字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント (cheery folk music) - [Gaelynn] My music and my disability to me are not the same. I don't think about my disability while I'm playing. I feel like myself. (high trilling crescendo) It's my form of meditation, I think. You know, there's a lot of work that we could do to make the arts more inclusive, so if I can be a catalyst for any of that that's important to me. That's cool. That's fun. (rhythmic banjo strumming) - [Chris] I'm Chris Funk. I'm a musician in a band called The Decemberists. And I'm on a journey looking for the most surprising and extraordinary people in music. My first stop takes me to Duluth, Minnesota. There I will meet up with Gaelynn Lea, an artist who creates music like nobody else. (Electric organ) I've shared the stage with some incredible people in my life, but the musician I am meeting today is truly extraordinary. My name is Gaelynn Lea, and I am a violinist and a songwriter from Duluth, Minnesota. - [Chris] I'd heard a lot about Gaelynn and was excited to meet her, little did I know that she was also a fan of The Decemberists. It turns out she had heard us play in 2004. [Gaelynn's friend] Hand spray-painted. No way, that's hilarious, I don't even have one of these. I'm keeping it, thank you. Please, no. (laughs) It's coming home (laughs) Last time, it was gonna be like a toy, but it was like oh no, this is the real deal. Yeah, it's legitimate, man. Gaelynn was born with brittle bone disease, which has left her in a wheelchair. But you'll really forget that after a few minutes. I started playing the violin when I was 10 years old. I loved the way the strings sounded. So the next year the teacher took it upon herself to help me figure out how to play up and down like a little cello. So it just meant I had to practice the same stuff a little bit harder probably and maybe that was a good thing in disguise. (slow melancholy tune) - [Chris] Gaelynn had been a part of the Duluth music scene for years when another musician gave her a device called a looping pedal. It allows her to record herself and play the music back while she's performing. And now I can play a song. (slow heartfelt tune) Looping was a mindblower, I mean it was so much a game-changer. 'Cause it was just such a cool experience to go from one note to like 10 notes and have it be orchestrated. It opened up a lot of doors, instrumentally and vocally and everything just kind of changed when I got into looping. And then I might want to fade out. (emotive tune fades away) So you're engaging all that with your knee? Yep. Awesome. I'm always fascinated by the imagination musicians will use to create new and fresh sounds. But the ingenuity that Gaelynn has shown in her journey to produce beautiful music is truly inspiring. (snappy folk tune) I think any instrument but especially violin, the way I play automatically just sounds different than the way someone else plays. It's really cool how you develop a voice and a form of expression that's kind of unique. It just clears my mind and lifts my spirit. There's not anything else that I've found does that. (long violin note, banjo strumming) (audience applause) (bing)
B1 中級 米 チェロのようにバイオリンを弾く驚くべき民族音楽家 (The Amazing Folk Musician Playing Violin Like a Cello) 29 1 許大善 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語