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영어학습소
영어학습소
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0:01
So what?
0:01
Oh, don't start with the snorting.
0:03
I was snoring, not snorting.
0:05
Snorting is essential.
0:06
Well, we are spinal tap.
0:08
We are.
0:09
And these are our essentials.
0:09
11 essentials.
0:15
You can count on me.
0:26
Always having a compass.
0:26
And that's invention where you know where you are and where things are in relation to you, not you to me in this case.
0:35
Let's say you wake up in the morning.
0:39
Wake me up.
0:42
Thank you.
0:42
It's night.
0:43
What?
0:43
What's going on?
0:43
Where?
0:45
Where am I?
0:46
Do you tell me?
0:48
Ah, yes.
0:48
I wish I knew where north was.
0:57
No, there it is.
0:57
Yeah.
0:57
So, what you can do, you can turn this dial.
1:00
You can't get a closeup.
1:03
That's a microphone.
1:03
That won't.
1:06
But I can hold it up in case it picks it up.
1:08
It won't.
1:08
It won't.
1:09
No, cuz it's a microphone.
1:09
But you can put this on a map itself and align it with this arrow here.
1:17
And then you dial this in to where you're going.
1:20
If you're camping out, what they call camping out, not the way you do it.
1:28
That's a different thing.
1:29
I'm talking about going in the woods and all that, which I like.
1:32
I am too.
1:33
Some of people on the street will say, "Nigel, where's West?"
1:35
Easy.
1:38
Go like this.
1:38
Why not?
1:38
Why not use a phone?
1:43
Hello.
1:43
No, no, no, no.
1:43
He's saying on your phone on a map on your on your phone.
1:49
There's also a map on your phone.
1:49
Yeah.
1:51
Well, nah, this little item.
1:57
I don't know how close you can get.
2:00
No, no, no.
2:00
I'm talking about the camera.
2:02
This.
2:02
It's a green apple.
2:05
A little green apple.
2:06
Yes.
2:06
And uh Lord made it or in this case, the Beatles.
2:08
Close enough.
2:10
It says the Beatles on it.
2:10
This was their logo for Apple Records and and etc.
2:15
Inside, if you pull the little stem, it's a flash drive containing the complete works of the Beatles.
2:24
Amazing.
2:25
This makes your computer dance or at least jump up and down in place.
2:27
It's troubling at first, but then you go, that's what I want from my computer.
2:31
Bit of action.
2:34
Very rare, isn't it?
2:35
Yeah.
2:35
You can't get this anywhere.
2:35
This is this is an essential, and I I don't leave home without it.
2:41
Where do you keep it?
2:41
Well, never mind.
2:45
We did just recently work with Paul McCartney.
2:47
Can you Who's talking now?
2:48
Oh, same.
2:48
Yes.
2:48
Hello.
2:51
Uh, someone else handled this.
2:53
No, I've got a problem with Paul with it.
2:55
It's all right.
2:55
We We're working it out by not speaking.
2:59
That's healthy.
3:00
I think so, too.
3:00
It's a way of engaging without getting too close.
3:02
Is ignoring each other.
3:06
Mhm.
3:08
These are essentials as part of your stage craft.
3:11
All of us are in a very man-heavy business, the business of hard rock, heavy metal.
3:17
There's a certain stance that's required to project, let's call it hyper masculinity.
3:23
A lot of people have said, Derek, we saw in that Hatchet Job movie that you had to pull out a cucumber out of your pants.
3:31
Well, so naive.
3:35
Mistake number one, it's a corette.
3:35
Now, if you you do your research in the grocery store, you'll see that a cucumber has a usually a more warty warty surface than would be desirable for the effect.
3:47
Pro tip, if you put a naked corette up your trousers or down your trousers and you get on stage, you start performing, you start sweating, you've got a sweaty, messy, slimy end of the show.
4:02
It also migrates down your leg.
4:04
Yes, it does.
4:04
Hence the foil.
4:04
Yeah.
4:07
So, two essentials in one.
4:12
Wool mittens.
4:12
Now, mittens are different than gloves, as you may know, because gloves have fingers.
4:18
Most people have fingers.
4:22
Fingers.
4:22
And most people have 10.
4:26
But someone invented these long ago.
