the brilliant hungarian pianist andras schiff, he says he will not return to hungary, not play in hungaryis prime minister. do you understand that position? andras is a very, very good friend and i have great, great respect for him. i personally don't do what he does, i go back regularly, ijust came today from budapest. and i can tell you why i do that, because there are so many people who need our music there and we have a very large following and i can see in their eyes how much they need music. and this is what we provide, and it gives me pleasure to simply make music for people. before we end, i want to get you to consider the future. you have said that the symphony orchestra, the very idea of it, has to continue constantly to evolve and develop, or it will simply become a museum. you are still full of energy and creativity, so where are you taking the idea of the orchestra and classical music next? i think a symphony orchestra must reform in order to survive. i would go even further, the danger is not that an orchestra becomes a museum, the danger is that an orchestra dies out like t