[applause continues]
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DYLAN: You guys ready to go to the 60s?
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[audience cheers and applauds]
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DYLAN VO: This is so great
because the music that
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came out of the Laurel Canyon scene
in the 60s
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was not only inspiring
to other bands at that time,
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but it also became inspiring
to my generation
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of musicians and songwriters.
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And tonight is an opportunity,
like folk music,
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to pass it on to a new generation
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and keep the echoes
of that music growing.
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[music fades]
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[people laughing and chatting indistinctly]
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[guitar strumming "Wild Mountain Thyme"]
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♪ Oh, the summer time is coming ♪
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♪ And the leaves are sweetly turning ♪
123
00:07:02,089 --> 00:07:06,260
♪ And the wild mountain thyme ♪
124
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♪ Blooms across the purple heather ♪
125
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♪ Will you go... ♪
126
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- Can we start over?
- I think I know it. We ready?
127
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I was gonna for a harmony but then I...
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[Regina laughs]
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What is the refrain, though?
Is it...just "will you go"?
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I like the way you're doing it.
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I just go "Will you go, will you go?"
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Sorry.
133
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Well, we can do it again.
134
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I think the refrain just comes around again.
135
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We just -- these just kind of repeat.
136
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Oh, we never -- what is all this?
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I never saw any of this!
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[guitar strumming]
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♪ Oh, the summer time is coming... ♪
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DYLAN VO: Why did we start all this?
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Well, we'd seen this movie "Model Shop".
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It reminded us
of a lot of music from the 60s
143
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so we decided to go back
and record some of the songs
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from the mid-60s
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and we got more and more curious
on what brought everybody here.
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Who came out here first?
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Was it people from
the east coast coming out here?
148
00:08:00,230 --> 00:08:04,359
Or was it people here
that started it just independently?
149
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Beach Boys were already here.
150
00:08:06,320 --> 00:08:09,198
I think The Byrds came out first
and everybody else followed.
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And how did The Byrds come to be?
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BECK: It started so innocently.
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["I Wanna Hold Your Hand" by The Beatles]
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♪ Oh yeah I'll tell you somethin' ♪
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♪ I think you'll understand ♪
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McGUlNN: The Beatles came out.
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And I heard this on the radio...
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[plays riff from "I Wanna Hold Your Hand"]
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And I said wow, you know,
they're using folk music chord changes,
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all these passing chords.
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[plays chords]
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So, it gave me an idea
of taking an old folk song
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and suping it up with a Beatle beat.
164
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And I took it down to the village
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and played it at the Café Playhouse.
166
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And they didn't like it.
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They didn't like the rock 'n' roll
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and folk music combined.
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They thought it was kind of a bad idea.
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You know, the coolest thing
about Roger, and I --
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it was like the first day I met him,
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he came into the Playhouse Café
with a Gibson 12-string,
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and he plays
"I Wanna Hold Your Hand".
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Hmm.
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And I went "I Wanna Hold Your Hand"
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as a one guitar folk thing?
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And it was really a remarkable, ballsy thing.
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- And he did take abuse for it.
- Yeah.
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I know a lot of people
were going what's he doing?
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So I went out to L.A.
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00:09:22,229 --> 00:09:24,982
and I got gig at the Troubadour
opening up for Hoyt Axton
182
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doing the same thing.
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And they didn't like it there, either.
184
00:09:27,859 --> 00:09:30,779
And that's when
I got together with Gene Clark
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00:09:30,779 --> 00:09:33,532
and David Crosby
and we got The Byrds together.
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There was a lot of funny shit
that happened.
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Ah, [chuckles]
we were rehearsing
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in an old recording studio
down on Third Avenue,
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ah, World Pacific I think it was called.
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Used to be a jazz studio.
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After they were through
using the studio at night,
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we would go in there and rehearse.
193
00:09:50,549 --> 00:09:53,218
And it did The Byrds
a great deal of good because
194
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we would have to listen to it back.
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If you hear how awful you are
then you work harder!
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DYLAN: Mm hmm.
197
00:09:58,849 --> 00:10:00,475
And so, that's exactly what we did.
198
00:10:00,475 --> 00:10:04,062
And then, after we started
getting good with it, ah,
199
00:10:04,730 --> 00:10:06,023
Dylan showed up.
200
00:10:07,983 --> 00:10:09,943
You have to be more specific.
201
00:10:09,943 --> 00:10:10,944
[Chuckles]
No, I'm kidding!
202
00:10:10,944 --> 00:10:12,112
You mean there's more than one?
203
00:10:12,112 --> 00:10:13,030
[chuckling]
Yeah!
204
00:10:13,030 --> 00:10:14,197
- Bob showed up.
- Okay.
205
00:10:14,197 --> 00:10:16,950
And he, 'cause he had heard
we were doing "Tambourine Man".
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00:10:16,950 --> 00:10:18,535
He listened to us play it electric
207
00:10:18,535 --> 00:10:21,747
and he you can hear
the gears turning, you know.
208
00:10:21,747 --> 00:10:24,124
He knew he wanted to do that immediately.
209
00:10:24,583 --> 00:10:28,211
With The Byrds the real
accomplishment is the melding
210
00:10:28,211 --> 00:10:31,715
of, you know, folk music and rock 'n' roll
211
00:10:31,715 --> 00:10:33,425
and I mean all the bands you think of that
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00:10:33,425 --> 00:10:35,177
as that California sound.
213
00:10:36,178 --> 00:10:38,347
Really none of them
sound exactly like The Byrds.
214
00:10:38,347 --> 00:10:40,515
["I'll Feel A Whole Lot Better" by The Byrds]
215
00:10:40,515 --> 00:10:42,601
♪ The reasons why ♪
216
00:10:42,601 --> 00:10:45,145
PETTY: That 12-string riff
is pretty spectacular.
217
00:10:45,145 --> 00:10:48,148
That's a pretty big moment in rock music.
218
00:10:48,148 --> 00:10:51,943
That's really, you know,
two things clashing together
219
00:10:51,943 --> 00:10:53,779
in a huge wave.
220
00:10:53,779 --> 00:10:57,157
And it would create
a whole genre of music quickly.
221
00:10:57,532 --> 00:10:59,534
I loved the sound that McGuinn got out
222
00:10:59,534 --> 00:11:03,038
of the 12-string and I thought
that the way he placed that,
223
00:11:03,038 --> 00:11:06,708
and Crosby's rhythm,
you know, underpinning it,
224
00:11:06,708 --> 00:11:09,336
they were the powerful band
that we all wanted to be!
225
00:11:09,336 --> 00:11:12,756
["I'll Feel A Whole Lot Better" continues]
226
00:11:14,716 --> 00:11:16,134
CLAPTON: I liked The Byrds a lot
227
00:11:16,134 --> 00:11:18,512
and I liked their kind of philosophy,
228
00:11:18,512 --> 00:11:22,516
the musical philosophy,
really, of, you know, folk rock.
229
00:11:22,516 --> 00:11:25,185
Folk rock to me was --
it was the songwriting, too.
230
00:11:25,185 --> 00:11:27,145
- Yeah, it was good.
- It was beautiful.
231
00:11:27,145 --> 00:11:29,815
♪ Oh, what will you give me?
232
00:11:30,357 --> 00:11:35,320
♪ Sang the sad bells of Rhymney ♪
233
00:11:37,531 --> 00:11:40,492
BROWNE: Folk music is just
an older form of songwriting.
234
00:11:41,201 --> 00:11:43,328
You learn a song from somebody,
235
00:11:43,328 --> 00:11:46,289
maybe it was your uncle
or somebody who learned it from
236
00:11:46,289 --> 00:11:48,583
a knife sharpener
who traveled through the South
237
00:11:48,583 --> 00:11:51,336
sharpening knives and scissors
who also played banjo and fiddle.
238
00:11:51,336 --> 00:11:52,713
"The Bells of Rhymney" by The Byrds]
239
00:11:52,713 --> 00:11:55,674
When The Byrds came out,
there were people who disapproved
240
00:11:55,674 --> 00:11:59,094
of doing those folk songs with a band.
241
00:11:59,720 --> 00:12:01,430
But it was very infectious.
242
00:12:01,430 --> 00:12:05,100
That's a big step forward
from "Love Me Do"
243
00:12:05,100 --> 00:12:07,102
to any of those things.
244
00:12:07,102 --> 00:12:10,564
And we started to take
rock 'n' roll seriously,
245
00:12:10,564 --> 00:12:13,942
'cause, yeah, no one
took it seriously before that.
246
00:12:13,942 --> 00:12:16,653
We were putting good poetry on the radio,
247
00:12:16,653 --> 00:12:18,530
AM radio, pop radio.
248
00:12:19,030 --> 00:12:20,240
It was the first time.
249
00:12:20,824 --> 00:12:24,411
There wasn't any of that before.
It was June, Moon, Spoon.
250
00:12:24,411 --> 00:12:27,414
♪ Baby I love you Ooh, ooh ♪
251
00:12:28,248 --> 00:12:30,125
Wasn't "Dance beneath the diamond sky
252
00:12:30,125 --> 00:12:32,502
with one hand waving free."
253
00:12:32,502 --> 00:12:34,296
It changed everything for everybody.
254
00:12:34,296 --> 00:12:35,547
Yeah.
255
00:12:36,882 --> 00:12:38,091
Fiona, are you here?
256
00:12:38,091 --> 00:12:39,843
[audience cheers]
257
00:12:43,597 --> 00:12:45,474
[audience cheers]
258
00:12:47,559 --> 00:12:49,519
DYLAN: I actually met Fiona
when she was 17.
259
00:12:49,519 --> 00:12:51,563
She'll probably
be embarrassed if I say that.
260
00:12:51,563 --> 00:12:52,731
[Apple chuckles]
261
00:12:52,731 --> 00:12:54,816
Too late now!
262
00:12:54,816 --> 00:12:56,109
Ready?
263
00:12:56,109 --> 00:12:57,235
Let's do a Byrds song.
264
00:12:57,235 --> 00:12:58,528
[drumsticks count in]
265
00:12:58,528 --> 00:13:01,031
["It Won't Be Wrong"]
266
00:13:08,830 --> 00:13:11,958
♪ Oh, every time I see you smile ♪
267
00:13:12,626 --> 00:13:16,004
♪ Now, come to me now, don't be long ♪
268
00:13:16,463 --> 00:13:19,633
♪ Let me tell youhow my heart goes wild ♪
269
00:13:20,217 --> 00:13:24,054
♪ Please let me love youand it won't be wrong ♪
270
00:13:26,264 --> 00:13:29,434
♪ Every time you're in my arms ♪
271
00:13:30,018 --> 00:13:33,855
♪ Come to me, don't be long ♪
272
00:13:33,855 --> 00:13:37,609
♪ You know thatI will never do you harm ♪
273
00:13:37,609 --> 00:13:41,488
♪ Please let me love youand it won't be wrong ♪
274
00:13:43,615 --> 00:13:46,660
♪ Let me love youand then you'll see ♪
275
00:13:47,452 --> 00:13:51,331
♪ Now, come to me, now, come to me ♪
276
00:13:51,331 --> 00:13:54,584
♪ Let me show you onceand we'll be free ♪
277
00:13:55,168 --> 00:13:59,047
♪ Please let me love youand it won't be wrong ♪
278
00:14:00,590 --> 00:14:04,344
[music continues]
279
00:14:12,143 --> 00:14:13,895
McGUlNN: The Beatles came to America
280
00:14:13,895 --> 00:14:15,522
and they asked them
who's your favorite band?
281
00:14:15,522 --> 00:14:16,648
And they said The Byrds!
282
00:14:16,648 --> 00:14:17,774
And we were just blown away.
283
00:14:17,774 --> 00:14:19,025
We kind of dressed like 'em.
284
00:14:19,025 --> 00:14:21,903
In fact, we bought these suits
that had black velvet collars.
285
00:14:21,903 --> 00:14:23,822
And we used to wear them
to Ciro's every night
286
00:14:23,822 --> 00:14:25,031
while we were doing our gig.
287
00:14:25,031 --> 00:14:26,199
That worked for about a week.
288
00:14:26,199 --> 00:14:27,576
We'd hang them up in the dressing room
289
00:14:27,576 --> 00:14:29,870
and put back our
t-shirts and jeans and go home.
290
00:14:29,870 --> 00:14:33,206
Well, one night we got to Ciro's
and the suits were gone.
291
00:14:33,206 --> 00:14:34,666
And I told this to John Lennon.
292
00:14:34,666 --> 00:14:36,543
He said, "I wished they'd stolen our suits."
293
00:14:36,543 --> 00:14:37,711
[Dylan chuckles]
294
00:14:37,711 --> 00:14:40,881
[plays "It Won't Be Wrong"]
295
00:14:46,386 --> 00:14:49,139
♪ Every time I see you smile ♪
296
00:14:49,598 --> 00:14:53,059
♪ Come to me, don't be long ♪
297
00:14:53,059 --> 00:14:56,396
♪ Let me tell youhow my heart goes wild ♪
298
00:14:56,396 --> 00:14:59,691
♪ Please let me love youand it won't be wrong ♪
299
00:14:59,691 --> 00:15:02,068
[continues playing]
300
00:15:03,028 --> 00:15:04,404
["The Bells of Rhymney" by The Byrds]
301
00:15:04,404 --> 00:15:07,115
[air traffic control speaks indistinctly]
302
00:15:11,912 --> 00:15:13,288
McGUlNN: We were invited to go to England
303
00:15:13,288 --> 00:15:14,748
and we were really jazzed because
304
00:15:14,748 --> 00:15:16,833
this is where
The Beatles and The Stones were.
305
00:15:16,833 --> 00:15:18,793
Then we got there and we
discovered we'd been billed
306
00:15:18,793 --> 00:15:21,338
as America's answer to The Beatles.
307
00:15:21,338 --> 00:15:23,632
And it was a little tough to live up to.
308
00:15:23,632 --> 00:15:26,217
And they came to see us
one night at the Blaises Club
309
00:15:26,217 --> 00:15:29,012
and Chris was so nervous
he broke a bass string.
310
00:15:29,012 --> 00:15:31,181
And nobody ever
breaks a bass string, but he did.
311
00:15:31,181 --> 00:15:33,767
Then we went upstairs after the show
312
00:15:33,767 --> 00:15:35,060
and John and George came up
313
00:15:35,060 --> 00:15:37,312
and John said "Great show!" you know.
314
00:15:37,312 --> 00:15:39,356
They loved us.
They were really nice to us.
315
00:15:39,356 --> 00:15:42,817
When we came over there finally,
they were extremely cool.
316
00:15:43,360 --> 00:15:45,236
REPORTER: Who is the young manwith the lengthy haircut
317
00:15:45,236 --> 00:15:46,655
to your right rear?
318
00:15:46,655 --> 00:15:47,656
PAUL McCARTNEY: Who is it?
319
00:15:47,656 --> 00:15:50,867
JOHN LENNON: That's Davefrom The Byrds, a mate of ours.
320
00:15:50,867 --> 00:15:53,995
McGUlNN: And then the next night
we went to the Scotch at St. James
321
00:15:53,995 --> 00:15:57,624
and Paul McCartney,
this is his private club.
