:29:00
	Well, since my baby
:29:01
	The same key, though, I think.
:29:04
	Well, since my baby left me
:29:06
	If I'm going:
Since my baby left me
:29:10
	- Me
- No, you can't hit that note.
:29:14
	Since my baby left me
:29:16
	Well, I found a new place to dwell
:29:20
	- That's all right.
- Not really.
:29:23
	- It sounds raga. You don't wanna go raga.
- Not with this, it don't.
:29:26
	- Since my baby left me
- It sounds fuckin' barbershop.
:29:29
	- Barbershop raga.
- Watch the language.
:29:32
	- You're in the presence of the King.
- Oh. Sorry.
:29:36
	This is thoroughly depressing.
:29:39
	Really puts a perspective on things,
doesn't it?
:29:41
	Too much. There's too much fuckin'
perspective now.
:29:45
	In 1967, that was the first time
Spinal Tap came into existence.
:29:50
	The whole world was changing
in those days.
:29:53
	We had the world's ear because we had
just released an enormous-selling single.
:29:57
	- Listen To The Flower People.
- Flower People.
:29:59
	We toured the world.
We toured the States.
:30:02
	- Toured the world and elsewhere.
- A dream come true.
:30:05
	Listen to what the flower people say
:30:10
	"JAMBOREEPOP"
(American TV - 1967)
:30:13
	Listen, it's getting louder every day
:30:22
	Listen, it's like a bolt out of the blue
:30:31
	Listen, it could be calling out for you
:30:54
	In the Flower People period,
who was your drummer?
:30:57
	Stumpy's replacement,
Peter "James" Bond.
:30:59
	He also died in mysterious
circumstances.