1 00:00:00,640 --> 00:00:02,920 Speaker 1: We would be singing a menu at work side said 2 00:00:02,960 --> 00:00:04,920 Speaker 1: twelve hundred people. The men at work could be down 3 00:00:04,920 --> 00:00:07,680 Speaker 1: the road. I only did the people party in the bands. 4 00:00:07,680 --> 00:00:10,200 Speaker 1: It was a way of like Cozy and Lisa's. 5 00:00:10,280 --> 00:00:13,319 Speaker 2: Pub drawn this morning, I guess the singer of Ice 6 00:00:13,400 --> 00:00:14,920 Speaker 2: Tiger Dave Crosby, Good. 7 00:00:14,760 --> 00:00:16,639 Speaker 1: Morning, Dave, Good morning, guys. 8 00:00:16,680 --> 00:00:17,600 Speaker 3: How are we good? 9 00:00:17,880 --> 00:00:18,200 Speaker 1: Well? 10 00:00:18,640 --> 00:00:21,520 Speaker 2: The band had an interesting blend of musicians, Dave, You 11 00:00:21,600 --> 00:00:25,080 Speaker 2: had a rock metal background, you did. Graham and Steve 12 00:00:25,120 --> 00:00:27,040 Speaker 2: had been in one of the city's more popular top 13 00:00:27,120 --> 00:00:30,440 Speaker 2: forty cover bands, and never the twain were meant to meet. 14 00:00:30,560 --> 00:00:33,680 Speaker 2: And yet you know, how did you find each other 15 00:00:33,760 --> 00:00:36,560 Speaker 2: and go, well, actually this is really going to work. 16 00:00:36,720 --> 00:00:39,680 Speaker 1: Well, but that's really quite a long story. 17 00:00:39,720 --> 00:00:45,000 Speaker 3: We got together by accident and possibly people that we knew, 18 00:00:45,920 --> 00:00:47,760 Speaker 3: and I went to see Flash Harry that who was 19 00:00:47,800 --> 00:00:50,080 Speaker 3: working with and I thought, oh, yeah, this guy is dangerous, 20 00:00:50,120 --> 00:00:53,920 Speaker 3: you know. And he heard that my band True Colors 21 00:00:54,000 --> 00:00:56,480 Speaker 3: was breaking up. Yeah, so he asked me if I'd 22 00:00:56,560 --> 00:00:59,200 Speaker 3: like to come down and try out for the job. 23 00:01:00,360 --> 00:01:06,360 Speaker 3: And once we'd got the rehearsal over and done with 24 00:01:06,959 --> 00:01:11,560 Speaker 3: and we started work. Graham and I we went to 25 00:01:11,880 --> 00:01:14,440 Speaker 3: Vic Park for a ride to try and find another 26 00:01:14,520 --> 00:01:18,039 Speaker 3: venue that was this side of the river. Yeah, And 27 00:01:18,240 --> 00:01:21,920 Speaker 3: once we scored the venue, we came out, sat in 28 00:01:21,959 --> 00:01:24,560 Speaker 3: his van and we started singing a song, an old 29 00:01:24,640 --> 00:01:28,440 Speaker 3: Ronnie Dio song called Rainbow Eyes, and he harmonized all 30 00:01:28,440 --> 00:01:32,840 Speaker 3: the way through it absolutely perfectly. I sang the main part, 31 00:01:32,959 --> 00:01:36,759 Speaker 3: he did the high harmony, and it just sounded amazing, 32 00:01:36,959 --> 00:01:38,960 Speaker 3: you know. And then he just sort of folded his 33 00:01:39,120 --> 00:01:41,720 Speaker 3: arms and he said, do you remember an annoying little 34 00:01:41,840 --> 00:01:45,600 Speaker 3: kid that came up to you in the mid seventies 35 00:01:46,240 --> 00:01:50,640 Speaker 3: and you gave him a lift home? And I looked 36 00:01:50,640 --> 00:01:55,680 Speaker 3: at him and I said, you're not him. Nobody else 37 00:01:55,720 --> 00:01:56,880 Speaker 3: could have known that story. 38 00:01:57,080 --> 00:01:58,480 Speaker 4: Yeah, it's amazing. 39 00:01:58,640 --> 00:01:59,400 Speaker 1: It is unreal. 