322
00:15:57,624 --> 00:16:00,335
And we had a couple of drinks,
and he took me for a ride
323
00:16:00,335 --> 00:16:03,046
in his Aston Martin DB5 around London.
324
00:16:03,046 --> 00:16:04,547
And then we hung out at The Stones' house
325
00:16:04,547 --> 00:16:06,508
and they showed us how they rolled joints.
326
00:16:06,508 --> 00:16:08,051
And they had a butler that rolled joints
327
00:16:08,051 --> 00:16:11,179
and put them on the stairs
for them in the morning
328
00:16:11,179 --> 00:16:12,055
like the morning coffee!
[chuckling]
329
00:16:12,055 --> 00:16:13,014
Yeah.
330
00:16:13,014 --> 00:16:14,849
The Byrds were great.
331
00:16:14,849 --> 00:16:16,476
They just became our friends.
332
00:16:16,476 --> 00:16:18,561
I mean when we came to L.A.,
333
00:16:18,561 --> 00:16:21,189
they came and hung out with us, you know.
334
00:16:21,189 --> 00:16:25,026
That 12-string sound was great
and the voices were great.
335
00:16:25,318 --> 00:16:26,861
So we loved The Byrds.
336
00:16:26,861 --> 00:16:30,699
They introduced us
to a hallucinogenic situation.
337
00:16:30,699 --> 00:16:31,825
Hmm.
338
00:16:31,825 --> 00:16:35,078
And, ah, we had a really good time.
339
00:16:35,078 --> 00:16:39,207
PETTY: The Beatles
actually started the folk rock
340
00:16:39,207 --> 00:16:40,375
in California.
341
00:16:40,375 --> 00:16:45,714
It was -- and it probably
was the California guys
342
00:16:45,714 --> 00:16:47,924
trying to grab hold of that sound.
343
00:16:48,633 --> 00:16:50,719
It's all full of strange coincidences.
344
00:16:50,719 --> 00:16:54,222
John Hall of the Rickenbacker company
flying to New York
345
00:16:54,222 --> 00:16:56,891
because he'd heard
The Beatles played Rickenbacker
346
00:16:56,891 --> 00:16:59,019
and going up to the suite
347
00:16:59,019 --> 00:17:03,314
with the second
Rickenbacker 12-string ever made,
348
00:17:03,314 --> 00:17:04,983
giving it to George.
349
00:17:04,983 --> 00:17:06,901
He brought it for John
350
00:17:06,901 --> 00:17:09,612
because he's the one
that played the Rickenbacker.
351
00:17:09,946 --> 00:17:12,323
But George had the flu,
the other three had gone out
352
00:17:12,323 --> 00:17:15,035
for a photo session,
and George nabbed the 12-string.
353
00:17:15,035 --> 00:17:15,952
Mm hmm.
354
00:17:15,952 --> 00:17:18,788
That changed pop music, you know,
355
00:17:18,788 --> 00:17:20,790
rock music I guess you would call it.
356
00:17:20,790 --> 00:17:23,001
We should have the nerve
to call it rock music,
357
00:17:23,001 --> 00:17:25,170
I mean it was rock 'n' roll music.
358
00:17:25,503 --> 00:17:27,714
Everything was influencing everything.
359
00:17:27,714 --> 00:17:31,718
With this huge witches brew of, you know,
360
00:17:31,718 --> 00:17:33,303
and things would pop out.
361
00:17:33,303 --> 00:17:35,889
I mean and transatlantic, too,
'cause we were all listening
362
00:17:35,889 --> 00:17:37,891
to each other's records, you know.
363
00:17:37,891 --> 00:17:42,312
And The Beatles were
doing their cop on The Byrds
364
00:17:42,312 --> 00:17:46,733
with one song and then
they were doing The Beach Boys
365
00:17:46,733 --> 00:17:48,318
with "Girl", you know.
366
00:17:48,318 --> 00:17:49,736
["California Girls" by The Beach Boys]
367
00:17:49,736 --> 00:17:54,074
♪ I wish they all could be California girls ♪
368
00:17:54,074 --> 00:17:57,911
♪ (I wish they all could be California) ♪
369
00:17:57,911 --> 00:18:03,666
♪ I wish they all could be California girls ♪
370
00:18:06,211 --> 00:18:10,215
I was a sucker for Brian's work right away.
371
00:18:10,215 --> 00:18:13,134
I was very close friends
with Felix Pappalardi
372
00:18:13,134 --> 00:18:16,054
and he was the guy
who pointed out to me
373
00:18:16,054 --> 00:18:19,599
the Bach-like qualities.
374
00:18:19,599 --> 00:18:22,227
And he said listen to this chord sequence.
375
00:18:22,227 --> 00:18:27,899
They're using like Bach
chordal movements in there.
376
00:18:27,899 --> 00:18:30,652
I mean that was really important.
377
00:18:30,652 --> 00:18:34,572
♪ Yeah, but I couldn't waitto get back in the States ♪
378
00:18:34,572 --> 00:18:37,784
♪ Back to the cutest girls in the world ♪
379
00:18:39,202 --> 00:18:43,456
♪ I wish they all could be California girls ♪
380
00:18:43,456 --> 00:18:47,669
♪ (I wish they all could be California) ♪
381
00:18:47,669 --> 00:18:53,716
♪ I wish they all could be California girls ♪
382
00:18:53,716 --> 00:18:55,969
Well, they were the other band
that we admired.
383
00:18:57,512 --> 00:18:58,721
They were it.
384
00:18:59,055 --> 00:19:02,809
Everybody else -- and they were
as establishment as they could be,
385
00:19:02,809 --> 00:19:04,435
but they were good.
386
00:19:04,435 --> 00:19:06,563
They had good songs 'cause of Brian
387
00:19:06,563 --> 00:19:08,439
and they had really interesting harmonies,
388
00:19:08,439 --> 00:19:10,900
completely different than anybody else.
389
00:19:10,900 --> 00:19:12,735
So, we liked them a lot.
390
00:19:12,735 --> 00:19:14,737
DICK CLARK: May I have,I'm sure most everybody knows
391
00:19:14,737 --> 00:19:17,907
but for anybody who might not,may be introduce you by name?
392
00:19:17,907 --> 00:19:19,450
- Al Jardine.- Thank you, Al.
393
00:19:19,450 --> 00:19:20,827
- Dennis Wilson.- Thank you.
394
00:19:20,827 --> 00:19:23,204
- Brian Wilson.- Carl Wilson.
395
00:19:23,204 --> 00:19:24,205
Mike Love.
396
00:19:24,205 --> 00:19:26,749
Who determineswhat will be done next?
397
00:19:27,458 --> 00:19:29,878
Well, I guess I do. I don't know.[chuckles]
398
00:19:29,878 --> 00:19:31,379
I write the songs and produce them,
399
00:19:31,379 --> 00:19:33,214
so I have a lot to say about it.
400
00:19:33,715 --> 00:19:36,384
PETTY: I can't see something in Mozart
401
00:19:36,384 --> 00:19:38,678
that's better than Brian Wilson.
402
00:19:39,387 --> 00:19:41,222
I think you could make that case.
403
00:19:42,265 --> 00:19:43,933
Those guys would have loved him.
404
00:19:43,933 --> 00:19:45,143
Hmm.
405
00:19:45,727 --> 00:19:47,854
He's really just too good.
He's [laughs]
406
00:19:47,854 --> 00:19:49,022
Yeah.
407
00:19:49,022 --> 00:19:53,151
He's not a guy that comes
down the pike in many lifetimes.
408
00:19:53,151 --> 00:19:55,028
That's pretty special stuff.
409
00:19:55,028 --> 00:19:57,739
["In My Room"]
410
00:20:00,867 --> 00:20:05,872
♪ In this world I lock out ♪
411
00:20:05,872 --> 00:20:12,462
♪ All my worries and my fears ♪
412
00:20:13,755 --> 00:20:16,424
♪ In my room ♪
413
00:20:20,220 --> 00:20:23,056
♪ In my room ♪
414
00:20:23,890 --> 00:20:26,684
♪ (In my room) ♪
415
00:20:28,686 --> 00:20:32,232
♪ I do my dreaming ♪
416
00:20:32,232 --> 00:20:35,693
♪ And my scheming ♪
417
00:20:35,693 --> 00:20:40,490
♪ Lie awake and pray ♪
418
00:20:42,867 --> 00:20:50,291
♪ Do my cryingAnd my sighing ♪
419
00:20:50,291 --> 00:20:56,381
♪ Laugh at yesterday ♪
420
00:20:57,423 --> 00:21:03,846
♪ Now it's dark and I'm alone ♪
421
00:21:03,846 --> 00:21:09,560
♪ But I won't be afraid ♪
422
00:21:10,603 --> 00:21:12,897
♪ In my room ♪
423
00:21:16,943 --> 00:21:19,946
♪ In my room ♪
424
00:21:20,738 --> 00:21:23,616
♪ In my room ♪
425
00:21:23,992 --> 00:21:26,953
♪ In my room ♪
426
00:21:27,453 --> 00:21:32,333
♪ In my room ♪
427
00:21:34,419 --> 00:21:36,963
[audience cheers]
428
00:21:37,964 --> 00:21:41,342
"In My Room", oh my God, you know.
429
00:21:41,342 --> 00:21:47,181
Who has not, you know,
sought solace of your -- the privacy
430
00:21:47,181 --> 00:21:49,892
and the solace of your own room,
your own space.
431
00:21:49,892 --> 00:21:52,353
It can be said in a million ways,
432
00:21:52,353 --> 00:21:54,981
but I mean just that --
that song was so beautiful.
433
00:21:55,189 --> 00:21:58,109
Beach Boys was a primary thing
434
00:21:58,109 --> 00:22:02,238
when Cream was kind of
philosophically driven by it,
435
00:22:02,238 --> 00:22:05,033
by the idea that we could
somehow do something like that.
436
00:22:05,033 --> 00:22:09,078
Or be inspired by that,
Pet Sounds, you know.
437
00:22:09,537 --> 00:22:13,374
PHILLIPS: They lived right down
the street from us, Brian and Marilyn.
438
00:22:13,374 --> 00:22:16,544
And one day I went over there
and the whole living room
439
00:22:16,544 --> 00:22:18,004
was full of sand.
440
00:22:18,713 --> 00:22:21,132
And there was nothing in the living room
441
00:22:21,132 --> 00:22:26,804
but a Steinway and a piano bench
and just all sand.
442
00:22:27,972 --> 00:22:31,142
And I looked at her
and I said what is going on?
443
00:22:32,018 --> 00:22:36,439
She said I know it's crazy
but he's writing some great songs.
444
00:22:36,439 --> 00:22:37,565
Mm hmm.
445
00:22:37,815 --> 00:22:39,901
And he was writing Pet Sounds!
446
00:22:40,151 --> 00:22:44,238
["You Still Believe In Me"
by The Beach Boys]
447
00:22:44,238 --> 00:22:48,201
PETTY: I won that record
on the radio, ah, on a call-in!
448
00:22:48,618 --> 00:22:52,163
Like I was standing by the phone
449
00:22:52,163 --> 00:22:54,707
and some trivia question was asked.
450
00:22:55,625 --> 00:22:58,211
I called right away and answered it
and I won a record!
451
00:22:58,211 --> 00:22:59,420
[chuckles]
452
00:22:59,420 --> 00:23:01,047
And it was Pet Sounds.
453
00:23:02,090 --> 00:23:05,426
It took me a few spins to understand, like,
454
00:23:05,426 --> 00:23:06,803
what's going on here.
455
00:23:06,803 --> 00:23:09,597
But I just fell in love with that record.
456
00:23:10,264 --> 00:23:11,391
It's different.
457
00:23:11,391 --> 00:23:13,142
You know, it's off in a corner by itself.
458
00:23:13,142 --> 00:23:15,395
Nobody else did that successfully,
459
00:23:15,395 --> 00:23:16,562
not to the level they did
460
00:23:16,562 --> 00:23:18,398
'cause they didn't have a writer like Brian.
461
00:23:18,940 --> 00:23:21,943
I was just kind of maybe too young
to really appreciate
462
00:23:21,943 --> 00:23:25,154
how incredibly sophisticated the music was.
463
00:23:25,154 --> 00:23:29,242
I just saw five guys wearing
the same shirt holding one surfboard
464
00:23:29,242 --> 00:23:30,535
and I thought it was lame.
465
00:23:30,535 --> 00:23:31,661
Hmm.
466
00:23:31,661 --> 00:23:35,123
But all that changed
when I heard Pet Sounds.
467
00:23:35,123 --> 00:23:37,708
That's said to be responsible
for Sgt. Pepper,
468
00:23:37,708 --> 00:23:38,960
you know, totally.
469
00:23:38,960 --> 00:23:41,170
Imagine a band influencing The Beatles.
470
00:23:44,799 --> 00:23:46,217
[needle scratches]
471
00:23:49,137 --> 00:23:53,891
[Jakob Dylan singing]
♪ I keep looking for a place to fit in ♪
472
00:23:53,891 --> 00:23:58,229
♪ Where I can speak my mind ♪
473
00:23:58,980 --> 00:24:03,734
♪ And I've been trying hardto find the people ♪
474
00:24:03,734 --> 00:24:08,030
♪ That I won't leave behind ♪
475
00:24:08,823 --> 00:24:10,950
♪ They say I got brains ♪
476
00:24:10,950 --> 00:24:15,496
♪ But they ain't doing me no good ♪
477
00:24:15,496 --> 00:24:17,999
♪ I wish they could ♪
478
00:24:18,749 --> 00:24:23,421
♪ And each time thingsstart to happen again ♪
479
00:24:23,421 --> 00:24:27,842
♪ I think I got something goodgoin' for myself ♪
480
00:24:27,842 --> 00:24:30,303
♪ But what goes wrong ♪
481
00:24:30,928 --> 00:24:35,516
♪ Now, sometimes I feel very sad ♪
482
00:24:36,058 --> 00:24:41,230
♪ Sometimes I feel very sad ♪
483
00:24:41,230 --> 00:24:43,399
[music continues]
484
00:24:44,567 --> 00:24:45,943
Do you want to sit at the piano?
485
00:24:45,943 --> 00:24:47,028
Does the song sound familiar to you?
486
00:24:47,028 --> 00:24:48,988
- Do you need me at the piano?
- Yeah, come on.
487
00:24:50,156 --> 00:24:51,991
We're working on a couple of your songs.
488
00:24:51,991 --> 00:24:53,743
[Brian Wilson plays piano]
489
00:24:56,704 --> 00:24:59,207
DYLAN: We're working on
"Just Wasn't Made For These Times".
490
00:24:59,207 --> 00:25:01,083
What key is your original key?
Do you remember?
491
00:25:01,083 --> 00:25:02,376
My original -- B-flat.
492
00:25:02,376 --> 00:25:03,503
We're in E-flat.
493
00:25:03,503 --> 00:25:05,129
E-flat, oh, you got the wrong key!
