Yeah. That's how I started with the music business. Joe Presser's son, 'round the corner, who was my good friend, he could blow a kazoo. He was interested in Kid Rena. He knew Kid Rena's riffs. He knew Buddie Petit's riffs, Chris Kelly's riffs. He had that kind of mind. He was destined to become a musician, but he never was. He come around, we standing on the corner, he start playing this . . . I start playing the ukulele Ain't Gonna Rain No More and et cetera, and he fell in, and he starts singing while I was playing. So I start singing too. We sing a duet, and people are liking it, drawing a crowd, because people want any kind of entertainment here. They'll pay for it. So the people in the block heard us, and said, "Tell them boys to come down and play some music. We'll give them something to drink, and we got a lot of cake and stuff here. Have some fun. " So we went down there, me and Joe Presser, and Luis Russell was with us, when we got inside. Luis Russell asked for two forks. The woman gave him two forks, and he started playing. He followed our key, because I couldn't play but in one key. Me and Joe Presser, and they was dancing and playing the blues. I guess there was, lot of the sounds was wrong, but people didn't care what it was. They say, "I like having a band. "