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A one-man musical phenomenon

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    (Music)
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    (Singing) I was walking down the line,
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    trying to find some peace of mind.
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    Then I saw you.
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    You were takin' it slow
    and walkin' it one step at a time.
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    I said, "Listen, stranger,
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    I'm feeling low now.
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    I don't know which way to go."
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    I said, "If you're lost now,
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    maybe I could help you along
    and sing you a song,
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    and move you on and on and on."
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    Singing down the line.
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    Where shall we go? Where shall we go?
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    She said, "I'm looking
    for a kind of shelter.
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    A place for me to call my own.
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    I've been walking all night long,
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    but I don't know where to call my home."
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    "The only way to find that place
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    is close to where my heart is.
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    I know I'm gonna get there,
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    but I've got to keep on
    walking down the line."
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    Down the line.
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    Down the line.
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    Thank you so much.
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    (Applause)
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    How's everybody feeling today?
    You feeling good?
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    (Cheers)
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    Fantastic. Would everybody mind
    singing with me for just one second?
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    Could you sing something?
    Could you sing a D?
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    Sing "Ooh."
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    (Audience hums)
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    Oh -- louder for me, louder for me.
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    (Singing) Oh.
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    Now, please, if you could sing,
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    "Oh oh oh."
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    Audience: Oh oh oh.
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    Jacob Collier: Whoa oh oh.
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    Audience: Whoa oh oh.
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    JC: Sing, "Whoa oh."
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    Audience: Whoa oh.
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    JC: Oh oh oh.
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    Audience: Oh oh oh.
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    JC: Sing, "Whoa oh oh."
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    Audience: Whoa oh oh.
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    JC: Sing, "Whoa oh oh."
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    Audience: Whoa oh oh.
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    JC: Whoa oh oh.
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    Audience: Whoa oh oh.
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    JC: Sing, "Whoa oh oh."
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    Audience: Whoa oh oh.
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    Thank you so much.
    That's beautiful. Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    So do you feel that motion?
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    Do you feel yourself
    as part of that motion,
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    things moving underneath the surface?
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    So the language of musical harmony
    is an absolutely extraordinary one.
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    It's a way of navigating
    one's emotional frameworks,
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    but without the need
    to put things into words,
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    and I think that,
    as with many other languages,
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    it doesn't matter how much
    you know about a language.
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    It doesn't matter
    how many words you can say,
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    how many phrases you know.
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    What matters is the emotional choices
    you make with this language.
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    So I encourage us to embrace
    this idea as a community,
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    which is the thing which in time
    may grow us towards
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    as opposed to away from our own humanity.
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    Thank you so much.
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    (Applause)
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    (Music)
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    (Singing) Take me
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    anywhere you want to go.
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    You know that my love is strong.
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    In my hideaway.
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    Softly,
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    like the calm that follows storms,
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    Find what I've been
    searching for all along.
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    In my hideaway.
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    Even when I close my eyes,
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    darling, if you've gone astray,
    I'm on my way to my hideaway.
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    Touch me
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    like I've never loved before,
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    in the place that I adore,
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    in my hideaway.
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    I know
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    whichever way the wind may blow,
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    there will be a place for me to go
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    in my hideaway.
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    My hideaway.
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    Sticks and stones
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    I won't hide from you no more.
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    And in time
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    I find what I've been searching for.
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    Heard your voice
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    calling out to me.
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    I'm on my way
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    to where I can be free.
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    And if she won't wait for me,
    do it right, don't look back,
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    keep my heart on the future.
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    On the soles of my shoes
    all the places I've been
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    that I've known since I knew her.
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    'Cause it's you, don't you know
    that you're making me guess
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    that you're the one for me.
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    That it's you that I guess
    that I wanted to know all along.
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    Girl, it's you that I want,
    that makes me complete,
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    cause you're the one for me.
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    It's thanks to you that I guess
    that I want you to know I belong.
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    One, two, three, four, five.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you so much. Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    Thanks so much. Thank you guys.
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    Kelly Stoetzel: OK, Jacob. Wow.
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    OK, we have some questions.
    JC: OK.
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    KS: That was spectacular.
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    JC: Thank you, Kelly. Thank you.
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    KS: Those
    visualizations we just saw,
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    those were happening in real time, yeah?
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    JC: Yeah, so everything visual
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    takes cues from things which are audial,
    or something, if that's a word,
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    and so everything is real time.
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    I cue the loops, I play the instruments
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    and then the tree, for example,
    that you saw grow,
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    grows in such a way
    that it takes low long notes
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    and grows thick long branches,
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    and it takes high, quiet notes, whatever,
    and then it grows thin, small branches.
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    And then my singing voice
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    sort of blows wind against the tree.
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    KS: So you're 22 years old.
    JC: Yes, indeed.
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    Moderator: You played
    all of that by yourself.
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    How did you get started
    and how did this all evolve?
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    JC: I have this magical room in my house
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    in North London,
    which is, like, over there.
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    (Cheers)
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    Thank you. Represent North London.
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    And this room --
    I mean, this is my family home.
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    I grew up in this room
    filled with musical instruments,
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    but most importantly, I had a family
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    who encouraged me
    to invest in my own imagination,
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    and so things I created, things I built
    were good things to be building
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    just because I was making them,
    and I think that's such an important idea.
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    But this room was
    my paradise, essentially,
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    and when I came to tour my album,
    which is called "In My Room,"
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    I thought I'd try and tour
    the room on the road,
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    and that's quite a strange idea,
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    but it's something that I've been
    working on for a couple of years,
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    and it's quite exciting
    to be inside the circle.
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    KS: So this is really
    like the setup in your room, here.
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    JC: It kind of is.
    It's similar to the room
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    in the sense that I can
    generate things on the spot
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    and I can be spontaneous,
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    which is what I think both music
    and all of the best ideas are all about.
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    KS: So you won two Grammys
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    for a record that you made
    in your room by yourself.
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    And how is that even possible?
    We couldn't have done that,
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    that couldn't have happened
    five years ago even.
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    JC: It's a brand new world.
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    The power is now
    in the hands of the creator,
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    as I'm sure you guys would agree,
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    as opposed to the big
    record company executive
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    or the big man or something like that.
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    It's somebody with a good idea.
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    Here I am at TED saying this
    to you guys who know this already,
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    but it's somebody with a good idea
    who can sow that seed.
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    That's the person who carries
    the torch into the world.
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    And yeah, I made this album
    completely on my own
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    and I didn't wait for somebody to say,
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    "Hey Jacob, you should
    make an album on your own."
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    I just went ahead and made it
    and I didn't mind what people thought,
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    and two Grammys is a massive bonus.
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    (Applause)
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    KS: Thank you so much, Jacob.
    JC: Thanks, Kelly. Thanks so much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
A one-man musical phenomenon
Speaker:
Jacob Collier
Description:

Jacob Collier is a one-man band and force of nature. In a dynamic, colorful performance, he recreates the magical room at his home in London where he produces music, performing three songs in which he sings every part and plays every instrument -- accompanied by kaleidoscopic visuals that take cues from the music and grow in real time.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:14

English subtitles

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