40 00:02:00,440 --> 00:02:04,320 Speaker 3: Yeah, we got really close for many years and we 41 00:02:04,360 --> 00:02:07,960 Speaker 3: wrote some pretty good tunes together. Also, Don Benson was 42 00:02:07,960 --> 00:02:12,480 Speaker 3: a really good part of the songwriting within the band. 43 00:02:13,600 --> 00:02:17,959 Speaker 5: Yeah, Greenie was always my perth Steve Vai or something 44 00:02:18,040 --> 00:02:20,160 Speaker 5: I was telling, such a great guitarist and standing down 45 00:02:20,200 --> 00:02:22,320 Speaker 5: on the night that the album was launched in ninety one, 46 00:02:22,400 --> 00:02:24,079 Speaker 5: right in front of him down there, that was something 47 00:02:24,120 --> 00:02:24,720 Speaker 5: pretty special. 48 00:02:24,760 --> 00:02:25,920 Speaker 1: And the fans came out, didn't they. 49 00:02:25,960 --> 00:02:29,880 Speaker 3: That's right? Yeah, he is an amazing guitarist. He always 50 00:02:29,960 --> 00:02:34,480 Speaker 3: has been. I was privileged to work with him, to 51 00:02:34,520 --> 00:02:40,080 Speaker 3: be honest, and we did have a good partnership. You know. 52 00:02:40,480 --> 00:02:43,120 Speaker 3: It was great until I got a little bored of 53 00:02:43,160 --> 00:02:46,160 Speaker 3: Perth and I just wanted to go. Yeah. Ok so 54 00:02:46,240 --> 00:02:49,000 Speaker 3: that was like ninety two, Yes, that was ninety two. 55 00:02:49,480 --> 00:02:52,400 Speaker 3: My parents were going back to England for one of 56 00:02:52,440 --> 00:02:58,440 Speaker 3: their every two year visits and I said, I might 57 00:02:58,560 --> 00:03:01,440 Speaker 3: just come with you for a few months just to see. 58 00:03:02,240 --> 00:03:05,600 Speaker 3: And I did, and I got work straight away, and 59 00:03:05,639 --> 00:03:08,320 Speaker 3: I was recognized straight away. You travel half a planet 60 00:03:09,120 --> 00:03:11,280 Speaker 3: and somebody recognized. 61 00:03:10,720 --> 00:03:16,080 Speaker 1: Oh, yeah, that's really But I started. 62 00:03:15,680 --> 00:03:20,640 Speaker 3: Working there with the duo, and I also started recording 63 00:03:20,639 --> 00:03:24,200 Speaker 3: with a French guy called Sylvain Governeur, and he was 64 00:03:24,280 --> 00:03:28,760 Speaker 3: quite a talented boy. But eventually I just sort of 65 00:03:28,800 --> 00:03:33,240 Speaker 3: run out of money and the boys rang back and said, 66 00:03:33,240 --> 00:03:37,920 Speaker 3: look some gigs if you want to come back. Okay, 67 00:03:38,160 --> 00:03:38,480 Speaker 3: So I. 68 00:03:38,440 --> 00:03:39,760 Speaker 1: Came back, came. 69 00:03:40,080 --> 00:03:42,640 Speaker 2: We know you played at the Charles Lost good memories 70 00:03:42,680 --> 00:03:44,680 Speaker 2: from the Charles. What are some of the other pubs 71 00:03:44,720 --> 00:03:46,120 Speaker 2: that you played at back. 72 00:03:46,000 --> 00:03:46,400 Speaker 4: In the day. 73 00:03:46,560 --> 00:03:51,080 Speaker 2: The Herdsman, Yeah, Raffles, of course, the Raffles, Yes. 74 00:03:51,600 --> 00:03:56,480 Speaker 3: What was the old be called stage door or something right, 75 00:03:58,640 --> 00:03:59,960 Speaker 3: and of course some country gigs. 76 00:04:00,440 --> 00:04:02,520 Speaker 4: Your first show was in management, wasn't it right? 77 00:04:02,960 --> 00:04:03,760 Speaker 1: Do you remember a. 78 00:04:03,640 --> 00:04:04,360 Speaker 3: New Year's Eve? 79 00:04:06,080 --> 00:04:09,560 Speaker 1: Mad? What do you got? Well? 80 00:04:10,280 --> 00:04:12,520 Speaker 3: I just didn't expect to have as many people as 81 00:04:12,560 --> 00:04:15,000 Speaker 3: we did on our first opening night. 82 00:04:15,440 --> 00:04:17,320 Speaker 1: But they must have built it really. 