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00:00All right, let's do that, let me show up.
00:30G'day, I'm Adam Hills, welcome to Picture Specs, the music we show that wanted to write
00:36an Australian version of Hamilton, but couldn't find enough appropriate rhymes for Sir Edmund
00:40Barton.
00:41As always, I'm joined by our two team captains, she listens to Charlie XCX and he's still trying
00:45to open a PDF, it's Miff Warhurst and Alan Brough.
00:49And this first guest tonight is a concert pianist and the co-host of the ABC show The Piano, where
00:57members of the public play a piano set up in a busy train station.
01:00She's helping people find their connection to music while missing their connecting train
01:03at Central.
01:04Please welcome Andrea Lamb.
01:06Next second guest is a comedian whose performance style has been likened to, and I quote, a bemused
01:13child attempting to wrestle a giant octopus into a suitcase.
01:16Say what you like, it was the best episode of border security we've seen in years.
01:21Please welcome Frank Woodley.
01:22Alan's first guest tonight is an Australian rock legend who appeared on the very first
01:31episode of Specs and Specs.
01:33We're grateful to have him back and we promise to have that invoice sorted any day now.
01:36Please welcome Ross Wilson.
01:38Alan's final guest tonight is a comedian and actor who created and starred in her own sitcom
01:46pilot and was also featured heavily on a celebrity foot fetish website.
01:50Yeah, whichever way you look at it, that's quite the feat.
01:53Please welcome Irving Ajunda.
01:56And now we are celebrating Australian music this year and tonight we have an Australian first.
02:04Paul Kelly has just released his new album Seventy and tonight he's going to end the show by
02:08playing his latest single for the first time on TV.
02:11It's a follow up to How To Make Gravy, it's called Rita Wrote A Letter.
02:17Paul, so excited to have you on Specs and Specs.
02:23What made you decide to go back to the story?
02:25For a long time I had just a line, Rita Wrote A Letter and I thought that's a great title
02:30for a song.
02:31I thought we never really heard much about her side of the story so I thought she deserves
02:35her own song.
02:36Like is this going to ruin it if I say Dan's talking from beyond the grave in this song?
02:39Beyond the gravy?
02:40He's talking from...
02:41Beyond the gravy.
02:42It's a ghost song.
02:43Yeah.
02:44Yeah.
02:45I've heard the song, he sounds in good spirits.
02:47The guy does not shut up.
02:51Listen, we'll find out how Joe died.
02:54Has anyone got any theories, Russ?
02:56He's mixing up gravy and he puts some mushrooms in it.
03:08Any other songs we'd like to see a sequel to, Irvie?
03:10Um, yes, I've always been obsessed with Kings of Leon, so I thought, you know, Sex on Fire,
03:16that's a great song.
03:17The sequel could be One More Tube of Caniston, please.
03:20Miff and Alan are going to pick a topic, everybody will be quizzed on that topic.
03:31Your choices tonight are drums, guitar, piano and flugelhorn.
03:36Alan, you can pick first.
03:38We'll have guitars, please.
03:40Miff, what topic do you want?
03:41Well, I'm sitting next to one of the country's greatest piano players, so we have to choose
03:46piano.
03:47Alright, we'll start with guitar.
03:48Everyone on your buzzers?
03:49Speaks and Specs.
03:50First question for one point.
03:51The Jaguar, Jazzmaster and Telecaster.
03:53Yes.
03:54Fender guitars.
03:55Are all models of which brand of guitar?
03:57Fender.
03:58Correct.
03:59Well done.
04:00For two points.
04:01Identify these famous guitarists by their signature guitars.
04:04Alan's side.
04:05Well, the right hand side is Jimmy Page.
04:08Correct.
04:09From Leadset.
04:10Yep.
04:11And...
04:12Eddie Van Halen.
04:13Yes!
04:14Well done.
04:15Good points.
04:16Am I right in saying that that guitar was called the Frankencaster?
04:22Mmm.
04:23Because he built it out of all these different parts?
04:25And I think I should get a point for that.
04:27Yes.
04:28I think you'll get a nice one.
04:29For three points, name these three guitar chords.
04:32Oh, mid-side.
04:33Oh no.
04:34I can't even play guitar.
04:35I just buzzed in.
04:36I can.
04:37Can you?
04:38D minor.
04:39Yep.
04:40E and G.
04:41You've got D minor and G.
04:43I'm going to throw it over to this side to pick the one in the middle.
04:45It's F.
04:46It's F.
