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Welcomeeeeeeeee......
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Welcome...to another episode...
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...of TwoSet Violin!!!
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Today, we're gonna talk about...
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- How do you introduce this...yeah... - That was such a classic TwoSet intro, we're just...
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- "What do we—what are we doing again today?" - "What's it again?"
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- "Uh..." - Alright, okay.
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We're watching a clip that many of you
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- have sent to us before to review, - Uh-huh.
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It is a scene involving violin playing,
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and it is from a TV series called "Chicago Med".
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As someone that nearly became doctor,
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and uh someone that—
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- Did you nearly become doctor? - Nah.
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—maybe could have become doctor,
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- we feel like this is the perfect video for us to review. - Mm-hmm.
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Um...so let's...
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- Let's watch it together. Shall we? - Let's get started.
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Can you hear this?
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Yes.
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How about now?
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Not as well as the other.
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Okay, first of all,
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- that is a chunky tuning fork. - Whoa, that's enormous.
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Second of all, I get the effect they're going for,
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- it's like...kind of resemble tinnitus. - Mmm.
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But no tuning fork...
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- Yeah, it'll be like an A, yeah. - ...is that high, it's normally...
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- You a musician? - Mm-hmm.
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Getting my master's at CCPA.
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The conservatory!
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Impressive!
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Follow my—
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I'll say as a musician,
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- losing hearing is the biggest nightmare. - Yeah.
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We rely on these so much.
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But it's also the source of our pleasure.
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- Yeah. - Like, we make music because we love...
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- Hearing music. - ...yeah, hearing music.
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I actually did, back in the day, have...
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...when I was in the conservatory, had um...
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...small, kind of a health-scare.
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I thought I was gonna have hearing problems,
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and hearing loss as well.
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Turned out it was fine, but I had like...
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...funny problems with my hearing,
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and that was the most scary thing ever.
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I don't mean to scare you,
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but becoming a doctor was actually my fallback plan.
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I wanted to be a musician. A violinist, in fact.
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Med is easier than being a musician!
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Ohhhhhhhhhhh!!!!
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*chuckles*
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I don't have a fallback plan.
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Music's all I ever wanted to do.
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- You see, that's what I was missing. - Yeah.
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Can you squeeze my hands?
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- The doctor sounds so like... - Condescending.
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*chuckles*
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"See, that's what l'm missing." *chuckle*
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"Good luck."
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- "You're about to go deaf." - Oh wow....
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- Paganini C minor Caprice broke my will. - *chuckles*
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Wait. What did she say?
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Paganini C minor Caprice—
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- Paganini C minor Caprice. - C minor—number 4?
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Alright,
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- I'll give that to you, that one broke my spirit too. - Yeah, that one is messed up.
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That's a good reference!
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Someone...
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- ...did their research. - Yeah.
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*chuckles* Just about everyone else!
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- It's a bear! - Yeah!
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I played snare in marching band in freshman year.
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I think if it's C minor it is...
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Yeah.
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What was it—what were they singing? *sings passage*
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Oh! *sings passage*
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Oh!
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Yeah yeah yeah...maybe it's that one.
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- Yeah yeah yeah. - Yeah...yeah...
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*chuckles* That's really funny.
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I've got a recital next month.
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All Bach program.
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Maybe you can come.
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Sure, I'd love to.
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Dr. Halstead.
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"I've got a recital coming."
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- "Sure, I'd love to." - Walks away... *chuckles*
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- She's got a slight nystagmus in— - In her right eye, I know.
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And then hearing loss on the left.
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I'm thinking it could be syndromic.
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Well, apparently you didn't need a consult.
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Come on, I value your opinion.
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How come you never told me you want to be a musician?
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You want an opinion?
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Call a neurosurgeon and send her for a stat head CT.
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Dr. Halstead.
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- Yeah? - Your violinist.
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Radiology just sent her report.
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Has anyone from neurosurgery seen these yet?
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They talked about scheduling surgery as soon as possible.
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Acoustic neuroma?
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Tumors, essentially.
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I know this is a TV show...
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...but maybe it's the fact that right now
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they haven't said anything to trigger musicians
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I'm actually believing it.
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Yeah.
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- Into the storyline right now...yeah. - Yeah, yeah, they haven't said anything stupid yet.
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So these neuromas are...
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...pressing against your inner ear,
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and that's why you've been experiencing
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the hearing loss and the dizziness.
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We need to remove them,
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and stop the internal bleeding.