4:26
And what these do is keep your hands warmer than gloves because the air inside circulates.
4:36
Yeah.
4:37
If you're wearing gloves, these little fingers don't have air around them.
4:41
You see, they can't breathe.
4:44
They can't breathe on their own anyway.
4:46
So these and I've worn these since I was a little lad.
4:50
Not those.
4:51
Not these actual ones cuz they were smaller.
4:53
But even when I was a child in Squattney, I would have these little ones and Oh, there's a glow.
4:57
There's a glove.
5:01
Everything Everything eventually turns into a puppet.
5:03
Nigel, have you noticed that?
5:05
My hand is warm now.
5:07
Yes, it's warmer now, isn't it?
5:10
No.
5:10
So, there's so many things that are better because it's a little friend warm.
5:16
If I'm playing guitar, I can't have cold hands cuz my fingers don't work.
5:20
You can't play with mittens.
5:20
No.
5:20
No.
5:22
You're missing the point.
5:22
And they're easy to pack.
5:24
When you go on the road, you put them like this.
5:26
It's called marrying mittens.
5:28
And you roll them up like this.
5:31
You see?
5:33
No.
5:33
It's a little bunny rabbit.
5:35
Exactly.
5:35
I can't go hop away.
5:35
You're going to hop away.
5:37
Where?
5:37
Hop away.
5:40
There's none of your Don't say See, they start cursing.
5:43
The bunny curses.
5:45
Huck it.
5:45
See, this is not okay.
5:49
No, bunny.
5:49
I can't wear them because I get claustrophobic.
5:52
It's like my hands are going through an MRI.
5:56
I remember you saying that when you were Yeah.
5:58
That doesn't make sense though.
6:02
Harmonas.
6:02
All Marine band, of course.
6:05
All Germanade.
6:07
Yeah.
6:08
Precision.
6:08
Yeah.
6:08
Yeah.
6:09
Are those real Marines?
6:10
No.
6:10
No.
6:10
No.
6:10
Real Marine band.
6:10
Yeah.
6:10
I've got about 12 or so in there.
6:16
And it comes in a nice high impact cloth bag with the poster from a production of the 12th night which is a Shakespeare play.
6:25
Of course he was a he was a writer.
6:30
I think they know that even in the stage they know who did Shakespeare play the harmonica.
6:35
Yeah he was famous.
6:38
Really?
6:38
Yeah he invented a lot of words.
6:38
That wasn't one of them.
6:41
But he does reference harps and these are called blues harps.
6:44
Shakespeare connection once again.
6:44
It's like Kevin Bacon.
6:46
Yeah.
6:49
My favorite marmalade.
6:51
What brand?
6:51
What is that?
6:52
Well, I'm going to get to that.
6:52
You see, if you read it, this is his bit.
6:56
Yeah, but what fruit?
6:57
Well, look, you've seen this.
6:57
I mean, Frank Cooper original and he does different ones.
7:01
This thick cut and I use this every day for breakfast for No one's talking to you.
7:10
You are now.
7:11
Oh, yeah.
7:14
It works on bread.
7:14
It works even with a spoon.
7:17
It's It's fantastic.
7:17
I recommend it.
7:21
And it works with cheese, I would assume.
7:23
Who's talking now?
7:25
That's her.
7:25
Oh, sorry.
7:25
Say again.
7:26
It works with cheese, I would think.
7:28
Maybe.
7:29
Oh, he loves getting started on the cheese.
7:31
The thing is not Stilton, but they're types of Gouda and some French cheeses where this works as a companion piece sort of.
7:40
I would say must have great lube.
7:48
This was given to me by Iva St. Hubbins, who is my dad, born Ivor Stubbins.
7:55
That's another story.
7:55
He says, "When you get yourself a coin, don't know what to do with it.
7:59
Don't spend it.
7:59
Put it in the bulldog."
8:01
Now, you balance your coin on his nose and then you flip that and he swallows it.
8:06
Now, it doesn't work anymore.
8:08
It's out of balance.
8:08
It's sort of a I think they don't make coins anymore either.
8:12
No.
8:12
Well, that's not my problem.
8:12
But the thing was, I didn't realize that my dad had left off the little cork in the bottom.
8:20
So that he would just come at night and he'd just go, "All right, he's learned his lesson, put it in his pocket, and off we go."
