I'll give you something good. I'd say that Doc Severinsen tried to maintain a standard with that band, just as high from the first week he became the leader, as to the very last week. And it never slacked off, ever, ever. And I think he deserves a lot of credit for that because everything comes from the leader, you know what I mean? Shoddy playing comes from a leader that doesn't care. Right on top of it playing that is really there and popping and good energy and good spirit comes because you've got a leader like that who insists on it. And even though I think you should always play like that, I give Doc full credit for the fact that he made sure 16 people always were like that. Now I don't mean to paint him like a pain. He wasn't a pain. He just wanted a high class standard of performance. And because he practices two to three hours a day, and because he's always there, there's not one guy in the band that could say "yeah but you don't really work at it. " Because probably nobody in the band works as hard as he does at his horn, see? So I give him a lot of credit for that, and I think it's why people are constantly coming up, including today, and telling me how much they miss the band on T.V. Because I think it really locked in an image of a high class, great, powerhouse big band. And I'm glad we did because we were kind of the only thing a lot of people could listen to other than the Rock `n Roll kind of combos that are on most of the other shows.