A music-loving father/daughter duo from Edmonton, Alberta have become somewhat of a viral sensation within the hard rock realm. Kari Carberry and her father Darrin are fans of the rock band Three Days Grace, who recently played a show at the Shaw Conference Centre in Edmonton just last week on December 12th. It was during the show when attendees got to see Darrin, who is mostly deaf, experiencing the rhythm and lyrics of the band’s music through Kari, who uses Sign Language to relay the performance to her dad.

Part of that special father/daughter relationship was captured by a fan named Jules during last week’s show. Jules was slightly irritated at first by all the personal space Kari seemed to take up during the show. Once she realized what Kari was doing for her father however, it inspired her to record what was taking place and shared the video to her Facebook, which has since gone viral and earned an impressive 17 million views since being uploaded last Thursday, making it one of the top feel-good news stories of the week as fans head into the holiday season.

“At last night’s concert, we witnessed something absolutely beautiful,” Jules mentioned in her comments to go along with the video. “We saw this girl and a man who seemed to require a lot of dancing room, irritating at first until we realized what was happening. Her father is deaf, she was signing the lyrics to him. We couldn’t care less about what was happening on stage, watching them was absolutely mesmerizing.”

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Kari has since provided some backstory as to how she and her father’s love for music have blossomed over the years, even though he was born deaf but does wear a hearing aid in one ear.

“He is the one who got me listening to the band,” Kari commented on her viral Sign Language performance. “When I saw they were going to be in Edmonton, my dad was the first person I asked to go with me.”

She also admitted members of the band have reached out in admiration of the relationship she has with her father.

The story brings to mind how Deadheads would bring balloons to Grateful Dead concerts in the days before event translators so they could feel the vibrations of the music through the hollow air of the rubber blown-up balls, as explained by Steve Silberman in the 2017 documentary, Long Strange Trip.

[H/T CNN]