8:26
So this was a great life lesson from my dad.
8:28
And I love my bulldog bank.
8:30
It also works as a lube.
8:34
He doesn't smoke a pipe as much as he used to, but he still carries one around.
8:38
It's a reminder of what I used to be, which at this age is pretty crucial.
8:43
A lot of people play music and they'd stick cigarettes in the strings of their guitars so they could sneak it.
8:50
And I used to actually slip the pipe into the top strings of the bass.
8:54
I call him Danny and he's uh Danny Mam.
8:59
Yeah, Danny Mam.
8:59
This is my past.
9:03
Pretty much everything is your past at this point.
9:05
Well, that's your only friend.
9:05
Don't smoke it.
9:10
I love cheese.
9:10
I have a cheese shop.
9:10
You can't eat cheese without slicing it in some way.
9:16
And what they say in the States is cutting the cheese.
9:17
But we don't say that in England.
9:21
Why does it have holes in it to breathe?
9:24
You're the person that's claustrophobic when they're wearing mittens.
9:26
You're asking what are holes in it?
9:28
I am the person.
9:29
Put your finger in it.
9:30
No.
9:32
So, you need it to be clean and sharp.
9:34
And let's say you pick a cheese, a lovely cheese, flinging that about.
9:39
It could be a cheddar.
9:39
It could be a gouda.
9:41
Whatever.
9:41
Gouda.
9:44
You cut it like this.
9:44
Now it's in two pieces.
9:46
Oh, look.
9:46
And And some people have come to visit.
9:48
Three people.
9:48
One, two, three.
9:51
Three pieces.
9:51
Sharp, good quality knife.
9:55
Explain the holes.
9:57
If this was one piece of steel, yes.
10:00
You'd wave it like this and you'd feel the the air.
10:02
This you don't feel the air.
10:05
I feel danger.
10:06
This happens to be an excellent quality knife.
10:09
I won't say the make because they're not going to send me them for free.
10:13
So what's the point?
10:14
Says Mattel on it.
10:15
No, that's a different thing.
10:15
They're made in in Germany.
10:17
That's where they make these knives.
10:20
If you've ever gone to Germany and played, we've played that.
10:24
They always say, which it means we have knives here that say and aras.
10:31
Yes.
10:31
At the knife shop.
10:34
is is means we means I have a severe cold.
10:37
Yeah.
10:37
Well, that's too Yeah.
10:37
So, this is an essential.
10:43
As a bass player in the band, I always was described as well, it's sort of the glue in a band is the bass player.
10:47
I heard that enough that it started getting me interested in the whole subject of glue, history of glue, history of glue, the nature of glue, the geography of glue, the smell of glue, the aronomy of glue, because sometimes it's vegetable based and sometimes it's animal based and you don't want to biology mix the two up.
11:09
Long story long, I ended up opening a museum of glue.
11:12
And when you're handling glue on a daily basis, there's always the chance that uh an accident might occur and things will get sticky.
11:23
Things would get sticky.
11:23
Exactly.
11:23
Right.
11:25
Well, this is called Goof Off and it is a glue removal adhesive.
11:27
So, you just spray it on and boom, magically you're you're separated from what you used to be glued to.
11:36
Don't play with glue without goof off.
11:38
And I don't think there is money from the goof off being there.
11:41
No, just scraping by.
11:43
Yeah.
11:43
I mean and off.
11:44
Yeah, it's a must.
11:48
This is a souvenir of kind of a magical time in recent past for me.
11:51
The the band was had broken up and I was trying to do something on my own musical.
11:57
I I do other things on my own.
12:00
Do you want to hear about that?
12:02
I do plenty of things on my own.
12:02
That's not anybody's business here.
12:06
But uh musically, Britain went through austerity in the teens of this century.
12:12
So there was a lot of money left over and uh they formed the British Fund for Aging Rockers.
12:16
Privileged to get a grant from the British Fund for Aging Rockers.
12:21
They said, "What would you like to do with the money?"
12:23
And I said, "I'd like to do something musical."
12:24
They said, "That's good enough for us.
12:28
Can I get one of those?"
12:29
No.
12:29
They're gone.
12:31
Labour took over.
12:31
Yeah.
12:33
You can't get a Beetle apple, then you know.