83 00:04:18,560 --> 00:04:22,400 Speaker 3: Well for us. Like I said, we've got about five 84 00:04:22,520 --> 00:04:25,560 Speaker 3: hundred people in a place that only holds about six. 85 00:04:26,000 --> 00:04:28,320 Speaker 3: And then they as soon as they heard us, they 86 00:04:28,360 --> 00:04:29,479 Speaker 3: were ringing their friends. 87 00:04:29,720 --> 00:04:34,640 Speaker 4: Yeah, probably a start for you know, live acts. So yeah, 88 00:04:35,000 --> 00:04:35,240 Speaker 4: so you. 89 00:04:35,240 --> 00:04:37,880 Speaker 1: Would have gone to a phone phone a. 90 00:04:37,960 --> 00:04:42,200 Speaker 3: Real yeah, and they were they were lining up waiting 91 00:04:42,279 --> 00:04:44,800 Speaker 3: to ring their mates to get on down. You know. 92 00:04:44,880 --> 00:04:45,719 Speaker 1: Yeah, it's amazing. 93 00:04:46,240 --> 00:04:48,120 Speaker 5: Well they have a common theme that over the last 94 00:04:48,120 --> 00:04:49,960 Speaker 5: week we've done this and we're going to continue doing this. 95 00:04:50,040 --> 00:04:51,800 Speaker 5: And you know, looking back, especially in the eighties and 96 00:04:51,839 --> 00:04:54,400 Speaker 5: early nineties and the Perth pub scene is those incredible 97 00:04:54,480 --> 00:04:56,240 Speaker 5: venues were all sort of warning them a bit that 98 00:04:56,279 --> 00:04:58,160 Speaker 5: they were they were massive beer barnes, weren't they really 99 00:04:58,440 --> 00:04:59,040 Speaker 5: they were, but. 100 00:04:59,000 --> 00:05:02,400 Speaker 3: They were very dangerous two dean. I mean the amount 101 00:05:02,400 --> 00:05:06,760 Speaker 3: of deaths I suppose on the road that was caused 102 00:05:06,760 --> 00:05:09,200 Speaker 3: by a drink driving because alcohol was a lot more 103 00:05:09,240 --> 00:05:12,760 Speaker 3: plutent in those days. I remember just a normal can 104 00:05:12,760 --> 00:05:17,840 Speaker 3: of beer was eight percent back then, and now it's 105 00:05:17,880 --> 00:05:19,919 Speaker 3: dropped to what five or something around a. 106 00:05:19,880 --> 00:05:21,440 Speaker 1: Lot of Yeah. 107 00:05:21,680 --> 00:05:26,000 Speaker 3: Fortunately during Tiger I never drank, and whenever we got 108 00:05:26,000 --> 00:05:28,640 Speaker 3: a drink rider, I thought, oh, well, you want to 109 00:05:28,760 --> 00:05:32,800 Speaker 3: order me something, get me a bottle of champagne. Okay, 110 00:05:34,080 --> 00:05:36,200 Speaker 3: so I did come on stage in a nice bucket 111 00:05:36,200 --> 00:05:38,520 Speaker 3: and everything. I thought, oh right, all right, Live the 112 00:05:38,600 --> 00:05:40,800 Speaker 3: high life, Ronnie James De. 113 00:05:42,800 --> 00:05:46,120 Speaker 2: Your first Perth show was at the Raffles, and at 114 00:05:46,160 --> 00:05:49,360 Speaker 2: that time there were a lot of cover bands doing 115 00:05:49,400 --> 00:05:53,599 Speaker 2: a lot of you know, mainstream top forty style stuff, 116 00:05:54,000 --> 00:05:57,400 Speaker 2: and then you came out with that much more rockier show. 117 00:05:57,640 --> 00:06:02,279 Speaker 2: Were people like oh at last, Well, I think it was. 118 00:06:03,680 --> 00:06:07,720 Speaker 3: It just came naturally as a progression for me. I 119 00:06:07,800 --> 00:06:11,520 Speaker 3: was in heavy metal bands before that, and then the 120 00:06:11,560 --> 00:06:15,000 Speaker 3: progression to go to glam rock wasn't really that hard, 121 00:06:16,080 --> 00:06:21,119 Speaker 3: except for putting on those silly outits, but it wasn't 122 00:06:21,120 --> 00:06:24,720 Speaker 3: that hard to actually sing the songs and get to 123 00:06:24,760 --> 00:06:26,720 Speaker 3: know them and feel good with them, and that, you know. 124 00:06:26,760 --> 00:06:28,920 Speaker 3: I mean, we had some great bands to pick from. 125 00:06:29,200 --> 00:06:33,599 Speaker 3: White Snake, Yeah, bon Jovi, Cose, Motley Crue, all those 126 00:06:33,640 --> 00:06:36,000 Speaker 3: sort of bands that were around Poison. 