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What are the side effects?
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There's a good chance you'll lose your hearing.
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My hearing?
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Yes.
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Dylan, I know it seems like your world is coming apart right now,
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but we got lucky here today.
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That fall you took might have just saved your life.
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I'm a musician!
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I don't know any of these med terms,
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- so I don't even know if it's legit or not. - Yeah, maybe the doctors watching this are like...
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- " Neuro-acoustical vabruolisis"? *pfft*" - Yeah yeah...
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I pulled this out of the deep depths of my closet.
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I reached out to Anne-Sophie Mutter's people, but...
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it seems she's on tour in China.
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Did they just say Anne-Sophie Mutter?
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- Ohh... - Okay, that's a bit ridiculous.
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- How do you just reach out to Anne-Sophie Mutter? - I know...
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- Maybe you can... - Maybe—I think you can...
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but it's just like I'm impressed they even mentioned
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- the name, Anne-Sophie Mutter. It's like... - Yeah.
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Wow.
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Nice one.
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I'm guessing you know Bach's concerto in D minor
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for two violins?
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In my day we all learned it.
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Sure.
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Get out your violin, Dylan.
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We're gonna have that recital.
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Come on.
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I know she's meaning the best,
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I don't know what her character is like...but...
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If I were just find out that I was gonna lose my hearing,
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and the doctor was like,
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"Get out your violin Eddy,
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we're gonna play Bach right now."
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- I'll be like— - "I'm not the—"
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- "You're not the one that'll be losing your hearing." - I'll be like, "What???"
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- *laughs* - "What???"
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The memory is not just in the head.
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We also have what's called kinesthetic memory.
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The body's memory.
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It remembers movement...
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...resistance, and the position of its parts.
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So hearing or not...
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...your body can still remember how to play.
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I'm gonna make a bit of a nuanced point here.
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I know this is probably gonna be taken the wrong way,
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I guess from a musician's perspective,
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part of the re—
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A) part of the reason we make music is...
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...because we can enjoy it, to hear it.
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It's not just so we can play the instrument,
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but also so we can enjoy hearing the sounds
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we make from the instrument.
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Second of all,
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part of practice is a feedback loop, between...
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- ...playing and hearing. - Hearing it, yeah.
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You experiment different feels,
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to hear what sound you get,
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and then you adapt to it.
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And to now have one of those feedback loops...
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...shut off,
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it's very difficult.
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And I think to give an example for that...
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Heifetz once gave his students a...
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a class where he detuned his violin—their violin,
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because his student was taking too long tuning it.
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And he was saying,
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"Look...
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in a real concert, when you play a 45-minute concerto,
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with temperature changing,
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- the strings are going to go slightly out of tune, - Mm-hmm.
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and then it's up to you to listen
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and adapt on the moment to the intonation.'
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Even...
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...Beethoven, the genius deaf composer
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that was able to compose a symphony,
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there are reports of him when he was losing hearing...
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...desperately trying to play the piano,
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holding a metal rod to transmit the sound vibrations
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- from the piano to his skull, like... - ...just to hear.
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He was a genius that can compose a symphony in his head,
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- and he was that desperate to hear that - Yeah.
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- last bit of frequency. - Yeah.
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So...
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- Just putting these things out there, - Yeah. *chuckle*
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- you guys let us know what you think. - I know.
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Concentrate on the feel, the vibrations.
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Just close your eyes,
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and remember.
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Oh no...!
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Dude, they—she could actually play.
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- They could both play. - They could both play, yeah, I was like,
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"Whoa!!!!"
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And they didn't even try to make it sound professional,
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- like at a high level. - They made it sound...
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- As...made it sound realistic. - ...real, like...what it would've sounded like
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- two people just pulling their violins out. - Yeah and then someone that hasn't practiced in ages.
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- Yeah...yeah. - 'Cause she still remember it in her hand.
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- Damn...that's impressive. - Dude...props to the actresses!
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Yeah.
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That was really sad when she got wheeled off.
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- I know. - It's like...
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...the final performance.
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I know it's just a TV show, but damn, that's heavy.
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That's frickin' intense.
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Alright guys.
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Thank you so much for watching.
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- Oh we should—oh, should we play it?
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*mumbles*
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Please subscribe!
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See you guys next time!
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Practice!
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40 hours a day!
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Or you'll have to become a doctor!
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- It's so hard to talk and play...! - ...talk and play at the same time...!