Budapest
orchestra helps deaf people 'hear' Beethoven through touch
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[February 10, 2020]
By Krisztina Fenyo and Krisztina Than
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Zsuzsanna Foldi has
been deaf all her life. Still, with her hands placed on the double bass,
sitting among musicians in Budapest's Danubia orchestra, she can enjoy
and literally feel Beethoven's famous Fifth Symphony.
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"When I sat next to the musician who played the bass today, I
started crying," she said.
"My father also had a double bass... and I did not have a hearing
aid. I always put my ear on the bass and he played to me," she
added, recalling her childhood.
Foldi lost her hearing when she was eight months old due to a
meningitis infection. At the age of three she was declared deaf.
Now 67, she is part of a group of people, including children, all of
them hard of hearing, that has been able to "hear" through touch
Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, which has gone down in music history as
the Symphony of Fate.
Some of the audience sit next to the musicians and place their hands
on the instruments to feel the vibration. Others hold balloons that
convey the vibration of the sounds. Some are given special
hyper-sensitive hearing aids.
Mate Hamori, the conductor of the orchestra that is holding a series
of concerts this spring for people with a hearing loss, said their
aim was to bring music to people who otherwise have no chance to
enjoy it, and to call attention to hearing difficulties that are
often ignored.
"So the idea was to somehow lure those who are the most capable of
sympathising with Beethoven and his own suffering into the world of
music," Hamori said.
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Beethoven's hearing gradually deteriorated and he wrote the Fifth
Symphony already with his hearing impaired in 1804-1808.
Its famous opening motif is often referred to as 'fate knocking at
the door' -- perhaps the hearing loss that he feared would afflict
him for the rest of his life.
As his hearing got worse, Beethoven composed music on his piano by
feeling the vibration of the notes.
Erzsebet Dudas, 75, who lost her hearing in one ear when she was 35
and then in the other as well six years ago, said she used to listen
to jazz and also classical music but had never heard Beethoven
before.
"Here, when the string instruments all sound, that gives a very good
vibration. It is not a coincidence that he wrote this kind of
music," she said.
(Writing by Krisztina Than; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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