Showing posts with label etnomusicology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label etnomusicology. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Why do humans sing? |ヒトはなぜ歌うのか

Below a trailer of a Japanese documentary on the origins of musicality, made by NHK, entitled Why do humans sing?  (ヒトはなぜ歌うのか ).

The one hour documentary presents cross-species and cross-cultural research on musicality, realized and filmed in Amsterdam, Inuyama, Boston and the rainforest of Central Africa.

For more information see NHK | Frontiers.

Sunday, February 09, 2020

What is musicality?

Are we the only musical species? What do you need to know in order to be musical? Is our musical predisposition unique, like our linguistic ability?

Below a video registration of a lively evening at Paradiso in Amsterdam on Monday 27 January 2020, organised by Science & Cocktails Amsterdam: in search of what makes us musical !

Honing, H. (2019). The evolving animal orchestra. In search of what makes us musical. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

How universal is music?


Inuit throat singers (Source: Flickr)
Tomorrow an elaborate study addressing this question will be published in Science (Mehr et al., 2019). It consists of 17 pages main text and roughly 100 pages of supplementary materials. It will give all of us a lot to read and think about. (Although the Science paper is embargoed until tomorrow afternoon, in Amsterdam we discussed the paper this week based on the pre-publication made available through PsyArXiv.)

(Source: pre-publication)
The study (i.e. pre-publication) presents several interesting findings, some as expected, others very intriguing. First of all, it provides convincing evidence that music is indeed a universal phenomenon: it can be found in virtually all societies and varies more within than between societies. Secondly, the study shows that there are often clear relations between the form of the music (its musical structure) and its function – the context in which it is used. For instance, being a lullaby or healing song. And, even more interesting, “these patterns do not consist of concrete acoustic features, such as a specific melody or rhythm, but rather of relational properties such as accent, meter, and interval structure.” (Mehr et al., 2019, p.13). Clearly, universal features of human musicality (i.e. the capacity for music; Honing et al., 2015) lead people to produce and enjoy songs with certain kinds of rhythmic or melodic patterning that naturally go with certain moods.



P.S. Many media will cover the publication in the next few days. For a coverage in Dutch see, e.g. De Volkskrant and NRC.

Honing, H., ten Cate, C., Peretz, I., & Trehub, S. E. (2015). Without it no music: cognition, biology and evolution of musicality. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences, 370(1664), 20140088. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2014.0088  
Mehr, S. A., Singh, M., Knox, D., Ketter, D. M., Pickens-Jones, D., Atwood, S., … Glowacki, L. (2019). Universality and diversity in human song. Science, 366 (21 November 2019), 1–17. https://science.sciencemag.org/cgi/doi/10.1126/science.aax0868 
[For an interactive version of the songs described, see http://themusiclab.org/nhsplots ]