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00:00I'm free to be whatever I am.
00:16Today is what every superfan or any fan is waiting for.
00:20This is the pinnacle, this is the holy grail of Oasis.
00:23It's like we've been waiting for this for so long.
00:26It'll be the biggest fan then and I think it'll be the biggest fan again next.
00:30There you have the best fan!
00:37Oasis!
00:38Yeah, yeah, Oasis, yeah.
00:52Hello and welcome to Countdown to the comeback just over.
00:56Let's have a look, five hours to go now until one of the most anticipated gigs of all time.
01:01I don't think it's an overstatement to say that.
01:03Absolutely, absolutely Tina.
01:05Very nice to see you Tina.
01:06Welcome to Cardiff and welcome to Wales.
01:08As a Cardiff boy I am so excited to welcome all these Oasis fans and to Oasis themselves.
01:14Ten hours.
01:15Ten hours.
01:15So don't go anywhere.
01:17Well, you can eat, you can drink.
01:19Charlotte Gallagher will be here for the ten hours.
01:21Hello Charlotte.
01:21Hello.
01:22Thank you so much for having me.
01:23Good to see you.
01:23I'm so excited.
01:24Oasis was my first big gig.
01:27Oh, was it?
01:27So I have so many special memories of that.
01:30I'm not seeing them tonight, I'm not seeing them tomorrow.
01:31I'm seeing them in Wembley in August.
01:33I can't wait and Cardiff has been so buzzing.
01:59Well, getting the stadium Oasis ready has been shrouded in mystery.
02:03But last night Oasis people sent us some secret behind the scenes footage to show us what's been going on
02:09behind those rigidly shut doors.
02:35And one man who's been overseeing this massive Oasis gig for the last year is the Principality Stadium manager Mark
02:42Williams.
02:43I spoke to him earlier today and asked him just how big a deal is this for the stadium and
02:48for Wales.
02:48We found out over 12 months ago actually that they were forming back up and that we were going to
02:54be first on the road.
02:57So yeah, really, really excited.
03:00A year's worth of planning to get it right.
03:02And of course the promoters and the production and everyone's been in now for about a week setting up and
03:08get everything ready for an enormously exciting couple of days.
03:12Do we have any idea if people are coming from the valleys, for example, or coming from over the bridge
03:17or coming from Manchester?
03:18We would get postcode data of where the tickets are bought from.
03:21I think night one and night two are slightly different.
03:24Night one, lots of internationals coming over.
03:27You know, it is the big night, the reunion night, the first show.
03:30Lots of postcodes from all over the UK and quite a lot from the Republic of Ireland actually as well.
03:36So we're essentially a good Irish contingent coming on the first night and the second night.
03:39Pretty much all postcodes across the UK.
03:41There is so much in terms of the love that they have for this band, isn't there?
03:45Have you seen that and felt that over the last couple of weeks?
03:47Yeah, absolutely.
03:48Everyone you speak to, you know, it's just the focus of all sort of talk at the moment.
03:52What's happening there?
03:53You know, are there any tickets available?
03:55Unfortunately, they all went very, very quickly and surprisingly.
03:59So yeah, a huge amount of hype around it.
04:01And yeah, I'm just really proud to be the first on the road for this amazing concert.
04:07And yeah, probably speak to you after night one and see how it all goes.
04:11I am here and the queues are just getting longer and longer outside this stadium.
04:16Everyone's in a brilliant mood.
04:17They can't wait to go in and just think how lucky everyone is who actually managed to get a ticket
04:22for today.
04:22But I've just met someone who only got her ticket last night, Ella.
04:27How on earth did you do that?
04:29Well, my brother's going anyway, so I just had a look online last night and managed to get a ticket.
04:34People have been trying to do this for months and they just opened up a few more.
04:37Yeah, I was off work anyway, so I thought, just have a look and managed to get a ticket.
04:42So I'm very excited, can't wait.
04:44Right, I've also been speaking to quite a few families who are going in.
04:47They're people bringing their children.
04:49Oh, let's find them, let's find them.
04:50Okay, we can only stay on this side of the line, but I'm going to say hello to you guys.
04:54So you're all going in as a family, how are you feeling?
04:57Buzzing, can't wait.
04:58So have you got your sons into the band then?
05:01Yeah, definitely, definitely.
05:03I wouldn't be into it without him, definitely not.
