TMC PULSE

July 2017

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t m c » p u l s e | j u ly 2 0 1 7 27 T ulip finger is a skin disease that affects people who han- dle tulip bulbs. But Tulipfinger— one word, not two—is a live karaoke band based in Houston. When Ryan Ash, George Denfield and Jiyoung Park aren't working in their respective labs at Baylor College of Medicine, the three neuroscientists can be found jamming out in Ash's Rice Village apartment. "I think everybody needs to express a little bit of them- selves in some form," said Park, a graduate student in structural and computational biology and molecular biophysics who sings backup vocals for Tulipfinger. "What we had in common was that we were really curious about neurons and brains." The band formed in 2011 after Ash, Denfield and Park met as graduate students in Baylor's neuroscience department and discovered their shared love of music. Playing together helped relieve the stress of graduate school and kept them from get- ting burned out. Originally, the band was named Spike!Spike!Spike! as an homage to neuroscience. The brain contains close to 100 billion neurons that con- stantly fire signals to communi- cate with each other; every firing signal is known as a spike. "We were able to make fun songs out of neuroscience," Park said. "I'm not sure how many people we got to really spread that fun to, but I think the neuro- science department enjoyed it." As Spike!Spike!Spike!, the band often played at Baylor's annual neuroscience conference, performing classic songs with a neuroscience twist. For example, the band's rendition of the 1966 Beach Boys classic "Wouldn't it Be Nice," was titled "Would it Make You Spike." "Writing and playing music are both very creative enterprises," said Denfield, a neuroscience M.D./Ph.D. student who plays guitar and sings. "Certainly, writing music is creative, but science is very creative, too. Idea generation is important in both of those." The band is like "Weird Al" Yankovic with a neuroscience flair, "but even nerdier," said Ash, a neuroscience postdoc- toral researcher who plays bass and trumpet. Eventually, the band changed its name to Tulipfinger in 2013 when members decided to focus less on neuroscience- themed songs and more on karaoke. Ash's father, a fellow musician who works in adver- tising, suggested they com- bine two random words for a unique-sounding name. They came up with Tulipfinger with- out knowing that "tulip finger" is a type of dermatitis. (That discovery came years later.) The name stuck. These days, Tulipfinger is an "activist karaoke band" with two additional members: Maho Sasaki, a neurological music therapist at Sam Houston University, on keyboard; and Dillon Baete, a Baylor neuroscientist-turned-beer- scientist at Karbach Brewery, on drums. Tulipfinger has close to 100 songs in its set list. When the band plays at a bar, people sign up to sing lead vocals, while the band plays the instru- mental music and provides backup vocals. All of Tulipfinger's songs have been selected in response to political upheaval. "Recently, there's been some interesting changes in the political climate and the social climate," Ash said. "I grew up listening to the Beatles and stuff, so we got more into protest songs … and encourage more people to sing those." Earlier this year, Tulipfinger performed at the March for Science in downtown Houston. The band's song, "M-M-M-March for Science!" was sung to the tune of the Knack's 1979 debut single, "My Sharona." NA M E : Tulipfinger OCCU PAT ION: Neuroscientists I N T ER EST: Live karaoke music HOW TMC EMPLOYEES SPEND THEIR SPARE TIME B y S h a n l e y C h i e n ON T H E SI DE Tulipfinger is Ryan Ash (bass, trumpet, vocals), Jiyoung Park (vocals), Maho Sasaki (keys), Dillon Baete (drums) and George Denfield (guitar, vocals).

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