:59:05
He's got one. He's got it.
:59:07
Think what a jumble
a tour book usually is...
:59:10
- He's got one.
- Right.
:59:12
What I want to explain to you
is that Denver...
:59:16
How would you characterise your
relationship with David over the years?
:59:21
- Has it changed in any way?
- Not really.
:59:23
I mean, you know, we've grown up...
but really it's not...
:59:28
No, not really.
We feel like children much of the time,
:59:33
even when we're playing.
:59:35
We're closer than brothers.
:59:38
Brothers always fight.
:59:40
Sort of... disagreements and all that.
:59:43
We really have a relationship that's way,
way past that.
:59:53
- He can't play any more.
- You know the parts.
:59:56
If he knew the fuckin' part,
he'd play it, wouldn't he?
:59:59
- Are you walking out? Great!
- Just tell me what we're supposed to do.
1:00:04
We're supposed to play the fuckin' thing!
1:00:07
- We've spent an hour and a half...
- I'm doing my part!
1:00:10
You know what would make this a lot
simpler? I hate to cut right to it here.
1:00:13
Why don't you play this alone, without
some angel hanging over your head?
1:00:18
Jesus Christ!
This is fuckin' all we need.
1:00:21
You can't fuckin' concentrate
because of your fuckin' wife!
1:00:24
- It's your fuckin' wife!
- She's not my wife.
1:00:27
Whatever the fuck she is,
we can't fuckin' do the track!
1:00:31
- This is unbelievable!
- No, it's not unbelievable at all!
1:00:35
Am I losing my fuckin' mind?!
Could you check me on this?
1:00:39
I don't understand
what this has to do with anything!
1:00:41
We're very lucky, in a sense,
that we've got two visionaries in the band.
1:00:46
David and Nigel are both like...
1:00:50
Like poets,
like Shelley or Byron or people like that.
1:00:53
They're two totally distinct
types of visionaries.
1:00:56
It's like fire and ice, basically.
1:00:59
I feel my role in the band is to be
kind of in the middle of that,