I can add something to that, if there's time.
Brett Kissel is an extraordinary individual. He goes over and beyond most artists in his ability to reach out to people and to engage. I think other artists who don't have his personal abilities as a communicator can do other things to give back. I think they can, in our case, record an oral history of what made them successful, what inspired them to be successful. That's something that the National Music Centre could broadcast and make available. They can donate instruments, part of their ephemera, their manuscripts, the things that inspired them, their creative works that they can leave as legacies, which can be tools for education and inspiration. I see this every day. When somebody sees a piano that was played by a certain Canadian artist or a guitar or a set of original lyrics that penned a particular song, it's inspiring to kids. I've seen kids' lives transformed by seeing these things. So they can give back those kinds of things as well, if they don't have Brett's personality. Brett's pretty special in that regard, but I think there are other ways that they can give back as well.