Well we're just going to play, we don't know what we're going to play right now. We don't rehearse, we just decide on what we're going to open with, what's going to be second, and what's going to be third. We'll have a little list. And somebody'll play a solo here and then someone else will play a solo and then we'll play another tune, then we play a closer. By that time an hour is up. Opener, couple of tunes in the middle and a closer, and then you feature each guy on a tune. And the closer is usually an up tune. And that usually tops everything that's happened up to that point. It's more exciting, get a faster tempo going. And that's the general format. You don't end with a ballad. But you play ballads inside. You have to have change of pace. You know you don't play the same tempo twice in a row. Start with a middleing size tune, then maybe play something faster than that second, third you go way down slow and play a blues, and then play something in the middle again, then maybe a ballad, and then you play a closer. And then maybe do an encore, maybe ... could be anything. So that's the format. That's usually the way we all work, and you just decide ahead of time what tunes you want to play. Everybody has to feel good about it. You say, "what do you want to do for a solo. " "Oh, I'll do ... whatever. " I'll let you know later. You can't necessarily ... it's no big deal, you don't have to let them know just what you're going to play. You think about it and when the time comes you say "what are you going to do? " So, "well what to YOU want to do. " You've got to make up your mind and when the time comes you just do it. You can't hem and haw. So you have three or four things in your mind and if you decide at the last minute it's alright, who cares? As long as you finally make up your mind to do it.