Might be in Savoy Ballroom, 1940, 1939. It might have been the Savoy Ballroom. It might have been 1939 but it says 1940. Edison's here. Ed Lewis, Buck Clayton. Vic Dickenson, Dickie Wells, Dan Minor. There's some heavy cats in there. Freddie, Tap Smith, Tap always loved, music-wise he loved Basie's band, but Lucky didn't care nothing about no money. What Basie was paying $250 a week, Lucky would give them $500. That's the way he was if he wanted a musician. And his mother worked for Al Capone. And so he never worried about no money. And when Capone and all of them people, they were very afraid about Lucky. So Lucky said one time they were playing well he was running around Chicago just by himself singing and singing from club to club, so his mother worked for Al Capone, and he always talked with a cigar in his mouth in the corner of his mouth and then would take it out when he talked you know. So he says "Clare, what did Lucky want." She says "oh he didn't want anything" she says "he's alright, Mr. Capone." He says "I mean something big ... I want him to have something big, I like Lucky." So Lucky says "tell him to come to dinner tonight." So Lucky say he went to dinner and he says "Lucky, I want you to have something big." So and he says "well I'd like to have a band someday, Mr. Capone, some day I'd like to have my own band." So and he says "you want a band?" He says that night, in one of his clubs, he had a band by the name of Walter Bonds, they were all burned and they were dying in Florida a few years later And he says he went to work and when he went there that night, he said he walked right up to the bandstand, and pulled Lucky by the, pulled Walter Bonds by the tail of his tuxedo and told him to come down, and took Lucky like this and put him up there. He gave him about $400 and said I want Lucky to have this band, you go get another band. He took that man's band in twenty minutes. He wanted Lucky to have that band. I remember Lucky when, of course when Lucky passed he had flowers from here to that corner, from Ralph Capone, Al's brother. And he dropped on the streets, of a heart attack, just ... He had a thousand dollars in his pocket, and when they carried him to the hospital he was so well liked, he had his thousand dollars, nobody got it. On 125th Street in New York, and he was, all them flowers, big as that like ... Yeah, he was in with them. So and this was the boy he liked was Tab Smith. That's the one. And he was playing with Lucky.