That sing-songing was what I picked up from my mother who used to always sing for herself, I think I picked it up from my mother. She was always singing for herself, whatever she was doing. So, it's a combination of that.
[Q] And did a lot of people sing?
Oh, I mean, they get together and drink a lot of beer and, of course, they sing, they sing. And our house, was next to the cemetery and whenever anybody died they, the gravediggers usually come with the barrel of beer to our house, they're waiting for the whole procession to come, the coffin and the singing the hymns and they were singing right there, drinking and singing their own songs and, oh they're coming already! So they drop their glasses, leave their glasses on the table and they go to take care of all that in the cemetery. Yeah, there is a lot of singing; there is a lot of singing. I still know, I still know, I think, hundreds and hundreds of songs. When I went to Lithuania for the first time, I went back in 1971, I knew more songs, more folk songs than they knew already because between 1940 and '70, during those 30 years already, and the song culture, they knew how to sing the new Soviet songs, but the folk songs were on their way out. I still knew them and I still know them. We sang here about two days ago, my friends sang Lithuanian folk songs.