494
00:25:05,129 --> 00:25:06,589
[laughter]
495
00:25:06,589 --> 00:25:08,090
We'll get capos.
496
00:25:08,090 --> 00:25:10,051
Yeah, play it in E-flat
or E or wherever you do.
497
00:25:10,051 --> 00:25:11,385
Okay, cool.
498
00:25:11,385 --> 00:25:15,348
[band starts
"I Just Wasn't Made For These Times"]
499
00:25:27,818 --> 00:25:30,112
[music continues]
500
00:25:39,121 --> 00:25:41,374
BRIAN WILSON: Well, Bach
influenced "California Girls",
501
00:25:41,374 --> 00:25:44,919
the duh, duh-duh, duh-duh,
that kind of a beat, shuffle rhythm.
502
00:25:44,919 --> 00:25:47,421
Chuck Berry and the Four Freshmen
taught me harmony
503
00:25:47,421 --> 00:25:51,217
and Chuck Berry taught me
rock 'n' roll melodies.
504
00:25:51,217 --> 00:25:55,096
Well, I learned violin arrangement
from George Martin.
505
00:25:55,096 --> 00:25:56,931
I learned how to make --
write out, you know,
506
00:25:56,931 --> 00:25:58,474
violin for violin players.
507
00:25:58,474 --> 00:26:00,685
I wrote manuscript for them,
and they played it --
508
00:26:00,685 --> 00:26:02,562
if they played it wrong
I can walk out and go
509
00:26:02,562 --> 00:26:04,522
"You got it wrong, buddy.
You gotta do this right",
510
00:26:04,522 --> 00:26:07,441
you know, and they'd
fix their instruments and they'd do it.
511
00:26:07,441 --> 00:26:08,484
Hmm.
512
00:26:08,484 --> 00:26:11,028
Well, The Beatles were probably
my favorite group, you know.
513
00:26:11,028 --> 00:26:12,738
I really liked them a lot.
514
00:26:12,738 --> 00:26:15,575
With Rubber Soul,
one of my buddies brought it over
515
00:26:15,575 --> 00:26:16,701
and played it for me.
516
00:26:16,701 --> 00:26:19,579
I said I can't believe this album! You know?
517
00:26:19,579 --> 00:26:22,290
He kept playing it and playing it
and I said wow!
518
00:26:22,290 --> 00:26:23,332
I couldn't believe it.
519
00:26:23,332 --> 00:26:25,334
That made me write
the Pet Sounds album.
520
00:26:25,334 --> 00:26:29,672
♪ Now, sometimes I feel very sad ♪
521
00:26:30,256 --> 00:26:34,719
♪ Now, sometimes I feel very sad ♪
522
00:26:35,428 --> 00:26:38,723
[music continues]
523
00:26:40,099 --> 00:26:45,396
♪ And I guess I justwasn't made for these times ♪
524
00:26:45,396 --> 00:26:50,109
♪ (I guess I justwasn't made for these times) ♪
525
00:26:50,109 --> 00:26:55,823
♪ And I guess I justwasn't made for these times ♪
526
00:26:57,658 --> 00:27:01,078
[music continues]
527
00:27:08,919 --> 00:27:10,921
[indistinct conversation]
528
00:27:13,758 --> 00:27:16,093
["Dedicated to the One I Love"
by The Mamas & and the Papas]
529
00:27:16,093 --> 00:27:21,891
♪ While I'm far away from you my baby ♪
530
00:27:23,517 --> 00:27:28,898
♪ I know it's hard for you my baby ♪
531
00:27:30,232 --> 00:27:36,405
♪ Because it's hard for me my baby ♪
532
00:27:36,405 --> 00:27:41,535
♪ And the darkest houris just before dawn ♪
533
00:27:43,496 --> 00:27:49,418
♪ Each nightbefore you go to bed my baby ♪
534
00:27:50,252 --> 00:27:56,634
♪ Whisper a littleprayer for me my baby ♪
535
00:27:57,343 --> 00:28:03,599
♪ Because it's hard for me my baby ♪
536
00:28:04,058 --> 00:28:08,104
♪ And the darkest houris just before dawn ♪
537
00:28:08,104 --> 00:28:12,692
PHILLIPS: We had the radio on
and The Byrds came on.
538
00:28:14,819 --> 00:28:16,237
I mean it was The Byrds.
539
00:28:16,237 --> 00:28:18,698
We were sure of it
because we knew them.
540
00:28:18,698 --> 00:28:20,574
We knew them personally
and we were friends with them.
541
00:28:20,574 --> 00:28:24,620
So we said God,
if The Byrds can have a hit,
542
00:28:24,620 --> 00:28:27,081
anybody can have a hit!
[laughing]
543
00:28:27,915 --> 00:28:28,999
Hmm.
544
00:28:28,999 --> 00:28:32,253
So, we've got to get back to L.A.
545
00:28:32,253 --> 00:28:34,088
But we were staying at the Albert Hotel.
546
00:28:34,088 --> 00:28:36,507
That's where all the musicians
kind of stayed
547
00:28:36,507 --> 00:28:38,134
when they went into town.
548
00:28:38,134 --> 00:28:40,302
And since John and I had gotten married,
549
00:28:40,302 --> 00:28:41,846
I wanted to go back home.
550
00:28:42,179 --> 00:28:45,015
And he said we can't go back home.
551
00:28:45,015 --> 00:28:46,142
We can't.
552
00:28:46,142 --> 00:28:48,769
The music business is here in New York.
553
00:28:48,769 --> 00:28:50,938
That's when he woke me up
in the middle of the night
554
00:28:50,938 --> 00:28:53,107
and he said I'm writing a song.
555
00:28:53,107 --> 00:28:54,400
Listen to this.
556
00:28:54,400 --> 00:28:55,901
And he played:
557
00:28:55,901 --> 00:28:57,987
♪ All the leaves are brown ♪
558
00:28:58,821 --> 00:29:01,073
♪ And the sky is gray ♪
559
00:29:02,408 --> 00:29:04,201
♪ I've been for a walk... ♪
560
00:29:04,201 --> 00:29:05,661
♪ (I've been for a walk) ♪
561
00:29:05,661 --> 00:29:07,621
♪ On a winter's day ♪
562
00:29:07,621 --> 00:29:10,249
♪ (on a winter's day) ♪
563
00:29:10,249 --> 00:29:11,709
♪ I'd be safe and warm ♪
564
00:29:11,709 --> 00:29:14,086
♪ (I'd be safe and warm) ♪
565
00:29:14,086 --> 00:29:16,172
♪ If I was in L.A. ♪
566
00:29:16,172 --> 00:29:18,758
♪ (if I was in L.A.) ♪
567
00:29:18,758 --> 00:29:22,887
♪ California dreamin'(California dreamin') ♪
568
00:29:22,887 --> 00:29:25,639
♪ On such a winter's day... ♪
569
00:29:26,849 --> 00:29:28,851
[guitar strumming]
570
00:29:28,851 --> 00:29:30,728
DYLAN: Has it been a while
since you've been in this room?
571
00:29:30,728 --> 00:29:35,816
I was just saying that
this is where we first sang
572
00:29:35,816 --> 00:29:38,360
for Lou Adler, in this studio.
573
00:29:38,360 --> 00:29:39,320
In this room, too?
574
00:29:39,320 --> 00:29:41,989
We recorded in 3, but this is where we,
575
00:29:41,989 --> 00:29:44,867
just where we're standing right now,
576
00:29:44,867 --> 00:29:49,038
we sang practically
the first album for Lou.
577
00:29:49,038 --> 00:29:50,456
And what were some of the songs you sang
578
00:29:50,456 --> 00:29:51,999
in the audition that you had?
579
00:29:51,999 --> 00:29:54,001
"California Dreamin"",
580
00:29:54,001 --> 00:29:55,586
"Monday Monday",
581
00:29:55,920 --> 00:29:57,838
"Go Where You Wanna Go."
582
00:29:57,838 --> 00:29:59,757
- You had some good ones, then.
- You know.
583
00:29:59,757 --> 00:30:00,925
[everyone chuckles]
584
00:30:00,925 --> 00:30:02,384
- Wow.
- We had some material.
585
00:30:02,384 --> 00:30:06,263
And he said, with his hat
pulled down over his nose like this,
586
00:30:06,263 --> 00:30:08,432
you know, "Why don't you
guys come back tomorrow.
587
00:30:08,432 --> 00:30:09,892
We'll talk about this tomorrow."
588
00:30:09,892 --> 00:30:11,560
"Okay."
[everyone chuckles]
589
00:30:11,560 --> 00:30:12,937
And when we came back,
590
00:30:12,937 --> 00:30:16,232
the contracts were
all over the floor at Studio 3
591
00:30:16,232 --> 00:30:19,068
and they were handing out pens like here!
592
00:30:19,068 --> 00:30:21,195
Sign this! Sign this! Sign this!
[chuckling]
593
00:30:21,195 --> 00:30:23,030
Well, then the audition went well, obviously.
594
00:30:23,030 --> 00:30:23,989
It did!
595
00:30:23,989 --> 00:30:26,700
ADLER: I think the first studio I recorded in,
596
00:30:26,700 --> 00:30:30,412
that's all the equipment they had,
just this little slab here.
597
00:30:31,413 --> 00:30:35,835
The piano was in the middle.
598
00:30:37,169 --> 00:30:41,549
Hal Blaine and his drums were there.
599
00:30:41,549 --> 00:30:46,303
John Phillips and his 12-string, P. F. Sloan,
600
00:30:46,303 --> 00:30:48,055
maybe Glen Campbell,
601
00:30:48,055 --> 00:30:50,599
Billy Strange, one of those guitar players --
602
00:30:50,599 --> 00:30:52,643
- All in here.
- would be in a line.
603
00:30:52,643 --> 00:30:56,480
We were at the end of a take
and Denny Doherty --
604
00:30:56,480 --> 00:30:58,232
it was pretty wild through the night.
605
00:30:58,232 --> 00:31:00,401
It got wilder and wilder.
606
00:31:00,401 --> 00:31:03,821
A lot of Crown Royal bags
laying everything.
607
00:31:03,821 --> 00:31:07,867
And Denny had fallen asleep on the piano.
608
00:31:08,534 --> 00:31:12,788
And John said
"Denny, get up. I need a note."
609
00:31:12,788 --> 00:31:16,584
And we couldn't raise Denny.
610
00:31:16,584 --> 00:31:20,713
So, we put -- got a microphone
and pulled it over here.
611
00:31:20,713 --> 00:31:21,630
Hmm.
612
00:31:21,630 --> 00:31:23,966
And put it over Denny like that.
613
00:31:23,966 --> 00:31:28,012
And John leaned down
and sang the note to him.
614
00:31:28,012 --> 00:31:31,640
Denny sang the note,
he got the note he wanted,
615
00:31:31,640 --> 00:31:33,434
he went right back to sleep.
616
00:31:33,434 --> 00:31:34,435
[Dylan chuckles]
617
00:31:34,435 --> 00:31:36,478
But it's a fantastic room. I mean it's --
618
00:31:36,478 --> 00:31:38,772
DYLAN: This room looks
exactly the same I would think, no?
619
00:31:38,772 --> 00:31:40,149
ADLER: The room looks exactly the same.
620
00:31:40,149 --> 00:31:42,109
The speakers are a little different.
621
00:31:42,109 --> 00:31:47,323
But the room looks
and feels exactly the same.
622
00:31:47,323 --> 00:31:50,784
♪ Bah-da bah-da-da-da ♪
623
00:31:51,660 --> 00:31:54,538
♪ Bah-da bah-da-da-da ♪
624
00:31:54,538 --> 00:31:58,083
♪ Monday, Monday(Bah-da bah-da-da-da) ♪
625
00:31:58,083 --> 00:32:03,005
♪ So good to me(Bah-da bah-da-da-da) ♪
626
00:32:03,005 --> 00:32:05,674
♪ Monday, Monday(Bah-da bah-da-da-da) ♪
627
00:32:05,674 --> 00:32:10,387
♪ It was all I hoped it would be ♪
628
00:32:11,347 --> 00:32:15,559
♪ Oh Monday mornin', Monday mornin' ♪
629
00:32:15,559 --> 00:32:18,979
♪ Couldn't guarantee ♪
630
00:32:19,813 --> 00:32:26,195
♪ That Monday evenin'you would still be here with me ♪
631
00:32:28,739 --> 00:32:31,450
♪ Monday, Monday ♪
632
00:32:32,242 --> 00:32:35,162
♪ Can't trust that day ♪
633
00:32:37,039 --> 00:32:39,124
♪ Monday, Monday ♪
634
00:32:39,124 --> 00:32:44,004
♪ Sometimes it just turns out that way ♪
635
00:32:44,964 --> 00:32:49,218
♪ Oh Monday mornin'you gave me no warnin' ♪
636
00:32:49,218 --> 00:32:52,137
♪ Of what was to be ♪
637
00:32:53,347 --> 00:32:57,393
♪ Oh Monday, Mondayhow could you leave ♪
638
00:32:57,393 --> 00:32:59,603
♪ and not take me ♪
639
00:33:02,940 --> 00:33:06,527
♪ Every other day(every other day) ♪
640
00:33:06,527 --> 00:33:10,572
♪ Of the week is fine, yeah ♪
641
00:33:11,365 --> 00:33:13,492
♪ But whenever Monday comes(but whenever Monday comes) ♪
642
00:33:13,492 --> 00:33:15,077
♪ But whenever Monday comes ♪
643
00:33:15,077 --> 00:33:22,126
♪ You can find me cryin' all of the time ♪
644
00:33:24,211 --> 00:33:28,048
It was all very, very romantic.
645
00:33:28,048 --> 00:33:31,885
We were living in the Virgin Islands
on the beach in tents.
646
00:33:31,885 --> 00:33:34,972
And it's just inevitable, it's gonna happen,
647
00:33:34,972 --> 00:33:38,976
the dynamics in a group
when there are men and women.
648
00:33:39,268 --> 00:33:41,937
You see something in a band member,
649
00:33:41,937 --> 00:33:46,942
their talent and their sexiness,
and there's a spark.
650
00:33:46,942 --> 00:33:50,154
I know that it happened
in the The Mamas & the Papas.
651
00:33:50,154 --> 00:33:53,907
I've seen it happen in almost
any group that I can think of
652
00:33:53,907 --> 00:33:55,951
that have men and women in them.
653
00:33:55,951 --> 00:33:57,411
Jefferson Airplane,
654
00:33:57,411 --> 00:33:59,038
Fleetwood Mac.
655
00:33:59,038 --> 00:34:00,831
We were so confined
656
00:34:00,831 --> 00:34:03,208
to the four of us living together all the time.
657
00:34:03,208 --> 00:34:04,668
We were always together.
658
00:34:04,668 --> 00:34:06,587
And when we were rehearsing,
659
00:34:06,587 --> 00:34:09,923
Denny and I under the table
were playing footsie.
660
00:34:10,507 --> 00:34:14,636
And Denny was also a big flirt.
661
00:34:14,636 --> 00:34:19,600
He just wanted to take it
to the maximum, you know.
