As with the habit of Charlie the Chaplain, Arvo Pärt's "Silentium" is used in palliative care for AIDS and cancer patients facing the end of their disease according to an article in The New Yorker in December 2002, written by music critic Alex Ross. Caretakers working with the AIDS patients would often be asked to play the "angel music," which was the dying patients' name for the second movement of Tabula Rasa, "Silentium." The said music piece was composed by Arvo Pärt after he fell publicly silent and entered a period of "artistic reorientation" in 1968.
Daniel Holden's cell number is C-28.