05:0862,000 fans will be here each night seeing Oasis play in Cardiff right here.
05:15And we know from the postcode data that many of them will be coming from abroad.
05:19One of those fans is coming all the way from Kenya and we went to visit him at his home
05:23ahead of his journey to Cardiff.
05:28Oasis Cardiff 2025, mad for it!
05:32I've not been to the UK before and this is also going to be my first big rock concert or
05:37rock gig that I go to.
05:38So for me, being able to be there in a big moment in history, at least for Oasis fans, I
05:44think it would be brilliant to be part of that.
05:48For me, Oasis represents a spirit and an optimism of the 90s that was very unique for everyone who lived
05:54through that time.
05:56To write simple music that relayed the simple truths of life is very difficult.
06:01And I think for me, they do that better than anyone.
06:05Next year, it will be the 35th anniversary of Oasis and we're not counting the years, they were broken up.
06:11Now, they formed in 1991, but it took another four years for them to really grab the public's attention.
06:17In 1994, Paolo Hewitt was a writer for the music newspaper, The NME.
06:21And he had a life changing experience after seeing Oasis play live for the first time.
06:29With Noel and Liam, I always look at it like the Godfather.
06:34Like Noel's Al Pacino and he's got that.
06:37And Liam's Sonny, you know, he's got that.
06:40Oh yeah, that's what makes Oasis, isn't it?
06:42Isn't it?
06:43My name is Paolo Hewitt.
06:44I'm a writer and I got to know Oasis very well back in the 90s and wrote two books about
06:49them.
06:53In 1994, they played two gigs in London.
06:56One at the Kennerstown Forum, one at the London Astoria.
06:59I went to both gigs.
07:00They stood on the stage like that in a row and they played this huge music.
07:04It was huge, but they never moved.
07:06They were just like that.
07:08They were like a gang.
07:09And then I'd think, I'd better not look at him.
07:11He's going to beat me up.
07:13I met Noel briefly.
07:15He knew who I was because he was a big jam fan and he'd read my book on the jam.
07:19And then he called me up one day and he said, why don't you pop round here?
07:23Liam was there as well.
07:25And then they just started breaking every rule.
07:27This is a bunch of guys from Manchester.
07:29They're all Manchester City fans.
07:30Oasis.
07:31For example, their first NME interview, you're meant to be selling yourself to the world.
07:35And Noel and Liam just argue the whole way through it.
07:43You know, I'm better than you.
07:44No, you're not.
07:45If it's one for me, then no, it wouldn't.
07:47It's because of me.
07:48I'm good looking.
07:48Yeah, but I've got the songs.
07:49You know, I mean, they just, you know, they broke every rule.
07:57You know these couples who bicker the whole time, but they love it.
08:00It was that.
08:01And it would just be funny, you know.
08:03Did we have an argument about that one?
08:05No.
08:06About singing Dr. Buckethead?
08:07We didn't have an argument, did we?
08:08We did.
08:09Yeah, we did.
08:09Yeah.
08:10At the time, the tabloids were really interested in, you know, exposing artists.
08:15And Oasis just came along and went, we like to sleep with supermodels.
08:18We like to get very drunk.
08:20And we like to make great records.
08:23Liam Gallagher was next to visit mum.
08:25Was he looking forward to the concerts?
08:27What do you reckon?
08:28Haven't you got any proper questions?
08:30So I went to sleep at Sheffield Arena, right?
08:32And we go back to the hotel.
08:35Noel leans over to me and he says,
08:37A year ago to this day, we were literally in a pub in Yorkshire,
08:42playing, you know, the proverbial four men and his dog.
08:44And now they're playing in a year, from a pub to a chef to an arena.
08:50All those ambitions and dreams, you know, they're suddenly coming real.
08:57If you're doing a film, right, the end of act one is Nedworth.
09:01It's been billed as the biggest rock concert of the 90s.
09:05250,000 Oasis fans all wanting to get this close to the band.
09:11That was unbelievable.
09:13Because the thing I thought about Nedworth was that everybody was there.
09:19Mum, Dad, goth, punk, mod, skinhead.
09:24Everyone was just fascinated and loved them.
09:27This is why the Ozone has had such a big problem getting into anything today.
09:30Because then people have pinched all the passes.
09:33Look how many Lance's got!
09:35That's what it happens to when you're famous.