662
00:34:19,600 --> 00:34:21,769
He had a great sense of humor,
663
00:34:21,769 --> 00:34:24,688
that little look in his eye, you know.
664
00:34:25,189 --> 00:34:26,940
He was just so hot.
665
00:34:27,191 --> 00:34:29,610
♪ Boys and girls ♪
666
00:34:29,610 --> 00:34:35,115
♪ You know they're birds of a feather ♪
667
00:34:36,325 --> 00:34:40,954
♪ Like two sides of a coin ♪
668
00:34:40,954 --> 00:34:44,374
♪ They are forever joined ♪
669
00:34:44,374 --> 00:34:49,338
PHILLIPS: On the cover of our first album
I'm lying back in Denny's arms.
670
00:34:49,338 --> 00:34:51,006
This is before we got caught.
671
00:34:51,006 --> 00:34:53,675
Really, the first night that we were together
672
00:34:53,675 --> 00:34:56,929
we had all been sitting
at the table and John and Cass,
673
00:34:56,929 --> 00:34:59,765
we looked over and they were asleep.
674
00:35:00,265 --> 00:35:03,185
And that's when Denny just got up
675
00:35:03,185 --> 00:35:06,730
and he walked over to the sliding glass door
and off we went.
676
00:35:07,106 --> 00:35:10,275
I was raised in a very free atmosphere.
677
00:35:10,567 --> 00:35:14,238
To me, having an affair was not as serious
678
00:35:14,238 --> 00:35:16,949
as it was to the rest of them.
679
00:35:17,449 --> 00:35:21,995
I had had an affair before Denny
680
00:35:21,995 --> 00:35:23,956
when John and I had first gotten married.
681
00:35:24,414 --> 00:35:28,418
So, it was something that John
had already experienced with me,
682
00:35:28,418 --> 00:35:30,963
and that's when he wrote
"Go Where You Wanna Go".
683
00:35:30,963 --> 00:35:35,259
John was really crushed and upset about it
684
00:35:35,259 --> 00:35:38,178
and so the lyric of
"go where you want to go,
685
00:35:38,178 --> 00:35:39,721
do what you want to do,
686
00:35:39,721 --> 00:35:42,724
with whoever you want to do it with" bitch!
687
00:35:42,724 --> 00:35:44,101
[both chuckle]
688
00:35:44,101 --> 00:35:47,104
So, I mean, I was busy.
689
00:35:47,104 --> 00:35:49,398
I was a very busy girl.
690
00:35:49,398 --> 00:35:51,275
And I was having a lot of fun!
[chuckling]
691
00:35:51,275 --> 00:35:52,734
I'm glad you said that and not me!
692
00:35:52,734 --> 00:35:54,027
[both laughs]
693
00:35:54,027 --> 00:35:57,823
["Go Where You Wanna Go"]
694
00:36:03,412 --> 00:36:06,331
♪ And you gotta go where you want to go ♪
695
00:36:06,331 --> 00:36:08,584
♪ Do what you want to do ♪
696
00:36:08,584 --> 00:36:13,255
♪ With whoever you want to do it with ♪
697
00:36:13,255 --> 00:36:15,507
♪ Go where you want to go ♪
698
00:36:15,507 --> 00:36:17,801
♪ Do what you want to do ♪
699
00:36:17,801 --> 00:36:22,264
♪ With whoever you want to do it with ♪
700
00:36:22,264 --> 00:36:26,268
♪ You don't understand ♪
701
00:36:26,268 --> 00:36:28,270
♪ That a girl like me ♪
702
00:36:28,270 --> 00:36:33,942
♪ Can love just one man ♪
703
00:36:36,612 --> 00:36:40,908
♪ Three thousand miles ♪
704
00:36:40,908 --> 00:36:44,328
♪ That's how far you'll go ♪
705
00:36:45,454 --> 00:36:48,790
♪ And you said to me ♪
706
00:36:49,416 --> 00:36:53,045
♪ Please ♪
707
00:36:53,420 --> 00:36:57,549
♪ Don't follow ♪
708
00:36:58,300 --> 00:37:01,220
♪ You gotta go where you want to go ♪
709
00:37:01,220 --> 00:37:03,472
♪ Do what you want to do ♪
710
00:37:03,472 --> 00:37:07,726
♪ With whoever you want to do it with ♪
711
00:37:08,018 --> 00:37:10,229
♪ Go where you want to go ♪
712
00:37:10,229 --> 00:37:12,397
♪ Do what you want to do ♪
713
00:37:12,397 --> 00:37:16,944
♪ With whoever you want to do it ♪
714
00:37:16,944 --> 00:37:20,656
♪ You don't understand ♪
715
00:37:20,656 --> 00:37:24,576
♪ That a girl like me can love ♪
716
00:37:24,576 --> 00:37:29,831
♪ Just one man ♪
717
00:37:30,958 --> 00:37:35,128
♪ You've been gone a week ♪
718
00:37:35,587 --> 00:37:38,757
♪ And I tried so hard ♪
719
00:37:39,883 --> 00:37:43,804
♪ Not to be the cryin' kind ♪
720
00:37:44,346 --> 00:37:47,474
♪ Not to be the girl ♪
721
00:37:47,474 --> 00:37:52,479
♪ You left behind ♪
722
00:37:55,732 --> 00:37:59,111
[music continues]
723
00:38:13,792 --> 00:38:15,794
♪ Go where you want to go ♪
724
00:38:16,044 --> 00:38:18,046
♪ Do what you want to do ♪
725
00:38:18,255 --> 00:38:22,592
♪ With whoever you want to do it ♪
726
00:38:22,592 --> 00:38:25,095
♪ Go where you want to go ♪
727
00:38:25,095 --> 00:38:27,431
♪ Do what you want to do ♪
728
00:38:27,431 --> 00:38:32,185
♪ With whoever you want to do it ♪
729
00:38:33,061 --> 00:38:36,773
[applause]
730
00:38:37,441 --> 00:38:39,276
Oh, that is so touching!
731
00:38:39,276 --> 00:38:41,028
- Oh good, you like it.
- I love it!
732
00:38:41,028 --> 00:38:43,030
- Oh, cool.
- I love it.
733
00:38:43,030 --> 00:38:44,406
I forgot what a great song that was!
734
00:38:44,406 --> 00:38:46,033
Yeah, right?
735
00:38:46,366 --> 00:38:47,576
♪ One, two, three ♪
736
00:38:47,576 --> 00:38:48,952
♪ You're going to lose that girl ♪
737
00:38:48,952 --> 00:38:51,288
♪ (Yes, yes, you're gonna lose that girl) ♪
738
00:38:51,288 --> 00:38:55,459
♪ You're going to lose that girl ♪
739
00:38:56,376 --> 00:38:58,628
PETTY: The 60s, right, it was really blessed.
740
00:38:58,628 --> 00:39:00,839
I mean all that stuff showed up at once.
741
00:39:00,839 --> 00:39:02,591
Must have been meant that way.
742
00:39:02,591 --> 00:39:05,802
But it was a nice circle of really good artists,
743
00:39:05,802 --> 00:39:07,929
well meaning artists, thinking about
744
00:39:07,929 --> 00:39:11,016
how can I make a record
as good as that one?
745
00:39:11,016 --> 00:39:12,976
Music happens
at a particular moment in time
746
00:39:12,976 --> 00:39:16,146
and it changes everything going forward.
747
00:39:16,146 --> 00:39:19,316
♪ You're going to lose that girl ♪
748
00:39:21,443 --> 00:39:26,823
ADLER: I had ended up
with an acetate of Pet Sounds
749
00:39:26,823 --> 00:39:29,618
and I was going to England
750
00:39:29,618 --> 00:39:32,120
to visit my friend Andrew Oldham,
751
00:39:32,120 --> 00:39:34,956
who is a producer of The Rolling Stones.
752
00:39:35,665 --> 00:39:37,834
And Paul McCartney came by
753
00:39:37,834 --> 00:39:40,003
and I played them Pet Sounds
754
00:39:40,003 --> 00:39:43,131
and they were listening
to everything that Brian was doing
755
00:39:43,131 --> 00:39:47,386
and thinking about how
they could use certain things
756
00:39:47,386 --> 00:39:49,638
that he was doing on Pet Sounds.
757
00:39:50,305 --> 00:39:52,599
Out of that comes Sgt. Pepper.
758
00:39:53,308 --> 00:39:55,727
STARR: There was a lot
of stuff going on.
759
00:39:55,727 --> 00:39:58,271
All those records you bought,
those vinyl -- we bought,
760
00:39:58,271 --> 00:39:59,981
you weren't even born --
761
00:39:59,981 --> 00:40:03,151
were just the best.
'Cause everyone was at it.
762
00:40:03,151 --> 00:40:05,654
I have two favorite records,
as a lot of people do,
763
00:40:05,654 --> 00:40:08,657
and one of them is Pet Sounds
and the other is Sgt. Pepper.
764
00:40:08,657 --> 00:40:10,325
You can listen to the records
765
00:40:10,325 --> 00:40:14,538
and you can see the cross-pollinization.
766
00:40:14,538 --> 00:40:16,164
It was a magical thing.
767
00:40:16,790 --> 00:40:19,501
Any time something good happens,
768
00:40:19,501 --> 00:40:21,420
it's gonna show up other places.
769
00:40:21,420 --> 00:40:23,296
It's gonna be mirrored back.
770
00:40:23,880 --> 00:40:26,174
Well, that was just like cross-pollinization.
771
00:40:26,174 --> 00:40:28,885
I mean The Beatles also
grew up listening to skiffle music.
772
00:40:29,386 --> 00:40:33,098
George admits "The Bells of Rhymney"
773
00:40:33,098 --> 00:40:35,809
and "If I Needed Someone" are very similar.
774
00:40:35,809 --> 00:40:40,480
I think he sent Roger a little card about it
775
00:40:40,480 --> 00:40:42,023
that he still has, you know.
776
00:40:42,023 --> 00:40:44,734
Someone would have
written most of a song, say,
777
00:40:44,734 --> 00:40:46,695
you know, Paul or John, and they play it
778
00:40:46,695 --> 00:40:49,364
and when it felt good okay, that's how we do it.
779
00:40:49,364 --> 00:40:51,366
We would just jam. We were buskers.
780
00:40:51,366 --> 00:40:53,869
The riff was...
["The Bells of Rhymney"]
781
00:40:58,123 --> 00:41:00,584
♪ Oh, what will you give me? ♪
782
00:41:01,293 --> 00:41:05,714
♪ Say the sad bells of Rhomey ♪
783
00:41:05,714 --> 00:41:08,633
Anyway, so George liked that riff and he wrote:
784
00:41:08,633 --> 00:41:11,470
♪ If I needed someone to love ♪
785
00:41:11,470 --> 00:41:12,387
based on that.
786
00:41:12,387 --> 00:41:15,015
He made a tape of it
and gave it to Derek Taylor in London.
787
00:41:15,015 --> 00:41:18,059
Derek came over to my house,
he said George wants you to know
788
00:41:18,059 --> 00:41:21,771
that he wrote this song based
on your riff in "Bells of Rhymney".
789
00:41:21,980 --> 00:41:25,192
When you hear beautiful music
it gets inside you
790
00:41:25,192 --> 00:41:27,736
and sometimes you want
to do a little something like that
791
00:41:27,736 --> 00:41:29,196
maybe, but your way.
792
00:41:29,196 --> 00:41:32,282
Or wow, he did that
so maybe I could maybe --
793
00:41:32,282 --> 00:41:34,034
and it's an open-ended thing.
794
00:41:34,034 --> 00:41:37,329
But that's fair, right? That's -- that's fair.
795
00:41:37,329 --> 00:41:40,415
But, you know, outright theft
isn't that good but you...
796
00:41:40,415 --> 00:41:42,042
[chuckles]
797
00:41:42,042 --> 00:41:44,461
But in that sense
I thought it was really nice.
798
00:41:45,253 --> 00:41:48,423
[♪♪♪]
799
00:41:50,091 --> 00:41:51,384
BECK: You have the heavy --
800
00:41:51,384 --> 00:41:52,594
you're a little bit on the heavier side.
801
00:41:52,594 --> 00:41:54,596
You got the Pet Sounds
and the Sgt. Pepper's over there --
802
00:41:54,596 --> 00:41:56,306
I have some very good shit over here, yeah!
803
00:41:56,306 --> 00:41:57,724
I'll stick with this.
804
00:41:57,724 --> 00:42:01,102
BECK: Yeah. And these records come
805
00:42:01,102 --> 00:42:03,271
all of a sudden like an avalanche.
806
00:42:03,271 --> 00:42:04,397
DYLAN: Mm hmm.
807
00:42:04,397 --> 00:42:06,858
And there's nothing like them before.
808
00:42:06,858 --> 00:42:09,611
SPEKTOR: It used to be that
every time any of these came out
809
00:42:09,611 --> 00:42:13,114
it was like this giant event
810
00:42:13,114 --> 00:42:16,451
and people would talk about it
and gather together
811
00:42:16,451 --> 00:42:19,996
and put on a record in their room
and listen to the record.
812
00:42:19,996 --> 00:42:21,122
- It's so cool.
- For days.
813
00:42:21,122 --> 00:42:22,123
For days!
814
00:42:22,123 --> 00:42:27,087
And they'd be deciphering,
you know, why is he wearing this cape,
815
00:42:27,087 --> 00:42:29,005
poncho, from the Renaissance Fair.
816
00:42:29,005 --> 00:42:30,423
[everyone chuckles]
817
00:42:30,423 --> 00:42:33,510
Yeah, one of my favorite things
about all these bands
818
00:42:33,510 --> 00:42:36,513
is that they're, in a sense,
they're sort of super groups,
819
00:42:36,513 --> 00:42:38,431
you know.
They have multiple lead singers.
820
00:42:38,431 --> 00:42:40,433
They have multiple songwriters.
821
00:42:40,433 --> 00:42:44,104
But I think the beauty of all this
is how they came together
822
00:42:44,104 --> 00:42:48,483
and brought the best of
that they had for something.
823
00:42:48,817 --> 00:42:51,611
Yeah! I mean just listen
to Buffalo Springfield
824
00:42:51,611 --> 00:42:53,613
- and all those bands.
- POWER: Yeah.
825
00:42:53,613 --> 00:42:55,699
DYLAN: You just get something
completely remarkable and unique
826
00:42:55,699 --> 00:42:57,158
- when it's --
- BECK: Oh, yeah --
827
00:42:57,158 --> 00:42:59,035
DYLAN: a combination,
a collaborative, that you can't --
828
00:42:59,035 --> 00:43:01,746
you just can't do, with all your own DNA.
829
00:43:01,746 --> 00:43:02,831
You just can't.
830
00:43:02,831 --> 00:43:03,832
[audience cheering]
831
00:43:03,832 --> 00:43:05,584
DICK CLARK: Gentlemen! Gentlemen!
832
00:43:05,584 --> 00:43:07,460
Nice to see you all!
833
00:43:07,460 --> 00:43:08,795
Welcome.
834
00:43:08,795 --> 00:43:11,256
Would you be kind enoughto act as spokesman,
835
00:43:11,256 --> 00:43:13,508
introduce yourself, and thenlet us know who else is involved.
