The young man sometimes closes his eyes as he plays, as if lost in the music. If his audience closed their eyes, too, they would never know the violinist standing before them has no right hand, only a stunted appendage with tiny stubs instead of fingers. Which is fitting, because Adrian Anantawan prefers to be judged for what people hear, not what they see.
At 28, Anantawan is one of the world’s most accomplished young violinists. He has performed at the White House, at the Vancouver Winter Olympics, for Pope John Paul II, for Christopher Reeve and most recently for the Dalai Lama during an event at MIT. Anantawan played a piece by Bach, and when he finished, the Tibetan Buddhist leader approached him.
“He put my hands together, and put his hands around mine, and our foreheads touched for six or seven seconds,” Anantawan said. “And I’m just thinking to myself, ‘My goodness, where has this instrument and music taken me?’ I feel tremendously blessed to have had experiences like that.”
Anantawan’s disability has been with him since birth. Doctors think the umbilical cord wrapped around his hand in the womb, cutting off the blood supply and keeping it from growing properly. To compensate, he uses a simple prosthesis called a spatula, which grips the violin bow.
In recent years, Anantawan has devoted his career to using adaptive technology — from prosthetic devices like his own to sophisticated computer software — to aid aspiring young musicians in overcoming a wide range of disabilities. By helping them make music, he believes this technology can help “reveal the inner humanity” of disabled children who struggle to express themselves through other means.
“Accessibility is not an act of charity,” Adrian told an audience last summer during a TEDx talk in suburban Boston, where he is now an orchestra conductor at the Conservatory Lab Charter School. “It’s one of lifting the ceiling of potential development so that all children can explore this world, but also possibly create new ones.”
Mind-controlled prosthetic limbs A ‘sonic fingerprint’
Born of Thai-Chinese ethnicity, Anantawan grew up in Toronto. With only one hand, many childhood milestones — learning to tie shoes, sharpen a pencil in class, ride a bike — were difficult for him. Classmates made him feel different. “Growing up without an arm — it seems trivial now, but when you’re in grade one or two, kids can exclude you on many different levels,” he said during an interview last fall at the annual PopTech conference in this picturesque Maine seaside town.
By the time he was 9, his parents decided he should learn a musical instrument. The recorder was out, because it’s difficult to adapt for two hands. The trumpet was too loud, and so were the drums. Little Adrian didn’t have much of a singing voice. So his mother decided on the violin. His parents took the instrument to a rehabilitation center, where they adapt prosthetics to meet the needs of disabled children. A few months later, engineers there produced a customized device out of plaster, aluminum and Velcro straps. Eighteen years later, he’s still wearing the same one.
“Little did my parents know that they had invited a dying cat into their home for the first six months in the form of ‘Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star,’ ” said Anantawan in the TEDx talk, squeaking out the melody on his violin. For a boy with one hand, music became a great equalizer. Suddenly, he could do something the same way as his classmates.
“I had this adaptation. It did look different. But what came out, in terms of the sound from the instrument, was exactly the same as theirs. And we were all trying to make music together,” Anantawan said. “Music was my way of sharing my personality with the world. I was very shy. I didn’t talk very much. And the instrument, and playing music, helped me come out of my shell.”
Adrian learned quickly. In some ways, he was easy to teach, because instructors didn’t have to worry about his right-hand technique — just his left hand and fingers, which press down on the strings of the violin to produce different notes, pitch, tone and so on.
Anantawan’s educational pedigree is impressive. He graduated from Philadelphia’s prestigious Curtis Institute of Music and earned a master’s degree from Yale. During two summers he studied under his boyhood idol, renowned violinist Itzhak Perlman, at his residency program in Shelter Island, New York.
For Anantawan, the key to playing music is merging technique with personal expression to produce something genuine and unique. “You’re thinking, ‘What do I want to express?’ and then your body finds a way to do it. That happens with everyone,” he said. “But for me, it’s more explicit. I’ve had to really think, because there’s no manual to (learn to) play with one hand.”
As a student and a professional, Adrian has performed as a soloist with orchestras throughout his native Canada, at New York’s Carnegie Hall and with violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter on a European tour.
He, and others, believe his disability produces a unique sound. Because Adrian’s right arm is shorter than that of most people, he draws the bow of his violin across the strings at unusual angles — not consistently perpendicular to the strings, as most violinists do.
