Chemotherapy forces Saskatoon violinist to relearn her craft - Action News
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Saskatoon

Chemotherapy forces Saskatoon violinist to relearn her craft

When Saskatoon violinist Marla Cole was diagnosed with life-threatening cancer, she started a project that would make her music live on.

Musician Marla Cole had a dream at her fingertips. But cancer almost ripped it from her grasp.

Marla Cole had to relearn to play the violin after chemotherapy made her left hand go numb. (Victoria Dinh/ CBC)

Live music can make memories, but when the show is over, the music drifts away.

When Saskatoon violinistMarla Cole was diagnosed with life-threateningcancer, she started a project that would make her music live on.

In 2015, Cole received a grant from the Touchdown for Dreams program that helps women with life-threatening cancer to fulfillone of their dreams.

The program is a partnership between theSaskatchewan Roughriders, the Saskatchewan Cancer Agency and Cameco.

Lifelong dream

Cole'swish was to record an album with the AmatiQuartet, of which she is a co-founder.

But when it was time to record, she was too sick to play.

Chemotherapy treatments and steroids caused her hands and feet to go numb, and her left hand never recovered.

Marla Cole's dream to record with the Amati Quartet is being made possible by the Touchdown for Dreams program. (University of Saskatchewan)

"It's a very unusual sensation," she said.

"To play a string instrument you need to be able to feel the strings and the fingerboard and it has been a huge learning curve to get around that."

Cole had to retrain her brain to play using only her sight and muscle memory.

She said the problem got so bad she considered giving up. Sheworried her career as a violinist was over.

"It was a very scary process because I could feel it happening and, you know,it was just getting worse and worse," said Cole.

But with the support of her quartet, she rebuilt her technique while recovering from the side-effects of chemotherapy.

Making memories

She says the completed album will make her music last forever.

"As a musician who does live performances, people come and they hear it but they can't take it away and so they can't hear it again," she said.

"So I think it was really important to me to have a CD and to have something to give to my family and say 'we did this and this is what I used to do.'"

A release party for the recording of theAmatiQuartet will be held at the Darrell Bell Gallery onSunday, Sept. 25from1 p.m. to 4 p.m.All proceeds from the 69-minute recording go to the Saskatchewan Cancer Agency.

With files from CBC Radio's Saskatoon Morning