127 00:06:36,160 --> 00:06:39,240 Speaker 4: Or the hair bands. 128 00:06:39,760 --> 00:06:45,760 Speaker 3: But nonetheless we made the transition. I think it was 129 00:06:45,839 --> 00:06:50,880 Speaker 3: harder maybe for Don because he had never played in 130 00:06:50,920 --> 00:06:54,320 Speaker 3: a hard rock bambo. But as soon as he started 131 00:06:54,360 --> 00:06:59,400 Speaker 3: listening to the the bon Jovi album Slippery Went, we went, 132 00:06:59,440 --> 00:07:00,920 Speaker 3: this is my favorite stuff. 133 00:07:01,160 --> 00:07:02,680 Speaker 1: Everything right right? Okay? 134 00:07:02,800 --> 00:07:03,040 Speaker 3: Yeah? 135 00:07:03,240 --> 00:07:06,000 Speaker 1: He was up for it. Yeah, so it worked out great. 136 00:07:06,279 --> 00:07:07,680 Speaker 5: What were the pants of choice for you, mate? Were 137 00:07:07,680 --> 00:07:09,400 Speaker 5: you leather or spandex? What did you go there? 138 00:07:09,720 --> 00:07:15,280 Speaker 1: The leather jeans? Glamor not? 139 00:07:16,040 --> 00:07:16,920 Speaker 4: Very rock and roll. 140 00:07:18,320 --> 00:07:20,080 Speaker 1: Quite a few of the hand the hairbands are wearing 141 00:07:20,120 --> 00:07:22,280 Speaker 1: it true? Would you believe I. 142 00:07:22,080 --> 00:07:24,520 Speaker 3: Was asked to do an advert wearing Spandex? 143 00:07:26,600 --> 00:07:29,920 Speaker 1: Pass you are ice. 144 00:07:29,960 --> 00:07:33,160 Speaker 2: Tiger was very well known for its highly visual shows. 145 00:07:33,160 --> 00:07:38,040 Speaker 2: But you also had a sound engineer, Ben Glad Ben Glatzer, 146 00:07:38,560 --> 00:07:42,960 Speaker 2: and that was very important to you for the quality 147 00:07:42,920 --> 00:07:44,600 Speaker 2: of the quality of the live sound. 148 00:07:45,000 --> 00:07:49,440 Speaker 3: And he was tuned into what we needed for effects 149 00:07:49,840 --> 00:07:54,440 Speaker 3: because those sort of bands they really required big effects. 150 00:07:54,920 --> 00:07:58,600 Speaker 3: This thing called an AMS spatializer, which just makes a 151 00:07:58,680 --> 00:08:01,080 Speaker 3: band so sounds so open. 152 00:08:01,120 --> 00:08:02,920 Speaker 1: Yeah, but still lound and big. 153 00:08:03,080 --> 00:08:06,080 Speaker 3: Yeah, he knew how to get that out of other equipment. 154 00:08:06,120 --> 00:08:09,320 Speaker 3: That very sound, right, and so we thought we're. 155 00:08:09,160 --> 00:08:12,720 Speaker 5: On the rug stadium rock sound exactly exactly? 156 00:08:12,840 --> 00:08:16,200 Speaker 4: What was it the wah wah pedal or something that's 157 00:08:16,280 --> 00:08:17,200 Speaker 4: for the guitar. 158 00:08:18,480 --> 00:08:22,000 Speaker 5: Going on to be stomping pedals all night? How about 159 00:08:22,240 --> 00:08:24,880 Speaker 5: going on Tellymte National TV. He's Saturday. That must have 160 00:08:24,880 --> 00:08:29,240 Speaker 5: been a really good experience country Yeah, yeah, yeah, massive show. 161 00:08:29,400 --> 00:08:30,360 Speaker 3: It was nerve wracking? 162 00:08:30,520 --> 00:08:32,920 Speaker 1: Was it for me? Were you lively? You it on mine? 163 00:08:33,040 --> 00:08:33,520 Speaker 3: Yeah? 164 00:08:33,559 --> 00:08:34,480 Speaker 1: It was unreal. 