04:47Yes, well done.
04:48You get that point out.
04:49Excellent work.
04:50I was just dripping with smug bum, wasn't I?
04:54Now, Ross, the opening notes of Eagle Rock, that little guitar riff is so memorable.
05:00As soon as you hear it, you know, oh my god, it's Eagle Rock.
05:03Do you remember where you were when you came up with that?
05:05I was actually in England.
05:06Right.
05:07And I was...
05:08Well, let's move on.
05:09What was the move?
05:11Well, I bought a guitar while I was over there for a few months.
05:14And I'm not a very good guitarist, so A is one of the easiest chords to play.
05:19You just put your fingers across like that.
05:21Yeah.
05:22And I didn't want to have to move up and down.
05:24So I came up with this riff where you didn't have to do anything except wiggle your little
05:28finger once in a while.
05:29Yeah.
05:30It's simple.
05:31It's simple.
05:32We found a great bit of footage of you playing at the concert for Bangladesh at the
05:36My Music Bowl in 1975.
05:38But what I love about it is you can see firstly the dancing that's going on, but the difference
05:43in generations as to how people reacted to your music.
05:46There he is.
05:47There's the Grumpy Man.
05:48Oh, I love it.
05:49Does it make you want to get up and start Sharpie dancing?
05:50Yeah.
05:51Absolutely.
05:52I'm so glad.
05:53I was smoking and nice guys too.
05:54There it is.
05:55And where?
05:56And where?
05:57Yeah.
05:58Yeah.
05:59Does it make you want to get up and start Sharpie dancing?
06:01Yeah!
06:02Absolutely!
06:03I was smoking in those days, too.
06:05There it is!
06:22Lovely, lovely bit of business.
06:23Lovely bit of business.
06:25Here's a fun fact.
06:27Do you all remember Magda Szabanski and Alan Pentland dancing as Michelle and Ferret on
06:31Australian TV as these characters?
06:33Right.
06:34In that footage, at that concert, Alan Pentland, who plays Ferret, is in the audience.
06:39Here it is.
06:40Not even making this up.
06:41That's actually him.
06:45Amazing moment of Australian TV history.
06:49Alright, let's move on to piano.
06:51Which is a notoriously tricky instrument.
06:54It is.
06:55What's the worst thing it's done to you?
06:56Usually it behaves pretty well.
06:58But one time I got on stage, everything was all set up.
07:01Piano's great.
07:02You know, everything's beautiful.
07:03Hall.
07:04Sat down.
07:05I started playing.
07:06It was pretty soft.
07:07It was all going well.
07:08And then I started playing a louder section and the piano started moving a little.
07:12I was like, this is not normal.
07:14I think the wheels were not screwed in correctly or something.
07:18So I was, you know, playing and then moving my chair and playing and moving my chair and
07:22then trying to make it look like it was normal.
07:24But Chopin was a bit stressful that day.
07:27Well, were there people going, hey, we wanted a moving piece, but come on.
07:33Alright.
07:34Alright, there you go.
07:35On to piano.
07:36For one point.
07:37Listen to one of the most famous pieces of piano music.
07:39It's Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1.
07:41There's a question to follow.
07:46The question is, what key is it in?
07:49It's in B-flat minor.
07:51Yes, correct.
07:52It's B-flat minor.
07:54What did you call me?
07:55What did you call me?
07:56What did you call me?
07:57I feel like that question was tailored.
08:01Question two.
08:02Sold in 2014 for $3.4 million, this iconic piano appears in a famous 1942 film.
08:09For two points, name the film.
08:11Yes.
08:12Kessa Blanka.
08:13Yes.
08:14Oh my gosh.
08:15And there was another part to the question.
08:16Who played it?
08:17Played it against Sam.
08:18Sam.
08:19It was Sam, yes.
08:20Kessa Blanka.
08:21And it was played by Sam.
08:23Final question for three points.
08:24You pick out the three fake piano brands from the following.
08:29Yes.
08:30Kauai is real.
08:31Kava Tappi is definitely not real.
08:33Fatsioli is real.
08:35Borussia Dortmund is very creative.
08:38Not real.
08:39Oh no.
08:40Andrea, if it helps.
08:41Yes.
08:42You were correct in Borussia Dortmund is a German football club.
08:45Kava Tappi is a type of pasta.
08:47What's the third fake one?
08:49I think Kabakicho might be fake.
08:53Correct.
08:54Well done!
09:00Kabakicho is a red-like district in Tokyo.
