Ray Nance, Lionel Hampton. You know what was so wonderful about that it was a Black community, and we didn't all go to the same school, but we all met musically. So with bands, like, you went to some school, I went to Winniford, but we had rehearsals, and then after hours, we met, and that's how we got to know each other. And to see all of that going on, we had Clark Smith and the Chicago Defender, the newspaper, hired Basie and Clark Smith to start a youth band, and that's where we came in. My mother was Nat Cole's piano teacher. See my mother played for Nat's father, had a church on Deacon Street, and a storefront, my mother was the organist, piano player for the church, and for the BIPU, so she had Nat there. He was always a nice guy. You know I was always getting in trouble, and my mom would say "why can't you be nice like Nathaniel?" And I couldn't stand him. Cause as kids, we really thought what we'd like to see was his big brother, Eddie.