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  • Animals have music.

  • And once you widen the lens as widely as possible,

  • see the big picture where sapien music comes from,

  • the cosmic joke, the irony is that,

  • humans aren't very musical at all.

  • And we know this because we evolved along the ape line-

  • and apes compared to birds, are not musical.

  • How can I say that?

  • Birds have vocal learning.

  • They can creatively learn new songs.

  • Apes can't do that.

  • They are confined to the chords they're born with.

  • Insects can pulse together in rhythm,

  • and apes don't have that.

  • So it's very odd that humans evolved from apes,

  • who are not musical, but humans evolved music again

  • from the ground-up from scratch.

  • I'm Michael Spitzer.

  • I'm Professor of Music

  • at the University of Liverpool in the U.K.

  • I've written a book called "The Musical Human:

  • A History of Life on Earth."

  • - 'Voyager 2, like Voyager 1 before it,

  • is a marvel of technology.

  • A remarkable instrument

  • of humanity's search for celestial knowledge.'

  • - So when NASA sent the 'Golden Record'

  • aboard Voyager, 40 years ago,

  • this suggested a very interesting thought experiment

  • because NASA stocked the record with

  • diverse examples of human music.

  • For instance, a Bach-Brandenburg concerto,

  • Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode,"

  • pan pipes from the Solomon Islands,

  • court music gamelan from Java.

  • If we imagine aliens open this in a billion years,

  • will they be able to extrapolate some common denominator,

  • something fundamentally human

  • from this assortment of Earth music?

  • And this begs the question: What do they have in common?

  • Now, I think what they do have in common, even for an alien,

  • is that sapiens are 'flatlanders.'

  • We inhabit a very narrow band of perceptual space.

  • We can't hear as low as whales.

  • We can't hear as high as bats.

  • Our songs aren't as long as whale songs,

  • which can be 23-hours long.

  • They aren't as fast as a Pipistrelle bat's song,

  • which can be as short as a wing beat.

  • What they will see though, is a lot of commonality

  • between sapiens' music and animal music.

  • Both are hierarchical,

  • as to say that we repeat at rising levels.

  • Music is the art of repetition.

  • You have notes on the bar.

  • You have bars repeated in a phrase.

  • You have phrases in a section.

  • Section in the work, and so on at infinitum.

  • And that might strike aliens as interesting.

  • And they might say, "Well, actually

  • this is not so different from animal music."

  • But they will recognize sapiens for perhaps

  • having this walking meter,

  • which goes back to Australopithecus, four million years ago.

  • When we talk about the origin of human music,

  • it's really about assembling elements of music,

  • which were synthesized much further down the road.

  • And one of these elements was bipedalism.

  • That what marks the first hominins apart from apes,

  • and our common ancestor, was getting up on our feet.

  • There is this link between rhythm and emotion,

  • which is due to the connections in the human brain

  • between the motor regions controlling our motion

  • and the regions controlling hearing.

  • For example, I once attended a concert

  • with my infant toddler,

  • and there were a thousand toddlers

  • all jumping up and down instinctively

  • to the orchestra playing the "Lone Ranger."

  • Now, they had never heard the "Lone Ranger" before,

  • but they had an instinctive response to that rhythm.

  • So, walking is the first step

  • of a whole cascade of evolutionary adaptations.

  • Our cranial volume triples in size;

  • we become a lot smarter.

  • And with our increased brain size,

  • comes a capacity to control our fingers,

  • to make links with the motor domains of our brain.

  • They become more dextrous

  • and ultimately more capable

  • of crafting flutes and playing them.

  • But standing up also gives us more space to breathe.

  • And our larynx descends through our vocal tracts.

  • Our Hyoid bone, which supports our tongue,

  • evolves so we can articulate what we sing.

  • And as our vocal tract learned how to produce

  • an infinitely greater variety of sounds,

  • our capacity to make sounds exceeded their function.

  • If you compare us with, say, the Vervet monkey,

  • they can make four kinds of calls.

  • And each call warns other monkeys

  • of a particular kind of danger.

  • But when you can produce a thousand kinds of sounds,

  • there's an excess of sounds.

  • And this is where music starts to become a possibility

  • where you're playing with sound, you're enjoying sound

  • for sound's sake, no longer having a function.

  • And at this point, I think, human music steps away

  • from animal vocalization or animal calls.

  • What also makes human music so distinctive

  • is the very human drives of emotions.

  • And indeed, the finite quality of human life.

  • Sadness, happiness, anger, fear, and so on.

  • We have mirror neurons in our brains.

  • If you're sad, I instinctively cleave to your sadness.

  • I mirror it, I emote with you-

  • and that's the same with music.

  • When I hear a sad song, my body,

  • my mirror neurons are instinctively sympathizing

  • or mirroring the human sadness

  • and code it in that sad song.

  • And music is full of similar responses.

  • Music is made of patterns.

  • And patterns can either be allowed to run their course,

  • or they can be frustrated through shots.

  • And when we hear a shot in music-

  • it can be a bang, or the interruption of a pattern-

  • that engages the same faculties in our brain

  • as danger out in the field.

  • But of course, nobody dies in music;

  • this is only a derived effect of that.

  • This is why we think that music is able

  • to express emotion in a very visceral way.

  • Music is a fantastic way of expressing your deepest emotions

  • and your identity, which can't be captured by language.

  • Why is that?

  • Because music is far too precise

  • for words to capture what's going on.

  • And there's a reason why teenagers

  • imprint their taste in music

  • with songs they learn at that time.

  • Because music has always come to define the

  • identity of who you are.

  • So the question of is music a universal language

  • is an interesting one

  • because, on the surface, music is absolutely universal.

  • What humans brought to the table is that

  • we're the great synthesizers-

  • we've put together the rhythms of insects,

  • the melody of birds, the gestural sociality of apes.

  • I think it's a reason why, although human music

  • is innate and universal, it's also learned.

  • And there's also a reason why humans

  • have always been haunted by a nostalgia for bird songs.

  • We hear birds in the trees.

  • And this gives us a sense of inadequacy

  • because bird song is natural and human music is not.

Animals have music.

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How humans evolved music—from scratch | Michael Spitzer

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    VoiceTube staff 發佈於 2024 年 04 月 07 日
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