Tells the inspiring story of Me2/Orchestra, the only orchestra in the…
Beethoven's Nine
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In early 2023, filmmaker Larry Weinstein set out to make a documentary about Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. It was supposed to be about how far we have come in the two hundred years since it was written. But when world events pull Larry into his own film, the question becomes a deeply personal one. Beethoven’s Nine is a documentary about music, but also about war and hope. It follows nine unique individuals, including Ukrainian musicians, a deaf composer, a Polish rock star, a best-selling author, a legendary cartoonist and Weinstein himself, as they try to better understand the legacy of Beethoven’s Ninth, the composer’s own struggles, the inspiration music can provide and how humanity continues to look for hope even in the darkest times.
Citation
Main credits
Weinstein, Larry (film director)
Weinstein, Larry (screenwriter)
Charters, Jason (film producer)
New, David (screenwriter)
Other credits
Cinematography, Filip Drózdz, John Minh Tran, Sven Jakob-Engelmann; editing, David New.
Distributor subjects
No distributor subjects provided.Keywords
00:00:13.280 --> 00:00:16.720
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement II plays]
00:00:22.320 --> 00:00:23.800
-[Larry] "Joy."
00:00:23.840 --> 00:00:25.400
"Let millions be embraced."
00:00:26.720 --> 00:00:29.320
"A kiss for the whole world."
00:00:30.760 --> 00:00:32.880
What are these words?
00:00:32.920 --> 00:00:34.480
What do they mean?
00:00:34.520 --> 00:00:37.640
This declaration that
caught the imagination
00:00:37.640 --> 00:00:40.120
of a young
idealistic Beethoven.
00:00:40.160 --> 00:00:42.720
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement II continues]
00:00:42.760 --> 00:00:46.120
-[Larry] Words that he waited
a lifetime to set to music.
00:00:46.120 --> 00:00:48.120
In his ninth and
final symphony,
00:00:48.120 --> 00:00:51.120
the first symphony in
history that used text.
00:00:51.160 --> 00:00:57.560
[singers warming up]
00:00:59.680 --> 00:01:01.600
-[Larry] "All people
become brothers
00:01:01.640 --> 00:01:04.520
beneath thy gentle wing."
00:01:04.560 --> 00:01:06.320
Why?
00:01:06.360 --> 00:01:08.920
Why were these words
so important to Beethoven
00:01:08.960 --> 00:01:11.520
that had led him to alter
the course of music?
00:01:11.560 --> 00:01:15.000
[cheering]
00:01:15.680 --> 00:01:20.120
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement II playing]
00:01:20.720 --> 00:01:21.600
-[Larry] Did he really believe
00:01:21.640 --> 00:01:25.080
that humankind
was harmonious?
00:01:25.120 --> 00:01:28.920
Or that one day we
might achieve harmony?
00:01:30.040 --> 00:01:33.400
That we would embrace
one another in light,
00:01:33.440 --> 00:01:35.680
in love, and at peace?
00:01:35.720 --> 00:01:37.800
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement II playing]
00:01:37.840 --> 00:01:39.800
-[Larry] This is a film
in which we set out
00:01:39.840 --> 00:01:41.800
to feature nine subjects,
00:01:41.840 --> 00:01:44.520
who somehow
embody Beethoven,
00:01:44.560 --> 00:01:46.080
his ninth symphony,
00:01:46.120 --> 00:01:49.200
and the ideals
that inspired him.
00:01:49.240 --> 00:01:53.840
What resulted is not the film
that I had expected to make.
00:01:55.320 --> 00:01:59.960
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement II continues]
00:02:03.360 --> 00:02:04.760
[explosion]
00:02:04.760 --> 00:02:09.640
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement I plays]
00:02:09.680 --> 00:02:12.480
-[Woman] Damn,
they are over our heads!
00:02:13.880 --> 00:02:15.840
-[Man] They fly
right over the houses!
00:02:15.880 --> 00:02:17.240
Sons of bitches!
00:02:18.680 --> 00:02:19.880
-[Volodymyr Zelensky]
All of us are here,
00:02:19.880 --> 00:02:24.480
protecting our independence
and our country.
00:02:24.480 --> 00:02:27.360
And it will continue
to be this way.
00:02:27.400 --> 00:02:32.160
Glory to our defenders,
glory to the heroes.
00:02:32.200 --> 00:02:33.080
Glory to Ukraine.
00:02:33.120 --> 00:02:34.360
-[Everyone] Glory to Ukraine.
00:02:38.720 --> 00:02:41.800
[helicopters whirring]
00:02:41.800 --> 00:02:43.680
-[Man] The first day,
when the war started,
00:02:43.720 --> 00:02:45.520
it was a huge shock.
00:02:45.560 --> 00:02:47.080
[missiles whooshing]
00:02:47.120 --> 00:02:49.800
-[Man 2] Everything changes
when you feel the blast wave
00:02:49.840 --> 00:02:52.080
for the first time.
00:02:52.120 --> 00:02:54.400
[fire crackling]
00:02:54.440 --> 00:02:56.880
-[Woman] I think it's the
heaviest year in my life.
00:02:58.040 --> 00:03:01.320
[explosion]
00:03:01.320 --> 00:03:05.720
[men shouting]
00:03:06.560 --> 00:03:08.040
-[Man 2] I saw
dead people,
00:03:10.240 --> 00:03:13.920
screams, black smoke, fire.
00:03:14.680 --> 00:03:16.440
-[Woman 2] I left Ukraine,
00:03:16.480 --> 00:03:18.960
I had to start
my life from zero.
00:03:19.000 --> 00:03:21.360
[rockets whooshing]
00:03:21.400 --> 00:03:23.640
-[Man 3] Rockets in the night.
00:03:23.680 --> 00:03:25.440
Not one rocket,
few rockets came.
00:03:25.480 --> 00:03:28.160
And they were flying
just above my house.
00:03:28.200 --> 00:03:32.360
And that sound is terrifying.
00:03:32.400 --> 00:03:34.520
When you hear it,
and then you hear explosion,
00:03:34.520 --> 00:03:37.520
and you understand that
next one can be yours.
00:03:38.400 --> 00:03:44.320
[instruments tuning]
00:03:48.360 --> 00:03:51.000
-[Keri-Lynn] I started
Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra
00:03:51.040 --> 00:03:54.600
because I was very angry,
and screaming, and crying,
00:03:54.640 --> 00:03:57.520
and outraged at
the start of the invasion.
00:03:57.560 --> 00:04:01.280
And I needed to do something
that would defend Ukraine,
00:04:01.320 --> 00:04:04.720
and its people, and fate,
on the cultural front.
00:04:04.760 --> 00:04:09.240
It was the idea I had to
find the group of musicians
00:04:09.280 --> 00:04:12.000
who are fleeing their
country desperately,
00:04:12.040 --> 00:04:13.080
who had no more voice.
00:04:13.720 --> 00:04:14.640
-[Keri-Lynn] Thank you.
00:04:14.680 --> 00:04:16.080
Number five please.
00:04:17.880 --> 00:04:26.680
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement I playing]
00:04:26.720 --> 00:04:28.040
-[Keri-Lynn] Late.
00:04:28.080 --> 00:04:38.080
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement I continues]
00:04:38.120 --> 00:04:44.680
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement I continues]
00:04:44.720 --> 00:04:46.160
-[Man 4] We are
playing together,
00:04:46.200 --> 00:04:47.880
music of Beethoven,
00:04:47.920 --> 00:04:51.600
that cries, and screaming
about the freedom.
00:04:51.640 --> 00:04:54.680
So that's amazing for me.
00:04:54.720 --> 00:04:56.040
I feel so grateful.
00:04:56.520 --> 00:04:59.600
-[Man 5] It's not only music,
we are here for the message.
00:04:59.640 --> 00:05:03.480
Listen us, listen us,
we are working together,
00:05:03.520 --> 00:05:05.520
we will do
something fantastic.
00:05:05.560 --> 00:05:07.480
And we want to now play.
00:05:07.520 --> 00:05:08.680
-[Woman] At that moment,
00:05:08.720 --> 00:05:11.800
of this hard moment
for our country,
00:05:11.840 --> 00:05:14.440
it was a moment
of salvation, you know,
00:05:14.480 --> 00:05:18.160
for me to be there
between my people.
00:05:18.200 --> 00:05:21.960
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement I continues]
00:05:22.480 --> 00:05:23.480
-[Keri-Lynn] There's
a lot of work to do,
00:05:23.520 --> 00:05:24.840
because it's
obviously a group
00:05:24.880 --> 00:05:26.880
that has never played together.
00:05:26.920 --> 00:05:31.280
And so, having to come
and make a harmonious group.
00:05:31.320 --> 00:05:33.000
We already have the desire,
00:05:33.040 --> 00:05:38.240
we have the passion
to be the very best,
00:05:38.280 --> 00:05:40.720
but it requires
a lot of work.
00:05:44.040 --> 00:05:47.000
There is hope, there is hope.
00:05:47.040 --> 00:05:50.760
Who would have ever thought
that out of all this misery,
00:05:50.800 --> 00:05:52.760
and oppression, and horror,
00:05:52.800 --> 00:05:57.080
that something so beautiful
could be realized from it?
00:05:57.120 --> 00:06:01.160
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement I continues]
00:06:02.920 --> 00:06:04.480
-[Larry] Beethoven
was entirely deaf
00:06:04.520 --> 00:06:07.680
by the time he wrote
his Ninth Symphony.
00:06:07.720 --> 00:06:11.080
But maybe this limitation
somehow liberated him.
00:06:11.120 --> 00:06:14.040
Out of the silence
and unhindered,
00:06:14.080 --> 00:06:15.360
he could imagine sounds
00:06:15.400 --> 00:06:18.280
that no composer had
ever imagined before.
00:06:18.280 --> 00:06:21.560
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement I continues]
00:06:21.600 --> 00:06:23.520
-[Gabriela] My name is
Gabriela Lena Frank.
00:06:23.560 --> 00:06:26.160
I am a composer and a pianist.
00:06:26.200 --> 00:06:27.640
I'm also the director of the
00:06:27.680 --> 00:06:30.680
Gabriela Lena Frank
Creative Academy of Music.
00:06:32.080 --> 00:06:33.840
So I was fitted
with my hearing aids
00:06:33.880 --> 00:06:37.760
when I was about
five years old.
00:06:37.800 --> 00:06:39.880
And my father, he would read
to me while holding me close,
00:06:39.920 --> 00:06:43.480
and I remember his body
vibrating with the stories,
00:06:43.520 --> 00:06:45.640
and then my brother started
taking piano lessons.
00:06:45.680 --> 00:06:48.280
And I used to
sit near the piano,
00:06:48.320 --> 00:06:51.280
and I could feel it
just ringing to life.
00:06:51.320 --> 00:06:54.680
And I started playing piano
before I got my hearing aids.
00:06:54.720 --> 00:06:55.880
-[Gabriela] So that's
the first piece
00:06:55.920 --> 00:06:57.160
I ever learned of Beethoven.
00:06:57.200 --> 00:06:59.520
That's the little Ecossaise.
00:06:59.520 --> 00:07:02.880
And then after that, I learned
the First Piano Sonata.
00:07:02.920 --> 00:07:10.520
[Plays Beethoven
Piano Sonata 1]
00:07:11.240 --> 00:07:13.840
-[Gabriela] I remember that
first day when I got fitted,
00:07:13.840 --> 00:07:16.440
and they put the
hearing aids in,
00:07:16.440 --> 00:07:19.840
and the first thing I
heard was the air just went--
00:07:19.880 --> 00:07:21.040
[blows]
00:07:21.280 --> 00:07:24.640
And it just came to life,
there was a sound to the room.
00:07:24.680 --> 00:07:28.160
And the technician
said "Hi, Gabriela."
00:07:28.200 --> 00:07:32.240
and it was something I had
never experienced before.
00:07:32.280 --> 00:07:35.480
And then I remember
going to the piano,
00:07:35.520 --> 00:07:39.200
and it had this life that I
had never experienced before.
00:07:39.560 --> 00:07:41.160
-[Gabriela] You see
some of the hallmarks
00:07:41.200 --> 00:07:42.440
of Beethoven already.
00:07:42.480 --> 00:07:43.880
[continues playing]
00:07:43.920 --> 00:07:45.240
-[Gabriela] I think
Beethoven's music,
00:07:45.280 --> 00:07:47.360
if he hadn't lost his hearing,
would be very different.
00:07:47.400 --> 00:07:48.840
And the oscillating,
of course,
00:07:48.880 --> 00:07:50.000
when you're doing
something like this...
00:07:50.040 --> 00:07:54.080
[plays two alternating notes]
00:07:54.080 --> 00:07:55.760
-[Gabriela] The piano's
starting to ring back at you,
00:07:55.800 --> 00:07:56.680
and the more you do it...
00:07:56.720 --> 00:07:59.280
[continues playing]
00:07:59.320 --> 00:08:01.280
-[Gabriela] I still feel it,
I still feel it,
00:08:01.320 --> 00:08:03.120
I still feel it,
I still feel it.
00:08:03.720 --> 00:08:06.480
-[Gabriela] The things
that we know him for,
00:08:06.520 --> 00:08:10.000
the relentless energy
of his music,
00:08:10.040 --> 00:08:11.960
the oscillating
piano patterns,
00:08:12.000 --> 00:08:13.960
the exploration of
the outer registers,
00:08:14.000 --> 00:08:16.600
the pitches, the contrast.
00:08:16.640 --> 00:08:18.240
The way he
played with silence,
00:08:18.280 --> 00:08:20.360
you know, that's very
important to his music.
00:08:20.400 --> 00:08:23.040
I don't think he would have
been as attracted natively
00:08:23.040 --> 00:08:25.160
to that if it weren't
for his hearing loss.
00:08:25.200 --> 00:08:30.280
[Plays Beethoven's
Sonata Pathetique]
00:08:30.600 --> 00:08:32.840
-[Gabriela] Pathetique
Sonata was 1798,
00:08:32.880 --> 00:08:36.480
and I'm very sure
that by this point
00:08:36.520 --> 00:08:38.280
he was experiencing
hearing loss.
00:08:38.320 --> 00:08:41.760
Even if he wasn't
completely aware,
00:08:41.760 --> 00:08:43.440
because hearing
loss creeps up on you.
00:08:43.480 --> 00:08:47.640
[continues playing]
00:08:47.680 --> 00:08:50.400
-[Gabriela] So he had
his hands opening up.
00:08:50.400 --> 00:08:53.520
[continues playing]
00:08:54.240 --> 00:08:59.160
-[Gabriela] That just grows,
and by the time we get to 1804,
00:08:59.200 --> 00:09:00.360
we get to the Waldstein.
00:09:00.400 --> 00:09:03.600
[Plays Beethoven's Waldstein]
00:09:03.640 --> 00:09:05.000
-[Gabriela] It's just
pure rhythm,
00:09:05.040 --> 00:09:06.800
it's just pure energy.
00:09:06.840 --> 00:09:08.720
Nothing else happening.
00:09:08.720 --> 00:09:14.680
[continues playing]
00:09:14.960 --> 00:09:16.560
-[Gabriela] There couldn't
be more difference.
00:09:16.560 --> 00:09:25.640
[continues playing]
00:09:26.160 --> 00:09:27.760
-[Gabriela] And look at
the distance between that.
00:09:27.800 --> 00:09:31.800
[continues playing]
00:09:32.640 --> 00:09:34.360
-[Gabriela] So if I were to
take out my hearing aids...