836
00:43:13,508 --> 00:43:15,594
Ah, my name is Neil Young.
837
00:43:15,594 --> 00:43:16,678
All right, Neil. How do you do?
838
00:43:16,678 --> 00:43:18,346
I'm the lead guitar player.How do you do?
839
00:43:18,346 --> 00:43:20,140
This is Richie Furay.
840
00:43:20,140 --> 00:43:21,975
CLARK: Hello, Richie! Nice to see you
841
00:43:21,975 --> 00:43:24,477
- This is Steve Stills.- Hello, Steve. Nice to see you.
842
00:43:24,477 --> 00:43:27,188
How does three Canadiansand a couple of other fellows
843
00:43:27,188 --> 00:43:29,441
all fall into together?How did that happen?
844
00:43:29,441 --> 00:43:32,819
Well, we, ah,Bruce and I came to Los Angeles
845
00:43:32,819 --> 00:43:36,031
in an old hearse to try to,you know, make stars, you know.
846
00:43:36,031 --> 00:43:37,407
We're gonna be stars.
847
00:43:37,407 --> 00:43:42,120
So, ah, we were just about to leaveand I saw him in a van
848
00:43:42,120 --> 00:43:44,456
going the other way on Sunsetand he stopped and he --
849
00:43:44,456 --> 00:43:47,667
and we stopped and we all stoppedand then we started.
850
00:43:47,667 --> 00:43:50,837
["For What It's Worth"]
851
00:43:53,423 --> 00:43:56,343
♪ There's something happening here ♪
852
00:43:56,343 --> 00:43:57,218
[audience cheers]
853
00:43:57,218 --> 00:44:00,930
♪ What it is ain't exactly clear ♪
854
00:44:02,098 --> 00:44:06,144
♪ There's a man with a gun over there ♪
855
00:44:06,895 --> 00:44:10,607
♪ Telling me I got to beware ♪
856
00:44:11,566 --> 00:44:14,944
♪ I think it's time we stop,children, what's that sound ♪
857
00:44:14,944 --> 00:44:18,531
♪ Everybody look what's going down ♪
858
00:44:22,285 --> 00:44:25,288
["Mr. Soul"]
859
00:44:29,000 --> 00:44:36,216
♪ Oh, hello Mr. Soul,I dropped by to pick up a reason ♪
860
00:44:36,216 --> 00:44:37,926
♪ For the thought that I caught ♪
861
00:44:37,926 --> 00:44:41,471
♪ That my headis the event of the season ♪
862
00:44:43,306 --> 00:44:45,392
♪ I'll cop out to the change ♪
863
00:44:45,392 --> 00:44:48,937
♪ But a stranger is putting the tease on ♪
864
00:44:51,189 --> 00:44:54,109
[music continues]
865
00:44:55,276 --> 00:44:57,821
STILLS: We were in Fort William, Ontario,
866
00:44:57,821 --> 00:45:00,532
and the owner of the club
said these guys that we,
867
00:45:00,532 --> 00:45:03,284
you know, employ regularly
are gonna come in
868
00:45:03,284 --> 00:45:08,373
and do a set in between
you guys and the main act.
869
00:45:08,373 --> 00:45:11,835
It was Neil with a little trio
called The Squires.
870
00:45:12,585 --> 00:45:14,838
And he was doing exactly
what I wanted to do,
871
00:45:14,838 --> 00:45:17,882
which was to play folk songs
on electric guitar.
872
00:45:17,882 --> 00:45:20,969
And we hung out together for a week.
873
00:45:20,969 --> 00:45:23,930
We talked and dreamt and fantasized
874
00:45:23,930 --> 00:45:25,890
about what we wanted to do.
875
00:45:25,890 --> 00:45:27,767
And we were inseparable.
876
00:45:28,017 --> 00:45:31,354
Buffalo Springfield,
you know, that was a big one.
877
00:45:31,354 --> 00:45:35,358
I saw them back in '67 or '68.
878
00:45:35,358 --> 00:45:39,154
They came to Gainesville
and played with The Beach Boys.
879
00:45:39,154 --> 00:45:41,364
You know, I never got over it!
[chuckling]
880
00:45:41,364 --> 00:45:44,617
It was a really
mind-blowing show, you know.
881
00:45:44,617 --> 00:45:48,246
It was like that's as good
as it's supposed to be, you know.
882
00:45:48,246 --> 00:45:49,414
It was maybe better.
883
00:45:49,497 --> 00:45:51,708
Buffalo Springfield had like, you know,
884
00:45:51,708 --> 00:45:58,131
just like legions of the girls that,
you know, I wanted,
885
00:45:58,131 --> 00:46:00,258
you know, were like just looking that way.
886
00:46:00,258 --> 00:46:02,469
And I thought, you know, this is --
887
00:46:02,469 --> 00:46:04,137
this must be a pretty good band.
888
00:46:04,137 --> 00:46:07,140
- We went to L.A. with Cream.
- Yeah.
889
00:46:07,140 --> 00:46:09,225
And I hadn't been there
more than about an hour
890
00:46:09,225 --> 00:46:11,394
and there was a knock at the door
and then Stephen Stills
891
00:46:11,394 --> 00:46:13,480
was there with a guitar, you know.
892
00:46:13,480 --> 00:46:14,647
He just came in.
893
00:46:14,647 --> 00:46:16,357
I took his guitar out of the case and said
894
00:46:16,357 --> 00:46:17,942
"I hear you like this".
895
00:46:17,942 --> 00:46:20,320
- He played you "Bluebird"?
- He played "Bluebird".
896
00:46:20,320 --> 00:46:23,448
["Bluebird"]
897
00:46:31,080 --> 00:46:34,959
They'd end with this really long
"Bluebird", like, you know,
898
00:46:34,959 --> 00:46:38,379
trading guitars for --
'til it just got really intense.
899
00:46:38,379 --> 00:46:39,547
It was great.
900
00:46:39,547 --> 00:46:43,676
The Byrds picked up the Buffalo Springfield
for an opening act
901
00:46:43,676 --> 00:46:47,055
and it lasted until
David Crosby saw us for the first time
902
00:46:47,055 --> 00:46:49,557
and he says "Get them out of there.
They're too good."
903
00:46:49,557 --> 00:46:52,811
I remember thinking
when we did it this is a bad idea.
904
00:46:53,478 --> 00:46:56,981
'Cause they're -
they're really amazingly good.
905
00:46:56,981 --> 00:46:59,776
And we had hits, you know,
so we could follow them,
906
00:46:59,776 --> 00:47:02,153
but they were awfully goddamn good.
907
00:47:02,153 --> 00:47:05,406
STILLS: What was good about it
is that we had a wealth of material.
908
00:47:05,406 --> 00:47:08,952
What was bad about it, it was
in really divergent directions.
909
00:47:08,952 --> 00:47:11,287
The first song we had, "Clancy",
910
00:47:11,287 --> 00:47:14,624
with the Buffalo Springfield,
we did the first take
911
00:47:14,624 --> 00:47:17,210
and the voice comes back
from the booth and said,
912
00:47:17,210 --> 00:47:20,880
"It's too long. Play it faster."
913
00:47:20,880 --> 00:47:21,881
Mm hmm.
914
00:47:21,881 --> 00:47:24,968
And that's when Neil and I
looked at each other and said
915
00:47:24,968 --> 00:47:27,637
oh my God, we've gotta
learn how to do this ourselves.
916
00:47:27,637 --> 00:47:31,975
There's Neil and I'm listening
to something that he's doing.
917
00:47:31,975 --> 00:47:34,435
And that's the old original console.
918
00:47:34,435 --> 00:47:35,895
This was only 8-track.
919
00:47:35,895 --> 00:47:41,025
That's why it's an old Altec console
with like big knobs.
920
00:47:41,484 --> 00:47:44,863
And right after that,
I think we got an MCI or something
921
00:47:44,863 --> 00:47:49,409
and went to 16, which to me
was all we ever needed.
922
00:47:49,409 --> 00:47:52,120
But this is like after we obviously had learned
923
00:47:52,120 --> 00:47:54,122
to make them ourselves. I see, no...
924
00:47:54,122 --> 00:47:57,125
That's probably the engineer
that was hired for the session.
925
00:47:57,125 --> 00:47:58,293
DYLAN: He's gotta sit down now?
926
00:47:58,293 --> 00:48:00,962
Just go sit down there.
[laughs]
927
00:48:00,962 --> 00:48:04,007
["Questions"]
928
00:48:09,387 --> 00:48:12,807
♪ Where are we going love? ♪
929
00:48:13,933 --> 00:48:16,352
♪ What are you feelin'? ♪
930
00:48:17,812 --> 00:48:21,107
♪ Now that I've caught my love ♪
931
00:48:22,150 --> 00:48:24,652
♪ My head is reelin' ♪
932
00:48:24,903 --> 00:48:29,324
♪ With the questions of a thousand dreams ♪
933
00:48:29,741 --> 00:48:33,620
♪ What she's doingwhat she's seen ♪
934
00:48:33,953 --> 00:48:37,415
♪ Now, come on lover talk to me ♪
935
00:48:37,415 --> 00:48:39,000
DYLAN: Should we talk about "Questions"?
936
00:48:39,000 --> 00:48:42,629
STILLS: Well, to start with I had this what --
you know those magical days
937
00:48:42,629 --> 00:48:44,881
where a lot of stuff happens?
938
00:48:44,881 --> 00:48:48,760
I met Judy Collins
and Eric Clapton on the same night.
939
00:48:48,760 --> 00:48:51,721
I went to the Whisky to see Eric.
940
00:48:52,013 --> 00:48:55,767
And so I'm flirting with Judy,
trying to listen to Eric,
941
00:48:55,767 --> 00:48:59,312
who's blowing my mind,
and so I'm overwhelmed.
942
00:48:59,312 --> 00:49:03,316
And then later on, Crosby had
brought Eric to my little house
943
00:49:03,316 --> 00:49:04,943
in Laurel Canyon.
944
00:49:04,943 --> 00:49:10,573
And the changes to "Questions" were derived
945
00:49:10,573 --> 00:49:15,328
from a song of Judy's called
"Since You've Asked".
946
00:49:15,328 --> 00:49:18,915
And I just took
this first three chords
947
00:49:18,915 --> 00:49:22,710
and changed the cadence and everything.
948
00:49:22,710 --> 00:49:26,297
And then it evolved into the song.
949
00:49:26,297 --> 00:49:30,468
And I think I was playing it for him
as I was trying to write it,
950
00:49:30,468 --> 00:49:34,347
and it later ended up
on a Buffalo Springfield album.
951
00:49:34,347 --> 00:49:36,557
I haven't listened to that stuff
for a long time,
952
00:49:36,557 --> 00:49:38,351
you know, the west coast music,
at all and so --
953
00:49:38,351 --> 00:49:39,310
The original version you --
954
00:49:39,310 --> 00:49:41,562
No, I haven't heard
the original version of "Questions"
955
00:49:41,562 --> 00:49:43,022
for a long, long, long time.
956
00:49:43,022 --> 00:49:44,816
And it really took me back.
957
00:49:45,316 --> 00:49:48,486
♪ What was it made you run ♪
958
00:49:49,278 --> 00:49:52,949
♪ Tryin' to get aroundThe questions... ♪
959
00:49:52,949 --> 00:49:56,119
CLAPTON: It took me back to
a song that I had done, too,
960
00:49:56,119 --> 00:49:57,912
around the same time.
961
00:49:57,912 --> 00:50:03,126
Ah, a little later, actually,
called "Let It Rain".
962
00:50:03,584 --> 00:50:06,879
And it was one of the first songs I'd ever written.
963
00:50:06,879 --> 00:50:10,425
And it -- and there, you know,
there's that kind of --
964
00:50:10,425 --> 00:50:12,301
I was influenced by it, I think.
965
00:50:12,301 --> 00:50:14,345
Yeah, I thought that we talked
about having, hopefully,
966
00:50:14,345 --> 00:50:16,139
you play on that song with Stephen...
967
00:50:16,139 --> 00:50:17,306
Yeah.
968
00:50:17,306 --> 00:50:20,143
I wondered if that was gonna be...
it's not gonna bother you
969
00:50:20,143 --> 00:50:22,812
that there's the --
there's a similar feel or...
970
00:50:22,812 --> 00:50:24,564
Well I didn't -- I must have copped it
971
00:50:24,564 --> 00:50:25,815
and not even known, you know.
972
00:50:25,815 --> 00:50:27,316
We can edit that part right out.
973
00:50:27,316 --> 00:50:28,818
Well, no, no! I think, no,
974
00:50:28,818 --> 00:50:30,319
that's very important for people to know.
975
00:50:30,319 --> 00:50:31,320
Well Stephen owes you one.
976
00:50:31,320 --> 00:50:34,615
♪ Come on lover, talk to me ♪
977
00:50:35,491 --> 00:50:38,911
[music continues]
978
00:51:07,065 --> 00:51:08,357
Sorry I got lost.
979
00:51:08,357 --> 00:51:10,026
Whatever happened
in the solo section was great.
980
00:51:10,026 --> 00:51:11,486
- Cool.
- With you and Eric together.
981
00:51:11,486 --> 00:51:14,238
SLATER: Yeah. When Eric's playing
in the top of the second solo,
982
00:51:14,238 --> 00:51:16,824
you know, he's playing in the higher register
983
00:51:16,824 --> 00:51:18,910
and I think anything in the lower register
984
00:51:18,910 --> 00:51:20,536
would be cool as a complement.
985
00:51:20,536 --> 00:51:24,332
[guitar solo]
986
00:51:29,378 --> 00:51:32,381
♪ Where are we going love? ♪
987
00:51:33,174 --> 00:51:37,428
Eric was very meticulous
about reminding me back then,
988
00:51:37,428 --> 00:51:41,432
he said (in British accent)
You know, when you're doing this on stage,
989
00:51:41,432 --> 00:51:43,434
you must take turns.
990
00:51:43,434 --> 00:51:46,437
[guitar solo]
991
00:51:46,437 --> 00:51:48,231
Much like schoolyard, you know.
992
00:51:48,689 --> 00:51:49,982
Gentlemanly.
993
00:51:49,982 --> 00:51:53,569
[guitar solo in "Questions"]
994
00:52:00,868 --> 00:52:05,456
[inaudible]
995
00:52:07,125 --> 00:52:10,378
CLAPTON: I had got an invite
to go and watch
996
00:52:10,378 --> 00:52:14,674
Buffalo Springfield rehearsing
in a house in Laurel Canyon.
997
00:52:14,674 --> 00:52:18,427
I had met this girl called
Mary Hughes who was
998
00:52:18,427 --> 00:52:21,848
the kind of beauty queen
of the Strip at that time.
999
00:52:21,848 --> 00:52:24,475
Jeff Beck was dating her
and Keith Moon was dating her
1000
00:52:24,475 --> 00:52:28,187
and I somehow managed
to get into the equation.
1001
00:52:28,187 --> 00:52:32,400
And I'm with this beautiful girl
and there's joints being passed around
1002
00:52:32,400 --> 00:52:33,693
and they start to play.
