Monty: "Are you all 'Liverpool types,' then?"
Ringo: "Yes."
John: "Uhh... types, yes."
Paul: "Oh yeah."
Ringo: "Liverpool-typed Paul, there."
Monty: "Now, I'm told that you were actually in the same form as young Ron Wycherley..."
Ringo: "Ronald. Yes."
Monty: "...now Billy Fury."
Ringo: "In Saint Sylus."
Monty: "In which?"
Ringo: "Saint Sylus."
John: "Really?"
Ringo: "It wasn't Dingle Bay like you said in the Musical Express."
Paul: "No, that was wrong. Saint Sylus school."
Monty: "Now I'd like to introduce a young disc jockey. His name is Malcolm Threadgill, he's 16-years old, and I'm sure he'd like to ask some questions from the teenage point of view."
Malcolm: "I understand you've made other recordings before on a German label."
Paul: "Yeah."
Malcolm: "What ones were they?"
Paul: "Well, we didn't make... First of all we made a recording with a fella called Tony Sheridan. We were working in a club called 'The Top Ten Club' in Hamburg. and we made a recording with him called, 'My Bonnie,' which got to number five in the German Hit Parade."
John: "Ach tung!"
Paul: (giggles) "But it didn't do a thing over here, you know. It wasn't a very good record, but the Germans must've liked it a bit. and we did an instrumental which was released in France on an EP of Tony Sheridan's, which George and John wrote themselves. That wasn't released here. It got one copy. That's all, you know. It didn't do anything."
Malcolm: "You composed 'P.S. I Love You' and 'Love Me Do' yourself, didn't you? Who does the composing between you?"
Paul: "Well, it's John and I. We write the songs between us. It's, you know... We've sort of signed contracts and things to say, that now if we..."
John: "It's equal shares."
Paul: "Yeah, equal shares and royalties and things, so that really we just both write most of the stuff. George did write this instrumental, as we say. But mainly it's John and I. We've written over about a hundred songs but we don't use half of them, you know. We just happened to sort of rearrange 'Love Me Do' and played it to the recording people, and 'P.S. I Love You,' and uhh, they seemed to quite like it. So that's what we recorded."
Malcolm: "Is there anymore of your own compositions you intend to record?"
John: "Well, we did record another song of our own when we were down there, but it wasn't finished enough. So, you know, we'll take it back next time and see how they like it then."
(long pause)
John: (jokingly) "Well... that's all from MY end!"
(laughter)
Monty: "I would like to just ask you - and we're recording this at Hume Hall, Port Sunlight - Did any of you come over to this side before you became famous, as it were? Do you know this district?"
Paul: "Well, we played here, uhh... I don't know what you mean by famous, you know.
(laughter)
Paul: "If being famous is being in the Hit Parade, we've been over here - we were here about two months ago. Been here twice, haven't we?"
John: "I've got relations here. Rockferry."
Monty: "Have you?"
John: "Yes. Oh, all sides of the water, you know."
Paul: "Yeah, I've got a relation in Clorton Village - Upton Road."
Ringo: (jokingly) "I've got a friend in Birkenhead!"
(laughter)
Monty: "I wish I had."
George: (jokingly) "I know a man in Chester!"
(laughter)
Monty: "Now, that's a very dangerous thing to say. There's a mental home there, mate. Peter Smethurst is here as well, and he looks like he is bursting with a question."
Peter: "There is just one question I'd like to ask. I'm sure it's the question everyone's asking. I'd like your impressions on your first appearence on television."
Paul: "Well, strangely enough, we thought we were gonna be dead nervous. and everyone said, 'You suddenly, when you see the cameras, you realize that there are two million people watching,' because there were two million watching that 'People and Places' that we did... we heard afterwards. But, strangely enough, it didn't come to us. We didn't think at all about that. and it was much easier doing the television than it was doing the (live musical performance) radio. It's still nerve-wracking, but it was a bit easier than doing radio because there was a full audience for the radio broadcast."
Monty: "Do you find it nerve-wracking doing this now?"
(laughter)
Paul: (jokingly) "Yeah, yeah."
Monty: "Over at Cleaver Hospital, a certain record on Parlophone - the top side has been requested. So perhaps the Beatles themselves would like to tell them what it's going to be."
Paul: "Yeah. Well, I think it's gonna be 'Love Me Do.'"
John: "Parlophone R4949."
(laughter)
Paul: "'Love Me Do.'"
Monty: "and I'm sure, for them, the answer is P.S. I love you!"
Paul: "Yeah."
Интервью брал "MERSEYSIDE broadcasting legend" Монти Листер. На фото.