00:09:36.160 --> 00:09:38.680
[continues playing]
00:09:38.680 --> 00:09:40.440
-[Gabriela] Now I'm on
a modern instrument,
00:09:40.480 --> 00:09:43.240
but with my pedal,
which he has marked here,
00:09:43.280 --> 00:09:45.960
the piano, I can still
feel the piano ringing.
00:09:46.000 --> 00:09:48.160
I can't hear it,
but it's still alive.
00:09:48.480 --> 00:09:50.360
-[Gabriela] He was
exaggerating all of that,
00:09:50.360 --> 00:09:54.040
and that was revolutionary
for piano composition.
00:09:54.080 --> 00:09:57.440
And it took a deaf person to
come along and revolutionize
00:09:57.480 --> 00:10:00.280
piano compositions, and he
would go on to influence
00:10:00.320 --> 00:10:04.000
hearing composers for
generations after him,
00:10:04.040 --> 00:10:06.480
and I think it's
a deaf aesthetic.
00:10:08.000 --> 00:10:11.080
[Beethoven's String
Quartet No. 9 plays]
00:10:11.080 --> 00:10:13.520
-[Larry] In his youth,
Beethoven devoured
00:10:13.520 --> 00:10:15.480
the writings of the new school
00:10:15.520 --> 00:10:17.520
of the Enlightenment
philosophers.
00:10:19.320 --> 00:10:22.680
These progressive thinkers
were hoping to lift humankind
00:10:22.720 --> 00:10:26.320
from the greed of aristocracy,
and the corruption of politics.
00:10:26.360 --> 00:10:29.600
[String Quartet
No. 9 continues]
00:10:29.640 --> 00:10:32.520
-[Larry] They rejected
repressive religious dogma.
00:10:34.240 --> 00:10:37.560
Some even daring to question
whether there was a God at all.
00:10:40.360 --> 00:10:42.480
But of all the
Enlightenment writers,
00:10:42.520 --> 00:10:44.240
it was the
German poet Schiller
00:10:44.280 --> 00:10:49.520
who moved Beethoven the most,
with his poem Ode to Joy.
00:10:51.440 --> 00:10:54.520
[String Quartet
No. 9 continues]
00:10:54.560 --> 00:10:57.120
-[Rebecca] The ideals
of the Enlightenment
00:10:57.160 --> 00:11:01.720
were permeating European
society, German society,
00:11:01.760 --> 00:11:05.600
in the 18th century.
00:11:05.600 --> 00:11:07.680
And I mean it was cool,
it was sexy,
00:11:07.720 --> 00:11:09.680
it was fantastic.
00:11:09.720 --> 00:11:13.080
You know, all the cool kids
were Enlightenment thinkers.
00:11:13.120 --> 00:11:17.480
Beethoven would have been
well aware of what was flying.
00:11:20.440 --> 00:11:22.400
I think we come
into this world,
00:11:22.440 --> 00:11:26.640
and we want to know
three big things, all of us.
00:11:26.680 --> 00:11:27.800
Where are we?
00:11:27.840 --> 00:11:30.040
What's the nature
of this world?
00:11:30.080 --> 00:11:32.800
That's the first question,
second question,
00:11:32.840 --> 00:11:34.960
what's our relationship to it?
00:11:35.000 --> 00:11:36.520
Does it care about us?
00:11:36.560 --> 00:11:39.120
Is it hostile to us?
00:11:39.160 --> 00:11:40.720
Are we made of the
same stuff of the world?
00:11:40.760 --> 00:11:43.040
Or are we something
more Godlike?
00:11:43.080 --> 00:11:45.520
And the third question is,
00:11:45.560 --> 00:11:47.640
what are we supposed to do
00:11:47.680 --> 00:11:51.360
with this short time
that we have in this life?
00:11:52.160 --> 00:11:56.720
To deal with those
three questions,
00:11:56.760 --> 00:12:02.560
banishing fantasies, what
we'd like the answers to be.
00:12:02.560 --> 00:12:06.040
But to actually look
to the world itself,
00:12:06.080 --> 00:12:08.200
evidence from the world.
00:12:09.480 --> 00:12:11.960
To answer those questions,
00:12:12.000 --> 00:12:14.320
I think that's what the
Enlightenment was.
00:12:16.640 --> 00:12:21.960
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata No. 8 plays]
00:12:36.440 --> 00:12:39.400
-[Benjamin] Charles Schultz
loved classical music.
00:12:39.440 --> 00:12:43.360
Beethoven, though, of course
held a special place for him.
00:12:44.960 --> 00:12:47.440
Schroeder's introduced
very early into Peanuts,
00:12:47.440 --> 00:12:50.960
in within the first year
or so, about 1951.
00:12:52.960 --> 00:12:55.520
And in fact, he's only
about the second character
00:12:55.560 --> 00:12:57.320
to be introduced
after the beginning.
00:12:57.360 --> 00:13:01.040
So he's one of the very oldest
characters in the strip.
00:13:01.080 --> 00:13:03.320
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata No. 8 continues]
00:13:03.360 --> 00:13:05.560
-[Benjamin] It's not
too long after when he adds
00:13:05.600 --> 00:13:08.960
the idea of having Schroeder
sit down at a toy piano,
00:13:08.960 --> 00:13:10.840
and play Beethoven.
00:13:10.880 --> 00:13:13.800
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata No. 8 continues]
00:13:13.800 --> 00:13:16.280
-[Charles] I was thumbing
through a music book one day,
00:13:16.320 --> 00:13:19.000
and I just thought it
would be interesting
00:13:19.000 --> 00:13:21.240
to show a complicated
musical score
00:13:21.240 --> 00:13:23.480
in such a simple thing
as a comic strip.
00:13:23.520 --> 00:13:29.680
So I chose Schroeder,
who was just a tiny baby
00:13:29.720 --> 00:13:31.440
in the strip at that time,
00:13:31.480 --> 00:13:34.720
to be the one who would
be playing the toy piano,
00:13:34.720 --> 00:13:38.200
and it worked so well
that it became one of the most
00:13:38.240 --> 00:13:41.360
important themes that has
ever been in the strip.
00:13:41.360 --> 00:13:44.960
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata No. 8 continues]
00:13:44.960 --> 00:13:48.800
-[Jean] Sparky, my husband,
that's what everyone called him.
00:13:48.840 --> 00:13:51.320
One of his best friends
was Shermie.
00:13:51.360 --> 00:13:54.320
Shermie's mother
was a music teacher,
00:13:54.360 --> 00:13:56.760
and Shermie had to practice.
00:13:56.800 --> 00:14:02.480
So Sparky would have heard
Beethoven as a young boy.
00:14:02.480 --> 00:14:05.880
And I think that those
things stick in your head.
00:14:05.880 --> 00:14:09.880
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata 8 continues]
00:14:09.920 --> 00:14:14.000
-[Benjamin] He would use music
as a way to access emotions,
00:14:14.040 --> 00:14:16.520
and he would put on music,
and he would say,
00:14:16.560 --> 00:14:18.920
you know, it helps me
feel what I need to feel.
00:14:18.960 --> 00:14:20.480
Because he would
pour his feelings
00:14:20.520 --> 00:14:22.760
into the strip as he's drawing.
00:14:24.600 --> 00:14:26.520
Charles Schultz did
describe the drawing
00:14:26.560 --> 00:14:28.280
of the real music notes
00:14:28.320 --> 00:14:32.120
as pretty tedious
work for a cartoonist.
00:14:32.160 --> 00:14:34.640
And I think it was
wanting to get it right.
00:14:35.760 --> 00:14:37.680
As he did the best he could,
00:14:37.720 --> 00:14:39.720
for someone who
couldn't read music,
00:14:39.760 --> 00:14:42.200
to copy it faithfully
into the strip.
00:14:42.240 --> 00:14:46.880
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata 8 continues]
00:14:47.080 --> 00:14:49.120
-[Larry] Charles
M. Schultz' Peanuts
00:14:49.160 --> 00:14:51.520
was the most
syndicated comic strip.
00:14:51.560 --> 00:14:54.040
in the world for 50 years.
00:14:54.080 --> 00:14:59.200
It appeared in over 1700
newspapers in 21 languages.
00:14:59.240 --> 00:15:03.680
And it was read by more
than 350 million people.
00:15:05.160 --> 00:15:08.440
Schultz, via young Schroder,
00:15:08.480 --> 00:15:12.120
transmitted his love of
Beethoven to the world.
00:15:12.160 --> 00:15:15.720
[Piano Sonata 8 ends]
00:15:18.120 --> 00:15:26.920
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata 3 plays]
00:15:26.960 --> 00:15:28.480
-[Steve] My name's
Steve Pinker,
00:15:28.520 --> 00:15:31.400
I am a Professor of Psychology
at Harvard University.
00:15:31.440 --> 00:15:34.440
And I'm interested in
all aspects of language,
00:15:34.440 --> 00:15:36.280
mind, and human nature.
00:15:36.320 --> 00:15:40.680
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata 3 continues]
00:15:41.320 --> 00:15:44.080
-[Steve] One of the great
gifts of being a scientific
00:15:44.120 --> 00:15:47.720
psychologist is that every
aspect of life becomes
00:15:47.720 --> 00:15:49.120
so much more interesting,
00:15:49.160 --> 00:15:51.120
because you not
only experience it,
00:15:51.120 --> 00:15:55.120
but you can step back and
ponder why you're having
00:15:55.160 --> 00:15:56.840
the experience you're having.
00:15:56.880 --> 00:15:57.960
[camera shutter clicks]
00:15:58.480 --> 00:16:02.920
[Beethoven's Piano
Sonata 3 continues]
00:16:02.960 --> 00:16:04.320
-[Steve] My own
passion for photography
00:16:04.360 --> 00:16:06.520
isn't just that it's a hobby,
00:16:06.560 --> 00:16:10.120
but it also ties into my
interest in visual cognition.
00:16:10.160 --> 00:16:12.560
How we see and make
sense of the world,
00:16:12.600 --> 00:16:16.960
how we perceive depth
and color and shape and form.
00:16:17.000 --> 00:16:19.480
And also human aesthetics.
00:16:19.520 --> 00:16:23.760
Why do certain landscapes
look appealing in real life?
00:16:23.800 --> 00:16:25.280
Why do they
sometimes look appealing
00:16:25.320 --> 00:16:28.320
when you squish them into 2D
and put them in a frame?
00:16:28.360 --> 00:16:30.960
Why to certain faces
and bodies
00:16:31.000 --> 00:16:35.000
and animals and
objects please us?
00:16:37.400 --> 00:16:40.080
So, as I indulge
in photography,
00:16:40.120 --> 00:16:42.720
I'm also doing a
bit of psychology,
00:16:42.760 --> 00:16:46.840
tapping my own intuitions
as to what is pleasing,
00:16:46.880 --> 00:16:49.560
and probing myself
as to why that should be.
00:16:53.040 --> 00:16:55.520
I chose the title
Enlightenment Now for my book,
00:16:55.520 --> 00:16:57.040
which made the
case for reason,
00:16:57.080 --> 00:16:59.400
science, humanism,
and progress,
00:16:59.440 --> 00:17:02.320
because I was calling for
more Enlightenment ideals now,
00:17:02.360 --> 00:17:05.360
for a reminder and
avowal of those ideas.
00:17:06.680 --> 00:17:08.920
The Enlightenment
wasn't an official movement,
00:17:08.960 --> 00:17:10.440
it doesn't have a creed.
00:17:10.480 --> 00:17:13.560
It doesn't have a starting date
and ending date.
00:17:13.600 --> 00:17:16.440
So it's a loose
connection of related ideals.
00:17:16.480 --> 00:17:20.880
I think of it as the idea that
we ought to use knowledge
00:17:20.880 --> 00:17:23.120
to improve human wellbeing.
00:17:25.000 --> 00:17:27.480
I don't think we live in a
world that's governed
00:17:27.520 --> 00:17:29.160
by Enlightenment values.
00:17:29.200 --> 00:17:31.280
There's still an awful
lot of autocracy,
00:17:31.320 --> 00:17:33.600
there's a lot of
religious dogma.
00:17:33.640 --> 00:17:36.880
There's a lot of
authoritarian populism.
00:17:36.920 --> 00:17:39.520
[chanting]
00:17:39.560 --> 00:17:43.200
-[Steve] So it's a call
for more enlightenment now.
00:17:43.200 --> 00:17:45.400
[Piano Sonata 3 ends]
00:17:51.440 --> 00:17:54.880
-[Larry] Beethoven was
the rock star of his day.
00:17:54.920 --> 00:17:57.880
Everyone recognized
him in the street.
00:17:57.920 --> 00:18:01.840
And everyone eagerly
anticipated his next work,
00:18:01.880 --> 00:18:04.440
and how it would push
music into the future.
00:18:04.480 --> 00:18:07.840
[Beethoven's
Symphony 9 plays]
00:18:07.880 --> 00:18:09.560
-[Larry] Monika Brodka
has been called
00:18:09.560 --> 00:18:12.360
the Beethoven of Polish Rock.
00:18:13.800 --> 00:18:17.040
It's not just because of
her immense popularity,
00:18:17.080 --> 00:18:18.640
but because her celebrity
00:18:18.680 --> 00:18:21.360
has allowed her the
freedom to push boundaries,
00:18:21.400 --> 00:18:24.080
and pursue her own
uncompromising vision.
00:18:25.000 --> 00:18:28.320
Just as Beethoven did
with his 9th Symphony.
00:18:29.200 --> 00:18:33.080
Beethoven wanted his music
to awaken all of humanity.
00:18:34.440 --> 00:18:35.680
-[Monika] My idea of an artist
00:18:35.720 --> 00:18:41.000
is to make people
question themselves,
00:18:41.040 --> 00:18:42.600
their life, their feelings.
00:18:42.640 --> 00:18:47.280
Is to be a rebel, a bit.
00:18:47.320 --> 00:18:48.160
[Sadza by Brodka]
00:18:48.360 --> 00:18:49.960
♪ You're rolling me
like a joint ♪
00:18:52.000 --> 00:18:54.840
♪ You're like a
bastard and a father ♪
00:18:56.720 --> 00:18:59.040
♪ Soot settles
00:19:01.280 --> 00:19:03.960
♪ Eyes glow
00:19:08.040 --> 00:19:09.720
-[Monika] I absolutely
think that music
00:19:09.720 --> 00:19:11.720
can change the world.
00:19:11.720 --> 00:19:15.240
You can change people's
mood with music.
00:19:15.280 --> 00:19:19.040
So if you can control
people's emotions,
00:19:19.080 --> 00:19:23.960
you can actually,
you rule the world.
00:19:24.000 --> 00:19:25.040
[laughing]
00:19:25.280 --> 00:19:29.120
♪ Now you have something
to start a fire with ♪
00:19:30.840 --> 00:19:37.680
[various instruments playing]
00:19:37.720 --> 00:19:40.920
-[Monika] I come
from a musical family,
00:19:40.920 --> 00:19:44.160
related to folk, Polish music,
south of Poland,
00:19:44.200 --> 00:19:45.720
from the mountain area.
00:19:45.720 --> 00:19:48.200
[alphorn blowing]
00:19:49.440 --> 00:19:51.120
-[Monika] I was sent
to a music school,
00:19:51.160 --> 00:19:54.280
not to actually
play classical pieces,
00:19:54.320 --> 00:19:56.200
to learn how to play violin,
00:19:56.240 --> 00:19:59.120
and to later play in
my father's band
00:19:59.160 --> 00:20:01.440
as a violin player,
you know,
00:20:01.440 --> 00:20:03.280
some mountain songs.
