Sunday, April 26, 2020

From Denver to Rotterdam and around the world: A message of hope amid a global crists.

As I write this, we’re currently in lockdown in my home state of Georgia. Millions of people have been diagnosed with what was originally thought to be a mysterious and quite aggressive form of pneumonia after having visited one specific open-air market in China in late December 2019. By 2020, the disease was found to be a new pathogen, and the city where the outbreak started (and the whole province)—close to 60 million people—were on lockdown in China.
My home country, the United States, got its first case in February, in the state of Washington; my home state of Georgia was about a month behind the first case in the country. In early March, we had 3 cases. More than 24 thousand people in my state now have the disease, and the whole country has 989 thousand cases—the most in the world—and worldwide, at least 3.06 million have contracted the virus, of whom more than 212 thousand have died. We need to test people to see if they have or had the disease, but, especially here in the United States, we can’t—there just aren’t enough tests. Millions more may be infected and that we’ll never know for certain because they weren’t tested, not because they chose not to be tested, but because they couldn’t be tested since the tests they needed literally did not exist and could not be made. Because of the severity of the disease we’ve been fighting—for months now classified as a pandemic—the world economy is at a standstill; many countries in Europe and many areas in my United States have been limiting economic activity to only the bare essentials, often closing every business indefinitely except those that make food, medicine, or things needed to fight the virus.
Hospitals are overrun. Doctors are desperate, some having to make life-or-death calls, giving life to one patient and denying life to another in a zero-sum game fighting over ventilators and experimental treatments in dangerously low supply. Public health officials say that this is the most serious affront to our national and global health systems since the Spanish Flu of 1918 a century ago. To prevent the death toll of the Spanish Flu pandemic, governments worldwide have put billions of people under government-enforced lockdowns and stay-at-home orders, potentially for the next several months, for their protection. The leading doctor fighting the virus here in America says we may have to wait until 2022 for a vaccine, and even longer until the vaccine is distributed widely enough that we can all consider ourselves safe again and to have some semblance of a return tot normalcy, like things were before the virus.
We are all scared, and we all need hope. Even for those of us who have not yet been directly affected by the virus, it's an incredibly treacherous time with so many unknowns: everywhere we look, we’re reminded of the crisis, and every time we turn on the TV and check the news, it’s bad, and very few people can give us sound information that tells us the end is really in sight. The numbers have worsened: more have died, there are fewer available hospital beds and ventilators, and there doesn’t appear to be any end in sight. 
For musicians, it’s a tough time: the concert halls are closed indefinitely, and some ensembles have had to disband entirely because ticket revenue has fallen so much so suddenly. Doing what we love to do-- playing for audiences who love what we play-- is impossible right now. One of the orchestras that shines brightly as an example of how to continue bringing music and hope to the world even though we musicians can’t rehearse together, let alone play in a packed concert hall for thousands at a time, is the Rotterdam Philharmonic in the Netherlands. The musicians in that Dutch orchestra, at a time when their country currently has about 37,000 cases, came together to give the world hope. The musicians came together via video from wherever they were, and from living rooms and kitchens, each musician alone played his or her part in the finale of Beethoven’s Ninth. As far as I can tell, the choral part was reused from another one of the Rotterdam Philharmonic’s recordings of the Ninth. The video, which went up on March 20, 2020 on the Rotterdam Philharmonic’s official YouTube channel, now has nearly 2.7 million views, 127 times as many likes as dislikes, and 2800 comments as of when this was written in late April 2020. The video was probably put together with next to no rehearsal time, and certainly no rehearsal time together, and titled “From us, for you,” has been a tremendous source of hope through the desolation and devastation of the pandemic. Even though this performance didn’t happen in one of the grandest concert halls in Europe led by an all-time great conductor for an audience who paid for a ticket to see a concert, it still managed to touch the hearts of millions of viewers. That’s the power of the Ninth: whenever or however we hear it, it’s an instrument of hope, of healing, of comfort.


I’d like to share some of the comments posted on the video.

