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It felt less like a street performance and more like a LOVE CONFESSION wrapped in music. When Karolina Protsenko asked the guitarist if he knew “I Like The Way You Kiss Me,” it wasn’t just a request, it was an invitation to something unscripted, intimate,

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 and unforgettable. As her violin danced to the melody, each note became a “whisper of emotion” – a smile turned into a sound, a kiss turned into a VIBRATION. The crowd didn’t just hear the music, they witnessed what felt like “first love blossoming” in real time. And in that fleeting moment, the sidewalk became the stage, and Karolina became the voice of every unspoken emotion we’ve ever tried to express in a song.

“Do you know this song?”—One simple question, and Karolina Protsenko turned an ordinary street moment into a showstopping work of art.

I ask if he knows "I Like The Way You Kiss Me" and Steal His Show

On a bustling city street, with people flowing by and music in the air, renowned street guitarist @DovydasMusic was mid-performance, his fingers dancing over the strings as a crowd slowly gathered around. Then, a petite girl with a violin case stepped forward—it was Karolina Protsenko, the violin prodigy known around the world for her emotional, soulful covers.

With a shy smile, she asked him:
“Do you know how to play ‘I Like The Way You Kiss Me’?”
Dovydas paused, nodded with curiosity—and that’s when the magic began.

As Dovydas strummed the first few chords of Artemas’s viral hit, Karolina lifted her bow. With the first note of her violin, the noise of the street melted away. The song, originally wrapped in electronic beats and modern textures, took on a whole new life through the strings of her instrument. Her violin didn’t just play—it spoke, it laughed, it wept.

Karolina Protsenko (16 yrs) & Dovydas - I Hope You Find Your John Smith  (Original)(Nov 18, 2024) - YouTube

There were no flashing lights, no stage, no microphones. Just a sidewalk, two artists, and a shared moment of musical spontaneity. Karolina didn’t just join the show—she gently, effortlessly stole it. The crowd around them erupted with joy, laughter, and applause, swept up in the raw, joyful energy of a performance that felt both intimate and cinematic.

Even Dovydas, the original performer, couldn’t help but beam. He exchanged glances with Karolina mid-song, as if saying: “You’ve got the spotlight now.”

The impromptu duet quickly went viral, sparking thousands of comments online:
“She didn’t just play the violin—she made the song breathe.”
“Karolina stole the show and my heart, all in under 3 minutes.”

With nothing but her violin and a fearless heart, Karolina Protsenko once again proved that music needs no stage, no translation, and no borders. Real art speaks for itself—and often, it begins with a simple, sweet question:
“Do you know this song?”

Written by sokkunthea

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“Mom, are we lost or just magically off-track again?” Karolina Protsenko giggles—and with that, begins a 12-minute journey through Yosemite that feels more like a time capsule than a vlog. In “The Wild Took My Breath Away – A Musical Soul in Nature,”

No stage. No spotlight. Just a teenage girl, a violin, and a centuries-old melody that stopped time. As Karolina Protsenko performed “The Gael” from The Last of the Mohicans on a quiet street—“strangers cried”—children froze mid-sentence, and one stunned tourist reportedly dropped her phone in disbelief.