00:20:03.320 --> 00:20:07.120
So there was already a
straight plan for me
00:20:07.160 --> 00:20:09.120
when I was a child,
00:20:09.160 --> 00:20:12.240
that he really wanted me
to play in the band.
00:20:12.280 --> 00:20:16.800
And I didn't feel attached
to this culture so much,
00:20:16.840 --> 00:20:21.520
I wanted to get rid of
it and be a pop singer,
00:20:21.560 --> 00:20:25.400
and you know,
sing very famous songs
00:20:25.440 --> 00:20:27.440
that are played by the radio,
00:20:27.480 --> 00:20:30.640
but somehow I couldn't
escape my past.
00:20:31.240 --> 00:20:34.720
[Beethoven's Symphony 9
Ode to Joy playing]
00:20:34.760 --> 00:20:37.120
-[Larry] The melody of
Beethoven's Ode to Joy,
00:20:37.160 --> 00:20:39.640
the fourth movement
of his Ninth Symphony,
00:20:39.680 --> 00:20:42.080
was unlike anything
he had ever written.
00:20:42.080 --> 00:20:45.360
He was trying to create a folk
melody that sounded like it
00:20:45.400 --> 00:20:47.080
had been sung
through the ages,
00:20:47.120 --> 00:20:49.520
something anyone could sing.
00:20:49.560 --> 00:20:52.920
[Ode to Joy continues]
00:20:52.960 --> 00:20:54.240
-[Larry] For Beethoven,
00:20:54.280 --> 00:20:57.760
folk music represented
the music of the people.
00:20:57.760 --> 00:21:00.280
The music that was
the most universal,
00:21:00.320 --> 00:21:02.240
and the most sublime.
00:21:02.280 --> 00:21:07.440
[Ode to Joy continues]
00:21:07.480 --> 00:21:14.680
♪ All humanity are brothers
Beneath thy gentle wing ♪
00:21:14.720 --> 00:21:19.440
[Ode to Joy continues]
00:21:19.480 --> 00:21:25.600
-[Monika] I was surprised how
joyfully naive this piece is,
00:21:25.640 --> 00:21:28.200
like in the lyrics part.
00:21:28.240 --> 00:21:32.320
There's a lot of rhymes, a
lot of words rhyme together,
00:21:32.360 --> 00:21:38.120
and it sounds very naive
but beautiful, as well.
00:21:38.160 --> 00:21:40.640
♪ Whoever has created
00:21:40.680 --> 00:21:42.960
♪ Lasting friendship
in thy house ♪
00:21:43.000 --> 00:21:46.320
♪ Or has won elated
A true and loving spouse ♪
00:21:46.360 --> 00:21:49.520
♪ All of those who
embrace one soul ♪
00:21:49.560 --> 00:21:52.320
♪ May join our
song of praise ♪
00:21:52.360 --> 00:21:55.120
♪ Those who can't
No longer whole ♪
00:21:55.160 --> 00:21:58.680
♪ Begone and
change thy ways ♪
00:21:58.720 --> 00:22:04.360
[Ode to Joy continues]
00:22:04.360 --> 00:22:07.560
-[Monika] It was amazing
to watch you conducting,
00:22:07.600 --> 00:22:11.160
like, you're so powerful even
though I saw your back only.
00:22:11.200 --> 00:22:13.160
-[Keri-Lynn] Well it takes
a bit of power to conduct
00:22:13.200 --> 00:22:15.280
Beethoven's 9th Symphony.
00:22:15.320 --> 00:22:16.840
-[Monika] Absolutely,
and I'm shocked,
00:22:16.840 --> 00:22:19.240
because, you know,
I perform like this,
00:22:19.240 --> 00:22:20.680
and you perform like this.
00:22:20.720 --> 00:22:21.880
[laughing]
00:22:21.920 --> 00:22:25.680
But you know, looking
just, you as a figure,
00:22:25.720 --> 00:22:27.920
you know,
looking at your back,
00:22:27.960 --> 00:22:32.600
it's just so much charisma
and so much power.
00:22:32.640 --> 00:22:34.000
Impressive.
00:22:34.040 --> 00:22:35.960
It's my first time ever here!
00:22:35.960 --> 00:22:36.960
-[Keri-Lynn] On the podium.
00:22:36.960 --> 00:22:39.920
-[Monika] Probably
the last moment
00:22:39.960 --> 00:22:41.800
where I ever stand here.
00:22:42.440 --> 00:22:51.160
[Ode to Joy continues]
00:22:54.000 --> 00:22:57.280
[feet shuffle]
00:23:05.280 --> 00:23:12.200
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement I plays]
00:23:22.320 --> 00:23:24.440
-[Craig] December 25th, 1989,
00:23:24.440 --> 00:23:28.880
Bernstein conducting
Beethoven's 9th.
00:23:28.920 --> 00:23:31.720
It was one of those moments
that you know you you will
00:23:31.760 --> 00:23:33.920
only experience
once in your life.
00:23:33.920 --> 00:23:37.240
[Beethoven's 9th continues]
00:23:37.280 --> 00:23:38.520
-[Craig] And for Lenny,
00:23:38.560 --> 00:23:40.840
it was almost the
culmination of his life.
00:23:40.880 --> 00:23:44.760
[Beethoven't 9th continues]
00:23:52.680 --> 00:23:54.360
[cheering]
00:23:55.160 --> 00:23:58.040
-[Craig] It was a very
symbolic moment for him
00:23:58.040 --> 00:24:01.040
that the wall came down.
00:24:01.080 --> 00:24:03.320
Because he always wanted to
00:24:03.360 --> 00:24:05.720
break down barriers
between people.
00:24:05.760 --> 00:24:07.840
He wanted people
to live in peace.
00:24:07.880 --> 00:24:12.360
He wanted the walls
to be demolished.
00:24:12.920 --> 00:24:20.320
♪ Oh friends
00:24:20.920 --> 00:24:24.000
-[Craig] Of course,
Bernstein being Bernstein,
00:24:24.000 --> 00:24:26.320
he found some
scholarship that said
00:24:26.360 --> 00:24:28.200
the original Schiller poem
00:24:28.240 --> 00:24:30.680
had the word Freiheit,
instead of Freude.
00:24:30.720 --> 00:24:35.600
And so he went back and
changed the word Freude,
00:24:35.640 --> 00:24:37.640
which means "joy"
in German,
00:24:37.680 --> 00:24:41.240
to Freiheit,
which means "freedom".
00:24:41.280 --> 00:24:45.920
♪ Freedom Freedom
00:24:45.960 --> 00:24:48.560
♪ Freedom beautiful
spark of divinity ♪
00:24:48.560 --> 00:24:50.160
♪ daughter of Elysium
00:24:50.160 --> 00:24:53.120
-[Keri-Lynn] He changed
Freude, joy,
00:24:53.160 --> 00:24:55.760
to Freiheit, freedom.
00:24:57.960 --> 00:25:00.920
And that was the source of
inspiration for me having
00:25:00.960 --> 00:25:04.760
the idea to sing the
Ode to Joy here in Warsaw,
00:25:04.800 --> 00:25:08.440
and in Berlin, in the
Ukrainian language.
00:25:08.480 --> 00:25:14.080
♪ Oh friends
00:25:14.120 --> 00:25:17.680
♪ Not these sounds
00:25:17.720 --> 00:25:20.360
-[Keri-Lynn] When you have the
words sung in the language of
00:25:20.400 --> 00:25:23.680
this country that is
suffering so much,
00:25:23.720 --> 00:25:26.680
it's all the more powerful.
00:25:26.720 --> 00:25:33.000
And we are
changing Freude to Slava,
00:25:33.040 --> 00:25:36.120
because that is glory, and
represents the bravery of this
00:25:36.160 --> 00:25:39.280
incredible nation
and its people.
00:25:39.320 --> 00:25:43.040
♪ Glory beautiful
spark of divinity ♪
00:25:43.080 --> 00:25:46.800
♪ Daughter of Elysium
00:25:46.840 --> 00:25:49.320
♪ Fire-inspired affinity
00:25:49.320 --> 00:25:53.600
♪ To thy radiant
shrine we come ♪
00:25:53.640 --> 00:25:56.960
♪ Pure magic frees all others
00:25:56.960 --> 00:26:00.440
♪ Restrained unable to sing
00:26:00.480 --> 00:26:07.440
♪ All humanity are brothers
Beneath thy gentle wing ♪
00:26:07.480 --> 00:26:11.280
[Ode to Joy continues]
00:26:11.800 --> 00:26:13.160
-[Man] Ok hold
that right here,
00:26:13.200 --> 00:26:13.840
just like that, right?
00:26:13.880 --> 00:26:14.480
-[Larry] Too far.
00:26:14.520 --> 00:26:16.280
-[Man] Too far, ok.
00:26:16.280 --> 00:26:17.960
-[Larry] Go back, no no.
00:26:18.000 --> 00:26:19.680
I would still have it
on the other side
00:26:19.720 --> 00:26:21.160
of that wooden thing.
00:26:21.200 --> 00:26:24.000
And, yeah that's ok.
00:26:24.040 --> 00:26:25.960
-[Man] I like the fact
it looks like it's...
00:26:26.000 --> 00:26:27.000
I think it's fine.
00:26:27.560 --> 00:26:29.400
-[Larry] My name
is Larry Weinstein.
00:26:29.440 --> 00:26:31.960
I actually am the
director of this film.
00:26:32.000 --> 00:26:34.800
And that's what I
do, I make films.
00:26:34.800 --> 00:26:37.200
Mostly about music,
sometimes about war.
00:26:37.240 --> 00:26:42.480
[Beethoven's
Moonlight Sonata plays]
00:26:42.520 --> 00:26:43.920
-[Larry] While
making this film,
00:26:43.960 --> 00:26:46.920
and you know, a lot of
this film is about war,
00:26:46.960 --> 00:26:50.480
and about the Ukraine war.
00:26:50.520 --> 00:26:52.320
And in the midst of this,
00:26:52.360 --> 00:26:56.720
there's been the
Israeli-Hamas conflict.
00:26:56.720 --> 00:27:02.560
[shouting]
00:27:04.280 --> 00:27:12.440
-[Larry] And yeah, my
sister lived in a Kibbutz,
00:27:12.480 --> 00:27:18.160
which was very
very close to Gaza.
00:27:18.200 --> 00:27:24.680
She and her husband were out
for a walk just before the
00:27:24.680 --> 00:27:29.800
missiles went off, and the
Hamas people were on the way
00:27:29.840 --> 00:27:32.120
to her Kibbutz to,
00:27:32.120 --> 00:27:35.600
I guess to kill people
and to take hostages.
00:27:35.640 --> 00:27:38.400
[gunshots]
00:27:38.440 --> 00:27:39.880
-[Larry] And they
encountered my sister,
00:27:39.920 --> 00:27:41.680
and her husband Gadi,
00:27:41.720 --> 00:27:44.040
my sister Judih and
her husband Gadi first.
00:27:44.720 --> 00:27:49.320
[distant explosions]
00:27:49.560 --> 00:27:54.680
-[Larry] I saw this text that
Judih had sent to her children
00:27:54.720 --> 00:27:58.080
that there are missiles
being fired overhead,
00:27:58.120 --> 00:28:01.720
and that Judih and Gadi are
facedown in the field
00:28:01.720 --> 00:28:03.760
with missiles over their heads.
00:28:05.480 --> 00:28:08.120
Somebody from the
Kibbutz phoned her,
00:28:08.160 --> 00:28:10.840
and said "Judih,
you're out in the fields,
00:28:10.880 --> 00:28:12.400
come back to the Kibbutz
00:28:12.440 --> 00:28:14.040
because you can
be in the safe room."
00:28:14.080 --> 00:28:17.440
And Judih said
"We've been shot.
00:28:17.480 --> 00:28:21.640
My Gadi has been shot,
and he's severely injured."
00:28:21.680 --> 00:28:23.560
"Severely wounded", I
think was the words.
00:28:23.600 --> 00:28:26.000
and she said, "I've
been wounded too,
00:28:26.040 --> 00:28:28.680
but it's not so serious.
00:28:28.680 --> 00:28:31.000
So please get
someone to get us."
00:28:31.040 --> 00:28:34.160
Like a medic from the Kibbutz,
they were close to the Kibbutz,
00:28:34.200 --> 00:28:36.200
not knowing the terrorists
00:28:36.240 --> 00:28:39.720
were on their way
to the Kibbutz.
00:28:39.720 --> 00:28:42.000
Because the terrorists
came in right away.
00:28:42.040 --> 00:28:45.280
And they started shooting
people and killing them,
00:28:45.320 --> 00:28:47.080
and taking some away,
00:28:47.120 --> 00:28:49.400
kidnapping them
probably to be hostages.
00:28:49.400 --> 00:28:51.000
They were burning their houses
00:28:51.000 --> 00:28:53.520
so that people would
run out from the smoke,
00:28:53.560 --> 00:28:56.360
and then they would shoot
them or abduct them.
00:28:57.360 --> 00:29:00.280
The fact is we don't know
where they are right now.
00:29:00.320 --> 00:29:02.680
We don't know where they are.
00:29:02.720 --> 00:29:07.240
Maybe Judih is
there as a hostage,
00:29:07.280 --> 00:29:10.000
because they
can't find her body.
00:29:10.040 --> 00:29:11.840
And that's kind
of encouraging.
00:29:11.880 --> 00:29:13.760
Oh, they can't find her body.
00:29:13.800 --> 00:29:17.360
But I have to tell you, the
idea of Judih being taken away
00:29:17.360 --> 00:29:21.560
abducted, and being a hostage,
00:29:21.600 --> 00:29:24.600
at the time that the
Hamas people were saying
00:29:24.600 --> 00:29:25.840
we're going to take
our hostages,
00:29:25.880 --> 00:29:28.040
we're going to execute
them one by one,
00:29:28.080 --> 00:29:29.640
that was happening
the same day.
00:29:29.680 --> 00:29:34.160
And we're going to broadcast
those executions to the world.
00:29:34.200 --> 00:29:38.760
This is what they were saying.
00:29:38.800 --> 00:29:41.720
I don't know what to hope for.
00:29:43.840 --> 00:29:49.840
[Gabriela's Pachamama
Meets an Ode plays]
00:30:05.720 --> 00:30:07.520
-[Gabriela] As a little
child over the years,
00:30:07.560 --> 00:30:10.240
I grew up hearing
a lot of Peruvian
00:30:10.280 --> 00:30:12.440
music in the household.
00:30:12.480 --> 00:30:16.520
I was seeing Peruvians
and Ecuador musicians,
00:30:16.520 --> 00:30:18.640
and Bolivia musicians.
00:30:18.680 --> 00:30:22.040
With these instruments,
panpipes as tall as I was,
00:30:22.080 --> 00:30:23.960
and quenacho flutes,
and zamponas,
00:30:23.960 --> 00:30:25.120
and charango guitars.
00:30:25.160 --> 00:30:26.720
And they looked
like my mother.
00:30:26.760 --> 00:30:27.920
They didn't look Mexicano,
00:30:27.960 --> 00:30:29.720
which is the dominant
Latin culture,
00:30:29.760 --> 00:30:31.200
Central American culture.
00:30:31.240 --> 00:30:32.640
They looked Andean,
00:30:32.680 --> 00:30:35.520
and it just informed
my own music making.
00:30:35.560 --> 00:30:38.840
That I was the music I was most
interested in exploring.