09:05Where many ivories have been tingled.
09:12Your love of classical music, and piano in particular, stretches back to when you were
09:16a kid you had a poster of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra on your wall?
09:18Oh, it was very cool.
09:19Yes.
09:20I had a poster of the Sydney Symphony on my wall.
09:22I thought they were amazing.
09:24And how old were you when you played with them for the first time?
09:26I was 13.
09:28That's so young!
09:30It was like the highlight of my life, I think.
09:33And then how old were you when you played your first professional gig?
09:36I think it was a couple of years later.
09:37Right.
09:38Yeah.
09:39And that was actually with the Tchaikovsky concerto in B-flat minor.
09:41It was that piece.
09:42Yes.
09:43Well listen, we've got a keyboard here.
09:44Yes.
09:45Would you love to demonstrate that first professional gig?
09:46I would love to.
09:47That piece is amazing.
09:48So, would you like to make your way over and play the Tchaikovsky piece?
09:51I would love to.
09:57Okay, so this piece has one of the grandest openings of all time.
10:01It has, you know, you imagine a hall with thousands of people.
10:05We've got a nine-foot Steinway.
10:06That's one brand I do know.
10:08And then a hundred musicians behind you.
10:10Yeah.
10:11And then the French horn starts out.
10:14The whole orchestra.
10:18And then there's the intro.
10:21And then the piano comes in with these crashing chords.
10:25It's very satisfying.
10:31Oh my god!
10:49Oh my gosh!
10:50Andrea Lamb!
11:06Oh my goodness.
11:11Alright, at the end of that round, Mif, Andrea, Frank are on six points, Alan, Ross, Irvey
11:16also six points.
11:17Teams have to identify the tunes being performed live in the studio.
11:27Tonight you'll have to name the songs from their operatically performed intros sung by
11:31renegade soprano and cabaret star Ally McGregor.
11:35Can we have song one, please?
11:42Here we're working on C늘-UFO, early music,
11:58ah evo, our evo, our evil.
12:04Ah-hah-hah-hah-hah-hah!
12:06Yes.
12:07Um... Cannonball.
12:09It's Cannonball by The Breeders. Yes, correct.
12:11Correct.
12:13Song two, please.
12:14Ba-da ba ba-da-ba.
12:17Ba-da-ba ba-da-ba.
12:19Ba-da-ba ba-da-ba.
12:21Ba-da-ba-ba.
12:23Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha.
12:25Ooh, allenside. Yes.
12:27Uh-uh, Crazy in Love.
12:28Crazy in Love by Beyoncé. Yes. Correct.
12:30Song three, please.
12:32Huh, huh, huh, huh, huh, huh, huh, huh, huh, huh.
12:36Blue Monday.
12:37Yes.
12:38Oh, my goodness.
12:39Blue Monday by New Order.
12:42Next song, please.
12:55Oh.
12:58Is it a whistly one?
13:00Yep.
13:01Um, ah, the winds of change.
13:09Winds of change by the scorpion.
13:10Yes, well done.
13:12That was amazing as well.
13:15That was wild.
13:16What is that note called?
13:18G686 or something like that.
13:20It's whistle tone.
13:21It's whistle register.
13:22And I understand that it's been written into two operas just for you.
13:26Yes, I started doing it as a joke.
13:28I was hosting a show in Edinburgh Festival and thought I was doing a version of Oops, I Did It Again, jazz style.
13:35And I thought, wouldn't it be funny if I did it like the record had been sped up.
13:38So I did it and then I realised that it was a pretty cool technique.
13:41So, yeah, we've written in whistle tone into the operas now.
13:44Well, now I want to hear how Oops, I Did It Again sounds.
13:47Yeah.
13:47Yeah.
13:47Yeah.
13:47Yeah.
13:47Yeah.
13:47Yeah.
13:47Yeah.
13:47Yeah.
13:48Yeah.
13:48Yeah.
13:48Yeah.
13:48Yeah.
13:49Yeah.
13:49Yeah.
13:49Yeah.
13:50Yeah.
13:51Yeah.
13:51Yeah.
13:52Yeah.
13:53Yeah.
13:54Yeah.
13:55Yeah.
13:56Yeah.
13:57Yeah.
14:04Yeah.
14:05Yeah.
14:06Yeah.
14:07Yeah.
14:08Yeah.
14:09Yeah.
14:10Yeah.
14:11Yeah.
14:12Yeah.
14:13Yeah.
