FILE PHOTO: Conductor Mate Hamori conducts the Danubia Orchestra during a rehearsal in Budapest, Hungary, February 5, 2020. REUTERS/Bernadett SzaboBUDAPEST: Zsuzsanna Foldi has been deaf all her life. Still, with her hands placed on the double bass, sitting among musicians in Budapest's Danubia orchestra, she can enjoy and literally feel Beethoven's famous Fifth Symphony.Advertisement"My father also had a double bass ... and I did not have a hearing aid.
Now 67, she is part of a group of people, including children, all of them hard of hearing, that has been able to"hear" through touch Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, which has gone down in music history as the Symphony of Fate. "So the idea was to somehow lure those who are the most capable of sympathising with Beethoven and his own suffering into the world of music," Hamori said.
Its famous opening motif is often referred to as 'fate knocking at the door' - perhaps the hearing loss that he feared would afflict him for the rest of his life.
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