00:30:38.840 --> 00:30:42.520
[Pachamama
Meets an Ode continues]
00:30:42.560 --> 00:30:44.640
-[Gabriela] The Philadelphia
Orchestra had a project
00:30:44.680 --> 00:30:47.720
in which they wanted
composers to comment
00:30:47.760 --> 00:30:49.760
on the Beethoven symphonies.
00:30:49.800 --> 00:30:52.920
This was an opportunity
I knew to react
00:30:52.960 --> 00:30:56.360
to Beethoven's Ode to Joy
in an unusual way.
00:30:56.360 --> 00:31:00.360
[Pachamama
Meets an Ode continues]
00:31:03.000 --> 00:31:05.280
-[Gabriela] Pachamama is one
of the most important deities
00:31:05.320 --> 00:31:07.160
of Peruvian mythology
00:31:07.200 --> 00:31:09.560
and pre-Columbian
Peruvian mythology.
00:31:09.600 --> 00:31:11.560
Pachamama is Mother Earth.
00:31:11.600 --> 00:31:15.240
[Pachamama
Meets an Ode continues]
00:31:34.240 --> 00:31:36.720
-[Gabriela] I love this picture
of him in the upper left corner,
00:31:36.760 --> 00:31:37.800
and there's a lot
of pictures of him
00:31:37.840 --> 00:31:39.560
walking in nature.
00:31:39.600 --> 00:31:42.040
And he would do this
to calm his spirit,
00:31:42.040 --> 00:31:44.240
because he was very political.
00:31:44.240 --> 00:31:47.880
He was really observant
of his society at the time.
00:31:47.880 --> 00:31:49.680
If Beethoven were alive today,
00:31:49.680 --> 00:31:51.960
I think he would have
been an environmentalist.
00:31:52.000 --> 00:31:55.440
I think he would have
been a political protester.
00:31:55.480 --> 00:31:58.120
I think that he would
have been very invested
00:31:58.160 --> 00:32:00.360
in the issues of
the climate crisis.
00:32:00.400 --> 00:32:03.360
[Pachamama
Meets an Ode continues]
00:32:03.760 --> 00:32:06.160
-[Larry] Beethoven struggled
to understand his place
00:32:06.160 --> 00:32:08.840
in the natural world,
00:32:08.880 --> 00:32:12.840
how it affected his
life and his art.
00:32:12.880 --> 00:32:15.680
He felt that by transcending
human suffering,
00:32:15.720 --> 00:32:18.080
by communing with nature,
00:32:18.120 --> 00:32:22.520
he might discover
meaning and inspiration.
00:32:22.560 --> 00:32:24.640
-[Man] The flowers
and some fruit--
00:32:24.680 --> 00:32:27.120
-[Gabriela] I had never
heard of Boondall.
00:32:27.160 --> 00:32:29.120
And when I met my husband,
00:32:29.120 --> 00:32:32.720
he took me to this area on
some of our explorations
00:32:32.760 --> 00:32:36.000
as a dating couple.
00:32:36.040 --> 00:32:38.200
And we made a leap
00:32:38.240 --> 00:32:41.600
and we bought
a property here in 2015.
00:32:41.640 --> 00:32:46.440
And in the fall of 2017,
the fires started.
00:32:46.480 --> 00:32:50.640
[Pachamama
Meets an Ode continues]
00:32:52.160 --> 00:32:55.320
-[Gabriela] In 2017,
the Tubbs fire torched
00:32:55.360 --> 00:32:57.720
the Coffey Neighborhood
in Santa Rosa,
00:32:57.760 --> 00:33:01.920
and my husband's family
was evacuated in Napa.
00:33:01.960 --> 00:33:05.840
2019, the evacuations hit the
coastline for the first time,
00:33:05.880 --> 00:33:08.560
2020 millions of
acres were burned
00:33:08.560 --> 00:33:10.960
in dry lightning strikes.
00:33:11.000 --> 00:33:12.760
Even the smaller fires
that were happening,
00:33:12.760 --> 00:33:15.320
a neighbor of ours
died two houses
00:33:15.360 --> 00:33:16.880
down the street from us.
00:33:16.920 --> 00:33:21.120
[Pachamama
Meets an Ode continues]
00:33:21.640 --> 00:33:23.680
-[Gabriela] When were
the seeds of the crisis,
00:33:23.720 --> 00:33:25.000
planted even?
00:33:25.200 --> 00:33:27.080
And to really understand how
we got to this mess that we're
00:33:27.120 --> 00:33:29.240
in today, you got to
go back centuries.
00:33:29.280 --> 00:33:31.280
And once you start going
down that rabbit hole,
00:33:31.320 --> 00:33:34.200
you realize that this
began with colonization.
00:33:34.240 --> 00:33:36.000
-[Gabriela] Beethoven lived
during the time when Europe,
00:33:36.040 --> 00:33:38.840
he's from Germany, was
able to become very wealthy
00:33:38.880 --> 00:33:40.320
because they colonized.
00:33:40.320 --> 00:33:42.800
They colonized other parts of
the world that we sometimes
00:33:42.840 --> 00:33:44.240
call the Global South.
00:33:44.280 --> 00:33:47.520
So Latin America,
and Asia, and Africa.
00:33:47.560 --> 00:33:50.120
-[Gabriela] Europe was
able to enrich itself,
00:33:50.160 --> 00:33:51.920
but it came at the expense.
00:33:51.960 --> 00:33:56.040
And we went into this mode
of thinking about endless
00:33:56.080 --> 00:33:57.840
economic growth,
and over- consumption.
00:33:57.840 --> 00:34:00.840
My God, this goes back years.
00:34:00.880 --> 00:34:03.760
-[Gabriela] Now, it's not that
he was responsible for this.
00:34:03.800 --> 00:34:08.120
But in his era, we planted the
seeds for the climate crisis
00:34:08.160 --> 00:34:09.080
that we have now.
00:34:09.120 --> 00:34:10.320
I think he would be horrified.
00:34:10.560 --> 00:34:13.320
-[Gabriela] The Ode to Joy
was happening as the seeds for
00:34:13.360 --> 00:34:14.680
this crisis were planted.
00:34:14.720 --> 00:34:16.360
What would
Beethoven think about that,
00:34:16.400 --> 00:34:18.920
if he could come to life
and see what has happened?
00:34:18.960 --> 00:34:20.360
I think the words
to the Ode to Joy
00:34:20.400 --> 00:34:22.320
would mean something
different to him.
00:34:22.360 --> 00:34:25.280
[in Ukrainian]
♪ Glory glory
00:34:25.320 --> 00:34:27.280
♪ Glory glory
00:34:27.320 --> 00:34:30.000
♪ Glory beautiful
spark of divinity ♪
00:34:30.040 --> 00:34:32.920
♪ Daughter of Elysium
00:34:32.960 --> 00:34:35.880
♪ Fire-inspired affinity
00:34:35.920 --> 00:34:39.400
♪ To thy radiant
shrine we come ♪
00:34:39.440 --> 00:34:42.120
♪ Pure magic frees all others
00:34:42.160 --> 00:34:45.400
♪ Restrained unable to sing
00:34:45.440 --> 00:34:51.520
♪ All humanity are brothers
beneath thy gentle wing ♪
00:34:51.560 --> 00:34:53.840
-[Gabriela] Brotherhood
is a big concept,
00:34:53.880 --> 00:34:55.920
it means can you get
over your own biases
00:34:55.960 --> 00:34:58.560
about certain cultures,
and groups of people?
00:34:58.600 --> 00:35:00.640
We need a moment
to take that in,
00:35:00.680 --> 00:35:03.440
you have to rewire everything
you've ever been taught.
00:35:03.480 --> 00:35:06.640
And I think the crisis has
been really hard for people to
00:35:06.640 --> 00:35:08.040
get their minds around.
00:35:08.080 --> 00:35:10.080
How do I go on with my
day to day existence?
00:35:10.080 --> 00:35:12.120
♪ Whoever has created
00:35:12.160 --> 00:35:15.520
♪ Lasting friendship
in thy house ♪
00:35:15.520 --> 00:35:21.920
♪ Or has won elated
A true and loving spouse ♪
00:35:21.960 --> 00:35:24.760
♪ All of those
who embrace one soul ♪
00:35:24.800 --> 00:35:27.880
♪ May join our
song of praise ♪
00:35:27.920 --> 00:35:30.680
♪ Those who can't
no longer whole ♪
00:35:30.720 --> 00:35:34.640
♪ Begone and
change thy ways ♪
00:35:36.360 --> 00:35:38.440
-[Steve] One question
that you could ask about the
00:35:38.440 --> 00:35:41.640
Enlightenment is that
the ideas sound perfectly
00:35:41.680 --> 00:35:44.280
congenial and
plausible, you know,
00:35:44.320 --> 00:35:45.800
reason, science, and humanism.
00:35:45.840 --> 00:35:48.400
But could it possibly work?
00:35:48.440 --> 00:35:52.720
You can embrace
any ideas you want.
00:35:52.720 --> 00:35:55.240
The question is
will they actually make
00:35:55.280 --> 00:35:56.920
the world a better place?
00:35:56.960 --> 00:36:00.480
And 250 years later, I think
we can say that they have.
00:36:02.400 --> 00:36:04.920
We live more than twice
as long as people did
00:36:04.960 --> 00:36:06.840
in the 18th century, on average.
00:36:06.880 --> 00:36:10.320
Life expectancy at
birth was maybe 30-35.
00:36:10.360 --> 00:36:12.840
At the time that
Beethoven wrote,
00:36:12.840 --> 00:36:15.560
probably 90% of the world
lived in what we would today
00:36:15.600 --> 00:36:17.080
call extreme poverty.
00:36:17.080 --> 00:36:19.160
Now it's less than 9%.
00:36:19.200 --> 00:36:23.280
In Beethoven's time, war
between great powers was a
00:36:23.320 --> 00:36:25.960
constant, they're
just always fighting.
00:36:26.000 --> 00:36:30.680
And now we consider a war to
be something extraordinary,
00:36:30.720 --> 00:36:32.960
anomalous, something
that you try to end
00:36:33.000 --> 00:36:34.520
as soon as possible.
00:36:34.560 --> 00:36:37.520
In Beethoven's time, there
was slavery throughout the
00:36:37.560 --> 00:36:39.800
Americas, and in many
parts of the world.
00:36:39.840 --> 00:36:45.400
Now, slavery is
illegal everywhere on Earth.
00:36:45.440 --> 00:36:50.080
In Beethoven's time, probably
a third of children died
00:36:50.120 --> 00:36:52.480
before they
reached adolescence.
00:36:52.520 --> 00:36:54.280
Now, at least in
developed countries,
00:36:54.320 --> 00:36:59.640
the rate of child mortality is
a third of a percentage point.
00:36:59.680 --> 00:37:02.520
A large percentage of
women died in childbirth.
00:37:02.560 --> 00:37:05.680
Now, that is a rare tragedy.
00:37:07.160 --> 00:37:09.520
-[Barack Obama] If you had to
choose any moment in history
00:37:09.560 --> 00:37:16.960
in which to be born, and you
didn't know in advance whether
00:37:17.000 --> 00:37:19.200
you were going to
be male or female,
00:37:19.240 --> 00:37:21.600
what country you
are going to be from,
00:37:21.640 --> 00:37:26.960
what your status was,
you'd choose right now,
00:37:27.000 --> 00:37:29.480
because the world has
never been healthier,
00:37:29.520 --> 00:37:32.760
or wealthier, or
better educated,
00:37:32.800 --> 00:37:35.880
or, in many
ways, more tolerant,
00:37:35.920 --> 00:37:39.880
or less violent
than it is today.
00:37:39.920 --> 00:37:41.360
-[Steve] We have
made the world better.
00:37:41.400 --> 00:37:43.680
Hard to appreciate, because
we're so aware of all the
00:37:43.720 --> 00:37:45.400
things that go wrong.
00:37:45.440 --> 00:37:50.240
And basically the news is a
machine for delivering to your
00:37:50.240 --> 00:37:54.600
screen, or doorstep, all the
worst things that happened in
00:37:54.640 --> 00:37:56.800
the last few hours.
00:37:56.840 --> 00:37:59.040
It's a highly
non-random sample.
00:37:59.080 --> 00:38:02.240
When things go well,
as they so often do,
00:38:02.280 --> 00:38:04.040
when someone
dies in their 80s,
00:38:04.080 --> 00:38:09.840
when someone doesn't starve,
when a city isn't destroyed by
00:38:09.880 --> 00:38:11.960
a war, we don't call it news.
00:38:11.960 --> 00:38:15.000
But it really
ought to be news,
00:38:15.000 --> 00:38:18.520
and because the well-being
of our lives depends on it.
00:38:21.640 --> 00:38:23.880
-[Man] So going through
this, and at the same time,
00:38:23.920 --> 00:38:27.040
making a film on Beethoven
must be a real challenge.
00:38:27.080 --> 00:38:29.760
-[Larry] Yeah,
it's a challenge.
00:38:29.800 --> 00:38:32.080
Like functioning through
the day is a challenge,
00:38:32.120 --> 00:38:33.320
of course.
00:38:34.200 --> 00:38:36.880
And because I'm
working with the RCMP,
00:38:36.920 --> 00:38:40.000
and because I'm working
with people from the Canadian
00:38:40.040 --> 00:38:42.520
government, and because
they're connecting to the
00:38:42.560 --> 00:38:45.720
Israeli government, and
because my family is dealing
00:38:45.760 --> 00:38:50.000
with the FBI, I'm getting
calls about "where's your
00:38:50.040 --> 00:38:52.280
sister's house
exactly, on the Kibbutz?
00:38:52.320 --> 00:38:54.080
Please communicate to Israel.
00:38:54.120 --> 00:38:56.320
Please talk to us in Ottawa."
00:38:56.360 --> 00:39:01.000
And I'm also trying to
communicate to my nephew and
00:39:01.040 --> 00:39:03.040
niece in Israel
and in Singapore--
00:39:03.080 --> 00:39:04.400
-[Larry] Should
we go somewhere?
00:39:04.520 --> 00:39:07.120
-[Larry] And, you know, I'm
having to tell people that I
00:39:07.160 --> 00:39:10.320
was avoiding telling,
and I start crying.
00:39:10.320 --> 00:39:12.120
[laughing]
00:39:12.120 --> 00:39:13.920
It's like this
ridiculous thing.
00:39:13.920 --> 00:39:17.840
And it's like, breathless,
and I'm exhausted.
00:39:17.880 --> 00:39:19.440
I'm exhausted.
00:39:19.480 --> 00:39:21.880
And then I can't sleep
because I'm afraid if I sleep
00:39:21.920 --> 00:39:24.000
I'm going to miss news.
00:39:24.000 --> 00:39:26.040
So that's what's
been happening.
00:39:26.080 --> 00:39:27.320
That didn't answer
your question, though.
00:39:27.680 --> 00:39:29.400
-[Ali] Oh, shit
it's happening.
00:39:29.440 --> 00:39:30.440
-[Larry] Oh, shit.
00:39:30.760 --> 00:39:32.160
Okay, the call's happening
and we don't have our--
00:39:32.200 --> 00:39:33.800
-[Ali] Are you ready?
00:39:33.840 --> 00:39:35.280
-[Larry] Almost.
00:39:35.320 --> 00:39:37.160
Just a second.
00:39:37.200 --> 00:39:38.160
-[Woman] Hi Ali.
00:39:38.200 --> 00:39:39.280
-[Ali] Hi.