14:14Can we have the next song please?
14:16Yes, yes, it is Radiohead
14:22Oh, yeah, everything's in its right place
14:26Yes, oh my god
14:28You got it
14:29You got it
14:31Next one, please
14:32Yeah, what is it?
14:49It's The Immigrant Song by Led Zeppelin
14:51It's The Immigrant Song by Led Zeppelin, correct
14:53Would you please thank Ali McGregor
15:02At the end of that round, Alan, Ross and Irvi are on 8 points
15:05Miff, Andrea and Frank, 10 points
15:07Each team will be given three items available for sale online
15:14You have to put the items in the order of the price they sold for
15:17From cheapest to most expensive
15:19Miff, Andrea, Frank, your items are
15:21A crochet doll of the biggest touring artist in the world, Taylor Swift
15:25You can sew it with a broken heart
15:27A Mattel doll of Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba in the movie Wicked
15:31Okay
15:32And a paper mache doll of London-born soul singer Amy Winehouse
15:36Put them in order of price least to most expensive
15:39Alright, well, for the worst possible reasons
15:41I feel like the Amy Winehouse one would be the most expensive
15:44Because A, it's handmade by the sound of things
15:47Yeah
15:47And B, she's sadly no longer with us
15:49It's also probably full of Coke
15:51Yeah
15:51Because we all know that the beehive was also used for transporting things internationally
15:59Is that true?
16:00Really?
16:01I didn't see that episode of border security
16:03Paper mache is so specific
16:06It is, although it's a cheap material
16:09I mean, all the big things in Australia are made out of chicken wire and paper mache
16:12So, you know
16:13Alphabet would be like, can you just get that at the shops?
16:17That's what I would think
16:18Would that be a collector item?
16:19So I reckon, yeah, that, I agree
16:20Cheapest?
16:21One, and then Taylor
16:22And that one looks like it's handmade as well
16:24It does
16:25So, Alphabet cheapest and then Taylor
16:27I think so
16:28And then Amy
16:29Are we all happy with that?
16:31That works
16:31Okay, you got three out of three
16:33The Cynthia Erivo Alphabet doll sold for $95
16:41The Taylor Swift crochet doll sold for $165
16:45Although postage is huge because it has to go on a private jet
16:49And the Amy Winehouse paper mache doll sold for $263
16:53Oh, okay
16:54Well done
16:56The Cynthia Erivo doll came with a warning that it has loose, sharp parts
17:01Anyone want to guess what noise you make when you step on them?
17:03Ah-ah-ah-ah
17:05Thank you
17:06Thank you, Irvie
17:07Thank you
17:07That's almost worth a point
17:09That's almost worth a point
17:10I think we should get a point
17:11All right, Alan, Ross, Irvi, your items are a koala plushie that belonged to Aussie legend Olivia Newton-John.
17:17Oh, cute.
17:18A can of promotional fly spray for ACDC's 1985 Fly on the Wall album.
17:23That's cool.
17:23And a 3D printed model octopus based on the rapper Tupac Shakur called a Tupac-tapus.
17:32Put them in order, least and most expensive.
17:34So, two of the people are dead.
17:35Yeah.
17:36Yes.
17:36So, I think that makes them potentially more expensive than the fly spray.
17:41So, when did you say it was from?
17:42The 80s.
17:4385.
17:44So, it's not effective as fly spray anymore, I suspect.
17:47If it wasn't a one-off, there would have been a bunch of them.
17:50Yeah.
17:50Well, Olivia's isn't one-off.
17:52It's something that belonged to her.
17:54She would have touched it.
17:55That's kind of rare.
17:56Yeah.
17:57Okay.
17:58Well, so, you think that's the most expensive?
18:00Mm, I'd say so.
18:02Tupac, I'd say there'd be more than one of those that didn't belong to him.
18:05It doesn't strike me as a mass-produced item.
18:09No.
18:11It's more an Etsy vibe, isn't it?
18:13Isn't it?
18:13It's very much an Etsy shop that closes down after it sells the one thing that it's called.
18:20I don't know if this makes any difference.
18:21It's a 3D printed model.
18:23Oh.
18:24I think someone has sniffed the fly spray and then made this in their own time.
18:28So, maybe the Tupac-a-puss.
18:32Yep.
18:34Maybe that's the least expensive.
18:36Bug spray in the middle.
18:37And Olivia Newton-John's koala is the most expensive.
18:42So, the Tupac-a-puss is the least.
18:45It's sold for $21 US dollars.