165 00:08:36,000 --> 00:08:38,200 Speaker 3: The only thing I sort of objected to was it 166 00:08:38,240 --> 00:08:39,640 Speaker 3: was a grease show. 167 00:08:40,240 --> 00:08:45,559 Speaker 5: Oh no, really a hard rock yeah, the fifties, but 168 00:08:45,760 --> 00:08:47,280 Speaker 5: it still cast. 169 00:08:47,480 --> 00:08:48,520 Speaker 1: It's still fit. 170 00:08:48,679 --> 00:08:54,920 Speaker 2: A heavier version of hopelessly Yeah. 171 00:08:55,160 --> 00:08:57,280 Speaker 1: Actually your vocal you could do the falsetto and something 172 00:08:57,400 --> 00:08:57,960 Speaker 1: that's cold. 173 00:09:01,400 --> 00:09:04,199 Speaker 2: Now you are a teacher these days and you are 174 00:09:04,760 --> 00:09:08,080 Speaker 2: loving it. Is it Is it as easy to command 175 00:09:09,040 --> 00:09:11,600 Speaker 2: a classroom full of kids as a pub audience. 176 00:09:11,920 --> 00:09:18,120 Speaker 3: No, not in a million years. With a pub audience, 177 00:09:18,200 --> 00:09:23,400 Speaker 3: you've got the luxury of knowing that they're under the influences, 178 00:09:23,800 --> 00:09:27,160 Speaker 3: so you know you can yeah, so you can get 179 00:09:27,160 --> 00:09:30,319 Speaker 3: them in the palm of your hands pretty you're hoping 180 00:09:30,360 --> 00:09:37,520 Speaker 3: to the classroom preferably. But children know that's a totally 181 00:09:38,000 --> 00:09:43,360 Speaker 3: different book because every single child is totally different, which 182 00:09:43,400 --> 00:09:50,040 Speaker 3: I love. But no, to be able to command their 183 00:09:50,080 --> 00:09:51,800 Speaker 3: attention is impossible. 184 00:09:52,360 --> 00:09:55,760 Speaker 1: But if they respect you, yep, then you. 185 00:09:55,840 --> 00:09:56,679 Speaker 3: Got their attention. 186 00:09:56,960 --> 00:09:59,839 Speaker 5: Okay, okay, see teaching music, You've got the same rock 187 00:09:59,880 --> 00:10:00,839 Speaker 5: he there was last time I saw you. 188 00:10:00,920 --> 00:10:01,000 Speaker 1: Ye. 189 00:10:02,080 --> 00:10:03,840 Speaker 5: How about the kids when you walk into the class 190 00:10:03,840 --> 00:10:06,240 Speaker 5: for the first time, do they go, oh, he looks 191 00:10:06,240 --> 00:10:06,800 Speaker 5: like a rock star. 192 00:10:07,040 --> 00:10:13,000 Speaker 3: They sometimes do. Some already know because I did one 193 00:10:13,000 --> 00:10:16,480 Speaker 3: of those things for TV where they interviewed me and 194 00:10:16,559 --> 00:10:21,760 Speaker 3: a lot of people saw me on that. Yes, but no, 195 00:10:21,920 --> 00:10:26,440 Speaker 3: they they respect me, but they know that I've got 196 00:10:26,520 --> 00:10:30,760 Speaker 3: boundaries too. If they start to get annoying, they'll see 197 00:10:30,760 --> 00:10:32,079 Speaker 3: the you know. 198 00:10:32,080 --> 00:10:32,520 Speaker 1: The toughs. 199 00:10:33,320 --> 00:10:36,000 Speaker 3: Yeah. Yeah, they know not to reach that point once 200 00:10:36,040 --> 00:10:37,240 Speaker 3: they've done it once or twice. 201 00:10:37,280 --> 00:10:38,880 Speaker 1: Yeah, but they're pretty good. 202 00:10:39,240 --> 00:10:42,040 Speaker 3: Most of the kids are fantastic, you know, they really are, 203 00:10:42,480 --> 00:10:45,480 Speaker 3: And I love working with them. I love seeing the 204 00:10:45,559 --> 00:10:48,720 Speaker 3: lights go on in their eyes when when you teach 205 00:10:48,760 --> 00:10:51,840 Speaker 3: them something they go, this is cool. This sound is 206 00:10:51,920 --> 00:10:54,520 Speaker 3: really cool. How do you get it? And I'll just 207 00:10:54,559 --> 00:10:56,520 Speaker 3: show them and they get it and then all of 208 00:10:56,559 --> 00:10:59,320 Speaker 3: a sudden there's this look