Yes. He's supposed to be an accompaniment. It's an accompaniment instrument. Once in a while I get a chance to solo, that's great, but you don't solo in every tune. I think what started that is all the duos -- the piano and bass -- because the clubs couldn't afford any more than two men, and they wanted some kind of entertainment in a bar to attract people, so they'd get a very good piano player and he gets the best bass player he likes to work with. Piano and bass duos -- like Ray Brown and Oscar Peterson. Start there. And then all over the world there's these piano and bass duos, no drums, can't afford it. Then there was Bill Evans, he always had marvelous bass players, he had Scott LaFaro, and they always had a quiet drummer. And that was it, the trio. You don't find many piano and guitar trios, because they duplicate each other and they have to get into each other all the time. They have to work out things together in order to have, you know...