00:39:39.360 --> 00:39:40.960
-[Woman] We're just
waiting for clearance,
00:39:41.000 --> 00:39:43.680
so in the mean time I'm
going to call the Minister,
00:39:43.720 --> 00:39:45.000
and get her on the line.
00:39:45.040 --> 00:39:45.920
-[Ali] Ok great.
00:39:47.200 --> 00:39:50.880
-[Larry] For weeks now, we've
been told that Melanie Joly,
00:39:50.920 --> 00:39:54.680
the Minister of Global Affairs
Canada wanted to talk to us,
00:39:54.720 --> 00:39:56.200
that we were a priority.
00:39:56.240 --> 00:39:57.480
-[Larry] The
call's happening now.
00:39:57.520 --> 00:39:59.560
In fact, they're
already calling.
00:39:59.920 --> 00:40:02.080
-[Larry] And I'm a little bit
cynical about politicians
00:40:02.120 --> 00:40:03.640
in these situations.
00:40:03.640 --> 00:40:05.640
But maybe they have
some information.
00:40:05.640 --> 00:40:07.200
All we want is information.
00:40:07.240 --> 00:40:09.120
We don't want
shoulders to cry on,
00:40:09.160 --> 00:40:10.520
which keeps happening.
00:40:10.560 --> 00:40:12.160
We don't even want
social services.
00:40:12.920 --> 00:40:16.240
Ali's still on
hold, she's saying.
00:40:16.280 --> 00:40:19.320
It's sort of like our first
chance to talk to someone
00:40:19.320 --> 00:40:22.720
who has any power at all.
00:40:22.760 --> 00:40:25.640
Whether that's true, that
they have power or not.
00:40:26.360 --> 00:40:27.000
[phone beeps]
00:40:27.040 --> 00:40:27.640
-[Melanie] Hello.
00:40:27.680 --> 00:40:28.240
-[Ali] Hi.
00:40:28.280 --> 00:40:29.000
-[Larry] Hello.
00:40:29.120 --> 00:40:29.960
-[Ali] Dad, can you hear her?
00:40:30.000 --> 00:40:31.920
-[Larry] Yes, I can hear.
00:40:31.960 --> 00:40:32.800
-[Melanie] Hi Larry.
00:40:32.960 --> 00:40:35.240
-[Larry] Hello, is
this Madame Joly?
00:40:35.240 --> 00:40:36.040
-[Ali] That's Melanie Joly.
00:40:36.080 --> 00:40:37.320
-[Larry] Oh hello, hi.
00:40:37.360 --> 00:40:39.240
-[Melanie] Here's the
information we have,
00:40:39.280 --> 00:40:45.880
regarding your sister, Larry,
and your aunt, Ali.
00:40:45.880 --> 00:40:49.040
We are considering her
as a missing person.
00:40:49.080 --> 00:40:52.760
I can't provide you any
confirmation that she's
00:40:52.800 --> 00:40:55.440
part of the hostages or not.
00:40:55.480 --> 00:40:57.680
I don't have that information.
00:40:57.720 --> 00:41:00.160
So there are 200 hostages,
00:41:00.160 --> 00:41:02.840
there are
negotiations happening.
00:41:02.880 --> 00:41:07.360
What we know also is that,
and that's for you privately,
00:41:07.400 --> 00:41:09.080
it's not for
public conception,
00:41:09.120 --> 00:41:12.360
but we know that
Hamas has hostages.
00:41:12.400 --> 00:41:16.040
But we know that there are
00:41:16.080 --> 00:41:17.840
other groups
that have hostages.
00:41:17.880 --> 00:41:18.880
-[Larry] Oh.
00:41:18.920 --> 00:41:21.840
-[Melanie] So that's
the issue also.
00:41:21.880 --> 00:41:24.440
The different hostages
are not necessarily
00:41:24.480 --> 00:41:26.400
with all the same group.
00:41:26.440 --> 00:41:27.840
-[Ali] And obviously
we have hope
00:41:27.880 --> 00:41:29.440
that she might still be alive.
00:41:29.480 --> 00:41:31.600
But it's so confusing.
00:41:31.640 --> 00:41:35.640
-[Larry] What can Canada do,
what do you think can be done?
00:41:35.680 --> 00:41:40.320
-[Melanie] Well, my concern
is definitely of course
00:41:40.360 --> 00:41:41.520
the release of hostages,
00:41:41.560 --> 00:41:43.720
and Canadians
getting out of Gaza.
00:41:43.760 --> 00:41:46.320
I'm concerned about
the escalation also.
00:41:46.360 --> 00:41:47.520
I'm really concerned about it.
00:41:47.560 --> 00:41:48.120
-[Larry] Yeah.
00:41:48.240 --> 00:41:49.560
-[Ali] It just feels...
00:41:49.680 --> 00:41:54.320
It just feels like obviously
the roots of all of this is
00:41:54.360 --> 00:41:57.080
islamophobia,
and anti-semitism,
00:41:57.120 --> 00:41:59.720
and the complication of
that part of the world,
00:41:59.760 --> 00:42:03.160
it like goes on forever, it's
not just since October 7th,
00:42:03.160 --> 00:42:06.640
but Netanyahu, and what
he stood for before this,
00:42:06.680 --> 00:42:08.560
but certainly what
he's doing right now,
00:42:08.600 --> 00:42:15.840
I've never, in my entire life,
felt like I had to be afraid
00:42:15.840 --> 00:42:21.600
because I was a Jewish person,
or feel worried that I was
00:42:21.640 --> 00:42:23.000
in danger because of that.
00:42:23.040 --> 00:42:24.600
And for the first
time in my life,
00:42:24.640 --> 00:42:27.400
it feels as if we've
just gone back in time.
00:42:27.440 --> 00:42:32.200
And I guess I just wonder,
what is the firmest stand that
00:42:32.240 --> 00:42:34.320
Canada can take with Israel?
00:42:34.360 --> 00:42:37.440
Like can you actually
denounce their actions,
00:42:37.480 --> 00:42:40.440
and let Israel know that
they're essentially fucking
00:42:40.480 --> 00:42:43.000
things up for everyone
all around the world,
00:42:43.040 --> 00:42:44.760
and causing death and pain
00:42:44.800 --> 00:42:47.320
and suffering all around
the world right now?
00:42:47.360 --> 00:42:49.240
-[Melanie] Mhmm.
00:42:49.240 --> 00:42:56.600
[Beethoven's 9th continues]
00:42:59.360 --> 00:43:03.040
-[Man] Beethoven is struggle,
the struggle for peace,
00:43:03.080 --> 00:43:04.760
for fulfillment of spirit.
00:43:04.800 --> 00:43:09.680
For serenity and
triumphant joy.
00:43:09.720 --> 00:43:13.560
He achieved it in his music.
00:43:13.600 --> 00:43:16.080
Somehow it must
be possible for us
00:43:16.120 --> 00:43:19.800
to learn from his
music by hearing it.
00:43:19.840 --> 00:43:21.200
Though not hearing it,
00:43:21.200 --> 00:43:24.040
but listening to it
with all our power
00:43:24.040 --> 00:43:26.480
of attention
and concentration.
00:43:26.520 --> 00:43:31.280
Then, perhaps, we can grow
into something worthy of being
00:43:31.320 --> 00:43:33.720
called the human race.
00:43:34.120 --> 00:43:39.480
[Beethoven's 9th continues]
00:43:48.680 --> 00:43:49.920
-[Larry] Bernstein hated that
00:43:49.960 --> 00:43:53.120
the Berlin Wall
had ever existed,
00:43:53.160 --> 00:43:55.160
that humankind
could somehow
00:43:55.200 --> 00:43:58.160
be divided by barriers.
00:43:58.200 --> 00:44:01.120
And now there was
so much joyousness.
00:44:01.160 --> 00:44:03.880
People could see what
the possibilities were.
00:44:05.880 --> 00:44:08.120
Even though Bernstein
was very ill,
00:44:08.160 --> 00:44:10.520
and had only a
few months to live,
00:44:10.560 --> 00:44:12.920
he pushed
himself to his limit.
00:44:12.960 --> 00:44:14.920
Because it seemed that
this was the beginning
00:44:14.920 --> 00:44:17.160
of a greater humanity.
00:44:17.200 --> 00:44:19.600
That this was going
to be a better planet.
00:44:19.640 --> 00:44:26.120
[Beethoven's 9th continues]
00:44:28.200 --> 00:44:30.000
-[Steve] Really is
overcome with a feeling.
00:44:30.040 --> 00:44:31.880
-[Rebecca] Oh yeah.
00:44:31.920 --> 00:44:35.720
To live this music
your whole life,
00:44:35.760 --> 00:44:38.280
and know your end is near.
00:44:38.320 --> 00:44:41.440
-[Steve] Had he been diagnosed
at that point, did he know?
00:44:41.480 --> 00:44:42.520
-[Rebecca] Oh yeah.
00:44:42.520 --> 00:44:43.320
-[Steve] So he's doing this,
00:44:43.480 --> 00:44:46.120
knowing that his
days are numbered?
00:44:46.160 --> 00:44:47.720
-[Rebecca] Yeah.
00:44:48.120 --> 00:44:54.240
[Beethoven's 9th continues]
00:44:55.560 --> 00:44:58.160
-[Craig] We were all very
concerned about his health
00:44:58.200 --> 00:45:00.000
at that time in his life.
00:45:00.040 --> 00:45:02.120
I was in the hall
for the concert.
00:45:02.160 --> 00:45:07.320
I came running down to be
here when he came offstage.
00:45:07.360 --> 00:45:10.480
[clapping]
00:45:10.960 --> 00:45:13.960
-[Craig] And he leaned
against the consort here,
00:45:14.000 --> 00:45:17.800
because he was completely
spent and exhausted.
00:45:17.840 --> 00:45:21.280
There's a famous photo of us,
me looking up at him,
00:45:21.320 --> 00:45:22.960
and him looking down.
00:45:23.000 --> 00:45:26.760
And you can see how
spent and exhausted he is.
00:45:26.800 --> 00:45:29.280
And that's little me here.
00:45:29.320 --> 00:45:30.400
This is me.
00:45:30.680 --> 00:45:36.320
And I'm actually in awe of
what had just taken place.
00:45:38.120 --> 00:45:42.680
-[Leonard] I am living through
a historical moment
00:45:42.720 --> 00:45:50.600
and the most
unforgettable Christmas day
00:45:50.640 --> 00:45:53.440
in my long, long, long life.
00:45:53.480 --> 00:45:59.320
[clapping]
00:45:59.360 --> 00:46:04.000
[Beethoven's 9th continues]
00:46:04.960 --> 00:46:06.600
-[Craig] And then
after the concert,
00:46:06.640 --> 00:46:08.720
it was time to go
back to the west.
00:46:08.760 --> 00:46:11.440
And Lenny, we were in
the car and he says,
00:46:11.480 --> 00:46:15.680
I really want to go and
touch the Berlin Wall.
00:46:15.680 --> 00:46:19.520
[banging]
00:46:25.240 --> 00:46:26.160
-[Franz] My parents asked me
00:46:26.200 --> 00:46:27.680
whether we want
to go to the wall
00:46:27.720 --> 00:46:29.880
and to chop some pieces out.
00:46:29.920 --> 00:46:31.680
So I took my ski goggles,
00:46:31.720 --> 00:46:34.080
which I bought a couple of
years ago in Czechoslovakia.
00:46:34.120 --> 00:46:35.800
And we went to the wall
00:46:35.800 --> 00:46:37.680
and start chopping
pieces out of the wall,
00:46:37.720 --> 00:46:39.400
and as we did
a couple of days before.
00:46:39.400 --> 00:46:43.080
And suddenly there was
a lady standing next to us
00:46:43.120 --> 00:46:44.280
and saying look,
00:46:44.560 --> 00:46:46.440
there's a guy coming that
looks like Leonard Bernstein,
00:46:46.440 --> 00:46:47.680
and Bernstein
was coming and said
00:46:47.720 --> 00:46:49.280
"I am Leonard Bernstein".
00:46:51.760 --> 00:46:54.680
-[Craig] There was a young
boy by the name of Franz,
00:46:54.720 --> 00:46:58.520
and he was holding
a hammer and chisel,
00:46:58.560 --> 00:47:00.120
and they recognize Bernstein,
00:47:00.120 --> 00:47:01.520
they had just been at home
00:47:01.520 --> 00:47:03.800
watching the
concert on television.
00:47:03.840 --> 00:47:05.400
-[Franz] Leonard
then was asking,
00:47:05.440 --> 00:47:07.320
"Can you chop out
a piece of the wall?"
00:47:07.360 --> 00:47:09.400
And my father handed over the
hammer and the chizel
00:47:09.440 --> 00:47:10.720
and the said
"Selbst is der mann",
00:47:10.760 --> 00:47:11.720
which means something like
00:47:11.960 --> 00:47:13.560
"There's nothing more
than do it yourself".
00:47:14.280 --> 00:47:16.160
He got the chisel
and he got the hammer
00:47:16.200 --> 00:47:17.240
and then he's like starting
00:47:17.280 --> 00:47:19.200
chopping the pieces
out of the wall.
00:47:22.880 --> 00:47:24.360
-[Franz] That's the
hammer and that the chisel
00:47:24.400 --> 00:47:25.760
Bernstein was using.
00:47:25.800 --> 00:47:27.360
-[Craig] Yeah.
00:47:27.400 --> 00:47:30.280
-[Franz] My father still
kept it in the cellar.
00:47:30.320 --> 00:47:31.280
-[Craid] Looks great.
00:47:31.520 --> 00:47:32.480
-[Franz] It wasn't used
in the last 35 years.
00:47:32.520 --> 00:47:34.840
[laughing]
00:47:37.360 --> 00:47:40.360
-[Craig] It was
a time of just joy.
00:47:40.400 --> 00:47:42.160
People were very joyful.
00:47:43.720 --> 00:47:44.800
-[Franz] And at this time,
00:47:44.840 --> 00:47:47.280
Leonard Bernstein
I think was excited
00:47:47.320 --> 00:47:49.480
by bringing people together,
00:47:49.520 --> 00:47:51.920
to see also a
chance for Europe,
00:47:51.960 --> 00:47:53.480
potentially even beyond,
00:47:53.520 --> 00:47:55.600
that this continent
and the world is
00:47:55.640 --> 00:47:56.880
coming closer
to each other,
00:47:56.960 --> 00:47:59.720
and that this Western-Eastern
part will fall down,
00:47:59.760 --> 00:48:03.000
and will people will live
definitely with each other.
00:48:03.040 --> 00:48:07.120
In freedom,
but also with more joy.
00:48:07.120 --> 00:48:11.480
[music fades]
00:48:14.880 --> 00:48:21.880
[Bethoven's
String Quartet 3 plays]
00:48:41.320 --> 00:48:45.400
-[Woman] We're in
Santa Rosa, California, and--
00:48:45.440 --> 00:48:48.680
-[Girl] There's a
statue of Snoopy and...
00:48:48.720 --> 00:48:50.800
-[Woman] Charlie Brown.
00:48:53.240 --> 00:48:58.840
The creator lived here,
and yeah, there's a museum,
00:48:58.840 --> 00:49:01.960
and there's an
ice skating rink.
00:49:03.000 --> 00:49:05.080
-[Man] Yeah, he was
a big part of Santa Rosa,
00:49:05.080 --> 00:49:09.440
I mean, I always read
the comic strips, always.
00:49:09.480 --> 00:49:10.840
-[Woman 2] And his
comic strip, Peanuts,
00:49:10.880 --> 00:49:12.640
is a reflection of his life.