1003
00:52:33,693 --> 00:52:36,821
And they played at a level where
it wasn't too loud for everybody
1004
00:52:36,821 --> 00:52:42,451
and they were rehearsing a set,
I think, to play for a show.
1005
00:52:42,451 --> 00:52:44,412
And then there's a knock at the door.
1006
00:52:45,037 --> 00:52:48,583
And someone goes to answer
and there's an immediate vibe
1007
00:52:48,583 --> 00:52:51,586
in the room of that
something's wrong, you know.
1008
00:52:52,295 --> 00:52:56,048
And they open the door
and there's a policeman standing there.
1009
00:52:56,048 --> 00:52:58,759
And there's a squad car in the background.
1010
00:52:58,759 --> 00:53:02,221
And he says,
"You'll have to keep it down.
1011
00:53:02,221 --> 00:53:05,391
We've had some complaints about the noise.
1012
00:53:05,391 --> 00:53:07,101
[sniffs]
What's that?"
1013
00:53:07,101 --> 00:53:09,520
And next thing you know,
they're in the room.
1014
00:53:09,520 --> 00:53:12,315
And I had nothing --
I had just put down a joint.
1015
00:53:12,315 --> 00:53:13,399
I had nothing in my hands,
1016
00:53:13,399 --> 00:53:17,153
but, ah, I was handcuffed to somebody.
1017
00:53:17,153 --> 00:53:22,325
So, we were all taken to L.A. County Jail.
1018
00:53:22,325 --> 00:53:26,162
Meanwhile, it was like where's --
what happened to Stephen?
1019
00:53:26,162 --> 00:53:29,457
Stephen, when he realized
who was at the front door...
1020
00:53:29,457 --> 00:53:30,374
Yeah!
1021
00:53:30,374 --> 00:53:34,128
Jumped out the bathroom window
and ran off.
1022
00:53:34,128 --> 00:53:36,130
There's a party that
we heard about, too, your --
1023
00:53:36,130 --> 00:53:38,216
was it your house
that had a party in the Canyon?
1024
00:53:38,216 --> 00:53:39,634
Is that the same party you mentioned?
1025
00:53:39,634 --> 00:53:41,677
What? Disastrous.
1026
00:53:41,677 --> 00:53:44,305
What I heard was
you were there, Eric was there,
1027
00:53:44,305 --> 00:53:46,474
Neil was there, and so were the police.
1028
00:53:46,474 --> 00:53:48,309
- I'd say yeah!
- That sound right?
1029
00:53:48,309 --> 00:53:51,479
Neil and I were sitting
in a bedroom in the back
1030
00:53:51,479 --> 00:53:53,314
and we here this
[grumbles sternly].
1031
00:53:53,314 --> 00:53:56,984
And I said go check that.
1032
00:53:56,984 --> 00:53:59,487
I'm gonna go next door and call lawyers!
1033
00:53:59,487 --> 00:54:01,405
And I book it out the back.
1034
00:54:01,405 --> 00:54:04,450
So, of course, that blew up
into ruining my reputation.
1035
00:54:04,450 --> 00:54:06,577
Oh, he was the guy that booked, you know.
1036
00:54:06,577 --> 00:54:10,915
And, ah, and I went next door and...
1037
00:54:10,915 --> 00:54:12,041
totally reprehensible.
1038
00:54:12,041 --> 00:54:14,627
I should have manned up and -- and it wasn't.
1039
00:54:14,627 --> 00:54:18,422
I've never lived that down
and felt awful about it ever since.
1040
00:54:18,422 --> 00:54:21,050
Neil got really aggressive
and was out the door
1041
00:54:21,050 --> 00:54:23,344
and he was gonna go
chase the police away.
1042
00:54:23,344 --> 00:54:27,098
'Cause he's Canadian and I guess
in Canada you can do that --
1043
00:54:29,350 --> 00:54:32,770
PETTY: It was really exciting
to get to Los Angeles
1044
00:54:32,770 --> 00:54:34,563
coming from Gainesville, Florida.
1045
00:54:34,563 --> 00:54:37,483
And in my mind,
it was the weather and the girls
1046
00:54:37,483 --> 00:54:41,904
and the surfing and the cars
and it was a young mentality.
1047
00:54:41,904 --> 00:54:45,199
[♪♪♪]
1048
00:54:51,455 --> 00:54:56,585
This is kind of where people
that really were big dreamers
1049
00:54:56,585 --> 00:55:00,131
went to because
that's kind of allowed here.
1050
00:55:00,131 --> 00:55:02,466
There are people that believe that
1051
00:55:02,466 --> 00:55:06,929
it might be possible to do
something that's not ordinary.
1052
00:55:06,929 --> 00:55:10,141
The first thing I remember
going down Sunset Boulevard
1053
00:55:10,141 --> 00:55:12,810
looking out the car at the all
the record companies, you know.
1054
00:55:12,810 --> 00:55:17,940
In those days it was MGM,
you know, Capitol, you know,
1055
00:55:17,940 --> 00:55:20,526
all these labels that aren't there anymore.
1056
00:55:20,526 --> 00:55:24,989
It was true. I got out there
and man, these recording studios
1057
00:55:24,989 --> 00:55:30,703
are all spotless and engineers
are really remarkably good.
1058
00:55:30,703 --> 00:55:33,998
This is where Phil Spector
and Brian Wilson were working.
1059
00:55:33,998 --> 00:55:36,876
People started showing up here
trying to work with the engineers
1060
00:55:36,876 --> 00:55:39,170
they worked with
and the studios that they worked in
1061
00:55:39,170 --> 00:55:42,131
to make things sound... fat.
1062
00:55:42,131 --> 00:55:44,091
In America it's very, very different.
1063
00:55:44,091 --> 00:55:46,135
Abbey Road was
the only place that, basically,
1064
00:55:46,135 --> 00:55:47,470
we ever recorded, right.
1065
00:55:47,470 --> 00:55:51,349
There it was almost like,
ah, almost like the BBC.
1066
00:55:51,349 --> 00:55:54,060
All the engineers had
these white overalls on.
1067
00:55:54,060 --> 00:55:55,770
And, you know, if you wanted
to bring the bass up
1068
00:55:55,770 --> 00:55:58,481
you had to go to the producer
who then went to the engineer
1069
00:55:58,481 --> 00:55:59,899
who then brought the bass up.
1070
00:55:59,899 --> 00:56:02,777
You were secondary somehow
to these people in white coats
1071
00:56:02,777 --> 00:56:05,154
that were really making the music.
1072
00:56:05,154 --> 00:56:07,490
STARR: They had all these
like professors guys.
1073
00:56:07,490 --> 00:56:09,450
You know, scientists upstairs.
1074
00:56:09,450 --> 00:56:11,077
We were in the studio.
1075
00:56:11,077 --> 00:56:12,787
It's like an old 40s movie.
1076
00:56:12,787 --> 00:56:14,830
Oh, what's that you want?
You want to play?
1077
00:56:14,830 --> 00:56:17,166
Mm, let me see what I can do.
1078
00:56:17,166 --> 00:56:21,003
Very different here.
Very much looser, much better.
1079
00:56:21,253 --> 00:56:24,048
"Good Vibrations"
was recorded in four studios,
1080
00:56:24,048 --> 00:56:25,174
four different studios.
1081
00:56:25,174 --> 00:56:26,801
Well, each studio is different, you know?
1082
00:56:26,801 --> 00:56:29,553
Like you can't --
not any one studio's the same.
1083
00:56:29,553 --> 00:56:32,014
Western was good for the,
ah, instrumentation,
1084
00:56:32,014 --> 00:56:34,058
like the bass, the drums, guitars.
1085
00:56:34,058 --> 00:56:36,310
Sunset Sound, I liked their tech piano.
1086
00:56:36,310 --> 00:56:38,979
I used that on the bridge
to "Good Vibrations."
1087
00:56:38,979 --> 00:56:40,981
Gold Star was good for just the echo.
1088
00:56:40,981 --> 00:56:42,400
The echo of Gold Star was good.
1089
00:56:42,400 --> 00:56:44,902
And RCA Victor,
that's where we did the vocal.
1090
00:56:44,902 --> 00:56:46,862
There were so many studios.
1091
00:56:46,862 --> 00:56:50,991
They had that great
RCA studio on Sunset and Ivar.
1092
00:56:50,991 --> 00:56:52,910
It was a fantastic place.
1093
00:56:52,910 --> 00:56:54,495
Columbia Studios.
1094
00:56:54,495 --> 00:56:56,622
And Western, you know,
1095
00:56:56,622 --> 00:56:59,417
United Western at times it was called.
1096
00:56:59,417 --> 00:57:00,626
It's still there.
1097
00:57:01,627 --> 00:57:03,295
DYLAN: Have you --
have you recorded here?
1098
00:57:03,295 --> 00:57:04,964
NORAH JONES: No, I've never been here.
1099
00:57:06,257 --> 00:57:08,926
Yeah, this is where
Brian Wilson, Mamas & the Papas,
1100
00:57:08,926 --> 00:57:10,761
and Buffalo Springfield recorded.
1101
00:57:10,761 --> 00:57:11,887
JONES: Yeah?
1102
00:57:12,638 --> 00:57:14,807
As well as you can see
the evolution of Don Was.
1103
00:57:14,807 --> 00:57:16,308
Yeah, there he is!
1104
00:57:16,308 --> 00:57:18,102
And let's go back further.
1105
00:57:18,102 --> 00:57:19,603
And there's some more of him over there.
1106
00:57:19,603 --> 00:57:21,063
Yeah, you can here see this --
1107
00:57:21,063 --> 00:57:22,231
There's some more him down there -
1108
00:57:22,231 --> 00:57:23,774
...before he really figured it out.
1109
00:57:24,066 --> 00:57:26,068
[Jones laughs]
1110
00:57:26,652 --> 00:57:28,070
SLATER: What about these guys?
1111
00:57:28,279 --> 00:57:29,822
Mm, not really familiar.
1112
00:57:30,156 --> 00:57:32,032
[everyone chuckles]
1113
00:57:33,492 --> 00:57:34,827
- That's okay.
- It's okay.
1114
00:57:34,827 --> 00:57:37,663
- This is all right here, huh?
- Yeah. It's cool.
1115
00:57:37,663 --> 00:57:39,373
Yeah, I want to record
a song by The Association.
1116
00:57:39,373 --> 00:57:40,416
Yeah!
1117
00:57:40,416 --> 00:57:42,042
They're not really marked
who's doing what,
1118
00:57:42,042 --> 00:57:43,586
but that doesn't really matter.
1119
00:57:44,503 --> 00:57:47,631
[guitar strumming "Never My Love"]
1120
00:57:49,341 --> 00:57:53,804
♪ You ask me if there'll come a time ♪
1121
00:57:53,804 --> 00:57:57,308
♪ When I'll grow tired of you ♪
1122
00:57:58,392 --> 00:58:00,686
♪ Never my love ♪
1123
00:58:03,355 --> 00:58:05,357
♪ Never my love ♪
1124
00:58:12,031 --> 00:58:13,824
Let's do it.
1125
00:58:13,824 --> 00:58:16,911
[band plays "Never My Love"]
1126
00:58:26,003 --> 00:58:31,175
♪ Well, you ask me if there'll come a time ♪
1127
00:58:31,175 --> 00:58:34,762
♪ When I'll grow tired of you ♪
1128
00:58:36,680 --> 00:58:38,974
♪ Never my love ♪
1129
00:58:41,977 --> 00:58:44,271
♪ Never my love ♪
1130
00:58:47,483 --> 00:58:52,196
♪ You wonder if this heart of mine ♪
1131
00:58:52,655 --> 00:58:56,158
♪ Will lose its desire for you ♪
1132
00:58:57,993 --> 00:59:00,079
♪ Never my love ♪
1133
00:59:03,415 --> 00:59:05,584
♪ Never my love ♪
1134
00:59:08,712 --> 00:59:12,466
♪ Now, how can you think love will end ♪
1135
00:59:12,466 --> 00:59:16,595
♪ When I've asked youto spend your whole life ♪
1136
00:59:19,974 --> 00:59:22,059
♪ With me ♪
1137
00:59:22,268 --> 00:59:25,563
♪ (With me, with me) ♪
1138
00:59:27,481 --> 00:59:31,986
♪ Buh-buh buh, Buh-buh ♪
1139
00:59:32,736 --> 00:59:36,115
♪ Buh-buh-buh ♪
1140
00:59:38,117 --> 00:59:40,327
♪ Never my love ♪
1141
00:59:43,414 --> 00:59:45,666
♪ Never my love ♪
1142
00:59:48,711 --> 00:59:52,339
♪ What makes you think love will end ♪
1143
00:59:52,339 --> 00:59:56,385
♪ When I've asked youto spend your whole life ♪
1144
01:00:00,097 --> 01:00:01,765
♪ With me ♪
1145
01:00:02,349 --> 01:00:05,769
♪ With me ♪
1146
01:00:07,396 --> 01:00:11,817
♪ Buh-buh, buh-buh, Buh-buh ♪
1147
01:00:12,776 --> 01:00:15,821
♪ Buh-buh, buh-buh ♪
1148
01:00:18,073 --> 01:00:20,200
♪ Never my love ♪
1149
01:00:23,495 --> 01:00:25,664
♪ Never my love ♪
1150
01:00:26,498 --> 01:00:29,084
[audience cheers]
1151
01:00:34,882 --> 01:00:36,842
I was driving down Sunsetand I turned on
1152
01:00:36,842 --> 01:00:39,136
one of those roadsthat leads up into the hills
1153
01:00:39,136 --> 01:00:41,347
and I stopped at this placethat overlooks the whole city.
1154
01:00:41,347 --> 01:00:42,931
It was fantastic.
1155
01:00:42,931 --> 01:00:45,100
I suddenly felt exhilarated there.
1156
01:00:45,517 --> 01:00:48,145
I was really movedby the geometry of the place,
1157
01:00:48,145 --> 01:00:49,313
its harmony.
1158
01:00:50,439 --> 01:00:52,149
It's a fabulous city.
1159
01:00:53,400 --> 01:00:55,319
To think some peopleclaim it's an ugly city
1160
01:00:55,319 --> 01:00:57,905
when it's really pure poetry,it just kills me.
1161
01:00:58,364 --> 01:01:02,159
I wanted to build something right then,create something.
1162
01:01:07,956 --> 01:01:09,166
McGUlNN: I used to love L.A.
1163
01:01:09,166 --> 01:01:11,251
when I was first there in the early 60s.
1164
01:01:11,251 --> 01:01:14,046
You can drive around and smell
the orange blossoms, you know.
1165
01:01:14,046 --> 01:01:15,589
It was really cool.
1166
01:01:16,006 --> 01:01:17,841
We moved into Laurel Canyon
1167
01:01:17,841 --> 01:01:19,593
and we just loved the scene there.
1168
01:01:19,593 --> 01:01:21,637
And a lot of people,
a lot of folk singers would come around
1169
01:01:21,637 --> 01:01:24,181
and play and we'd,
you know, get high and stuff.