09:39Where's the band to take over from Oasis?
09:41Where are they? There's no one.
09:43Where's the Liam?
09:44Since the beginning of pop music, you've had the devil.
09:47Elvis Presley, Jimi Hendrix.
09:50After Liam, who next? Who?
09:55There's no one, is there?
09:56So that urge when you're a kid and you want a band and, you know,
10:00you want to dress like them and, you know, get an identity from them
10:04and stick your finger up to the world.
10:08Olly Murs?
10:12You designed all the sleeve artwork for Oasis in the 90s.
10:17I mean, wow.
10:18Thank you very much, yes.
10:19It was a pleasure to do it.
10:21And how's it changed now?
10:22Because I'm guessing there aren't the budgets available in the same way
10:26for doing the kind of thing that you did.
10:27Because I've read about how, you know, elaborate some of the...
10:31I mean, one of the shoots, didn't they have an idea
10:33where everybody wanted to be in a different part of the world?
10:35Yeah, that was being here.
10:37No, we were going to shoot each band member of whatever they wanted to be
10:40anywhere in the world.
10:41And that didn't get scrapped because of budget reasons either.
10:43Time.
10:44Yeah, exactly.
10:44So they would have done it if they had the time.
10:46Money was no object.
10:47That's the one with the Rolls Royce in the pool, right?
10:50Yeah, yeah.
10:50And you raided, and I didn't know this existed,
10:53the BBC props warehouse at White City.
10:56Basically, the whole point to that sleeve is it doesn't mean anything.
11:00Because that's the whole point.
11:01Yeah.
11:01I knew that before we did it, Oasis were just so massive then.
11:05That was like the height of Oasis Mania that whatever we did,
11:08the press would dissect it and say, this means that.
11:10So I just took Liam and Noel to the...
11:12It was in White City, props warehouse there, BBC.
11:16And just said, pick just random objects.
11:18And there was just all kinds of objects, like a big abacus, a huge hourglass.
11:21There was even a traffic light at one point that we didn't use in the end.
11:25On August the 29th, 1994, Oasis released definitely, maybe at the time,
11:30the UK's fastest selling debut album.
11:33And it marked a supersonic period for the band and their team.
11:37I'm Abby Scott, and I worked for the Oasis management team
11:41back in the early and mid 1990s.
11:44And the management company did everything that represented the band
11:47from like contracts, money, arranging tours.
11:50And my specific role was sort of sending out demos, answering the phone,
11:56putting together itineraries, fan mail, and sort of doing stuff for the band directly,
12:02like buying them shampoo or ordering Mother's Day gifts for them
12:06when they were on tour, things like that.
12:09And the office, it was a tiny, tiny little room.
12:12I can't explain to you how small it was.
12:15It was like your sitting room.
12:16Despite the press, the band were really lovely guys.
12:20All five of them.
12:21They had no airs and graces.
12:23And they were just like really down to earth.
12:25So like, if Liam came to the office, he'd say,
12:27want a cuppa?
12:27And he'd put the kettle on.
12:29And Noel would always ask what we were doing.
12:31And, well, Bonehead, oh my goodness, Bonehead was so funny.
12:37He really should have been a stand-up comedian.
12:39They would send us postcards when they went on holiday.
12:41And it was, it was, yeah, they were great.
12:44One day, the phone rang and someone in the office picked it up and it was Burt Bacharach.
12:49And he wanted to arrange for Noel to guest one of his shows and sing with him.
12:54And, you know, it was so exciting to get a call for such a legend.
12:58But also, we got calls that, like, for example, another day, we had a phone call and we were told
13:05it was a call from prison.
13:07And we were all a bit puzzled.
13:08And it turned out to be Ronnie Crane wanting to know if Noel would collaborate with him.
13:17We all wanted to send Noel a birthday gift and we couldn't decide what to send him.
13:21And then we remembered that he absolutely loved crisps.
13:24So we decided to send him this bouquet and it was made up of a bottle of Jack Daniels.
13:30And all around it were all the flavours of Walker's crisps.
13:33And Maggie, who was on tour with them, perhaps reported back to us that he loved it.
13:39I was really chuffed to hear that the Gallagher boys have made up.
13:44But also chuffed for all these new fans out there that are going to hear their amazing music.
13:50And sort of on a personal level, I went up in the loft and got down my old Oasis box
13:55and it had things, you know, in it like my first Access All Areas lanyard and, I don't know, itineraries
14:05and tickets from the early gigs.
