When James was a teenager, he loved enjoying tracks time and again. I Am the Walrus, by theBeatles Autobahn, by Kraftwerk.
“He hears emotion in music. I know that for a fact,” James’s daddy the Guardian reporter John Harris informs Helen Pidd.
After James’s autism medical prognosis, John found that songs was a terrific means for them to hyperlink, which he discovers in his brand-new publication, Maybe I’m Amazed: A Story of Love and Connection in Ten Songs.
Helen speaks with John concerning what he’s discovered concerning the means autistic people expertise songs, and the difficulties and stereotypes autistic people nonetheless take care of. She likewise goes to the songs course, Sound Lab, the place James performs instruments with numerous different autistic and learning-disabled youths.
In the podcast, John opinions taking James to see Kraftwerk heading at Bluedot occasion.
“Ginny, my partner, put her hand on James’s chest, and his heart was beating so fast and kind of flapping his hands, getting really, really excited. And then when they played Autobahn, which I think was about two-thirds of the way through, with these visuals of an animated VW Beetle driving down a German road, he was having this sort of mystical experience. But we all were. It was amazing, absolutely amazing.”
“And I remember driving back through the Cheshire countryside, thinking that’s the best gig I’ll ever see.”
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