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Dancer performs ‘virus melody’ in empty Budapest square

Dressed in black and wearing a facemask, the dancer leaps and pirouttes across Budapest’s deserted central Heroes Square — to the strains of a melody that mirrors the molecular structure of the coronavirus. To mark World Dance Day, Zsolt Vencel...
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Dressed in black and wearing a facemask, the dancer leaps and pirouttes across Budapest’s deserted central Heroes Square — to the strains of a melody that mirrors the molecular structure of the coronavirus.

To mark World Dance Day, Zsolt Vencel Kovacs was performing his interpretation of part of the composition created this month by Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientists. “For me this music brings melancholy, its monotony gives me tension and as the music progresses it becomes more rhythmical and aggressive and at the end it calms down. It inspired me,” the 21-year-old said.

The MIT team used a computer to transform a model of the structure of SARS-CoV-2 – as the virus that causes COVID-19 is known — into interwoven melodies, assigning a different note to each of the protein’s amino acids. A dancer with the Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet, Kovacs had to return home when Europe’s borders went into lockdown, catching the last flight back to Budapest for Hungarian citizens.

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“The aim is to make squares and sites that have emptied because of the coronavirus, popular. So that when this epidemic is over, these squares could be filled with people again.” The full composition runs for nearly 1 hour and 50 minutes. Reuters

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