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♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ Ladies and gentlemen, from London, John Hannibal! John Hannibal! It's way over 20 years with us. Thank you so much. And this gives me the chance to introduce you a great friend, also a founding member since 25 years with us. He was starting so spectacularly, like all of us would love to start in the music industry. Who would not be with Miles Davis as a first band? So, he became very famous, but his 28 albums that he recorded after that are so meaningful and so special. Ladies and gentlemen, from New York City, one of the greatest saxophone players of our time, Bill Evans! From New York, Bill Evans! And Till and myself, we just agree that of all times, the greatest trumpet player is the legend. You know him from so many incredible recordings. And maybe the best known stuff was the Brecker Brothers. And he's a genius in many, many ways, as a composer, as an arranger, but he is the trumpet player of our times. And Till and myself are just looking up to him as a god on the trumpet. Ladies and gentlemen, from New York City, the legendary icon on trumpet and flugelhorn, Randy Brecker! And you know what makes Soulmates so special? That we all became musicians back then, in the beginning of the 70s, mid of 70s, because we were idealistic about it, that music can change the world, to create a better world. We all believed that music, and we artists, are always a bit of a stick in the flesh of society. We have to be renaissance, we have to preserve this rebelliousness in our youthful hearts forever. And the next song tells about this liberalism of us musicians, this renaissance rebelliousness, which separated us all at the age of 18, but also today at the age of 60. The song is called On and On.