“With the violin, the way that you’re built physically influences to a very high degree how you sound. I’m not able to use my entire bow, for instance,” Anantawan said. “So therefore I put more pressure on my bow to put more weight onto the string and produce more sound. “It gives me a bit of a sonic fingerprint.”
But Anantawan’s lack of a right hand hasn’t limited his ability to play at a world-class level.
“There’s no music he can’t play, as far as I can tell,” said Professor Lee Bartel, associate dean at the University of Toronto, who is himself a violinist. “There are no limitations with this disability. He has fully adapted it.”
Bartel has heard Anantawan play a variety of repertoire in different contexts and scoffs at any notion that he’s gained recognition as a musician because people feel sorry for him or see him as a novelty. “There’s no doubt he is exceptionally talented,” he said. “He is a star performer.”
Giving back
With his place in the classical music world secure, Anantawan now wants to focus on helping others like him.
Anantawan says he’s happiest playing music or working with children, who seem to relate to his boyish demeanor. He was inspired in part by a visit years ago to Toronto’s Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital, which built his prosthetic. There Anantawan was introduced to a device, called a Virtual Music Instrument, that translates movement into sound.
Like a motion-controlled video gaming system, the Virtual Music Instrument employs a camera that is mounted on a computer screen and aimed at someone, capturing their gestures. The Virtual Music Instrument software is designed to play prerecorded musical samples when the person waves a hand or tilts their head, activating symbols on the screen.
Intrigued, Anantawan applied for a grant from Yale and gathered a team of doctors, musicians, music therapists and educators to explore the device’s potential. He began working with a young musician, Eric Wan, who was forced to give up the violin after a neurological disorder paralyzed him from the neck down. The project concluded with Wan using the Virtual Music Instrument, guided by movements of his head, to play Pachelbel’s “Canon in D” during a 2011 concert with the Montreal Chamber Orchestra.
“I had been playing the violin for about eight years before I got paralyzed,” said Wan in a YouTube video about the performance. “I really didn’t think I was able to play an instrument again. It’s an incredible feeling.”
Anantawan has been back to Holland Bloorview several times to give concerts and talk to the young patients. As an icebreaker, he always passes his prosthesis around the room so the kids can handle it up close.
“There’s a silence that falls upon the room as the kids watch him play,” said Tom Chau, vice president for research at Holland Bloorview, and who developed the Virtual Music Instrument. “He’s a great role model for our clientele. They can see, down the road, the possibilities (that exist for them).”
It’s not just children who have been inspired by Anantawan. He was once approached by an Iraq war veteran who had lost an arm. After seeing Anantawan play in a video online, the man made a crude prosthetic device out of cardboard and took up the violin.
“In most of these stories, it’s never about the technique or technology that is important, but the desire to live life authentically and creatively. We often forget even ‘traditional’ musical instruments are technological adaptations in their own right — they are tools to manipulate sound in a way that we couldn’t do with our bodies alone,” said Anantawan, who earned a second master’s degree last year, this time from Harvard’s Graduate School of Education.
“To say that your example has changed some life along the way for the better — I’m extremely humbled to be a part of that.”
Today, Anantawan combines classroom teaching with the drier but no less important task of developing arts curricula for kids with special needs — not just physical disabilities, but cerebral palsy, Down syndrome and other conditions. He hopes someday to implement educational practices, working with devices such as the Virtual Music Instrument, that can be adopted by other schools around the globe.
“It’s a lot easier to start from the bottom up than the top down,” he said. “You have to understand where these kids are coming from, and the nature of their disability. I was extremely lucky to find the right instrument and adaptation and the right medium. But in public education, you don’t want luck to be a factor.”
Anantawan said he’s happiest playing music or working with children, who seem to relate to his boyish look and soft-spoken demeanor. It gives him profound satisfaction to help open doors for kids, to help them hear their own voice.
“The reward (for me) comes on many levels, but perhaps the most rewarding comes in the form of those few seconds that a child is creating something musically unique, a voice that demands our attention,” he said.
“In terms of stories, I’m sure that at some point the children I’ve worked with will have their own. But I’ve always found that they have touched my life in a far deeper way than anything that I’ve given them.”
Originally published by Brandon Griggs, CNN.