The narrator and the other members of the school band arrive at the studio where they have been rehearsing. The narrator asks the other musicians what they are doing there, and they tell him that they are practicing in the attic of their grandmother's house. The other musicians tell the narrator that the attic is their "gar age" and that they do not need to come in there. They begin to play a song they have written together, and the narrator is amazed at how different the song sounds when it is combined with other musicians' parts. He thinks that they will be able to perform the song at the upcoming school fair.
The narrator and the other members of the school band arrive at the studio where they have been rehearsing. The narrator asks the other musicians what they are doing there, and they tell him that they are practicing in the attic of their grandmother's house. The other musicians tell the narrator that the attic is their "gar age" and that they do not need to come in there. They begin to play a song they have written together, and the narrator is amazed at how different the song sounds when it is combined with other musicians' parts. He thinks that they will be able to perform the song at the upcoming school fair.