 How many wands? There's four in there. Wait, four? Yeah. Do you know who it is? I see Snape. Yep. I think I see Luna. You do? Uh, I don't recognize the other two. The other two are Lupins. Ah, and his wife, Tonks. That's why. I wouldn't know Tonks. I challenge you to a ta-sa-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta You mother-teller, baby. Hey, welcome back to our stupid rags and G-dients. I'm Corbert. Are you sure? Corbert? Corbert who's Corbert? He's Corbert. I'm Merr. And he follows us on Instagram and Twitter from all juicy content and things like that. Don't waste time and re-exercise us. Today we're reckoned to read this. That's a strange thing is read this a song, a trailer, where TM Krishna featuring Viku Vinayakram live at Afghan Church, Gatlin Plain. Ketakuri Harihara Vinayakram also known as Viku Vinayakram is a legendary Grammy award-winning Indian percussionist. Also known as the God of Gautam, he plays Carnatic music with the Gautam, an earthen pot. Oh yeah, we've seen that before and I'm not, forgive me if I'm mispronouncing the name of the instrument, and is credited with popularizing the Gautam. He's the first South Indian to win a Grammy award. That's awesome. Cool. Very excited. We love this kind of stuff. Yes, indeed. Let me get my speakers working here. Here we go. Turned upside down with that one, the other ones I couldn't even count with them. So he gave it a beginning count. It was a count of eight and then a bomb two, which is a syncopated. It's really a one. So it was like one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. One, two, one, two, three. It's a stutter. It's just, that's a syncopated one, two on a one. Foggiest idea, how they know what they're doing, because that little break of the bop, bop puts the downbeat in a different place every time. So the downbeat is the one, two, three, four. Now they're syncopated, right? So with the right hand I'm going to do the double tap. So they go one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. Seven, eight. Constantly changing itself based on a standard count. That little dot dot flips it so that the downbeat now is the upbeat and they're playing in between the downbeats and the upbeats. It's, that's one of the most complicated rhythmic things I've ever heard in my life. It sounds complicated to me and I definitely don't understand any of it. And how do they make those gothams? Is that what they're called? Gothams? How do they, how do they tune those things? Because those were in tune. It was bum bum bum, which is one, three, five. It's a triad. I wonder if they're just, do they just come tuned? Like that you make them? Yeah, they've got to be made and you buy them in tune. Do you have to, how often do you have to replace them once? Right. And does playing them, did it slowly change the shape so that they're no longer in tune? Or are they just that hard that they never change their shape? Also, where did it originate? Did it just, they didn't have any other instruments? So somebody started playing a pot? Right. I don't know. Like that's what I would think. Like, like, it came from like a tribe or somewhere that didn't have a lot of musicals. So they, they had pots and they were like, this can play? Right. Evolved into it. And somebody figured out how to make sure that it was in tune so that you could hear it and it matched the skin on the, the tabla. It's incredible. The, the rhythmic complexity that everybody was doing, but especially him, just utterly mind boggling. Yeah, that was, that was insane. So let us know more from this gentleman and any other classic instrument stuff that we should watch and react to. Should we interview him? We do. What would we say? Well, we interviewed his accused saint after horse. Yeah, I know. But that, that was, we could, you know, in some semblance, it would be probably so stupid. We would have realized now, what are we going to say? I really feel like I'd say, does it hurt your fingers? I feel like that's what we asked the kids. Probably did. How do you do that? Yeah. You know what it's like, Chris Farley. Yeah. Doing his interviews with people. You know, remember that time, remember that time when you, you, you play that song and you hit the things and you play real hard. Cool. That was awesome. All right, Chris Farley. Let us know more about videos that you react to down below.