PEN-L
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
Music 30-35,000 years ago
BBC World service this week featured a programme about drums quoting a
Paul Barnes saying that the earliest evidence for human music making
goes back 30-35 thousand years ago and consists of a series of
lithophones - stones in the form of stalacities that would resonate at
different frequencies when struck.
Also that some studies imply that the areas of greatest decoration in
prehistoric caves coincide with where the acoustics are best.
As far as I can trace from Google, Paul Barnes is a musician and
pianist
specialising in the performance of ancient music.
Music has considerable importance for creating collective feeling,
trust, and intuitive cooperation. All of great economic significance
in a pre-capitalist society.
It seems likely to me that singing, dancing and other simple musical
instruments, were important for many thousands of years before this.
Does anyone know of an earlier date for confirmed evidence?
Chris Burford
London
- Thread context:
- Music 30-35,000 years ago,
Chris Burford Sun 14 Mar 2004, 21:07 GMT
- George Carlin on Indians,
Craven, Jim Sun 14 Mar 2004, 17:35 GMT
- Free Peltier! A Position Statement from Carter Camp,
Craven, Jim Sun 14 Mar 2004, 17:29 GMT
- Derivatives,
Marvin Gandall Sun 14 Mar 2004, 16:23 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]