The arrogance of youth. But I learned a lot from the people in the band. They stuck together, and the community, teamwork that was involved. That was my first time in being involved in something other than a sports team that had that many components, had that many people involved. I learned a lot from Ray Charles about the way that he would deliver his music night after night. The one experience that taught me the most - the situations on the road were really kind of - they were not very good. It was jive. The pay was very low, and then we would share hotel rooms. If the road manager could get a free room out of a hotel, then wed stay there. It might be 15 miles from the gig. So I would tell the guys in the band. I said, "Rather than pay this cab fare, we should just all chip in and buy him a room. Its going to work out better. " But they - I guess they were saying, the principle of it was jive. So they wouldnt do that. Because Im saying, we could stay right next to the venue, chip in $5, as opposed to having to pay $8 to get this cab both ways. At any event, there was discontent over silly things that were going on. So I decided, in order to rebel, that there was one song that we would always play, and it would end on one big chord. I had to play a D-natural. I just remember that one note that I would always hit. Every night it got a little louder and a little louder and a little longer. Finally we did [? ] somewhere, and we hit that chord, and I just hung it over. Ray Charles looks back, and hes like, "Its too loud, too loud, damn it, this right here. " He played that D, and everybody looked at me. They knew. The hip thing about it, though, is that he went into a blues. He started playing that one note, and then he changed it up into a blues. He played something really hip. But then the older guys in the band, they took me aside, and they said, whatever personal stuff we have going on with the situation, when you hit the bandstand, you only focus on the music. They said, if you cant - if you have to bring the personal thing into the music, then you might as well go home. It was the first time that I had thought about the professionalism that was required, because to me it was like, Im young, the gigs jive, the pays not happening, the situations arent this and that, but it taught me a lot about the sacrifices that the older generation of musicians - because, when I look back at it, we were probably in a very luxurious situation compared to what the earlier bands and the earlier musicians had to endure. So it taught me a lot about the humility that was required to play the music and to bring something out of myself into the music. That was a great learning experience.