14:07So I put all that box out and it had lots of photos in it.
14:10So hard to believe it's, you know, it was so long ago.
14:15Hi, guys. I've been looking forward to saying hi to you. I've heard all about you.
14:18Just tell us what's the story behind you being here today and where have you come from?
14:22So we've come from, well, we all come from the Reading area.
14:25So we live in Berkshire.
14:28Well, we got tickets on the sale last year.
14:31We, unfortunately, we're meant to have a fourth member here today.
14:35Well, there is four of us.
14:36But Adam, who couldn't make it, unfortunately passed away in February for cancer.
14:42So we've designed these T-shirts for him, Adam Conrad Pratt.
14:46And he's definitely going to be with us in spirit today.
14:49And, yeah, we all grew up together.
14:51We went to school together.
14:52We embraced Oasis around, I'd say, 95.
14:57Adam, we went to see Oasis in 97 twice with Adam.
15:00And it's been our bond ever since.
15:02Bond between us, you know.
15:03And Adam here, he'd be absolutely loving this.
15:06And we're going to, you know, do him proud today.
15:08So, yeah, it's just happy memories and nostalgia and good times, yeah.
15:13And when did you last speak to Noel?
15:15Today.
15:15Today. And how are they feeling?
15:16He's just really excited.
15:18He's like, you know, he's relaxed.
15:20Yeah.
15:20I mean, there's no one cooler than Noel Gallagher.
15:23You know what I mean?
15:23The only thing he gets excited about, really, is when Man City win.
15:27You might see him jump up and down.
15:30But this guy is as cool as a cucumber.
15:33Nothing phases him.
15:34This is his job.
15:36This is his life.
15:36This is what he was born to do.
15:39He's born to do this.
15:40And tonight, guys, you're going to see the gig of a lifetime.
15:44Wow.
15:44I'm sure.
15:44You're going to see the gig of a lifetime.
15:47And I'll be there.
15:48Cheering him on.
15:48You're with the band.
15:50I'm with the band.
15:51I'm not a fan.
15:51That's what I said.
15:52You're with the band.
15:53Ultimate rock chick.
15:54Give us the inside trap.
15:56Because there's been so much speculation about why they're doing it.
15:59Is it for nostalgia reasons?
16:01I think everything that people are coming up with, that's why they're doing it.
16:05Right.
16:05To be together.
16:06For the fans.
16:07For nostalgia.
16:09It's the right time.
16:10Britain needs this big push of excitement.
16:13And for the teens to realise that we're back.
16:16And Britain's not over.
16:18And we're back with a bang.
16:19There's no way the line doesn't have the be.
16:35Oasis's second album, What's the story, Morning Glory, propelled the band to international fame when it reached number four in
16:42the US Billboard parade in 1995.
16:45However, the album's roots lie here in Wales, as I've been finding out.
16:55This is kind of mind-blowing, because you've got two tape machines here.
16:58You have two tape machines, yes.
16:59So Bohemia Rhapsody was recorded on that tape machine.
17:02Over there.
17:02And then the one next to it.
17:04Is what Oasis recorded.
17:05What's the story of Morning Glory?
17:07Wow.
17:07It's not bad, is it?
17:08That isn't bad at all.
17:10That is very, very cool.
17:13This unassuming farm on the outskirts of Monmouth has been the creative cradle for some of the biggest names in
17:21music.
17:22From Queen's soaring operatics, to the early sparks that launched Coldplay into global stardom.
17:30Rockfield isn't just a studio, it's a living piece of music history.
17:35And in one quiet corner, a simple stone wall still carries the weight of a Britpop anthem.
17:43It's Wonderwall.
17:44This is so cool.
17:45This is very special.
17:46What happened on top of this wall?
17:48Well, Noel sat on top, doing the record of Wonderwall, with the microphones and everything, and the birds singing behind.
17:54This is very special for an Oasis fan.
17:56For an Oasis fan, you're very special, yes.
17:59Kingsley Ward founded Rockfield Studios with his brother Charles over 60 years ago.
18:04She's Bonnie, named after my favourite singer from Wales ever, Bonnie.
18:09Guess who that is, Bonnie Tyler.
18:11He fondly remembers hosting the Gallagher Brothers when they stayed at the farm in 95.
