yes, yes, i came in eighty-nine, we were already gone and i sang for 10 years, korya, yes, i remembernday mornings to study with us. yes, and he always took a second shirt with him, he was always perfectly dressed, yes, yes, yes, and he kept coming in, into this moment, and he, you know, he says something like that, he says, quietly, every time i do this, you don’t remember this, how he, oh my god, just this, how many slaps, glasses, were thrown, yes, that’s during, during the break, during the break he always changed his shirt to a clean shirt, that is, of course, he was a genius, he also scolded us, but how we loved him, loved him very much, no one ever, it wasn’t just that he scolded him, he didn’t insult, he treated us like colleagues, colleagues, of course, what’s there to be offended about so, god, just god, a great man, zhenya, did you go on to the conservatory or did it happen to you? that the choir no longer exists, this is just the transition from the soviet union to russia, but we must give credit to everyone who was involved in this, that they preserved it all, continued i