© 2024 KPCW

KPCW
Spencer F. Eccles Broadcast Center
PO Box 1372 | 460 Swede Alley
Park City | UT | 84060
Office: (435) 649-9004 | Studio: (435) 655-8255

Music & Artist Inquiries: music@kpcw.org
News Tips & Press Releases: news@kpcw.org
Volunteer Opportunities
General Inquiries: info@kpcw.org
Listen Like a Local Park City & Heber City Summit & Wasatch counties, Utah
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

'CODA' actor rocks out to music and NPR news

Actor Daniel Durant, appearing on the <em>Kelly Clarkson Show</em>, describes how he enjoyed radio as a child by feeling vibrations from a car's sound system turned up all the way.
screenshot from Kelly Clarkson Show
Actor Daniel Durant, appearing on the Kelly Clarkson Show, describes how he enjoyed radio as a child by feeling vibrations from a car's sound system turned up all the way.

Updated March 18, 2022 at 7:36 PM ET

In the movie CODA, which is up for best picture at this year's Academy Awards, the father of the family, who is deaf, likes to listen to loud hip hop in his car. He bumps up the sound to feel the beats vibrating through his body.

One of the film's costars, Daniel Durant, who plays the brother of the main character, has a similar affinity.

"I'm fully deaf. I can't hear anything at all but I love feeling the vibration through my body," he explained on the Kelly Clarkson Show, while promoting CODA.

Using American Sign Language, he said he learned to listen to music as a child on long car rides traveling for his soccer games. "Sometimes I'd ask my mom, 'Can you turn it up so I can feel the bass?' And my mom was like, 'Yeah,' but we struggled to hear it. So my mom went ahead and bought a new sound system, and I loved it. You could feel the bass. It was so strong. The windows were shaking. It felt so good."

One day, he stayed in the car while his mother went into a store. He cranked up the new sound system and started dancing in his seat. "I loved it. I could feel the car shaking. I was having so much fun." he said. A stranger drove by and rolled down his window to look at him.

"I was just imagining he must be like, 'Wow, you have such a nice system, playing a great song.' And I was like, 'Yeah.' And I started dancing to him and another person pulled up. It was a woman, same thing. I pointed at her and kept dancing."

When his mother came out of the store, he asked her what song it was.

"She started laughing," he recalled. "You're listening to NPR talk radio."

Durant didn't say exactly which program or segment he was jamming to.

"There is a rhythmic aspect to speaking. Our voices are filled with varied inflections and vocalizations," says Jessica Allison Holmes, an assistant professor of musicology at the University of Copenhagen. "With the right speaker system in your car, some booming voice could come through and you could feel it. Sure, you could rock out to the news."

Holmes is writing a book on music and deafness, and says people who are deaf offer a far more reaching conception of music than hearing people do. "Deafness is a diverse ideological, physiological and cultural and linguistic experience," she says. "No two deaf experiences of music are alike."

In her research, she's found that many people who are deaf have developed a very sophisticated conception of sound that is multi-sensory. "Certainly rhythm and vibration are very important, but visual cues are equally important," she says. Case in point: Holmes' uncle, who is profoundly deaf, likes to go to the opera, where he can experience the emotional trajectory on the singers' faces. "But he also says if the music isn't loud enough or percussive enough, he's not interested."

Electronic dance music and death metal are popular among some people who are deaf, she says, pointing to a nonprofit music collective in the U.K. called Deaf Rave, which hosts Def Leppard music festivals in venues with state-of-the-art sound systems and subwoofers to optimize the bass. American deaf culture has a strong tradition of what's known as "song singing," using ASL alongside singers like Eminem or Meghan Thee Stallion at concerts. "They're not seeking to sort of provide a one-to-one translation of the music or the lyrics, " she says. "The signs become their own form of visual spatial music that can oftentimes work independently."

Audiologist Brian Fligor, president of Tobias and Battite Hearing Wellness in Massachusetts, says generally, people who are deaf — whether or not they use hearing aids or cochlear implants — will register lower pitched sounds better than those with higher pitches. "Dance music, rap and hard rock tend to be more interesting, at least to those deaf people I've worked with," he says, adding that some classical music heavy with percussion also could be interesting. He points to composer Richard Wagner, or the theme from the film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Fligor, a member of the American Academy of Audiology, says you need very little or even no hearing ability to enjoy music, as long as your vestibular system is functioning. That's the sensory system, "specifically the part of the inner ear that tells where our head is in space, and if we're moving or turning," he says. It's pressure awareness or equilibrium. That system can be stimulated by things like beats and low frequency sounds, a phenomenon Fligor says is called the "rock and roll effect."

"Even if you don't really hear the music, your vestibular system is being stimulated by very intense sounds," he says. "And it gives you a bit of an endorphin rush, a bit of a high."

In that sense, he says, music can be a bridge to unite deaf and hearing cultures.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

@kellyclarksonshow ready to get the club pumping…with NPR 😆 #coda #codafilm #npr #danieldurant #music #bass #asl ♬ original sound - Kelly Clarkson Show

As an arts correspondent based at NPR West, Mandalit del Barco reports and produces stories about film, television, music, visual arts, dance and other topics. Over the years, she has also covered everything from street gangs to Hollywood, police and prisons, marijuana, immigration, race relations, natural disasters, Latino arts and urban street culture (including hip hop dance, music, and art). Every year, she covers the Oscars and the Grammy awards for NPR, as well as the Sundance Film Festival and other events. Her news reports, feature stories and photos, filed from Los Angeles and abroad, can be heard on All Things Considered, Morning Edition, Weekend Edition, Alt.latino, and npr.org.