1170
01:01:24,181 --> 01:01:25,683
It was fan -- a fun time.
1171
01:01:25,683 --> 01:01:28,727
Just driving up those canyons
and people pointing out houses
1172
01:01:28,727 --> 01:01:30,354
of famous people that lived there,
1173
01:01:30,354 --> 01:01:33,023
Houdini and Tom Mix and Zappa
1174
01:01:33,023 --> 01:01:35,484
and, you know, it was a fabulous time.
1175
01:01:35,484 --> 01:01:38,987
["Somebody Groovy"
by The Mamas & the Papas]
1176
01:01:42,574 --> 01:01:46,161
♪ I need somebody groovy ♪
1177
01:01:46,495 --> 01:01:50,457
♪ Someone who's able to move me, yeah ♪
1178
01:01:51,625 --> 01:01:54,503
PETTY: Any time you
drove by the Canyon Store
1179
01:01:54,503 --> 01:01:56,255
you saw some pop hero.
1180
01:01:57,005 --> 01:02:00,217
[chuckles]
There's David Crosby, you know!
1181
01:02:00,217 --> 01:02:02,511
BROWNE: There were people
from everywhere in Laurel Canyon.
1182
01:02:02,511 --> 01:02:04,346
In '66 it was teeming.
1183
01:02:04,346 --> 01:02:05,681
And you might see anybody.
1184
01:02:05,681 --> 01:02:08,225
Like I one time saw
Crosby blow through there
1185
01:02:08,225 --> 01:02:09,935
and scoop up these two girls.
1186
01:02:09,935 --> 01:02:11,895
And he was wearing a cape, by the way.
1187
01:02:11,895 --> 01:02:13,981
[chuckles]
[swooping noise]
1188
01:02:13,981 --> 01:02:16,150
Disappeared, you know, into the night!
1189
01:02:16,150 --> 01:02:18,694
Frank Zappa lived across the street.
1190
01:02:18,694 --> 01:02:20,904
And he once stood in the middle of the street
1191
01:02:20,904 --> 01:02:24,116
reading me the lyrics of
"Who Are The Brain Police",
1192
01:02:24,116 --> 01:02:26,994
like Alan Ginsberg. It was...
1193
01:02:27,661 --> 01:02:29,913
And I kept going whoa! Whoa! Whoa!
1194
01:02:31,039 --> 01:02:35,961
And then I heard Frank Zappa
do an orchestration
1195
01:02:35,961 --> 01:02:38,714
on a track without the yelling over it.
1196
01:02:38,964 --> 01:02:42,009
And it was -- it was otherworldly.
1197
01:02:42,009 --> 01:02:44,511
It was really -- really incredible.
1198
01:02:44,511 --> 01:02:47,097
There's not the kind of scene
there is in New York
1199
01:02:47,097 --> 01:02:49,516
and the east coast cities
where there's a club you go to.
1200
01:02:49,516 --> 01:02:52,519
We would go over to people's houses
1201
01:02:52,519 --> 01:02:55,689
and yak it up for hours and hours!
1202
01:02:55,689 --> 01:02:57,274
And play music, you know.
1203
01:02:57,274 --> 01:02:59,109
All kinds of music all the time.
1204
01:02:59,318 --> 01:03:02,529
[Stills playing guitar]
1205
01:03:11,455 --> 01:03:13,499
McGUlNN: I wrote a song
with Brian Wilson one time.
1206
01:03:13,499 --> 01:03:15,000
Brian came over to my house.
1207
01:03:15,000 --> 01:03:17,669
I said wow.
He had never come over before.
1208
01:03:17,669 --> 01:03:20,422
And he came up and he said,
"You got any speed?"
1209
01:03:20,422 --> 01:03:22,633
And I said, "I think so."
I went to the medicine cabinet
1210
01:03:22,633 --> 01:03:25,093
and I gave him two Biphetamine 20s.
1211
01:03:25,093 --> 01:03:26,804
He -- he wanted two.
1212
01:03:26,804 --> 01:03:29,723
And this is about,
mm, 4:00 in the afternoon.
1213
01:03:29,723 --> 01:03:31,600
We started playing a song.
It was like a...
1214
01:03:31,600 --> 01:03:33,477
[plays guitar]
1215
01:03:33,477 --> 01:03:35,562
Okay, we're playing that
and we're playing that and playing that.
1216
01:03:35,562 --> 01:03:38,649
And it finally gets dark and I go to bed.
1217
01:03:38,649 --> 01:03:41,109
And, you know, seven,
eight hours later I got up
1218
01:03:41,109 --> 01:03:43,821
and Brian is still at the piano going...
1219
01:03:43,821 --> 01:03:45,989
- Still playing the same figure?
- Yeah, same song, yeah!
1220
01:03:45,989 --> 01:03:47,825
- Really fast.
- It's only got one verse.
1221
01:03:47,825 --> 01:03:50,369
And they finally released it,
called it "Ding Dang".
1222
01:03:50,369 --> 01:03:52,454
And whenever I see Brian
these days he points at me
1223
01:03:52,454 --> 01:03:53,580
and goes "Ding dang!"
1224
01:03:53,580 --> 01:03:54,581
[both chuckle]
1225
01:03:54,581 --> 01:03:57,000
There's a lot of strange stuff happening here.
1226
01:03:57,000 --> 01:04:01,839
George and I just drove up
to wherever Micky Dolenz lived
1227
01:04:01,839 --> 01:04:05,843
and Stephen Stills was there
and several other people.
1228
01:04:06,510 --> 01:04:09,096
And they were all
being hippies in the nude.
1229
01:04:09,096 --> 01:04:11,014
And when they saw
it was George and I driving
1230
01:04:11,014 --> 01:04:13,183
they all run in and got dressed!
[both laugh]
1231
01:04:13,183 --> 01:04:16,353
And we were going
well, that's not very hippie.
1232
01:04:16,353 --> 01:04:18,689
You just felt like
you could do anything, you know.
1233
01:04:18,689 --> 01:04:22,484
You just felt like
there was nothing stopping you,
1234
01:04:22,484 --> 01:04:25,195
is the way that --
and Hollywood was right there
1235
01:04:25,195 --> 01:04:28,240
and the music industry, or a good part of it.
1236
01:04:28,240 --> 01:04:30,868
And Sunset Boulevard, you know.
1237
01:04:31,660 --> 01:04:34,496
It just -- it reeked of what happened in the 40s
1238
01:04:34,496 --> 01:04:39,793
with the movie stars and that lifestyle.
1239
01:04:39,793 --> 01:04:44,506
And, in a sense,
we emulated it in a different way.
1240
01:04:44,840 --> 01:04:47,509
There's a certain thing
about freedom of spirit,
1241
01:04:47,509 --> 01:04:50,512
a certain thing about lack of rules,
1242
01:04:50,512 --> 01:04:54,099
lack of previous stuff holding you in place.
1243
01:04:54,808 --> 01:04:57,185
Certain people wound up,
you know, in certain places
1244
01:04:57,185 --> 01:04:59,438
and chemistries happened
1245
01:04:59,438 --> 01:05:02,399
and they inspired other
chemistries around them.
1246
01:05:03,400 --> 01:05:05,944
NASH: I kind of compare it with
Vienna at the turn of the century
1247
01:05:05,944 --> 01:05:09,197
when all those architects
and painters and furniture builders
1248
01:05:09,197 --> 01:05:10,908
would drink massive amounts of coffee,
1249
01:05:10,908 --> 01:05:13,368
and what are you doing
and what are you working on now?
1250
01:05:13,368 --> 01:05:16,038
Paris in the 30s with Gertrude Stein and all,
1251
01:05:16,038 --> 01:05:18,040
you know, all those artists coming together.
1252
01:05:18,040 --> 01:05:22,210
But I think this era, in time,
is gonna be treated exactly the same way
1253
01:05:22,210 --> 01:05:24,630
in a couple of hundred years by the historians.
1254
01:05:26,048 --> 01:05:29,009
The power of music is undeniable.
1255
01:05:29,718 --> 01:05:32,304
I truly believe it can change the world.
1256
01:05:32,304 --> 01:05:33,347
I do.
1257
01:05:33,889 --> 01:05:35,474
Small ways, but...
1258
01:05:39,019 --> 01:05:40,479
I'm not letting this go!
1259
01:05:45,400 --> 01:05:49,821
[band begins playing "Goin' Back"]
1260
01:06:01,917 --> 01:06:04,670
♪ I think I'm goin' back ♪
1261
01:06:05,462 --> 01:06:09,216
♪ To the things I learned so well ♪
1262
01:06:09,216 --> 01:06:11,009
♪ In my youth ♪
1263
01:06:13,845 --> 01:06:16,598
♪ I think I'm returning to ♪
1264
01:06:17,307 --> 01:06:21,186
♪ Those days when I was young enough ♪
1265
01:06:21,186 --> 01:06:23,188
♪ To know the truth ♪
1266
01:06:25,357 --> 01:06:27,859
♪ Now there are no games ♪
1267
01:06:28,986 --> 01:06:31,655
♪ To only pass the time ♪
1268
01:06:33,031 --> 01:06:35,701
♪ No more electric trains ♪
1269
01:06:36,952 --> 01:06:39,788
♪ No more trees to climb ♪
1270
01:06:41,665 --> 01:06:46,003
♪ But thinking young and growing older ♪
1271
01:06:46,003 --> 01:06:47,671
♪ Is no sin ♪
1272
01:06:49,798 --> 01:06:54,678
♪ And I can play the game of life to win ♪
1273
01:06:57,848 --> 01:07:00,726
♪ I can recall the time ♪
1274
01:07:01,435 --> 01:07:07,024
♪ When I wasn't afraidto reach out to a friend ♪
1275
01:07:09,735 --> 01:07:12,404
♪ Now I think I've got ♪
1276
01:07:13,572 --> 01:07:18,952
♪ A lot more than just my toys to lend ♪
1277
01:07:20,871 --> 01:07:23,123
♪ Now there's more to do ♪
1278
01:07:24,416 --> 01:07:27,210
♪ Than watch my sailboat glide ♪
1279
01:07:28,462 --> 01:07:32,466
♪ And every day can be ♪
1280
01:07:32,466 --> 01:07:35,343
♪ A magic carpet ride ♪
1281
01:07:37,220 --> 01:07:40,390
♪ A little bit of courage ♪
1282
01:07:41,058 --> 01:07:43,101
♪ Is all we lack ♪
1283
01:07:45,062 --> 01:07:48,190
♪ So catch me if you can ♪
1284
01:07:48,857 --> 01:07:51,026
♪ I'm goin' back ♪
1285
01:07:54,738 --> 01:07:59,826
♪ La la lala-la la la la, la-la la la ♪
1286
01:08:02,746 --> 01:08:08,001
♪ La la la, la-la la la la,la-la la la ♪
1287
01:08:18,136 --> 01:08:22,641
♪ La la la, la-la la la la,la-la la la ♪
1288
01:08:22,641 --> 01:08:24,518
McGUlNN: You know, the politics in bands
1289
01:08:24,518 --> 01:08:25,936
it gets pretty heavy sometimes,
1290
01:08:25,936 --> 01:08:28,772
especially when one guy's
getting more songs on the record
1291
01:08:28,772 --> 01:08:30,148
than somebody else.
1292
01:08:30,148 --> 01:08:32,609
And David had written
this song about a ménage à trios.
1293
01:08:32,609 --> 01:08:33,652
["Triad" by David Crosby]
1294
01:08:33,652 --> 01:08:38,615
♪ What can we donow that we both love you ♪
1295
01:08:41,201 --> 01:08:44,329
♪ I love you too ♪
1296
01:08:45,664 --> 01:08:48,416
♪ And I don't really see ♪
1297
01:08:48,416 --> 01:08:52,879
♪ Why can't we go on as three ♪
1298
01:08:53,463 --> 01:08:54,714
McGUlNN: I didn't think it was appropriate
1299
01:08:54,714 --> 01:08:56,007
for what we were doing,
1300
01:08:56,007 --> 01:08:58,260
but he thought it was
cool and hip and everything.
1301
01:08:58,260 --> 01:09:01,721
And we decided
to do a Goffin and King song
1302
01:09:01,721 --> 01:09:04,975
called "Going Back"
and he was just up in arms about that.
1303
01:09:05,350 --> 01:09:06,810
CROSBY: It just wasn't, you know,
1304
01:09:06,810 --> 01:09:09,354
something that they thought
was in good taste, you know.
1305
01:09:09,354 --> 01:09:12,149
It was risqué,
it was out on the edge, you know.
1306
01:09:12,149 --> 01:09:13,900
To me it's not out on the edge at all.
1307
01:09:13,900 --> 01:09:15,235
It's just a love song.
1308
01:09:15,235 --> 01:09:16,611
It has happened.
1309
01:09:16,903 --> 01:09:19,030
I mean otherwise the French
wouldn't have a name for it!
1310
01:09:19,030 --> 01:09:21,074
NASH: It wasn't so much
David writing the song.
1311
01:09:21,074 --> 01:09:24,828
It was the realization that
he actually lived it, many times.
1312
01:09:24,828 --> 01:09:26,705
That was what pissed me off.
1313
01:09:26,705 --> 01:09:28,832
He knows it was a naughty song to write.
1314
01:09:28,832 --> 01:09:31,376
You gotta remember, Crosby was like Brando.
1315
01:09:31,376 --> 01:09:32,836
He had no boundaries.
1316
01:09:32,836 --> 01:09:35,422
McGUlNN: Carole and Gerry
had moved from New York to L.A.
1317
01:09:35,422 --> 01:09:37,507
and they had starting writing songs that --
1318
01:09:37,507 --> 01:09:40,177
not the kind of girl band stuff
they'd been doing.
1319
01:09:40,177 --> 01:09:43,722
But more of like a hipper style.
1320
01:09:43,722 --> 01:09:47,017
And David was --
he was, um, insufferable.
1321
01:09:47,017 --> 01:09:48,393
He was tough to live with.
1322
01:09:48,393 --> 01:09:50,061
He didn't get his cool song on
1323
01:09:50,061 --> 01:09:53,523
and we did this kind of
really commercial song instead.
1324
01:09:53,523 --> 01:09:55,192
So, he was angry with that.
1325
01:09:55,192 --> 01:09:57,611
The breaking point
really was when Chris Hillman
1326
01:09:57,611 --> 01:10:00,739
got mad at David
and said we gotta get rid of him.
1327
01:10:00,739 --> 01:10:02,574
The fun thing is that
everybody thinks that
1328
01:10:02,574 --> 01:10:04,284
that's why they
threw me out of The Byrds.
1329
01:10:04,284 --> 01:10:05,452
Ladies and gentlemen,
1330
01:10:05,452 --> 01:10:07,370
that's not why they
threw me out of The Byrds.
1331
01:10:07,370 --> 01:10:09,915
They threw me out of The Byrds
'cause I was an asshole.
1332
01:10:09,915 --> 01:10:11,458
He was saying things like
you guys are not
1333
01:10:11,458 --> 01:10:13,835
good enough musicians
to be playing with me.
1334
01:10:13,835 --> 01:10:16,213
I went oh, really?