18:47That's more than I was expecting.
18:49Olivia Newton-John's koala was second.
18:52It's sold for $1,170 US dollars.
18:54Oh.
18:55ACDC's fly spray went for $4,550 US dollars.
18:59Wow.
19:00Wow.
19:01Wow.
19:02That's amazing.
19:03All right, at the end of that round, Al and Ross Irvi are on 9 points.
19:06Miff, Andrea, Frank, 13 points.
19:12Each team will be shown photos of an iconic music celebrity.
19:15They have to order them from earliest to most recent based upon their look.
19:19Frank, you'll be playing for your team and your celebrity is Ross Wilson.
19:23Woo!
19:24Woo!
19:25Make your way up to the car walk, please.
19:27Ross, you are not allowed to help or interfere.
19:31You have 60 seconds to put them in chronological order.
19:34Your time starts now.
19:35I reckon 76 moves to 71 because that looks like the early hippie kind of period.
19:40Would you agree with that?
19:41Oh, no.
19:42That's 80s, I reckon.
19:43I think the one in your hand looks like another 70s photos.
19:46I don't reckon.
19:47He's looking like...
19:48It reminds me of David Bowie's serious moonlight tour.
19:52He's just getting a bit of that, which is an 80s thing, isn't it?
19:55Yeah, that's 80s, I think.
19:56This is older.
19:57That's older.
19:58They're all...
19:59He's looking.
20:00He's got bags under his eyes.
20:01Fashion, not the facial features.
20:03Yeah.
20:04I think that's right.
20:0584 there.
20:06Because that feels like, you know, the chemistry.
20:08Yeah, I reckon.
20:09But these are a bit harder.
20:11Oh, these.
20:122002 maybe is the grey stars or whatever it is.
20:15I'm feeling it.
20:16Maybe.
20:172005 moved to 2002 maybe.
20:19Okay.
20:20And then...
20:21Oh, go, go.
20:22All right, step away from the catwalk.
20:24The gold one won't be...
20:25Oh, yeah.
20:26Frank Woodley, come on bound.
20:27Come back, come back.
20:28And then...
20:29Yeah, that's okay.
20:30Okay, let's see how you went.
20:33You got the first three right.
20:35Yes!
20:36But then after that, it went a little bit off.
20:38Right.
20:39That's all right.
20:40Three points for Frank Woodley.
20:44Irvie, you'll be playing for your team.
20:46Your celebrity is Mifunwi Walhurst.
20:49Would you like to make your way up to the catwalk, please?
20:51Yes.
20:52Yay!
20:55Okay, um...
20:56All right, your time starts now.
20:57All right, guys, what do we think?
20:58I think 2022 goes to 2024.
21:00Oh.
21:01Yeah, I...
21:02She just made a noise though, so maybe not.
21:04The one of her and Adam is, I think, when the show won a Logie.
21:08In?
21:09Which maybe...
21:10Two thousand and...
21:11Ten?
21:12Nine...
21:13I think 2011 is the first one.
21:15The first ever?
21:16I think that's 2006.
21:17Oh.
21:18You think so?
21:1920 seconds.
21:20I think that looks like 2006 fashion more so.
21:21Okay, you go.
21:22Yeah, all right.
21:23I feel maybe...
21:24But that's also 2006 fashion.
21:26Okay.
21:27Time's running out.
21:29Okay, so...
21:30We've got this.
21:31Maybe...
21:32Yes.
21:33Why not?
21:34Oh!
21:35Oh, my God!
21:36Oh, my God!
21:37This is quite remarkable.
21:38Irvie, come back to your seat.
21:39Oh, okay.
21:40Thanks.
21:41Um...
21:42I'm gonna make a prediction.
21:44Yeah.
21:45None...
21:46Or all.
21:47Okay, you're correct.
21:48None.
21:49It's none.
21:50It's none.
21:51None.
21:52None.
21:53None.
21:54None.
21:55None.
21:56None.
21:57None.
21:58None.
21:59What are the odds?
22:00Um...
22:01Can I just say...
22:02The one in 2022 with Miff holding the bells was from last series.
22:05All right, at the end of that round, Alan, Ross, Irvie are on nine points.
22:10Miff, Andrea, Frank, 16 points.
22:12Woo!
22:15All right, it's time for the final countdown.
22:18One point for a correct answer, one point off for a wrong answer.
22:21Perfect.
22:22Buzzes, your questions start now.