in their eyms. Now you've 209 00:10:59,360 --> 00:11:00,360 Speaker 3: never seen it. Love it. 210 00:11:00,800 --> 00:11:02,280 Speaker 4: Yeah, that is why. 211 00:11:02,120 --> 00:11:02,880 Speaker 1: I go every day. 212 00:11:03,000 --> 00:11:05,400 Speaker 2: Yeah, and I guess some parent teacher night you'd be 213 00:11:05,440 --> 00:11:07,520 Speaker 2: in demand because all their parents east to go the 214 00:11:07,600 --> 00:11:08,559 Speaker 2: Charles will be coming to. 215 00:11:10,320 --> 00:11:16,360 Speaker 1: Chat have an autograph. We have had a few. 216 00:11:16,559 --> 00:11:20,320 Speaker 5: Yes, we must also identify talent, incredible talent in some 217 00:11:20,360 --> 00:11:21,160 Speaker 5: of those kids as well. 218 00:11:21,360 --> 00:11:27,800 Speaker 3: Oh yes, absolutely. We recently just had two Russian girls 219 00:11:28,960 --> 00:11:33,760 Speaker 3: and they'd only just come in from Russia and they're 220 00:11:33,920 --> 00:11:37,920 Speaker 3: absolutely brilliant musicians, right, and of course you can imagine 221 00:11:37,920 --> 00:11:41,720 Speaker 3: that discipline that happens in that area. But they came 222 00:11:41,720 --> 00:11:44,840 Speaker 3: in and they brought a lot to the table. Yeah, 223 00:11:44,880 --> 00:11:51,000 Speaker 3: but unfortunately them for six months. Oh that's but that 224 00:11:51,160 --> 00:11:53,040 Speaker 3: a little time that we had together. It was great 225 00:11:53,080 --> 00:11:56,520 Speaker 3: fun and they helped to teach the kids as well. Yeah. 226 00:11:56,600 --> 00:12:00,240 Speaker 4: Yeah, well it's very contagious in a room at that. 227 00:12:00,280 --> 00:12:03,040 Speaker 4: I guess. Are you're still playing gigs. 228 00:12:02,840 --> 00:12:05,840 Speaker 3: Not meaning maybe one or two per year? Yeah, not 229 00:12:05,920 --> 00:12:08,280 Speaker 3: a great deal, because I mean I do gigs with 230 00:12:08,320 --> 00:12:12,360 Speaker 3: the kids. Yeah, you know, and that's fulfilling most of 231 00:12:12,400 --> 00:12:12,840 Speaker 3: my life. 232 00:12:13,320 --> 00:12:16,600 Speaker 5: You're pretty much jacked black from the movie Thinking School 233 00:12:18,080 --> 00:12:20,880 Speaker 5: Absolutely love it absolutely. 234 00:12:20,360 --> 00:12:23,720 Speaker 1: Or mister Holland, yes, did you see that this week? 235 00:12:24,040 --> 00:12:26,080 Speaker 1: What a greatsational movie. 236 00:12:26,760 --> 00:12:30,480 Speaker 2: Well, Dave, it's been lovely to reminisce with you about 237 00:12:30,480 --> 00:12:33,280 Speaker 2: the Ice Tiger Jays as part of our Perth pub crawl. 238 00:12:33,400 --> 00:12:33,760 Speaker 1: Thank you. 239 00:12:33,960 --> 00:12:34,960 Speaker 4: Feels like yesterday. 240 00:12:35,000 --> 00:12:37,800 Speaker 1: It does feel like yesterday it was, and you look 241 00:12:37,920 --> 00:12:40,800 Speaker 1: like yesterday. Yeah you did. 242 00:12:41,160 --> 00:12:42,199 Speaker 4: It's longer than yours. 243 00:12:42,600 --> 00:12:42,760 Speaker 1: Off. 244 00:12:44,559 --> 00:12:47,160 Speaker 3: Can I just say a little hello for all of 245 00:12:47,200 --> 00:12:49,160 Speaker 3: the kids at Belga High School and all of the 246 00:12:49,240 --> 00:12:52,360 Speaker 3: teachers that have supported me over the way. Yeah, thank you. 247 00:12:52,440 --> 00:12:55,679 Speaker 2: We heard good things about your kids in the we're 248 00:12:55,760 --> 00:12:56,440 Speaker 2: chatting before. 249 00:12:57,360 --> 00:13:00,440 Speaker 5: Very passionate both ways. It's good yea interesting you Jays, 250 00:13:00,960 --> 00:13:01,760 Speaker 5: Thanks for listening.