Hrishikesh Hirway What you discover when you really listen TED

I’ve been in love
with music my whole life,

both as a musician and as a listener.

But as a listener,

sometimes songs feel
a little like houses to me,

houses that you can
only see from the street.

You can stop and admire them
from the outside.

You can say, “Wow, look,
the architecture is amazing.

You might be able to get a little peek
inside through one of the windows,

but it’s this thing of beauty that you
have to appreciate from a distance

because it’s not yours.

And as a musician, when you put
a song out into the world,

it can sometimes feel
like you’re trapped in the backyard

of this house that you built.

There might be people looking at it,

but you never get the chance
to show them anything inside.

Inside a song, there are all these parts
that get imagined and written and recorded

that are so full of thought and beauty,

but only the people who’ve made the song

ever get to hear
those pieces on their own.

All those pieces get smushed together
in the final version that comes out.

Whenever I put out a song,
I was always a little sad

that no one else was going to get to hear
the things that I had heard

when I was making it.

Let me show you what I mean.
Here’s a clip from a song of mine.

(Guitar plays a soft accompaniment)

(Cello plays a flowing melody)

OK. What’s your experience
when you listen to that?

You might like it, maybe,
or you might hate it,

or you might say, “I don’t know, dude,

it’s 20 seconds of a song,
what do you want from me?”

Which is fair.

What I hear is impossible
to expect anyone else to hear.

It’s not just the cello part
and the guitar part and the drum beat.

It’s also all the things
that I lived through

in order for that music to exist.

So in 2014, I started a show

to try and solve this distance
between the creator and the audience.

I interviewed musicians
about one of their songs

and then combined that
with the different layers of music

that make up that song.

I thought this way
an artist could bring a listener in

and give them a guided tour
of this house they made.

They could point to the foundation

and say, “This is how
the song got started.”

And then as more and more
layers get built on top,

eventually the full song gets revealed.

The show is called “Song Exploder.”

It’s a pod –

(Applause)

“Song Exploder” is a podcast,

and it’s also a TV show
that I adapted for Netflix.

And over the years, I’ve gotten to talk

to some of the biggest musicians
in the world about their work.

People like Fleetwood Mac and U2,
Lin-Manuel Miranda, Alicia Keys,

Billie Eilish, The Roots and Yo-Yo Ma,
and over 200 others.

At first, I was really looking
at those isolated pieces of music

to do the work of revealing
the inside of their respective houses.

But as I was having conversations
with them about their songs,

something happened.

I realized that there were rooms

to be discovered
in the conversations themselves,

doors that could be opened.

And I started to wonder:

Could I try listening to people

the way that I was trying
to listen to music?

Because when someone tells you something,
just like with a song,

there can be all these layers within it.

There can be all this context
that you’re missing

as the person out on the street,
outside of the house.

So to get inside,
I had to listen for those moments,

those clues where there was
more to be discovered,

where there was
something below the surface

of what was first presented to me.

So I borrowed from
my music-listening brain,

and now when I’m in a conversation,
this is what I try to do.

Be open to new ideas.

Stop multitasking.

Let the other person know
that you’re engaged,

and do it without taking your focus away
from them and turning it onto you.

Because of making “Song Exploder,”

I now listen to a much wider
range of music than I used to.

When I was younger,

I used to actually pride myself
on my music snobbery.

But nowadays, it just feels
like I’m potentially cutting myself off

from hearing some great ideas.

And I think that’s a prerequisite
when it comes to listening to people, too.

You have to go into it
open-minded and curious

and ready to learn something new.

Also, the instinct to multitask
is so hard to turn off,

but it’s so important that you do it.

You know, when you’re listening
to music these days,

most of the time it’s something
that we do passively.

It’s in the background.

It’s the soundtrack
to something else that we’re doing.

And I hate to say it, but between
our phones and our smartwatches

and just our own wandering thoughts,

it’s easy to get distracted,

and we tend to listen
to other people that way, too.

But you can’t really get immersed
if that’s the case.

Imagine trying to listen to a song

while singing a different
song in your head.

You can’t do it or you can’t do it well.

