People all over the world are impressed by the cello melody reverberating at a COVID-19 vaccination station.
According to foreign media such as CBS in the US on the 14th local time, a man who had been vaccinated at the Berkshire inoculation center in Massachusetts suddenly pulled out a cello and started improvising.
Familiar tunes such as Bach’s Unaccompanied Cello Suite No. 1 and Schubert’s Ave Maria were played, and the hall became quiet for an instant. Citizens who visited the inoculation center sat in chairs spaced apart from the cello player to enjoy the performance. Some people shed tears as if they were overwhelmed with emotions.
It was Yo-Yo Ma, a world-renowned cellist who gave the surprise performance. Yo-Yo Ma, who visited the vaccination site to receive the second vaccination, organized an improvisation concert.
After receiving the injection, Yo-Yo Ma is known to have asked the person in charge of the field, “Would it be okay to play the cello during the waiting 15 minutes?”
Yo-Yo Ma has held live concerts several times through social media since the Corona 19 crisis, and released the album “Songs of Stable and Hope,” which has been devoted to the hearts of tired people. In August of last year, with pianist Emanuel Ax, we visited public transport drivers, firefighters, and nursing care workers to hold a concert.
“Many people watched the performance with tears,” said Jonah Sykes, director of the Berkshire Inoculation Center.
This is’News Pick’.
(Source =’Guardian News’ YouTube,’Berkshire Community College’ Facebook)