 We have a saying that, you know, nothing happens in Nashville without the Aristocrat Abans. I can't recall any other band that's done what we've done. The name Aristocrat was bestowed on the band in the early 60s. This is pre Super Bowl era. This is when it was the NFL Championship. The band was performing in Baltimore. Mr. Greer, who is considered the father of the Aristocrats. He was the director of bands and he programmed for a half-time show, Bok to Caught in Feud. We opened that show with the Bok to Caught in Feud. Now, I mean, here's a hundred and some black kids playing Bok at a football game with ice and snow. And as the story goes, one of the announcers heard the band and said that band is aristocratic. And so that's where the name Aristocrat Abans came from. So one of the things that we've always kind of prided ourselves on going all the way back to Mr. Greer is to try to find that unique element with regards to show style, show performance format, whether it's music like Bok to Caught in Feud, whether it's a current event that we want to highlight, current event in society, the United States, the world, what have you. It's the details that set us apart. We've pride ourselves on trying to find something unique. And normally those performances always elevate us to something else. Case in point, the Grammy. I just want to say these kids so deserving. These kids work so hard. You know, being that moment and to be on stage and to look out and kind of just being as more like, oh, this just happened and knowing that the impact that makes historically and also to see the moment when the students they FaceTime band, you know, I could see them just going crazy after, you know, they accomplished that. You're talking about the top music award. And then you get that sort of relief too. All that hard work paid off. So it was that kind of feeling. With regards to marching band being a major musical genre in the African-American community and then gospel music being a major musical genre in the African-American community and marrying those two together to produce an original album. Well, the outgrowth of that album was the Grammy, of course. I think I'm most proud of the legacy that the band has created. During my era, in the last 10 years or so, we've played at the White House twice on the White House lawn. We have performed for an international soccer match. We've been nominated for two Stell Awards last year, nominated for three NAACP Image Awards. We've had some unique experiences and it aligns with what I call teaching beyond the classroom. We've been a partner of the Tennessee Titans since 1999, since they moved to town. A lot of our kids are from outside of the city of Nashville. And so that is the first time they get an experience at an NFL game and that goes back to teaching beyond the classroom. All of these things have been just a remarkable experience for us with the Tennessee Titans. It's something that we're proud of. Aristocrata Bands is a household name in the community. We've been around for over 75 years in this neighborhood and a lot of the people who live on the backside of campus, even in pre-drill when we're starting to do PT at six in the morning, you can see them coming on their back porch just to see how big the band is this year. I constantly hear, what do y'all have next? Just band the lane.