Well I know what Miles means to me personally. And I know what he means to music and what he means to the public at large. And so in giving this Lifetime Achievement to Miles, I wasn't just reading what was on the TelePrompTer. I mean I was reading that, but I meant every word that I said. Because I had something of my own experience with this man who was like my teacher, like my father in a way you know as far as my career was concerned. I learned so much from Miles that I would be a very different piano player had it not been for that experience in playing with that particular Miles Davis group, you know. Because of Miles and because of all the side men. One of the things that Miles provided, among many things, is the attitude to really encourage an individual to develop his creativity. And he was very concerned about young people. He hired a very young band and he wanted us to figure things out ourselves. He wanted us to continually work on things. I mean he even said "I pay you to practice on the bandstand, on the stand, in front of the people, not just in your room. " You know the idea was not just to go to your room and practice something and learn it perfectly and then play it in front of the people. Miles wanted true jazz improvisation to be presented by this band, which means you captured that moment, not the moment in your room hours earlier. And so that's a lesson I've never forgotten. And it sustains me to this day.