And you can’t fully appreciate
what someone else is saying

if you’re thinking about something else.

I’m also a big believer in the power
of nonverbal communication.

Like, just the simple act of a nod

is a way to let the other person know
that you’re engaged

and also invites them
to keep going and say more.

That kind of intentional, engaged silence
makes space for them.

Sometimes, though,
you do have to actually ask for more.

You have to draw them out.

But if you can ask for what’s below
the surface of what they just said,

you might unlock some door for them

and invite them to go through it with you.

That also means turning off the instinct
to talk about yourself.

I used to think that this was actually
the best way to show

that I was really listening.

Someone would tell me something

and I’d say, “That reminds me
of this thing that happened to me,”

and then I would tell
a whole story of my own.

But it’s kind of like listening
to half a song and then saying,

“Oh, you know, this part
reminds me of this other song,”

and then turning that first song off
and going and putting on some other song,

which is also something I’ve done.

(Laughter)

But you can’t get deeper
if you lose the moment like that.

So it’s a challenge to your impatience
and to your selfishness

to be engaged without making it about you.

OK, and so now to ignore the advice
about talking about yourself.

I would like to talk about myself

and tell you a little bit about me
and that song that I played you a part of

to hopefully illustrate
what I’m talking about.

Years ago, when I was making
my first recordings,

I would play my songs over and over
and over again in my bedroom.

My music career wasn’t really something
I could talk about with my parents.

They were hardworking immigrants

whose dream for me had been
to become a doctor or a lawyer.

But every now and then,

I would hear my mom
humming one of my songs

just to herself in the kitchen.

And that felt like some kind
of unspoken approval.

And over the years, whenever I would hear
my mom humming one of my songs,

it made me so happy.

Last fall, my mom passed away.

And a few weeks after her funeral,

I had a dream where I got
to see her and talk to her

and visit with her for a little bit.

And I woke up filled
with longing and sadness

but also gratitude
for this moment and this dream.

And I ended up writing a song about it.

(Guitar plays a soft accompaniment)

(Sings) But it’s so good to see you.

It’s so good to see you,

see you again.

In the bridge,

I stopped singing for a little bit
and I just hummed a melody.

(Humming)

I was thinking about my mom,

and I wanted to try and represent her
in the music in some way.

One of the people
who I talked to about the song

while I was making it was Yo-Yo Ma.

I told him, this is what the song is about

and this is what the music
is supposed to do in this part.

And I asked him,
“Do you think that the cello

could represent my mom’s voice?”

And he listened to everything that I said.
And then he played those notes.

(Cello plays a flowing melody)

OK. Here’s everything together again.

(Guitar plays a soft accompaniment)

(Cello plays a flowing melody)

So now, what’s your experience
when you listen to that

from inside the house?

Every conversation has the potential
to open up and reveal

all the layers and layers within it,

all those rooms within rooms.

And personally, I hope
that I can keep looking for those ways in

so I can experience the depth
and the richness of someone else’s ideas

every chance I get to hear them.

For now, thanks for listening to mine.

Thank you.

(Applause)

(Plays a soft tune)

(Sings) You called out my name

“Bring me some water, my love”

And it all felt the same

As any other

night of my life

We lived at home back then

It still feels like home in my sleep

I woke to dark again

For a moment

It was you

and me

You’re a piece of a dream now

Just a little too far

I can still hear your voice through

The door left ajar

But can’t see where you are

By the murmuring TV

You’d fall asleep to

in bed

You sat and looked at me

I said I miss you

You said,

“I know”

The pictures that I’ve framed

Don’t tell the stories in between

The moments that contain

Who you were really

to me

You’re a piece of a dream now

Just a little too far

I can still hear your voice through

The door left ajar

I guess that’s how it is now –

The only place you’ll appear

We’ll have to meet in some shadow

Between there and here

Between there and here

But it’s so good to see you

It’s so good to see you

See you again

(Hums a soft melody)

You’re a piece of a dream now

Just a little too far

I can still hear your voice through

The door left ajar

I guess that’s how it is now –

The only place you’ll appear

We’ll have to meet in some shadow

Between there and here

Between there and here

Thank you.

(Applause)