18:17They were boys when they were here.
18:18What were they like?
18:19Oh, well, they were a proper rock band.
18:22Very loud, by the way.
18:24Did they ever keep you up at night when you were trying to sleep?
18:26Yes, and Anne went down and sorted them out.
18:28So Anne's your wife, and what did she say to Oasis?
18:31Yes, four o'clock in the morning.
18:32The studio doors were wide open, so down she goes, like Mrs. Belly Mop, with her nightdress on.
18:38I said, what happened?
18:39I stood in the doorway, and they all went dead quiet.
18:41I'm not surprised.
18:42And they went, oh, what's wrong?
18:44And next day they apologised.
18:46Don't think we worry too much, you know, because they are rock smiles, aren't they?
18:50Are you happy as well that they've got back together?
18:52When you saw that news, that must have made you smile.
18:55I smiled because I was only hoping they would, to be honest with you.
18:58And are you going to go to Sea Oasis?
18:59Yes, yes.
19:00Noel got me some tickets.
19:02Very kind of it, wasn't it?
19:03Well, I mean, it's thanks to you that he wrote Wonderwall, I think.
19:08So we had the drums in here.
19:10So Alan White was set up here.
19:11It's where we usually put the drum when we did the Stone Rose as well.
19:14While Rennie was here, they faced down that way so they could see the rest of the band.
19:17Nick Brine was just 18 years old when Oasis were here.
19:21Obviously this is the centrepiece of the room which everybody asks about because it's Don't
19:25Look Back in Angle Piano.
19:27He helped shape the sound of their album.
19:32So Oasis would have been behind that glass there.
19:35They would have been making What's the Story, Morning Glory.
19:38You would have been here working on the desk.
19:41Can you tell us about what that was like having them in the studio, you're here, that relationship?
19:47We recorded it so fast.
19:48I mean, for one of the biggest albums of all time, it's one of the fastest recorded albums
19:52that I've ever been involved in.
19:54And when you heard they were getting back together, I mean, you probably had a bit of
19:58an inside track anyway.
19:59Were you surprised?
20:01Yeah, yes and no.
20:02I mean, I always thought if they got back together, it's still going to be amazing.
20:05You know, it's going to be an event that so many people want to see and it's great.
20:09It's fantastic, isn't it?
20:10You know, we need more bands like Oasis.
20:21Well, before Oasis take to the stage for the very first time together, Liam and Noel in
20:2716 years, it's the turn of the support act, Richard Ashcroft, former front man for the
20:32Verve.
20:32And he will be joined on stage by ex-bassist Damien Minchella, who popped in to have a little
20:38chat with us earlier.
20:40I'm really, really pleased they've got it together and particularly for Liam, because
20:44that's all he's ever wanted to do is get the band back together.
20:47Had he said that to you over the years?
20:48I just, I need this band.
20:49That's all he wanted to do was to be back on stage with his brother.
20:53And it's really nice.
20:54It's actually happening now.
20:58I mean, and for you to be part of that as well is incredibly special, I imagine.
21:02Yeah, I mean, it's kind of weird because he must have done around about 100 gigs the first
21:08time around with my old band.
21:10So it's just like mates doing mates things.
21:12And I'm playing with Rich Ashcroft.
21:14It's the same thing because everyone looks back on the Britpop time with that revisionist
21:19thing of like, what an incredible time to have been alive.
21:21But it was literally our day-to-day existence was, oh, doing a gig with some friends, just
21:26happens to be a big gig.
21:27And then our other mates, the Verve, they're doing a gig somewhere else.
21:31And then obviously history then turns it into what it is today, which is like the biggest
21:36UK tour ever.
21:37Over the years when, you know, they were split, did you feel like a sadness about that, that
21:42they weren't together?
21:44And that people were missing out on like Oasis music, maybe new songs, the concerts?
21:49These things take forever to organise.
21:51I mean, I know a year before this was announced, it was happening.
21:54Did you?
21:55Yeah.
21:55Who told you first that?
21:57I'm not going to say because they'd get sacked, but someone in Oasis's management who,
22:02and I'm not going to say because they will get sacked.
22:03Okay.
22:04So I knew it ages ago, but obviously, you know, it's one secrecy and whatnot.
22:09Was that hard to keep that secret?
22:10Did you even tell like your family?
22:11Oh yeah, totally.
22:12Yeah, you told your family.
