Still Waters Posted November 13, 2013 #1 Share Posted November 13, 2013 What do you get if you give musical instruments to a group of elephants? Just a loud noise, or an orchestra? One elephant ensemble in Thailand demonstrates - according to its creators - that animals can really make music. http://www.bbc.co.uk...gazine-24400364 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Id3al Experience Posted November 13, 2013 #2 Share Posted November 13, 2013 (edited) Define 'real' music? However, cool story I love how intelligent elephants are. Such beautiful beasts Edited November 13, 2013 by The Id3al Experience 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
travelnjones Posted November 13, 2013 #3 Share Posted November 13, 2013 Dude don't you have Meddle? Seamus 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
imrunningthismonkeyfarm Posted November 13, 2013 #4 Share Posted November 13, 2013 My dog makes music while wagging her tail! More of a beat really but it sounds good & if you was to put it through a syntheziser & add a few other dog or animal sounds I can't see how you wouldn't consider that to be music!! Also, birds sing all kinds of beautiful songs & when you think about it, they are related to dinosaurs in which case they would be amongst the earliest of music making creatures on the planet! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lightly Posted November 14, 2013 #5 Share Posted November 14, 2013 ^ Yup, a lot of bird songs are 'musical' .. if we can describe music as pleasing sounds in pleasing patterns . Some Classical music pieces seem to have borrowed sequences of notes from bird songs. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Likely Guy Posted November 14, 2013 #6 Share Posted November 14, 2013 Whales sing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eldorado Posted November 14, 2013 #7 Share Posted November 14, 2013 The House of the Rising Sun was pretty good. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Frank Merton Posted November 14, 2013 #8 Share Posted November 14, 2013 As with whales singing, there are two pitfalls in this kind of thinking. One is stretching the definition of "music" so as to include things that really are something else (animals vocalize for many reasons) and the other is anthropomorphizing into animals things we do. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lightly Posted November 14, 2013 #9 Share Posted November 14, 2013 I think humans copied animal sounds and the human heartbeat the result evolved into what we call music. I can imagine a cave mother making soothing humming sounds to her baby in time to it's heartbeat. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Frank Merton Posted November 14, 2013 #10 Share Posted November 14, 2013 Human music comes from the whistle of the wind, the rustle of the leaves, the rumble of the thunder, the splashing of the waves and the "bubbling" of the brook, the galloping of horses and howl of wolves and of course the heartbeat we hear in our ears as we fall asleep. It is just that human music is still something else entirely. Especially Western serious music. By coincidence earlier this evening I spent over an hour concentratedly listening to Shostakovitch's Seventh Symphony, and in the process "remembered" Stalin (although I don't know if the composer intended that, I suspect so -- at any rate sounds of a very human period of history). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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