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Watch as brain damaged violinist performs with friend - using just her thoughts

A brain damaged violinist has performed in concert with her best friend 29 years after they last played together after her mind was wired up to a computer to allow her to play notes using only her thoughts.

Rosemary Johnson, 51, was a leading member of the Welsh National Opera Orchestra but her promising career as a soloist was cut short when she was involved in a devastating car accident in 1988 while travelling to a concert.

Miss Johnson was left in a coma for seven months and suffered a debilitating head injury which robbed her of speech and movement, confining her to a wheelchair and leaving her unable to lift, let alone play, her beloved violin.

Alison Balfour 
Alison Balfour

But in a groundbreaking project led by Plymouth University and the Royal Hospital for Neuro-disability in London, her brain was linked to a computer using Brain Computer Music Interfacing software, allowing her to compose and play music again.

This month, for the first time she was able to perform with her best friend Alison Balfour, with whom she last played when they were both violinists in the Welsh National Opera Orchestra in the 1980s.

Rosemary Johnson, aged 19, before the accident  - Credit:  Paul Grover
Rosemary Johnson, aged 19, before the accident Credit: Paul Grover

“The idea with playing with Rosie again after so many years was something I never imagined would be possible,” said Mrs Balfour, who now plays with the Bath Philharmonia.

“I felt honoured to be doing this with her, to be her sound, her music, her violin and to have her next to me again was wonderful, really wonderful.

“Music has an extraordinary power to move people. It can give them a voice, it can give them a chance to express themselves. It can be a release of emotion and a connection with other people."

Violinist Rosemary Johnson controlling the music with her brain - Credit: Plymouth University 
Violinist Rosemary Johnson controlling the music with her brain Credit: Plymouth University

“I can remember the first day Rosie came in. She had the kind of musical look about her that gave us confidence in what she was doing.  I am a rank and file but she was a solo player, she was a numbered position.

“She had everything ahead of her. After the accident I remember the orchestra felt broken. That lasted a long while.”

To use the computer interface, Miss Johnson focusses on different coloured lights on a computer screen which allow her to select notes and phrases to be played and or alter a composition as it is performed by live musicians. The intensity of her mental focus can even change the volume and speed of the piece.

The friends played a piece of music composed together at a venue in central London on July 20th.

The brain cap reads thoughts and translates them into music  - Credit: Plymouth University 
The brain cap reads thoughts and translates them into music Credit: Plymouth University

Professor Eduardo Miranda, of the University of Plymouth, who leads the project said: “Music is very important as a language to express things that perhaps we cannot say with words. I am passionate about finding new vocabularies, new sounds, new ways to make music.

“I had this thought, just imagine if it would be possible to read information from your brain to compose music. That somebody can no longer move their body can no longer play a musical instrument, imagine if you could do something to reconnect this person with music.

“When I met Rosie there was something that clicked, I knew that she was a musician. I knew that she would understand.”

Professor Eduardo Miranda - Credit: University of Plymouth
Professor Eduardo Miranda Credit: University of Plymouth

Speaking of the moment when Miss Johnson was first able to control the interface, Prof Miranda added: “That moment was magical. I cannot describe it. It was a dream I had and a dream that seemed impossible.

“ The system is reading Rosie’s brainwaves. It took twenty years. It would not have been achieved if I had not have the chance to work with Rosie. We were all in tears. We could feel the joy coming from her at being able to make music.”

This year Miss Johnson will receive an MBE for services to music. The team is hoping that the technology will eventually provide many more patients with the ability to express their feelings even when they are unable to speak or move, through music.

A film of the concert has been created as part of Volvo’s Human Made Stories Series in collaboration with Sky Atlantic.