00:49:12.680 --> 00:49:15.440
-[Man 2] His drawings
reflected a down-to-earth
00:49:15.480 --> 00:49:17.600
sort of comic strip
that didn't take on
00:49:17.640 --> 00:49:19.320
worldly sort of subjects,
00:49:19.360 --> 00:49:22.280
but just in the simplicity
of the philosophy
00:49:22.320 --> 00:49:25.440
was the beauty of what
he did on a daily basis.
00:49:25.480 --> 00:49:28.120
He made you think,
but in a child-like,
00:49:28.160 --> 00:49:31.440
you can see through to
the heart fo the matter.
00:49:33.200 --> 00:49:34.720
-[Benjamin] Charles Schultz
never would have claimed
00:49:34.760 --> 00:49:37.520
to be a poet, or a philosopher,
00:49:37.560 --> 00:49:39.320
certainly not
anything like that.
00:49:43.520 --> 00:49:45.840
you can't help but feel
the poetry of some of these.
00:49:45.840 --> 00:49:49.960
But you can't help, as someone
who really loves the strip,
00:49:51.360 --> 00:49:53.960
And yes, even some
of the philosophy
00:49:54.000 --> 00:49:56.080
that he displays
within the strip.
00:49:56.120 --> 00:50:03.000
[Bethoven's String
Quartet 3 continues]
00:50:03.200 --> 00:50:07.840
♪ O freunde
00:50:07.880 --> 00:50:11.680
-[Larry] "Joy, beautiful
spark of divinity."
00:50:11.720 --> 00:50:13.080
Spark!
00:50:13.080 --> 00:50:13.800
Sparky.
00:50:13.840 --> 00:50:16.400
[laughing]
00:50:16.440 --> 00:50:17.800
-[Jean] But what's Tochter?
00:50:17.840 --> 00:50:18.800
I took a year--
00:50:18.840 --> 00:50:19.920
-[Larry] Daughter.
00:50:20.160 --> 00:50:22.880
Daughter Elysium, which
means daughter of paradise,
00:50:22.920 --> 00:50:25.080
of utopia.
00:50:25.120 --> 00:50:27.280
It's interesting, because
it's not a Christian thing.
00:50:27.320 --> 00:50:28.720
It's just about divinity,
00:50:28.760 --> 00:50:30.800
and when Beethoven
was writing this piece,
00:50:30.800 --> 00:50:33.920
he was studying
Eastern religions.
00:50:33.960 --> 00:50:36.520
Like he was thinking
about mankind.
00:50:36.560 --> 00:50:38.200
Even though he
was born Catholic,
00:50:38.240 --> 00:50:40.640
he never went to churches,
he never crossed himself,
00:50:40.640 --> 00:50:42.000
he never confessed.
00:50:42.040 --> 00:50:44.920
All he was interested
in was the truth.
00:50:44.960 --> 00:50:48.400
And Beethoven said I'm
gonna write a piece of music
00:50:48.440 --> 00:50:51.720
that encompasses
my youthful ideals,
00:50:51.720 --> 00:50:53.920
and I'm sick, and I'm old,
00:50:53.960 --> 00:50:56.120
and he probably knew
he was going to die soon.
00:50:56.160 --> 00:50:58.920
And yet, he was going
to embrace humanity.
00:50:58.960 --> 00:51:01.120
It's very beautiful,
it was very moving,
00:51:01.160 --> 00:51:04.200
I practically cry
when I think about him,
00:51:04.240 --> 00:51:05.800
and what he was doing.
00:51:05.840 --> 00:51:06.960
And somehow when I was reading
00:51:07.000 --> 00:51:09.640
a lot of the Peanuts
comic strips,
00:51:09.680 --> 00:51:12.240
I feel this vulnerability
in humanity.
00:51:12.240 --> 00:51:13.560
And I start,
00:51:13.600 --> 00:51:16.080
and Charlie Brown's
crooked little smile,
00:51:16.120 --> 00:51:18.680
and I start to
feel emotion again,
00:51:18.680 --> 00:51:21.000
that I do and I hear that
piece of music by Beethoven.
00:51:21.040 --> 00:51:23.000
So I love all that.
00:51:24.520 --> 00:51:27.560
-[Lucy] You and your
stupid ol' Beethoven!
00:51:27.600 --> 00:51:29.760
By golly, I'll show you.
00:51:29.800 --> 00:51:32.600
[banging]
00:51:32.640 --> 00:51:33.560
-[Lucy] There!
00:51:33.640 --> 00:51:38.000
[Beethoven's 9th
Symphony playing]
00:51:38.000 --> 00:51:40.400
-[Larry] Beethoven could
never have imagined how
00:51:40.400 --> 00:51:42.680
his music might
affect audiences,
00:51:42.720 --> 00:51:45.040
or who might
appropriate his music
00:51:45.040 --> 00:51:46.840
for their own causes.
00:51:46.840 --> 00:51:50.000
[Beethoven's 9th continues]
00:51:50.040 --> 00:51:52.680
-[Larry] The 9th was
Hitler's favorite symphony,
00:51:52.720 --> 00:51:56.120
so he insisted that it
be played on his birthday.
00:51:56.160 --> 00:51:58.200
It's hard to imagine
what he thought
00:51:58.240 --> 00:52:00.440
Shiller and Beethoven meant
00:52:00.480 --> 00:52:04.160
when they declared that
all men are brothers.
00:52:05.080 --> 00:52:07.320
-[Gabriela] I think
Beethoven would be horrified
00:52:07.360 --> 00:52:11.600
that Hitler loved this piece.
00:52:11.640 --> 00:52:15.200
The anthem quality
of the Ode to Joy
00:52:15.240 --> 00:52:19.400
has been used
and abused over time.
00:52:19.440 --> 00:52:21.880
But I think he would also
be amazed that people
00:52:21.920 --> 00:52:23.280
as far away as China,
00:52:23.320 --> 00:52:25.280
the student protesters
in Tiananmen Square,
00:52:25.280 --> 00:52:27.160
were singing this.
00:52:27.200 --> 00:52:30.000
And I think he'd be amazed
at the anthem quality
00:52:30.040 --> 00:52:31.560
spoke to different languages.
00:52:31.600 --> 00:52:33.920
♪ Bela e celeste--
00:52:33.920 --> 00:52:36.680
-[Gabriela] And the fact that
has been translated so often.
00:52:36.720 --> 00:52:40.120
♪ Centelha da divindade
00:52:40.160 --> 00:52:43.200
-[Gabriela] I think he will be
amused and how it's been used
00:52:43.200 --> 00:52:45.880
in popular culture,
Die Hard, and commercials,
00:52:45.920 --> 00:52:47.400
and oh my goodness.
00:52:47.400 --> 00:52:49.200
-[Gabriela] I don't know if you
guys will recognize this movie,
00:52:49.240 --> 00:52:51.200
Die Hard,
which was like super,
00:52:51.240 --> 00:52:52.240
you know it?
00:52:52.480 --> 00:52:54.440
It was like super popular
in the 80s and 90s.
00:52:54.440 --> 00:52:56.640
Let's watch a little
excerpt from this.
00:52:56.680 --> 00:52:57.800
-[Man] It's gonna go!
00:52:57.840 --> 00:53:03.000
[Ode to Joy
playing over buzzing]
00:53:03.040 --> 00:53:04.200
-[Gabriela] You hear it?
00:53:04.240 --> 00:53:16.360
[Ode to Joy
playing over buzzing]
00:53:16.400 --> 00:53:18.280
-[Gabriela] It's also been
used in commercials.
00:53:18.320 --> 00:53:19.480
Let's go to the top right.
00:53:19.520 --> 00:53:20.960
[singing in the tune
of Ode to Joy]
00:53:21.000 --> 00:53:24.200
♪ Drink milk long life
Taste that fresh milk ♪
00:53:24.240 --> 00:53:27.800
♪ Best that Cole
has ever tasted ♪
00:53:27.840 --> 00:53:29.360
-[Gabriela] And
then this last one,
00:53:29.400 --> 00:53:30.560
if you go into YouTube,
00:53:30.600 --> 00:53:35.760
and you Google
Ode to Joy Flash Mob.
00:53:35.800 --> 00:53:39.280
For some reason, Ode to Joy
is super popular with flash mobs
00:53:39.320 --> 00:53:40.560
around the world.
00:53:40.600 --> 00:53:43.080
I think this is Spain.
00:53:43.120 --> 00:53:47.560
[more instruments join in]
00:53:53.160 --> 00:53:57.600
-[Monika] Music is and was
always the widest medium
00:53:57.640 --> 00:54:00.320
to get to people.
00:54:00.360 --> 00:54:03.680
It's an idyllic idea
to compose a piece
00:54:03.720 --> 00:54:08.800
that make people gather
and feel the solidarity,
00:54:08.840 --> 00:54:10.000
feel the connection,
00:54:10.040 --> 00:54:15.760
and to create classical
piece that has the
00:54:15.760 --> 00:54:18.760
element of a pop or rock song,
00:54:18.760 --> 00:54:21.480
that could actually be
sung in the stadiums.
00:54:21.520 --> 00:54:23.360
[Ode to Joy being sung]
00:54:23.400 --> 00:54:26.240
-[Monika] It's one of
the only classical pieces
00:54:26.280 --> 00:54:28.640
that if you ask different
people on the street,
00:54:28.680 --> 00:54:30.400
everybody knows it.
00:54:30.440 --> 00:54:32.680
So he achieved this goal.
00:54:34.000 --> 00:54:37.360
It's one of the only
examples in classical music
00:54:37.400 --> 00:54:39.480
that people know so well.
00:54:39.520 --> 00:54:42.080
[Ode to Joy continues]
00:54:42.120 --> 00:54:45.720
-[Monika] Definitely
have this pop hook.
00:54:45.720 --> 00:54:48.760
[sings Ode to Joy's tune]
00:54:48.800 --> 00:54:50.280
-[Monika] You know,
it could be a ringtone.
00:54:50.320 --> 00:54:52.800
[phone ringing]
00:54:55.400 --> 00:55:00.800
-[Monika] It's probably every
artist's dream to have
00:55:00.800 --> 00:55:03.600
such a piece in their
discography, yeah.
00:55:03.640 --> 00:55:09.840
[playing Ode to Joy]
00:55:09.880 --> 00:55:14.040
-[Man] I think music is
a really powerful weapon.
00:55:14.080 --> 00:55:18.520
Even during this
horrible times of war,
00:55:18.560 --> 00:55:21.760
it's about we still have hope.
00:55:21.800 --> 00:55:26.560
[continuing Ode to Joy]
00:55:26.600 --> 00:55:28.760
-[Man 2] Of course
music's changed the world.
00:55:28.760 --> 00:55:34.840
It's an instrument to express
everything we can feel.
00:55:34.880 --> 00:55:39.040
Now we are speaking to
the world without words.
00:55:39.080 --> 00:55:42.400
[speaking another language]
00:55:43.720 --> 00:55:50.480
[flute playing]
00:55:50.520 --> 00:55:55.320
[speaking another language]
00:55:55.320 --> 00:56:02.440
[piccolo playing
to a metronome]
00:56:04.640 --> 00:56:09.240
[Keri-Lynn muttering]
00:56:17.680 --> 00:56:21.120
-[Keri-Lynn] With all of the
oppression that is happening,
00:56:21.160 --> 00:56:23.080
that we thought
would never happen,
00:56:23.120 --> 00:56:27.120
the repeat Naziism,
and the Soviet Empire,
00:56:27.160 --> 00:56:29.480
it's all come back to life.
00:56:29.520 --> 00:56:31.160
And we keep
saying to each other,
00:56:31.160 --> 00:56:34.720
this is still happening,
how could this be happening?
00:56:35.880 --> 00:56:39.040
You can't eradicate evil
from the world, you know?
00:56:39.080 --> 00:56:46.000
So music is there
as a symbol of love.
00:56:46.040 --> 00:56:51.440
It's a vehicle for us to make
humanity a better place.
00:56:52.240 --> 00:56:57.760
-[Rebecca] Maybe what he was
trying to do was to move us
00:56:57.800 --> 00:57:00.160
with beauty, you know?
00:57:00.200 --> 00:57:05.320
His genius to create this
overwhelming aesthetic,
00:57:05.360 --> 00:57:10.800
emotional, inspiring experience
with the right message.
00:57:10.800 --> 00:57:18.240
[thunder crashing
over Ode to Joy]
00:57:19.000 --> 00:57:20.040
-[Larry] Yeah, you
know, it's funny,
00:57:20.080 --> 00:57:22.960
we as filmmakers
often are like voyeurs,
00:57:23.000 --> 00:57:29.560
we watch things, and we're
not necessarily affected.
00:57:29.600 --> 00:57:32.280
My films have been
about classical music,
00:57:32.320 --> 00:57:33.560
most of them.
00:57:33.600 --> 00:57:36.280
It comes from a deep
interest in that music,
00:57:36.320 --> 00:57:40.680
and in those personalities.
00:57:40.720 --> 00:57:43.680
But I'm removed.
00:57:43.720 --> 00:57:45.680
This is different.
00:57:45.720 --> 00:57:48.080
And this idea of
changing perspective,
00:57:48.120 --> 00:57:49.760
and being immersed
in something,
00:57:49.800 --> 00:57:53.160
which directly relates to
what we're talking about,
00:57:53.200 --> 00:57:55.400
is new for me.
00:57:55.440 --> 00:58:05.680
[slow dramatic music]
00:58:05.720 --> 00:58:09.600
-[Larry] I've done a number
of films that intertwine music
00:58:09.640 --> 00:58:11.960
into extra musical things,
00:58:12.000 --> 00:58:15.400
some medical related
things like Ravel's Brain,
00:58:15.440 --> 00:58:16.920
about the death of Ravel.
00:58:16.960 --> 00:58:21.440
But I did a number of things,
like where I touched upon war.
00:58:22.360 --> 00:58:25.640
My film on Shostakovich is
called The War Symphonies,
00:58:25.680 --> 00:58:27.920
and it has to do
with World War II,
00:58:27.960 --> 00:58:30.240
but it also has to do
with the war with Stalin.
00:58:30.280 --> 00:58:33.400
[Shostakovich
Symphony 4 playing]
00:58:38.480 --> 00:58:42.600
-[Larry] The last film
I finished was Propaganda,
00:58:42.640 --> 00:58:46.960
The Art of Selling Lies,
it was overtly about politics.
00:58:47.000 --> 00:58:49.680
[quick dramatic music]
00:58:49.720 --> 00:58:51.200
-[Larry] And then this.
00:58:51.200 --> 00:58:53.360
This, which we knew, would
have some political content,
00:58:53.400 --> 00:58:58.080
but now it's taking a turn
because of the recent events.
00:58:58.120 --> 00:59:10.600
[chanting]
00:59:13.640 --> 00:59:15.160
[cheering]
00:59:15.200 --> 00:59:21.760
[Brodka's Utrata playing]
00:59:25.080 --> 00:59:27.600
-[Monika] In my art, my work,
00:59:27.640 --> 00:59:31.240
there are some things
about religion,
00:59:31.240 --> 00:59:33.720
which are appealing for me,
00:59:33.760 --> 00:59:39.560
because in folk culture,
there is a lot of pagan fests,
00:59:39.600 --> 00:59:43.160
and a lot of
weird celebrations.
00:59:43.200 --> 00:59:46.600
[Brodka's Utrata continues]
00:59:47.280 --> 00:59:52.360
-[Monika] To have people
gathered in one cause together,
00:59:52.360 --> 00:59:55.640
singing together,
or praying together.
