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A one-man orchestra of the imagination

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    Well, there's lots to talk about,
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    but I think I'm just going to play to start off.
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    (Music)
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    ♫ When I wake up ♫
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    ♫ in the morning ♫
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    ♫ I pour the coffee ♫
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    ♫ I read the paper ♫
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    ♫ And then I slowly ♫
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    ♫ and so softly ♫
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    ♫ do the dishes ♫
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    ♫ So feed the fishes ♫
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    ♫ You sing me happy birthday ♫
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    ♫ Like it's gonna be ♫
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    ♫ your last day ♫
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    ♫ here on Earth ♫
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    (Applause)
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    All right.
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    So, I wanted to do something special today.
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    I want to debut a new song that I've been working on
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    in the last five or six months.
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    And there's few things more thrilling
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    than playing a song
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    for the first time in front of an audience,
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    especially when it's half-finished.
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    (Laughter)
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    I'm kind of hoping some conversations here
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    might help me finish it.
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    Because it gets into all sorts
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    of crazy realms.
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    And so this is basically a song
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    about loops,
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    but not the kind of loops that I make up here.
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    They're feedback loops.
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    And in the audio world
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    that's when the microphone gets too close
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    to its sound source,
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    and then it gets in this self-destructive loop
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    that creates a very unpleasant sound.
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    And I'm going to demonstrate for you.
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    (Laughter)
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    I'm not going to hurt you. Don't worry.
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    ♫ This is a loop, feedback loop ♫
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    ♫ This is a loop, feedback loop ♫
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    ♫ This is a loop, feedback loop ♫
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    ♫ This is a loop, feedback loop ♫
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    ♫ This is a loop, feedback loop ♫
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    ♫ This is a loop, feedback loop ♫
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    ♫ This is a -- (Feedback)
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    All right. I don't know if that was necessary to demonstrate --
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    (Laughter)
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    -- but my point is it's the sound of self-destruction.
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    And I've been thinking about
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    how that applies across a whole spectrum of realms,
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    from, say, the ecological, okay.
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    There seems to be a rule in nature
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    that if you get too close to where you came from,
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    it gets ugly.
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    So like, you can't feed cows their own brains
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    or you get mad cow disease,
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    and inbreeding and incest
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    and, let's see,
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    what's the other one?
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    Biological -- there's autoimmune diseases,
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    where the body attacks itself
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    a little too overzealously
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    and destroys the host,
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    or the person.
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    And then -- okay, this is where we get to the song --
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    kind of bridges the gap to the emotional.
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    Because although I've used scientific terms
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    in songs,
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    it's very difficult sometimes to make them lyrical.
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    And there's some things
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    you just don't need to have in songs.
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    So I'm trying to bridge this gap
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    between this idea and this melody.
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    And so, I don't know if you've ever had this,
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    but when I close my eyes sometimes
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    and try to sleep,
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    I can't stop thinking about my own eyes.
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    And it's like your eyes
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    start straining to see themselves.
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    That's what it feels like to me.
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    It's not pleasant.
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    I'm sorry if I put that idea in your head.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's impossible, of course, for your eyes to see themselves,
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    but they seem to be trying.
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    So that's getting a little more closer to a personal experience.
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    Or ears being able to hear themselves --
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    it's just impossible.
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    That's the thing.
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    So, I've been working on this song
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    that mentions these things
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    and then also imagines
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    a person who's been so successful
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    at defending themselves from heartbreak
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    that they're left to do the deed themselves,
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    if that's possible.
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    And that's what the song is asking.
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    All right.
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    It doesn't have a name yet.
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    (Music)
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    ♫ Go ahead and congratulate yourself ♫
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    ♫ Give yourself a hand, the hand is your hand ♫
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    ♫ And the eye that eyes itself is your eye ♫
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    ♫ And the ear that hears itself is near ♫
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    ♫ 'Cause it's your ear, oh oh ♫
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    ♫ You've done the impossible now ♫
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    ♫ Took yourself apart ♫
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    ♫ You made yourself invulnerable ♫
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    ♫ No one can break your heart ♫
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    ♫ So you wear it out ♫
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    ♫ And you wring it out ♫
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    ♫ And you wear it out ♫
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    ♫ And you break it yourself ♫
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    ♫ Breaking your own, break it yourself ♫
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    ♫ Breaking your own, break it yourself ♫
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    ♫ Breaking your own ♫
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    (Applause)
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    Thanks.
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    (Applause)
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    All right.
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    It's kind of cool. Songwriters can sort of get away with murder.
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    You can throw out crazy theories
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    and not have to back it up with data
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    or graphs or research.
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    But, you know, I think reckless curiosity
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    would be what the world needs now,
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    just a little bit.
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    (Applause)
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    I'm going to finish up with a song of mine
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    called "Weather Systems."
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    (Music)
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    ♫ Quiet ♫
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    ♫ Quiet down, she said ♫
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    ♫ Speak into the back of his head ♫
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    ♫ On the edge of the bed, I can see your blood flow ♫
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    ♫ I can see your ♫
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    ♫ cells grow ♫
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    ♫ Hold still awhile ♫
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    ♫ Don't spill the wine ♫
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    ♫ I can see it all from here ♫
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    ♫ I can see ♫
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    ♫ oh, I ♫
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    ♫ I can see ♫
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    ♫ weather systems ♫
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    ♫ of the world ♫
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    ♫ Weather systems ♫
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    ♫ of the world ♫
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    ♫ Some things you say ♫
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    ♫ are not for sale ♫
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    ♫ I would hold it where ♫
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    ♫ our free agents of some substance are ♫
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    ♫ scared ♫
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    ♫ Hold still a while ♫
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    ♫ Don't spill the wine ♫
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    ♫ I can see it all from here ♫
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    ♫ I can see ♫
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    ♫ oh, I ♫
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    ♫ I can see ♫
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    ♫ weather systems of the world ♫
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    ♫ Weather systems ♫
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    ♫ of the world ♫
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    Thanks.
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    (Applause)
Title:
A one-man orchestra of the imagination
Speaker:
Andrew Bird
Description:

Musical innovator Andrew Bird winds together his trademark violin technique with xylophone, vocals and sophisticated electronic looping. Add in his uncanny ability to whistle anything, and he becomes a riveting one-man orchestra.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
18:59
TED edited English subtitles for A one-man orchestra of the imagination
TED added a translation

English subtitles

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