22:23In 2004, Mattel released a Barbie doll of which iconic Grammy-winning Australian pop star?
22:29Yes.
22:30It could be Kylie.
22:31Kylie?
22:32It'd have to be Kylie, wouldn't it?
22:33It's Kylie Minogue, correct.
22:34Julian Casablancus is the lead singer...
22:36Yes.
22:37...of The Strokes.
22:38The style of music known as bebop falls under which genre?
22:41Jazz.
22:42Yes.
22:43What fruit is on the cover of the Velvet Underground's debut album?
22:46Banana.
22:47Yes.
22:48In 1992 comedy Wayne's World, which U.S. rock star gives Wayne and Garth a history lesson?
22:53It's Alice Cooper.
22:55Alice Cooper, correct.
22:56Which U.S. pop star was on board an all-female trip to space organized...
23:00Katy Perry.
23:01Katy Perry.
23:02Is the Japanese taiko a string percussion...
23:06Percussion.
23:07Percussion.
23:08It's a drum.
23:09And your final question.
23:10If Justin Timberlake is filthy and Christina Aguilera is dirty, what is Lola Young?
23:14Oh, Missy.
23:15Missy.
23:16Yes, correct.
23:17Well done.
23:18Well done.
23:19At the end of the show, the final scores are...
23:24Alan, Ross, Irvie, 15 points.
23:26Miff, Andrea, Frank, 18 points.
23:34Would you please thank all our guests for tonight?
23:36Andrea Lamb, Frank Woodley, Ross Wilson and Irving Najumdar.
23:43And our two team captains, Mick Warhurst and Alan Brough.
23:52To take us out tonight, Paul Kelly is about to play the sequel to his classic hit, How To Make Gravy, called Rita Wrote A Letter.
23:58Thanks for watching, Spicks and Specs.
23:59My name's Adam Hills.
24:00Goodnight, Australia.
24:01I really don't know how I'm talking.
24:02Six feet down and under the clay.
24:06The laws of nature forbid it.
24:07But I was never good with rules anyway.
24:08The day I walk out of prison, I knew that I was stealing stuff.
24:09And I was never good with rules anyway.
24:11I really don't know how I'm talking.
24:13I really don't know how I'm talking.
24:18Six feet down and under the clay.
24:20The laws of nature forbid it.
24:25But I was never good with rules anyway.
24:28The day I walk out of prison, I knew that I was stealing stuff.
24:36Or the crime committed.
24:39I was still doing time behind the walls between me and her.
24:46Rita wrote a letter.
24:49They keep her with me every day.
24:53Rita wrote a letter.
24:56This is what she had to say.
24:59She said, Joe, I'm really sorry.
25:05But me and Dana are always here to stay.
25:08With the kids it's getting better.
25:11And now our little baby's on the way.
25:14They took me back at the restaurant.
25:20Then you cooked every stole of my game.
25:24They put me on the dishes and the pots and pans.
25:29I was happy being busy again.
25:34Then every night when I came home.
25:37With my back and feet all aching sore.
25:41I laid every merry sparrow.
25:45Toss until the break of dawn.
25:49Rita wrote a letter.
25:52Rita wrote a letter.
25:53One you don't want to get from your wife.
25:57Rita wrote a letter.
25:59The pen is sharper than the knife.
26:04She said, man, I gave you good chances.
26:09But half of you turned into two.
26:12You can never hold your temper.
26:14And you always made it all about you.
26:18Hey.
26:27Hey!
26:28Hey!
26:29Hey!
26:30Well, the phone calls they started to dwindle.
26:39Once they move further up the coast.
26:43Those silences have lasted forever
26:48I couldn't find the words I needed the most
26:52One day I went to see an old friend
26:56And I brought a little package home
27:00For old times' sake, sweet oblivion
27:04But some things you shouldn't do alone
27:07Reader wrote a letter
27:12I'm still hugging it under the clay
27:15Reader wrote a letter
27:18Deep down I know it's better to sway
27:21Maybe she and them feel guilty
27:28And the children sometimes cry at night
27:31But I made my bed
27:34I'm lying in it
27:35And I know they're gonna be all right
27:38Yeah
27:40Reader wrote a letter
27:43I will always love her
27:47Me that goes above her
27:51Hover or around her
27:55Dad, I don't forgive you
27:59Didn't mean to say that
28:03It's just my mother played her
28:07Multiplied each matter
28:10Reader wrote a letter
28:14I'll always love her
28:19Thank you for listening to the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story of the story
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