00:59:55.680 --> 01:00:00.800
It's something that
I also do in my work.
01:00:00.800 --> 01:00:05.160
♪ I've been bitten by
the data-hungry virus ♪
01:00:05.200 --> 01:00:09.200
♪ It circulates through
a system of channels ♪
01:00:09.240 --> 01:00:13.600
♪ I lost what was uploaded
01:00:13.640 --> 01:00:19.120
♪ The sudden destruction
turns your stomach ♪
01:00:19.120 --> 01:00:20.680
-[Monika] I exchange
this energy
01:00:20.720 --> 01:00:22.360
with people on concerts.
01:00:22.400 --> 01:00:25.720
♪ The frame. The frame
is not the same ♪
01:00:25.760 --> 01:00:30.000
-[Monika] And my shows
are very much theatrical,
01:00:30.000 --> 01:00:34.000
and like, if you go to a
mass it's one big theatre,
01:00:34.040 --> 01:00:36.400
you know, you have an
altar, which is a stage,
01:00:36.440 --> 01:00:39.080
and you have
some weird smoke,
01:00:39.120 --> 01:00:41.880
and people drink
different things,
01:00:41.920 --> 01:00:43.480
and then they watch it,
01:00:43.520 --> 01:00:46.880
and then, you know, like,
it's a directed show,
01:00:46.920 --> 01:00:49.600
every time is the
same, you know?
01:00:49.640 --> 01:00:51.320
Jesus was a rockstar, come on.
01:00:51.360 --> 01:00:52.360
[laughing]
01:00:52.880 --> 01:00:56.240
♪ I've been bitten
by the data-hungry virus ♪
01:00:56.280 --> 01:00:59.040
[cheering]
01:00:59.080 --> 01:01:02.440
-[Monika] I mean, it's
not a cocky way to say,
01:01:02.480 --> 01:01:03.800
like, if you think about it,
01:01:03.840 --> 01:01:08.160
like, you know,
God created the world,
01:01:08.200 --> 01:01:14.560
have his own "wyznawca",
followers, yeah.
01:01:14.600 --> 01:01:16.880
I have my own followers
on Instagram as well.
01:01:16.880 --> 01:01:18.200
[laughing]
01:01:18.240 --> 01:01:20.000
And on the concerts,
01:01:20.040 --> 01:01:23.600
but this was also
a huge responsibility,
01:01:23.640 --> 01:01:25.320
you know, on the artist,
01:01:25.320 --> 01:01:29.440
to be that person
that people follow.
01:01:31.120 --> 01:01:35.480
And they respect
what we have to say,
01:01:35.520 --> 01:01:39.000
and they treat us,
somehow, as authorities.
01:01:39.040 --> 01:01:44.560
And it's also
very intimidating.
01:01:47.040 --> 01:01:48.200
[birds chirping]
01:01:48.280 --> 01:01:51.280
[Beethoven's 9th symphony
Movement I playing]
01:01:51.320 --> 01:01:54.680
-[Gabriela] I met John and
Helen Meyer about 15 years ago,
01:01:54.720 --> 01:01:57.320
and they were so excited
to meet me because John
01:01:57.320 --> 01:02:00.600
already had an idea to
work on hearing aids,
01:02:00.640 --> 01:02:03.520
specifically for musicians.
01:02:03.560 --> 01:02:07.120
And I have been privileged
for several years to be
01:02:07.160 --> 01:02:08.960
one of their test subjects.
01:02:08.960 --> 01:02:10.840
-[Man] Alright, how's that?
01:02:10.880 --> 01:02:12.320
The voice should be
a little bit more clear.
01:02:12.360 --> 01:02:13.720
-[Gabriela] But now
I'm hearing echo.
01:02:13.760 --> 01:02:14.600
Is there an echo?
01:02:14.800 --> 01:02:16.560
Not echo, I'm
hearing reverberance.
01:02:16.600 --> 01:02:18.040
-[Man] There's
reverberance in the room.
01:02:18.080 --> 01:02:19.440
-[Gabriela] It's the
first time I'm hearing it.
01:02:19.480 --> 01:02:20.680
-[Man] Ok that's very good.
01:02:20.720 --> 01:02:21.840
-[John] I can
kill the reverb--
01:02:22.080 --> 01:02:23.280
-[Gabriela] I've never
heard the reverberance before.
01:02:23.320 --> 01:02:24.080
[clap]
01:02:24.080 --> 01:02:24.960
-[John] Count it out.
01:02:25.000 --> 01:02:26.280
-[Gabriela] Yeah.
01:02:26.320 --> 01:02:28.080
I don't usually
get to hear that.
01:02:28.080 --> 01:02:30.480
-[Helen] I'm Helen Meyer,
this is John Meyer.
01:02:30.520 --> 01:02:34.680
We run a company
called Meyer Sound,
01:02:34.720 --> 01:02:38.520
and we design and manufacture
professional sound equipment.
01:02:38.800 --> 01:02:41.160
[Beethoven's 9th
movement II playing]
01:02:41.200 --> 01:02:42.280
-[Helen] When
we first started off,
01:02:42.360 --> 01:02:44.520
we were working with
the San Francisco Opera,
01:02:44.560 --> 01:02:46.200
we were working
with Frank Zappa.
01:02:46.200 --> 01:02:48.800
I mean you think ok, those are
two very different types of
01:02:48.800 --> 01:02:52.520
people, but both of them
wanted to capture music
01:02:52.560 --> 01:02:54.160
in a special way.
01:02:55.040 --> 01:02:57.400
We've worked with
the Grateful Dead,
01:02:57.440 --> 01:02:59.080
we've worked with Pavarotti,
01:02:59.120 --> 01:03:02.440
we've worked with so many
wonderful artists.
01:03:02.480 --> 01:03:04.520
Right now we're working
with Ed Sheeran,
01:03:04.520 --> 01:03:06.320
we're working with Metallica.
01:03:06.320 --> 01:03:10.000
[Beethoven's 9th
movement II continues]
01:03:10.040 --> 01:03:11.840
-[Helen] It's actually
the same thing
01:03:11.880 --> 01:03:14.720
what we do with Metallica,
what we do with Gabriela,
01:03:14.760 --> 01:03:18.640
it's all about giving them the
tools they need to create
01:03:18.680 --> 01:03:21.400
to be able to create everything
that they want to create,
01:03:21.400 --> 01:03:22.960
because they
all have a vision.
01:03:23.000 --> 01:03:25.760
-[John] We pick up the sound,
01:03:25.800 --> 01:03:28.800
and we have 20 millionths
of a second to do the work
01:03:28.840 --> 01:03:29.880
before we have to
release it to
01:03:29.920 --> 01:03:31.360
the ear drum, you know?
01:03:31.400 --> 01:03:35.080
So there's a lot of processing
going on in that little box,
01:03:35.080 --> 01:03:36.960
and it's running at
half a million hertz.
01:03:37.000 --> 01:03:39.200
-[Helen] The thing that
makes our device different
01:03:39.240 --> 01:03:41.920
is that it takes,
well you could describe it,
01:03:41.920 --> 01:03:43.600
but I'm not gonna let you,
01:03:43.640 --> 01:03:44.880
because it's
gonna be too long.
01:03:44.920 --> 01:03:47.680
Hold on, hold on,
let me say this.
01:03:47.720 --> 01:03:49.520
Our hearing device
that we are researching,
01:03:49.560 --> 01:03:53.280
it's still a research project,
that we codenamed Beethoven,
01:03:53.320 --> 01:03:55.680
is all about creating
a hearing device
01:03:55.720 --> 01:03:58.080
for musicians primarily,
01:03:58.120 --> 01:04:01.120
because musicians have
to have full dynamic range.
01:04:01.160 --> 01:04:02.880
-[Helen] Okay,
let's hear some music.
01:04:02.920 --> 01:04:03.360
-[Man] Alright.
01:04:04.440 --> 01:04:16.280
[Beethoven's 9th
movement I plays]
01:04:16.880 --> 01:04:18.760
-[John] Hearing aids
right now are mostly,
01:04:18.800 --> 01:04:21.760
you put them in and they
don't seal up the ear,
01:04:21.760 --> 01:04:24.240
and they just add some high
frequencies to the thing
01:04:24.280 --> 01:04:25.600
to help your speech.
01:04:25.600 --> 01:04:29.400
We basically plug,
we take total responsibility.
01:04:29.400 --> 01:04:32.360
We plug everything up,
it's like a super ear plug.
01:04:32.400 --> 01:04:34.600
And then we pick it up
and we reproduce it.
01:04:34.640 --> 01:04:35.800
We're completely responsible,
01:04:35.840 --> 01:04:37.360
once she wears
our hearing aid,
01:04:37.400 --> 01:04:38.320
what she's hearing.
01:04:38.560 --> 01:04:40.400
there's nothing coming
from anywhere else.
01:04:40.440 --> 01:04:41.680
-[Gabriela] Hey,
what did you just do?
01:04:41.720 --> 01:04:42.760
-[Man] I tried to fix it.
01:04:42.800 --> 01:04:43.760
Is it fixing it?
01:04:43.800 --> 01:04:44.920
-[Gabriela] It's nice.
01:04:44.920 --> 01:04:45.920
-[Man] Alright.
01:04:45.920 --> 01:04:47.880
-[Gabriela] I have
been disheartened,
01:04:47.920 --> 01:04:50.480
even with these hearing
aids that I have now.
01:04:50.520 --> 01:04:52.720
I've been fighting the fact
that they sharpen the pitch,
01:04:52.760 --> 01:04:53.960
not perfect pitch.
01:04:54.080 --> 01:04:56.600
So I have to combat
my own native musical ability
01:04:56.600 --> 01:04:59.600
in order to avail myself
of the tool.
01:04:59.600 --> 01:05:01.080
-[John] We're not doing
any of that here.
01:05:01.120 --> 01:05:02.880
We're not doing any
pitch shifting and stuff.
01:05:02.920 --> 01:05:05.000
It's all just balancing.
01:05:05.040 --> 01:05:08.040
I mean, we have
to figure, I mean,
01:05:08.040 --> 01:05:10.080
we're trying to get
directional clues,
01:05:10.120 --> 01:05:12.520
and to get the brain to solve
that we're gonna have to
01:05:12.560 --> 01:05:15.240
give the information
very accurately to the brain
01:05:15.280 --> 01:05:16.360
for it to do that.
01:05:16.480 --> 01:05:18.160
-[Helen] It's such an
incredible opportunity
01:05:18.200 --> 01:05:20.640
to work with Gabriela,
because she is so unique.
01:05:20.680 --> 01:05:25.840
I mean, she is a brilliant,
creative composer
01:05:25.880 --> 01:05:29.840
who is entirely deaf,
by most standards,
01:05:29.880 --> 01:05:34.400
and yet she's able to
help us create a tool,
01:05:34.400 --> 01:05:39.040
a device that allows her
to hear things she'd never
01:05:39.080 --> 01:05:40.760
thought she'd be able to.
01:05:40.800 --> 01:05:43.040
That is extraordinary for us.
01:05:43.080 --> 01:05:44.800
-[Gabriela] It was just
a very intense moment,
01:05:44.840 --> 01:05:51.200
because everything came
to a head in a few seconds.
01:05:51.240 --> 01:05:52.360
First, I was shocked.
01:05:52.400 --> 01:05:57.480
And then I felt
a little bit of grief.
01:05:57.520 --> 01:05:59.560
I felt like this is
what I've been missing
01:05:59.600 --> 01:06:01.680
for the first four
decades of my life.
01:06:01.720 --> 01:06:02.960
And the lack of effort.
01:06:03.000 --> 01:06:04.280
I think that was
the other thing,
01:06:04.320 --> 01:06:06.880
I'm so used to putting
in effort to translate,
01:06:06.920 --> 01:06:08.600
constantly translate
and strategize.
01:06:08.600 --> 01:06:12.720
And you feel complete.
01:06:12.760 --> 01:06:14.240
I don't know, you feel
you feel complete
01:06:14.240 --> 01:06:15.880
when you have
access to the sound
01:06:15.920 --> 01:06:18.240
as Mother Nature
handed it to you,
01:06:18.280 --> 01:06:22.080
as a genius like
Beethoven handed it to you.
01:06:22.080 --> 01:06:25.680
And this is the closest
that I have experienced,
01:06:25.720 --> 01:06:29.680
to something where
I felt complete.
01:06:33.080 --> 01:06:35.440
-[Gabriela] He lived at a time
when he didn't have access
01:06:35.480 --> 01:06:38.280
to the technology
that we do now.
01:06:38.320 --> 01:06:42.440
He lived at a time when
people didn't look at disability
01:06:42.480 --> 01:06:45.040
with the kind of
eyes they do now.
01:06:45.080 --> 01:06:48.520
And I enjoy a life
that he couldn't.
01:06:52.440 --> 01:06:56.920
And he writes "Forgive me
when you see me draw back
01:06:56.920 --> 01:06:59.880
when I would gladly
mingle with you.
01:06:59.920 --> 01:07:02.000
My misfortune
is doubly painful,
01:07:02.040 --> 01:07:05.560
because it must lead to
my being misunderstood.
01:07:05.600 --> 01:07:08.280
For me, there can be no
interaction to society
01:07:08.320 --> 01:07:12.800
with fine intercourse,
mutual exchange of thought.
01:07:12.800 --> 01:07:15.000
I must live like an exile.
01:07:15.000 --> 01:07:18.040
What a humiliation when
someone stood beside me,
01:07:18.040 --> 01:07:20.640
and heard a flute
in the distance,
01:07:20.640 --> 01:07:22.640
and I heard nothing.
01:07:22.640 --> 01:07:25.640
Such incidents have brought
me to the verge of despair.
01:07:25.680 --> 01:07:27.320
With a little more,
01:07:27.360 --> 01:07:31.560
and I would have had
put an end to my life."
01:07:33.200 --> 01:07:35.320
He was just a man.
01:07:35.360 --> 01:07:39.960
He wasn't the Superman that
people have made him to be.
01:07:39.960 --> 01:07:45.280
I think his genius is the fact
that he did write this music,
01:07:45.320 --> 01:07:47.800
this malady that he speaks of
01:07:47.800 --> 01:07:50.680
influenced his music
in such a way.
01:07:50.720 --> 01:07:54.960
How can we deny the origin
of his genius in the music?
01:07:55.000 --> 01:07:56.280
And he suffered.
01:07:57.920 --> 01:08:02.400
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III plays]
01:08:11.520 --> 01:08:13.480
-[Larry] The 9th symphony,
I've listened to it a lot
01:08:13.520 --> 01:08:16.600
lately for some reason.
01:08:16.640 --> 01:08:19.160
The part that is
the most moving,
01:08:19.200 --> 01:08:21.640
without question,
is the third movement,
01:08:21.680 --> 01:08:23.960
the movement before
the Ode to Joy movement.
01:08:24.000 --> 01:08:28.440
[Beethoven's 9th
movement III continues]
01:08:31.720 --> 01:08:37.720
-[Larry] And though
I'm at least agnostic...
01:08:37.720 --> 01:08:42.120
I call myself
a devout Atheist.
01:08:42.120 --> 01:08:47.720
But I would say the
third movement is a prayer,
01:08:47.760 --> 01:08:49.560
a very good prayer.
01:08:49.600 --> 01:08:52.760
And it's very gentle
and very beautiful.