[chuckles]
1335
01:10:16,213 --> 01:10:18,006
- That's not cool, you know!
- Yeah.
1336
01:10:18,006 --> 01:10:19,674
So, we didn't like that attitude very much.
1337
01:10:19,674 --> 01:10:21,676
You know, I say
it's because I was an asshole.
1338
01:10:21,676 --> 01:10:23,220
It wasn't that simple, of course.
1339
01:10:23,220 --> 01:10:24,888
If you give kids millions of dollars, you know,
1340
01:10:24,888 --> 01:10:26,014
they'll screw up.
1341
01:10:26,014 --> 01:10:27,849
We held it together for a pretty long time.
1342
01:10:27,849 --> 01:10:30,393
Bands tend to devolve.
1343
01:10:30,393 --> 01:10:32,479
They evolve up the point where they're exciting
1344
01:10:32,479 --> 01:10:34,147
and they're new and they're good,
1345
01:10:34,147 --> 01:10:36,358
and then after that they
work their way slowly downhill
1346
01:10:36,358 --> 01:10:38,902
until it's turn on the smoke machine
and play your hits.
1347
01:10:38,902 --> 01:10:40,695
And that's not good enough for me.
1348
01:10:41,238 --> 01:10:42,572
It's just not.
1349
01:10:42,822 --> 01:10:44,282
I've done it.
1350
01:10:44,282 --> 01:10:46,159
You know, 'cause it was
the path of least resistance
1351
01:10:46,159 --> 01:10:48,870
and it made me lots of money
and all that good stuff.
1352
01:10:48,870 --> 01:10:50,205
It's not good enough.
1353
01:10:51,081 --> 01:10:53,541
♪ Now there's more to do ♪
1354
01:10:54,709 --> 01:10:57,629
♪ Than watch my sailboat glide ♪
1355
01:10:58,838 --> 01:11:01,758
♪ And every day can be ♪
1356
01:11:02,842 --> 01:11:05,553
♪ A magic carpet ride ♪
1357
01:11:07,597 --> 01:11:10,684
♪ A little bit of courage ♪
1358
01:11:11,351 --> 01:11:13,395
♪ Is all we lack ♪
1359
01:11:15,438 --> 01:11:19,192
♪ So catch me if you can ♪
1360
01:11:19,192 --> 01:11:21,653
♪ I'm goin' back ♪
1361
01:11:23,363 --> 01:11:28,535
♪ La la la, la-la la la la,la-la la la La la la, la-la ♪
1362
01:11:31,162 --> 01:11:34,541
♪ La la la, la-la ♪
1363
01:11:35,500 --> 01:11:39,713
[audience cheers]
1364
01:11:42,507 --> 01:11:44,718
REPORTER: I feel like
we hear these songs,
1365
01:11:44,718 --> 01:11:46,928
we grew up with these songs,
and then we take them for granted
1366
01:11:46,928 --> 01:11:49,347
and I feel like there's
this thing happening tonight
1367
01:11:49,347 --> 01:11:51,474
and in your hands,
and in this band's hands,
1368
01:11:51,474 --> 01:11:53,184
where you're kind of
bringing them back to life
1369
01:11:53,184 --> 01:11:54,477
and reminding us of the brilliance.
1370
01:11:54,477 --> 01:11:55,854
Can you talk a little about that?
1371
01:11:55,854 --> 01:12:00,734
It really started with, ah, seeing this film,
1372
01:12:00,734 --> 01:12:02,319
which was "Model Shop".
1373
01:12:02,319 --> 01:12:05,572
And it was a movie
in '67 done by Jacques Demy.
1374
01:12:05,572 --> 01:12:09,576
That movie looked like
the sound of The Beach Boys
1375
01:12:09,576 --> 01:12:11,119
and The Mamas & Papas.
1376
01:12:11,119 --> 01:12:15,206
And so, it sent us on
an exploration back to that time
1377
01:12:15,206 --> 01:12:18,501
and to look at the records
that, you know, made, ah,
1378
01:12:18,501 --> 01:12:21,379
made that age of innocence
of southern California writing
1379
01:12:21,379 --> 01:12:24,841
from '65 to '67, you know, come alive.
1380
01:12:25,300 --> 01:12:26,843
Most of the groups
that we're talking about,
1381
01:12:26,843 --> 01:12:29,512
that we've picked from,
I think they were --
1382
01:12:29,512 --> 01:12:32,223
those are the ones that are the premier
southern California rock bands
1383
01:12:32,223 --> 01:12:34,809
from that year at that time.
1384
01:12:37,687 --> 01:12:41,524
CROSBY: Something happened
there that engendered
1385
01:12:41,524 --> 01:12:45,028
a whole lot of music, a whole lot of
1386
01:12:45,028 --> 01:12:49,032
new ways of approaching the music possible.
1387
01:12:49,991 --> 01:12:51,868
Whatever it was, it was a good thing.
1388
01:12:52,285 --> 01:12:55,372
DYLAN: I don't think you have
to put too much effort into it, really.
1389
01:12:55,372 --> 01:12:57,290
I think they're classics.
They're timeless.
1390
01:12:57,290 --> 01:13:01,211
And a good song will sound
as good then as it'll sound today.
1391
01:13:01,211 --> 01:13:04,089
You don't have to do much.
We didn't reinvent them at all.
1392
01:13:04,089 --> 01:13:05,965
We actually stayed
pretty true to what they sounded like.
1393
01:13:05,965 --> 01:13:08,301
And oddly enough,
that sound is pretty relevant.
1394
01:13:08,301 --> 01:13:09,969
It's pretty current right now.
1395
01:13:11,638 --> 01:13:13,098
CROSBY: I think, you know,
people have been trying
1396
01:13:13,098 --> 01:13:14,724
to put salt on its tail for a long time,
1397
01:13:14,724 --> 01:13:17,227
trying to figure out why it happened there
1398
01:13:17,227 --> 01:13:19,020
and how it happened there.
1399
01:13:19,020 --> 01:13:23,108
And I -- you can guess
1400
01:13:23,108 --> 01:13:24,818
and you can point out certain factors
1401
01:13:24,818 --> 01:13:26,903
that you think would
have been influencing it.
1402
01:13:27,112 --> 01:13:30,657
But I don't know if we'll ever get it named.
1403
01:13:31,491 --> 01:13:32,784
It did happen.
1404
01:13:33,076 --> 01:13:36,913
And it still is a place
where people come to make music.
1405
01:13:39,416 --> 01:13:43,962
BECK: Maybe it started with
this optimism of The Beatles
1406
01:13:43,962 --> 01:13:48,049
to Ed Sullivan was the beginning of '64,
1407
01:13:48,049 --> 01:13:52,512
so that is the perfect kickoff
where there's this fad, right?
1408
01:13:52,720 --> 01:13:56,015
People want to be their own Beatles.
1409
01:13:56,349 --> 01:14:00,186
And then so that lasts for two,
two and a half years.
1410
01:14:00,186 --> 01:14:01,729
Well, it probably changed a lot when
1411
01:14:01,729 --> 01:14:04,441
everybody started writing
more complex, longer songs,
1412
01:14:04,441 --> 01:14:07,068
which is kind of up until
Pet Sounds and Expecting to Fly.
1413
01:14:07,068 --> 01:14:09,154
Songs were three and a half minutes
and they could do --
1414
01:14:09,154 --> 01:14:11,197
they realized they could do a lot more.
1415
01:14:11,197 --> 01:14:13,658
Don't you feel like some of these songs
1416
01:14:13,658 --> 01:14:17,287
structurally, like word-wise and sound-wise,
1417
01:14:17,287 --> 01:14:20,957
they're almost like more related to dreams?
1418
01:14:20,957 --> 01:14:23,710
Because they feel like
music before was more written
1419
01:14:23,710 --> 01:14:26,463
for like the conscious mind
and this seems to be like more
1420
01:14:26,463 --> 01:14:29,507
coming in touch with the subconscious,
1421
01:14:29,507 --> 01:14:32,051
which is on the way to psychedelia probably,
1422
01:14:32,051 --> 01:14:33,845
just that in-between?
1423
01:14:33,845 --> 01:14:35,638
Well I think we talked about
"Expecting To Fly"
1424
01:14:35,638 --> 01:14:38,266
and maybe that's the end of it?
1425
01:14:39,851 --> 01:14:41,227
You know?
1426
01:14:41,227 --> 01:14:43,730
I'm not sure I would be the one
to say why it's the end of it,
1427
01:14:43,730 --> 01:14:45,815
but that's very different than
everything else we listened to
1428
01:14:45,815 --> 01:14:48,151
and I wouldn't say more ambitious,
1429
01:14:48,151 --> 01:14:51,696
but it seemed like something
cracked open maybe right then.
1430
01:14:53,865 --> 01:14:59,412
BECK: That era begins with
this collective idea of these
1431
01:14:59,412 --> 01:15:01,789
musicians and this
creative force coming together
1432
01:15:01,789 --> 01:15:02,957
to make something bigger.
1433
01:15:02,957 --> 01:15:06,961
And then the era ends
when it becomes more
1434
01:15:06,961 --> 01:15:08,630
about the individual,
1435
01:15:08,630 --> 01:15:12,926
yeah, searching their
own life and their own path
1436
01:15:12,926 --> 01:15:17,388
and, ah, yeah, you get
all these groups breaking up.
1437
01:15:17,889 --> 01:15:21,017
When you have strong minded people
1438
01:15:21,017 --> 01:15:24,687
and they're having these
visions of a new type of art
1439
01:15:24,687 --> 01:15:28,525
and they start to compromise,
then it just doesn't last maybe.
1440
01:15:30,151 --> 01:15:32,237
What do you remember about
"Expecting To Fly"?
1441
01:15:32,237 --> 01:15:33,321
'Cause we recorded that for the record.
1442
01:15:33,321 --> 01:15:34,614
What do you remember
about recording that song?
1443
01:15:34,614 --> 01:15:36,699
Actually, I wasn't allowed on those sessions.
1444
01:15:36,699 --> 01:15:37,617
You're not on that at all?
1445
01:15:37,617 --> 01:15:41,079
No, that's when Neil
had decided to take flight.
1446
01:15:41,079 --> 01:15:43,331
- That song was a warning.
- Was it?
1447
01:15:43,331 --> 01:15:45,708
- Yes, I'm leaving.
- Really?
1448
01:15:45,708 --> 01:15:48,211
And I'm going to wait until it's absolutely
1449
01:15:48,211 --> 01:15:51,214
critically important
to the survival of the band,
1450
01:15:51,214 --> 01:15:54,968
like the night before Johnny Carson
booked the first rock band.
1451
01:15:55,760 --> 01:15:58,763
Neil quit the day before
we we're getting on the plane.
1452
01:16:01,349 --> 01:16:04,310
[band tunes up]
1453
01:16:09,440 --> 01:16:12,694
[band plays "Expecting To Fly"]
1454
01:16:16,823 --> 01:16:18,700
[audience cheers]
1455
01:16:30,503 --> 01:16:35,508
♪ There you stood on the edge of your feather ♪
1456
01:16:36,884 --> 01:16:40,680
♪ Expecting to fly ♪
1457
01:16:42,432 --> 01:16:47,437
♪ While I laughedand I wondered whether ♪
1458
01:16:48,688 --> 01:16:52,567
♪ I could wave goodbye ♪
1459
01:16:54,944 --> 01:16:59,198
♪ Knowin' that you'd gone ♪
1460
01:17:03,870 --> 01:17:08,833
♪ By the summer it was healing ♪
1461
01:17:10,084 --> 01:17:13,046
♪ And we had said goodbye ♪
1462
01:17:14,881 --> 01:17:19,719
♪ All the years we'd spent with feeling ♪
1463
01:17:21,179 --> 01:17:23,931
♪ Ended with a cry ♪
1464
01:17:25,350 --> 01:17:28,686
♪ Babe ♪
1465
01:17:29,562 --> 01:17:32,231
♪ Ended with a cry ♪
1466
01:17:33,524 --> 01:17:36,527
♪ Babe ♪
1467
01:17:37,737 --> 01:17:40,490
♪ Ended with a cry ♪
1468
01:17:44,869 --> 01:17:48,039
[music continues]
1469
01:17:57,048 --> 01:18:02,637
♪ I tried so hard to stand as I stumbled ♪
1470
01:18:03,888 --> 01:18:07,809
♪ And fell to the ground ♪
1471
01:18:08,893 --> 01:18:11,896
♪ So hard to laugh ♪
1472
01:18:11,896 --> 01:18:14,399
♪ As I fumbled ♪
1473
01:18:15,525 --> 01:18:20,029
♪ And reached for the love I found ♪
1474
01:18:21,698 --> 01:18:25,702
♪ Knowin' it was gone ♪
1475
01:18:30,581 --> 01:18:35,586
♪ If I never lived without you ♪
1476
01:18:37,088 --> 01:18:40,049
♪ Now you know I'd die ♪
1477
01:18:41,592 --> 01:18:46,472
♪ If I never said I loved you ♪
1478
01:18:47,849 --> 01:18:50,810
♪ Well now you know I'd try ♪
1479
01:18:52,186 --> 01:18:55,314
♪ Babe ♪
1480
01:18:56,232 --> 01:18:58,860
♪ Now you know I'd try ♪
1481
01:19:00,486 --> 01:19:03,489
♪ Babe ♪
1482
01:19:04,615 --> 01:19:07,201
♪ Now you know I'd try ♪
1483
01:19:08,661 --> 01:19:12,206
♪ Babe ♪
1484
01:19:12,874 --> 01:19:15,793
♪ Now you know I'd try ♪
1485
01:19:16,335 --> 01:19:18,212
[applause]
1486
01:19:18,212 --> 01:19:21,841
[music rewinds]
1487
01:19:28,431 --> 01:19:31,309
["What's Happening?!?!",
Jakob Dylan singing]
1488
01:19:31,309 --> 01:19:33,227
♪ I don't know ♪
1489
01:19:36,814 --> 01:19:39,442
♪ What's going on here ♪
1490
01:19:40,651 --> 01:19:42,612
♪ And I don't know ♪
1491
01:19:45,156 --> 01:19:48,743
♪ How it's supposed to be ♪
1492
01:19:50,995 --> 01:19:54,665
[music continues]
1493
01:20:01,798 --> 01:20:03,841
♪ Oh, I don't have ♪
1494
01:20:07,303 --> 01:20:09,889
♪ The vaguest notion ♪
1495
01:20:11,224 --> 01:20:12,975
♪ Whose it is ♪
1496
01:20:16,604 --> 01:20:20,817
♪ Or what it's all for ♪
1497
01:20:21,609 --> 01:20:24,487
[music continues]
1498
01:20:32,453 --> 01:20:34,330
♪ I don't know ♪
1499
01:20:37,875 --> 01:20:40,711
♪ And I'm not cryin' ♪
1500
01:20:41,712 --> 01:20:44,215
♪ Laughin' mostly ♪
1501
01:20:47,218 --> 01:20:51,347
♪ As you can see ♪
1502
01:20:52,181 --> 01:20:55,810
[music continues]
120828
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