This one is from a doctor actively working to end the pandemic “Thank you – as an ER physician dealing with the repercussions of this global tragedy, it is beautiful to have reminders of why we are putting our lives at risk every day. You have touched my heart and given me, and others, strength to keep being what we are - doctors - because of what you are - artists....”
An Indonesian doctor said this “I am a physician in Indonesia. I lost it when the chorus came in. Thank you.”
 Another man said this about his Dutch wife’s past experiences through World War II and how they relate to the current pandemic: “…Her parents watched [Rotterdam] erupt in flames in May of 1940 and lived through five years of occupation. As we cope with this pandemic, I remember the courage of my Dutch family, I draw strength from knowing that people have survived terrible times…” 
This commenter included a quote from Washington Irving, an American writer roughly contemporaneous with Ludwig van Beethoven. The commenter said: “‘There is a sacredness in tears. They are not a mark of weakness, but of power. They speak more eloquently than ten thousand tongues. They are the messengers of overwhelming grief, of deep contrition and of unspeakable love.’ [ –Washington Irving] Thank you for giving me Joy 💖.” 
 This commenter speaks of the immense emotional impact even an impromptu performance under the strangest of circumstances, like this one, can have: “When I saw all the comments saying how they cried unexpectedly, I didn't think I would cry but I did. This hit me so hard, thank you so much. Music can heal.”
This commenter points out that authentic joy is transcendent over even the most crippling illnesses or physical disabilities, like Ludwig van Beethoven was: “A deaf man that knows what joy would sound like is a great testament to the potential greatness of humanity.” An American commenter wrote this: “This brought tears to my eyes. Music is the universal language. Thank you and much love from America. 🧡🧡🧡
Another commenter contrasts the desolation of today with the hope of tomorrow: “Literally crying at the end. It's difficult to explain how powerful this music is. This song has survived so many ugly events in human history. Yet, it remains beautiful. Thank you, Rotterdam philharmonic orchestra. You have shown us exactly what context our current worries exist in. In the existence of this song, Rotterdam was cruelly burnt to the ground. The citizens of the Netherlands experienced unimaginable suffering, yet the song survived. Now the citizens of Rotterdam can proudly perform the music, just like the generations before them. I know coronavirus is terrifying, and it has deeply harmed my personal life. But we will survive this crisis, just like Beethoven's symphony. There will be a time when symphony halls across the world will be full again.”
Another commenter on the transcendence and historical importance of this performance, despite it not being in as grand a setting or with as illustrious a conductor as the other monumentally influential performances I'll discuss in that section of my upcoming book. “No concert, no lesson, no future musical event will ever be more important or as powerful as these last 4 minutes. Thank you for sending such an uplifting message in such tumultuous times. God Bless.”
This commenter speaks to the universality of the healing power of music, our common language: “This is why music is SO important. In a language that we can all relate to, all feel and all bond. Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! For sharing your gifts with us all in time where we need hope, love and song. Beautiful!”
On the uniting power of music: “This is so beautiful I'm crying. If only the world would come together like this at all times. Thank you!!”
Another similar video was released at around the same time by the Colorado Symphony Orchestra, based in Denver, Colorado. There, 544 thousand people have seen the video, there have been 136 times as many likes as there have been dislikes, and there have been about 490 comments as of when this was written in late April 2020. Here’s a sampling of those comments.
“We may be remote but we are STILL musicians and we can still touch souls.... We need our music and those around us virtually need it as well…”
“I started tearing up watching this. If you'd brought in a full choir, I would have straight-up broken down. Wonderful job, all of you.”
“The arts are what make us human, both in good times and times of difficulty. Everyone of these individuals, everyone of these instruments is unique and different and yet when they come together, they bring peace, beauty and joy. Thank you to each of these musicians for sharing this beauty. May we all learn a lesson that when we come together, in our uniqueness, we can make beautiful things happen. I so enjoyed this amazing rendition of Beethoven's Ode to Joy, last movement of his 9th Symphony. Thank you!”
“Brought tears to my eyes. Thank you for sharing your gift of music with us at this time.”
“I'm in tears. Thank you so much for sharing joy in this time of uncertainty. Blessings on each of you."
“Thank you so much for this beautiful song! I think it's so amazing that us musicians can still play together, even under the current circumstances!”
“Music is essential in crisis. It gives you courage.”
Using online tools to translate their comment from Japanese, I found that one person wrote “I will be healed. I pray that all the hearts of the world will be healed. Thank you for the wonderful music.”
 “Thank you. In a time of distancing you all model music togetherness. And bring out individual gifts for the gift of shared music. Thank you”

 One of the great miracles of this symphony is the hope that this melody and its lyrics inspire in all of us: "Alle Menschen werden Brüder." "All men will be brothers." Leaning on each other and on our music for strength and encouragement, we'll make it through the crisis. These past few months have been difficult, and there are many more difficult months ahead. But do not be afraid. Now, while many of us are scared, let us remember that we have each other, and let us take comfort in each other's company, and in the beautiful music and memories we can create together, even in the midst of a global crisis because hope, music, and love transcend anything. Anchoring ourselves by our music, let us not lose one of the things that matters most: our hope. Stay strong, my friends.