01:08:52.800 --> 01:08:56.920
[Beethoven's 9th
movement III continues]
01:09:01.080 --> 01:09:04.560
-[Larry] And that
piece of music,
01:09:04.600 --> 01:09:06.680
that third movement is,
01:09:06.720 --> 01:09:10.720
it's like it emits
out of your innards.
01:09:10.720 --> 01:09:11.920
It's like a heartbeat.
01:09:11.960 --> 01:09:13.560
It's very beautiful.
01:09:13.600 --> 01:09:16.600
That's the piece I would
play for my sister Judih.
01:09:16.640 --> 01:09:21.080
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:09:44.000 --> 01:09:46.160
-[Larry] Judih's
my older sister.
01:09:46.200 --> 01:09:48.080
We have a younger
sister, Andrea,
01:09:48.120 --> 01:09:49.480
I'm in the middle.
01:09:49.520 --> 01:09:51.960
Judih was very
special growing up,
01:09:52.000 --> 01:09:53.480
she was really smart.
01:09:53.520 --> 01:09:56.360
So she ended up being friends
with people who were older
01:09:56.400 --> 01:09:59.080
than her, because she
kept skipping grades.
01:09:59.120 --> 01:10:03.720
But because of that she had
access to music that was much
01:10:03.760 --> 01:10:05.280
more sophisticated.
01:10:05.320 --> 01:10:08.200
So she surrounded
us with that,
01:10:08.240 --> 01:10:11.000
and she was the one
that we looked up to.
01:10:11.040 --> 01:10:15.360
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:10:19.440 --> 01:10:21.000
-[Larry] My father
died six years ago,
01:10:21.040 --> 01:10:23.200
and my mother
decided to stay at home.
01:10:23.240 --> 01:10:27.000
She is often very much alone.
01:10:27.040 --> 01:10:28.600
But she wants it that way.
01:10:28.640 --> 01:10:32.200
She wants to be enveloped in
the memories of that place.
01:10:32.240 --> 01:10:33.440
She's very lucid.
01:10:33.480 --> 01:10:35.880
[door creaking]
01:10:38.760 --> 01:10:40.520
-[Iris] Are you bringing
the toilet paper in,
01:10:40.560 --> 01:10:42.040
or are you going to
leave it at the car?
01:10:42.040 --> 01:10:43.720
-[Larry] She ruins the mood
by talking about toilet paper.
01:10:43.760 --> 01:10:47.080
Do you really want to be on
film talking about toilet paper?
01:10:47.080 --> 01:10:50.440
-[Larry] My mother is someone
who is a real character,
01:10:50.480 --> 01:10:51.760
she's from
Brooklyn originally,
01:10:51.800 --> 01:10:53.360
she has still a
bit of that accent.
01:10:53.400 --> 01:10:54.240
-[Iris] You didn't tell me
01:10:54.440 --> 01:10:56.200
he was gonna be
doing all this filming.
01:10:56.240 --> 01:10:57.960
-[Man] That's a
nice shot right there, wait.
01:10:58.000 --> 01:10:59.560
-[Iris] Want me
to cry or laugh?
01:10:59.600 --> 01:11:00.800
-[Man] No, no, no, no.
01:11:00.840 --> 01:11:04.320
-[Larry] Tell my mother
not to talk if you want.
01:11:04.360 --> 01:11:07.120
-[Iris] I can shut up.
01:11:07.160 --> 01:11:09.080
-[Larry] I went early on,
01:11:09.120 --> 01:11:10.880
and I had to tell my
mother what happened.
01:11:10.920 --> 01:11:13.400
She hadn't seen the news.
01:11:13.440 --> 01:11:16.920
And she was crying,
and she was saying
01:11:16.960 --> 01:11:18.560
"I don't know what to hope for".
01:11:18.600 --> 01:11:22.120
Like the idea that
Judih and Gadi died
01:11:22.160 --> 01:11:26.120
in a field together embracing,
they were full of love.
01:11:26.160 --> 01:11:29.120
Maybe that's the
way they should go.
01:11:29.680 --> 01:11:33.280
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:11:33.880 --> 01:11:38.680
-[Iris] Here's Judih
with Larry and Andrea.
01:11:38.720 --> 01:11:42.160
Here's Larry and
Mary getting married.
01:11:42.200 --> 01:11:44.760
And Bill and me.
01:11:44.800 --> 01:11:48.440
And my daughter Judih, the one
wearing black at a wedding.
01:11:48.480 --> 01:11:49.480
[laughing]
01:11:49.640 --> 01:11:54.320
Here's Judih with her
two oldest children.
01:11:55.200 --> 01:11:56.280
-[Woman] I'm terrified.
01:11:56.280 --> 01:11:58.560
I'm terrified for
the Jewish people.
01:11:58.600 --> 01:12:01.360
I'm terrified that
hate is taking over.
01:12:01.400 --> 01:12:04.160
Honestly, like,
I don't even want to cry
01:12:04.200 --> 01:12:06.600
because my dad
dying is my biggest fear.
01:12:06.640 --> 01:12:12.000
But I feel like dying could
be better in this situation.
01:12:12.040 --> 01:12:14.480
I imagine my mom's
little tiny body,
01:12:14.520 --> 01:12:16.840
you know, when
thrown somewhere,
01:12:16.880 --> 01:12:19.040
with somebody torturing her.
01:12:19.040 --> 01:12:21.720
You know, along with
the other 80 people
01:12:21.760 --> 01:12:24.480
that I know and grew
up with, little children.
01:12:24.960 --> 01:12:29.240
-[Larry] My sister was in
Toronto visiting my mother
01:12:29.280 --> 01:12:32.440
for her 95th birthday.
01:12:32.480 --> 01:12:34.920
And Judih pulled me aside
01:12:34.960 --> 01:12:36.760
just before I took
her to the airport,
01:12:36.800 --> 01:12:38.360
so my mother
wouldn't hear,
01:12:38.360 --> 01:12:41.480
and said "there's something
in the air right now,
01:12:41.520 --> 01:12:44.960
a war is going to happen,
a really serious war".
01:12:45.000 --> 01:12:47.960
And she said "the moment
there's whisperings of war
01:12:48.000 --> 01:12:49.360
we're out of there,
01:12:49.400 --> 01:12:51.880
we're going to leave
Israel and come to Canada."
01:12:51.920 --> 01:12:55.360
It's the very first time in
the 40 years she lived there
01:12:55.400 --> 01:12:57.200
that she ever said that.
01:12:57.640 --> 01:13:03.080
[planes whooshing]
01:13:03.120 --> 01:13:11.120
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:13:11.160 --> 01:13:24.040
[helicopters whirring]
01:13:24.040 --> 01:13:35.720
[planes whooshing]
01:13:35.760 --> 01:13:40.080
-[Monika] This is
a miliary celebration.
01:13:40.120 --> 01:13:45.480
It's pretty creepy
to see and hear
01:13:45.520 --> 01:13:48.760
military planes passing so low.
01:13:48.800 --> 01:13:54.040
[planes whooshing]
01:13:54.080 --> 01:13:58.360
-[Monika] They're a very
unreal image in Warsaw.
01:13:58.400 --> 01:14:04.280
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:14:14.120 --> 01:14:15.120
-[Monika] Yeah,
because I don't know
01:14:15.120 --> 01:14:18.320
what's the reason
of this situation,
01:14:18.360 --> 01:14:19.920
it's supposed
to give us like
01:14:19.960 --> 01:14:23.000
the sense of
security or something.
01:14:23.040 --> 01:14:27.240
It doesn't give me this
feeling at all, you know?
01:14:28.560 --> 01:14:34.040
Having a conflict right next
to our border maybe made us,
01:14:34.040 --> 01:14:37.920
you know, be more
aware that it can happen
01:14:37.960 --> 01:14:40.520
any day here as well.
01:14:40.560 --> 01:14:44.680
I think we are far away
from the idea of Humanism.
01:14:44.720 --> 01:14:46.480
Getting farther.
01:14:49.720 --> 01:14:52.560
-[Monika] I'm pretty
pessimistic
01:14:52.600 --> 01:14:54.880
about the world right now.
01:14:56.160 --> 01:14:58.760
-[Rebecca] If we lived up
to what was hatched
01:14:58.800 --> 01:15:00.000
during the Enlightenment,
01:15:00.000 --> 01:15:01.600
it would be a
truly different world.
01:15:02.200 --> 01:15:08.240
[Beethoven's
String Quartet 15 plays]
01:15:08.280 --> 01:15:11.080
We're all in this together.
01:15:11.120 --> 01:15:13.760
We've got to love one another,
01:15:13.800 --> 01:15:16.720
not because we're made
in the image of God,
01:15:16.760 --> 01:15:19.120
but because we're people.
01:15:19.120 --> 01:15:22.920
[Beethoven's
String Quartet 15 continues]
01:15:22.920 --> 01:15:28.520
-[Rebecca] Nobody knows how
important connectedness is,
01:15:28.560 --> 01:15:31.560
better than the
deeply lonely person.
01:15:33.560 --> 01:15:36.240
That was Beethoven.
01:15:36.640 --> 01:15:40.520
[Beethoven's
String Quartet 15 continues]
01:15:40.560 --> 01:15:42.280
-[Rebecca] You can
hear it all in the music.
01:15:43.680 --> 01:15:45.480
What a gift he gave to us.
01:15:45.480 --> 01:15:54.480
[Beethoven's
String Quartet 15 continues]
01:15:56.320 --> 01:16:00.160
-[Larry] It's the night
of the 21st of December.
01:16:00.160 --> 01:16:02.160
It's actually the
22nd of December now,
01:16:02.160 --> 01:16:04.080
I think it's like
three in the morning.
01:16:04.120 --> 01:16:09.960
Today was the shortest day,
and it's the longest night,
01:16:10.000 --> 01:16:11.240
and it is a very long night.
01:16:11.280 --> 01:16:16.680
I was on a phone call
with my sister, Andrea,
01:16:16.720 --> 01:16:21.480
with the
Israeli Intelligence,
01:16:21.520 --> 01:16:26.120
and they told us that they
have evidence now
01:16:26.120 --> 01:16:34.720
that my brother-in-law Gadi
is most certainly deceased.
01:16:34.760 --> 01:16:38.200
And so was Judih,
so is my sister Judih,
01:16:38.240 --> 01:16:42.320
which we have been hoping
that that was not the case.
01:16:42.360 --> 01:16:45.920
But maybe deep inside,
we knew all along
01:16:45.960 --> 01:16:48.640
that she did not
survive October 7th.
01:16:51.160 --> 01:16:54.640
A lot of people were praying,
and we're praying,
01:16:54.680 --> 01:16:57.280
which kind of shows
you what prayers do.
01:16:57.320 --> 01:17:00.320
But we learned that in
the Holocaust as well,
01:17:00.360 --> 01:17:02.080
and other atrocities.
01:17:03.880 --> 01:17:08.480
So I'm ranting a bit,
but I'm very despondent.
01:17:10.360 --> 01:17:12.000
I want to believe in humanity.
01:17:12.000 --> 01:17:14.200
I want to believe in the
things that this film
01:17:14.200 --> 01:17:16.560
we've been doing is about,
01:17:16.600 --> 01:17:19.280
but there's just
so much pain.
01:17:19.320 --> 01:17:21.880
Is it the best of
all possible worlds?
01:17:21.920 --> 01:17:23.240
No, not tonight.
01:17:27.120 --> 01:17:31.480
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III plays]
01:17:50.560 --> 01:17:52.040
-[Woman] Ok.
01:17:52.560 --> 01:17:55.680
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:17:57.080 --> 01:17:58.720
-[Larry] It's great
to see you.
01:17:58.760 --> 01:18:01.400
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:18:02.480 --> 01:18:03.920
-[Woman] Hey.
01:18:04.760 --> 01:18:07.760
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:18:11.680 --> 01:18:13.760
-[Gabriela] Imagine Beethoven
at the end of his life,
01:18:13.800 --> 01:18:16.960
and he's in really dire
circumstances with his health,
01:18:17.000 --> 01:18:20.080
and he's alone,
and he feels rejected,
01:18:20.120 --> 01:18:24.880
and perhaps does
know that he's dying,
01:18:24.920 --> 01:18:28.640
but he was going to celebrate
what he couldn't have, himself.
01:18:28.640 --> 01:18:32.320
And leave this
message for the future.
01:18:32.360 --> 01:18:35.520
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:18:37.360 --> 01:18:39.440
-[Woman] In the beginning
I had kind of
01:18:39.480 --> 01:18:42.560
losing faith in humanity.
01:18:42.840 --> 01:18:46.160
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:18:46.360 --> 01:18:48.640
-[Woman] I hope to
recover from this feeling,
01:18:48.680 --> 01:18:51.000
I hope to regain the faith.
01:18:52.200 --> 01:18:54.640
And the 9th Symphony
of Beethoven
01:18:54.680 --> 01:18:56.560
gives us this message.
01:18:56.960 --> 01:19:01.960
[Beethoven's 9th
Movement III continues]
01:19:10.800 --> 01:19:12.880
-[Larry] Beethoven was
writing for the future,
01:19:12.920 --> 01:19:15.200
and writing for a
better humankind,
01:19:15.240 --> 01:19:18.880
and I find that so moving.
01:19:18.920 --> 01:19:22.160
We are all people,
we all can do good.
01:19:22.200 --> 01:19:24.080
We can all embrace each other.
01:19:24.120 --> 01:19:26.080
That's what I believe in.
01:19:26.120 --> 01:19:28.920
And that's what I...
01:19:30.960 --> 01:19:32.040
And it's what my sister,
01:19:32.040 --> 01:19:34.680
and and people
who are like-minded,
01:19:34.720 --> 01:19:38.880
I want to go
forward with that.
01:19:38.920 --> 01:19:41.280
And I want to impart
those things...
01:19:42.120 --> 01:19:43.680
[with emotion]
To people I love.
01:19:45.520 --> 01:19:54.200
-[Man] This idea of freedom,
idea of friendship, idea of joy.
01:19:54.240 --> 01:19:56.920
We are still thinking about
01:19:56.960 --> 01:20:00.760
how we can change
our world to be perfect.
01:20:01.880 --> 01:20:07.920
-[Rebecca] So let this
incredible emotional beauty,
01:20:07.960 --> 01:20:13.920
birthed in great anguish,
wake people of the Earth up.
01:20:13.960 --> 01:20:17.080
Inspire them, not to
look beyond this life,
01:20:17.080 --> 01:20:19.920
but to look to this life.
01:20:19.960 --> 01:20:22.360
This very short time we have.
01:20:22.400 --> 01:20:26.560
And I think this is what
he wanted to give to us.
01:20:26.600 --> 01:20:29.600
And the depth of his genius.
01:20:32.200 --> 01:20:35.200
-[Keri-Lynn] This is
the miracle of life.
01:20:35.200 --> 01:20:36.760
That good comes out of evil.
01:20:36.800 --> 01:20:42.440
And that's what
Beethoven's symphony's about.
01:20:42.480 --> 01:20:52.520
[Beethoven's 9th
Ode to Joy plays]
01:20:52.520 --> 01:20:57.680
[Beethoven's 9th
Ode to Joy plays]
01:20:57.720 --> 01:21:10.600
[Beethoven's 9th
Ode to Joy plays]
01:21:17.160 --> 01:21:24.200
[quick dramatic music]
01:21:44.680 --> 01:21:50.600
[Brodka's Utrata playing]
01:22:26.000 --> 01:22:29.800
[Beethoven's
Ode to Joy playing]
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 83 minutes
Date: 2024
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: College, Adults
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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