[[quoteright:270:[[Music/RayCharles http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Ray_Charles_7407.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:270:RayCharles: one of the founding fathers of soul, and blind since the age of seven.]]
Music is a common career of choice for people without sight, both in real life and in the realms of fiction. In many cases, the musician's lack of vision will actually enhance his musical abilities.
See also YourEyesCanDeceiveYou, BlindBlackGuy. Compare and contrast DeafComposer.
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!!Examples:
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[[folder:Film]]
* Blind Mag from ''RepoTheGeneticOpera''
** Though the fact she's in-universe promoted as "Blind Mag" may be a bit of a [[LampshadeHanging lampshade]], as she's ''not actually blind anymore'', and hasn't been for seventeen years. That's hardly a secret, either. Perhaps GeneCo itself is playing on this trope?
* In ''GetCrazy'', we meet a B.B. King expy at a fellow blues man's funeral. All the other blues men in attendance are blind, throwing flowers, well, blindly. One of them walks into an open grave.
* RayCharles does some light AdamWesting in ''TheBluesBrothers'' as the owner of Ray's Music Exchange. He plays a total [[JerkAss dick]] of a store owner, obviously employing some [[HonestJohnsDealership shady business practices]] and even [[DisproportionateRetribution fires a handgun at a kid he suspects of shoplifting]], but hoo boy can he play the electric piano!
* In {{Suspiria}}, there's Daniel, the blind pianist.
* In SlumdogMillionaire they blind boys who can sing because blind singers earn more.
* An entire band in ''Hop.''
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[[folder: Literature]]
* Rosemary Sutcliff's historical novels use this trope often. Sometimes the blind musician, always a harper, is blind from birth, but usually, in whatever culture she's writing about, it's a custom to blind a boy found to have musical gifts, so that his gift can grow stronger and he can become the next village harper, a revered position. She does have plenty of harpers who aren't blind, too, though.
* Linus Wynter from Eoin Colfer's ''Airman'' - a blind spy who etches out an entire opera on the walls of his cell.
* Aurelio, the blind Manoush who first appears in City of Stars, the second book in Mary Hoffman's ''Stravaganza'' sequence.
* [[StepfordSmiler Skylar]] of ''Literature/GivesLight'' is a mute musician, not blind, but the trope plays out the same.
* ''Literature/TheOdyssey'' features a blind bard in one scene; the narration explains that [[DisabilitySuperpower the muses gave him the gift of song to make up for his lack of sight]]. This lends some weight to the popular legend/theory that Creator/{{Homer}} himself [[AuthorAvatar was blind]].
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[[folder:Music / RealLife]]
* Happened a lot in blues music. Blind Willie Johnson, Blind Willie [=McTell=], Blind Lemon Jefferson... in fact, Wikipedia has an index of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Blind_bluesmen blind bluesmen]].
* RayCharles
* JeffHealey
* StevieWonder
* The 18th-century Irish harpist/composer Turlough Carolan.
* José Feliciano
* RonnieMilsap
* Diane Schuur has proved that gender is no object for this trope.
* Lyricist Fanny Crosby.
* Terri Gibbs
* The Blind Boys of Alabama
* Jazz pianists George Shearing and Lennie Tristano.
* Rahsaan Roland Kirk, who sometimes played two or three saxophones at once.
* ArtTatum
* Ken Medema
* AndreaBocelli
* Blind Tom Wiggins, an enslaved autistic piano savant popular during the 19th century
* Brother Ali, a blind, albino, Muslim, Caucasian rapper
* One episode of ''Stan Lee's Superhumans'' featured Derek Paravicini, a blind autistic man who can remember and accurately replay any song he's ever heard in his life.
* Gao Jianli, a musician during the rein of the Chinese Emperor Qin Shi Huang (259-210 BC), which means this trope is recorded to be OlderThanFeudalism, no big surprise. Gao Jianli had his eyes put out by the emperor, who feared an assassination attempt but liked his music. Sure enough, Gao Jianli tried to assassinate the emperor by attacking him with his lute. Yeah. Unfortunately, he failed. But he still might also count as a HandicappedBadass despite that.
* Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu is a blind Aboriginal singer-songwriter. Additionally, he is extremely shy and speaks little English. Against these odds, he has achieved commercial success and critical acclaim in Australia and performed at Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee concert among huge stars such as PaulMcCartney and fellow BlindMusician StevieWonder.
* The drummer for the Australian indie band Rudely Interrupted was born without eyes.
* There was an obscure blues singer who went by the name Blind Ben Covington, but acquired the nickname Bogus Ben Covington when word got out that he [[BlatantLies wasn't actually blind at all]]. He is therefore an aversion of the trope.
* Contemporary Christian singer/songwriter Ginny Owens.
* Louis Braille, the inventor of the raised-dots alphabet for the bind, was a church organist.
* Jean Alain, composer & organist.
* Sir John Stanley, composer & organist. He was once scheduled to be the keyboardist for a concert that Handel--himself blind by that time--was supposed to conduct. Handel, when told of it said, "Don't you know your Scripture? If the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the pit."
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[[folder:LiveActionTV]]
* One episode of ''QuantumLeap'' was about a fictional blind pianist.
* ''TheRutles'' had retired New Orleans bluesman (IIRC) Blind Lemon Pie, who claimed to have invented The Rutles' music, although his wife retorted that he made this and similar claims only for the benefit of TV documentary crews.
** Actually Blind Lemon Pye was inspired by The Rutles to quit working on the railroad and become a (starving) musician. The person claiming to have originated The Rutles was Ruttling Orange Peel, who lives next door.
* One episode of ''Series/JonathanCreek'' had a musician ''pretending'' to be blind in order to enhance his reputation... not to mention [[DirtyOldMan using it as an excuse to feel up women]] because that's how he "sees" what they look like. He used to be blind however, it's just that he decided only to tell a very small group of people that he'd had corrective eye surgery. Even his own girlfriend didn't seem to be aware of it.
* Jason "Jace" Newfield of the [[DisneyChannel Disney Channel Original Movie]] ''Going to the Mat.'' Lampshaded when he expresses frustration at his lack of success on the wrestling team, saying he wanted "to be a part of one thing where [his] disability was totally irrelevant," and adds that the fact that he's a musician as well makes him a "walking cliche."
* Rosalind in ''Series/{{The Mentalist}}'' is a blind pianist.
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[[folder:VideoGames]]
* ''ApolloJustice'': Machi is a [[spoiler:fake]] one. Lamiroir was a blind singer, but had surgery to regain her vision.
* It's one of the innocent bystanders in ''The Punisher'' NES game. Killing him will remove a chunk of health from you.
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[[folder:{{Webcomics}}]]
* Blind Willie "Buttermilk" Stubbs, Father "Blind Pappy" Ramblin' Jackson and Earl Stokes "Can't-see-a-damn" Molasses Fatts in ''ProblemSleuth''.
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[[folder:WesternAnimation]]
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' also makes reference to a jazz sax player called "Blind Willie" Witherspoon. He was so good he became a jazz legend even though he'd been unwittingly [[RuleOfFunny playing an umbrella for the duration of his career]]. Nobody told him because they thought it was funny.
* A ''WesternAnimation/CowAndChicken'' episode has a blind black jazz player neighbor who lives in a swamp.
* The "Toby Danger" cartoon in ''{{Freakazoid}}'' had a brief gag where a dead ringer for Ray Charles continued performing, oblivious to the power being cut.
* Toots (Joan's foster dad) from ''CloneHigh''.
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