22:12And I told my dogs as well, but they just went woof.
22:15Who cared?
22:16They were like, woof, don't, who?
22:16They were just like, just throw a stick.
22:18It's far more exciting.
22:19And have you seen Liam and Noel on stage yet rehearsing?
22:22And can you give us any kind of snippets, any kind of insight?
22:25I can not.
22:26You can't.
22:26I can not.
22:27And I will not.
22:29Unless you're paying me.
22:30No, I won't.
22:30No.
22:32They both look good.
22:33Yeah.
22:34And the last time I saw them separately was playing with Liam in Norway and Noel in Glasgow.
22:43And this was years ago.
22:43This wasn't on the cards.
22:44So actually to see them together after all that time is really nice.
22:50Where did the connection with Oasis start?
22:53Well, with the minutes ago, the whole country is like bugging it.
22:58I met them in 1993.
23:00Yeah.
23:01I first heard of them about two hours after Alan, who I worked with, had fallen out of King
23:07Tut's.
23:07And he went, I think we had it on the neck because we were always bankrupt or scratching
23:14a line.
23:14And he said, they're across between the Beatles, the Stones and Sex Pistols.
23:21I was like, Alan, it's like 3.40, 3.40, mate.
23:25Go to bed.
23:26Anyway, I met him Thursday and next week the kid came down with the bonehead and he just
23:33walked in and that was it.
23:34I just went, wow.
23:36Did you know straight away?
23:38Just walked in like a, you know, like a caged leopard.
23:42Had a quick look around everywhere and wasn't bothered about the deal we were all talking about.
23:47It just, just, and he got this kind of 18 quid minutes jacket on.
23:51I think now he wears like a 5,000 pound CD company.
23:55But the same swagger.
23:56We have the swagger and the look and that was it.
23:58And that's why he's the kid, you know, he could turn up in a brown paper bag and still
24:02look groovy.
24:04And so what happened after that point?
24:05We signed him.
24:06Right.
24:06They wanted to sign for us or we wanted them.
24:11Yeah, we, I think, I think the meeting lasted 15 minutes.
24:14We went to the pub for three hours.
24:16Can I do it now?
24:17Do you reckon?
24:22I need a shim, none of your sweet lips tonight.
24:28At the end of the first week of the session, your voice is in bad nick.
24:30It sounds like, it sounds like you've been singing for four weeks on that one.
24:33Yeah, that's because we were out last night.
24:35Oh, exactly.
24:37What am I, what am I tonight?
24:38I was going for a couple of jars tonight and then got off my belly.
24:41I've been at 12 once.
24:42When you go out, you're...
24:53One minute and 30 seconds.
24:55Do you know what?
24:56I'm feeling nervous.
24:57I know.
24:58I know.
24:58I just had a little bit of butterflies there.
25:00Exactly.
25:01And it's that thing like stage left, stage right.
25:03Can you hear it?
25:03You can hear it.
25:04You can hear the roar.
25:05It must be amazing in there, you know.
25:07Yeah.
25:07Imagine if you were in the front, I don't know, 50 rows.
25:10One thing that struck me, I did an interview up in Birmingham BBC.
25:17And Lorna, the young receptionist, we gave you some codes for the Lost Tape show.
25:22And I said, are you coming with your friends?
25:23Here they come.
25:24Can you hear that?
25:24Yeah, can you hear that?
25:25I'm taking me dad.
25:27And the amount of people who've been passed on generationally, that this is their Led Zeppelin,
25:33their Beatles, their Stones.
25:34And you walk around here, this is, they're the new biggest band.
25:39It's amazing you say that to him.
25:41That's been the theme.
25:43Here they come.
25:44I mean.
26:05That was the best gig I've ever been to in my life.
26:08We were quite far back, but no matter how far back you are, absolutely amazing.
26:13Just that, I don't know, you can't even explain that.
26:17Absolutely amazing.
26:17Strange to see Liam and Noel on the same stage.
26:20And to be honest, they just smashed it.
26:23It was so good.
26:24It was so emotional.
26:25I had to record it because I kept feeling good.
26:27Oh my God, it's happening.
26:29They're back together.
26:30That's it.
26:31It was amazing.
26:34I loved it so much.
26:36Supernova.
26:38I came all along from Estonia and I felt in love, really.
26:43Super fantastic.
26:44Mwah.