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Bovine Audience Finds Cellist s Recitals Moo-Ving
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Bovine Audience Finds Cellist s Recitals Moo-Ving
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Bovine Audience Finds Cellist s Recitals Moo-Ving
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When the Cellos Play, the Cows Come Home
A collaboration between a cattle farmer and a Danish music training program brings regular recitals to pampered livestock.
The Students of the Scandinavian Cello School performing for Mogens and Louise Haugaard’s cows on April 23.Credit.Carsten Snejbjerg for The New York Times
By Lisa Abend
LUND, Denmark During a recent performance of Tchaikovsky’s “Pezzo Capriccioso,” a handful of audience members leaned forward attentively, their eyes bright, a few encouraging snuffles escaping from the otherwise hushed parterre. Though relative newcomers to classical music, they seemed closely attuned to the eight cellists onstage, raising their heads abruptly as the piece’s languid strains gave way to rapid-fire bow strokes.
Copyright © 2021 Albuquerque Journal
Greg McKinnis, a funeral director at Rivera Family Funerals, never thought he’d have to wear a respirator to work. Then came the COVID-19 pandemic.
Now, when McKinnis arrives to transport a recently deceased person to the mortuary, he puts on a full body suit: shoe covers, two layers of gloves and a suit that covers his entire head, mirroring the body suits worn by hospital staff in COVID-19 wards.
“The temperature goes from 70 degrees to 100 degrees, because you had that suit on,” McKinnis said. “It’s a little overwhelming.”
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For McKinnis and other funeral directors, the pandemic has turned much of their industry on its head and has led to more bodies, slower turnaround on vital records and fewer people at each funeral.