[00:01.44] When I was fifteen, sixteen, when I really started to play guitar [00:06.20] I definitely wanted to become a musician [00:09.54] It was almost impossible because, it was, the dream was so big [00:13.12] That I didn't see any chance because I was living in a little town, was studying [00:19.37] And when I finally broke away from school and became a musician [00:25.11] I thought "Well, now I may have a little bit of a chance" [00:28.43] Because all I really wanted to do is music and not only play music, but compose music [00:35.42] At that time, in Germany, in '69, '70, they had already discotheques [00:42.03] So, I would take my car, would go to a discotheque, sing, maybe, thirty minutes [00:50.01] I think I had about seven, eight songs [00:52.94] I would partially sleep in the car [00:56.68] Because I didn't want to drive home and that helped me for about, almost two years [01:03.90] To survive [01:05.38] In the beginning [01:08.78] I wanted to do an album with the sounds of the '50s, the sounds of the '60s, of the '70s [01:15.75] And then have a sound of the future [01:18.94] And I said, "Wait a second [01:20.69] I know the synthesizer, why don't I use the synthesizer, which is the sound of the future?" [01:27.44] And I didn't have any idea what to do, but I knew I needed a click, so we put a click on the 24-track [01:34.51] Which then was then synced to the Moog Modular [01:38.59] I knew that could be a sound of the future, but I didn't realize how much the impact it would be [01:47.25] My name is Giovanni Giorgio, but everybody calls me Giorgio [01:54.10] [04:58.82] Once you're free of mind about the concept of harmony and of music being "correct" [05:06.62] You can do whatever you want [05:07.94] So, nobody told me what to do [05:10.99] And there was no preconception of what to do [05:13.80]