Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
02:52 on Friday, June 26, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
12:13 on Friday, June 26, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
02:52 on Saturday, June 27, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
05:20 on Saturday, June 27, 2009
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jose_luis (2369 points)
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This was a supposed conclusion by scientists, but as expressed by the media, so it could be dubious.
Not my own and in any case we should read the official report when it is published and if made available. It would have been safer to write "the oldest musical (wind) instrument found to this date". But I was so enthusiastic about it....
Two instruments were found, but I only the ivory-made one was shown. The other was made for other material I could not understand clearly (the program was in French), but is related to birds. I understood "bird egg" which seems too improbable; it was probably "bird bone", though the sound difference for those words in French is important enough not to confound me. Anyway...
Without denying the immense capability of human voice to produce richly varied music, I think that voice could hardly be considered a musical instrument, as it is produced by a built-in part of our bodies and not by an "instrument". At least this is so in Spanish, according to the definition of our official dictionary.
In English the concept could be wider, to include parts of our bodies, such as the larynx for the voice and sing and the hands for manipulating objects. But everything we have in our bodies has some function and therefore could be considered to be an instrument for something, so the definition loses some strength.
Taken to the extreme, some people would say that "we are instruments of God", so denying our (presumed) free will. Sorry, it seems I woke up too philosophically inclined this morning.
My Webster says, for "instrument": a tool, an implement or utensil; a means by which something is performed or effected; any contrivance from which music is produced.
and for "contrivance": noun--> to plot, plan, scheme ...
As I heard on the news, it has been dated between 35K and 40K years ago. Which is indeed amazing, all other considerations taken apart.
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
06:07 on Saturday, June 27, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
11:24 on Saturday, June 27, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
11:33 on Saturday, June 27, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
18:30 on Saturday, June 27, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
05:30 on Sunday, June 28, 2009
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jose_luis (2369 points)
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Check the following link, to read more about this find and also to get the thrill of listening to a reconstruction of the possible sounds they could get out of those ancient instruments:
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/44941/title/Stone_Age_flutes_found_in_Germany#flutesound
The most important fact for me is that the musical scale some 35,000 years ago was already more or less the same scale that is still used today in some parts of the world. This could be a proof that the sense of basic harmony is not culturally acquired but is something deeply built-in our brains and it has been there since a very, very long time.
How did this ability to perceive and enjoy certain intervals get there, at a time when everything needed to be strictly functional and useful for survival?
Is music so much important, then?
Sorry for drummers, but these finds seem to prioritize tune/melody to rhythm as a way to enjoy certain aspects of life.
Drums certainly were used (before or after 35,000 years ago, I do not know), but probably for other purposes: "long" distance communication, also very important for group/tribe survival, encouraging warriors to enter or fight a battle (exactly as today) and the like.
But the expression of nice, peaceful feelings and other soul related matters, such as love and court, were most probably left to our instrument.
Good questions and issues to think about, aren't they?
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
16:59 on Tuesday, June 30, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
19:11 on Tuesday, June 30, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
04:49 on Thursday, July 2, 2009
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Scotch (660 points)
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[DanTheMaster] Evidence suggests that the earliest humans actually communicated with music--via the voice. |
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What evidence?
But as far as instruments other than the voice are concerned, I would dispute that percussion instruments came first. |
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Have you personally unearthed an older percussion instrument then? It may seem to you that percussion instruments ought to have come earlier, but science relies on evidence, not vague intuition. The accomplishments of science in contradistinction to vague intuition speak for themselves.
But the flute is almost indubitably the first wind instrument |
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The evidence for this is precisely (and only) the evidence that the first instrument of any kind was the flute--that the oldest instrument we've found is a flute. You can't have it both ways.
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
05:00 on Thursday, July 2, 2009
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Scotch (660 points)
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[jose-luis] The most important fact for me is that the musical scale some 35,000 years ago was already more or less the same scale that is still used today in some parts of the world. This could be a proof that the sense of basic harmony is not culturally acquired but is something deeply built-in our brains and it has been there since a very, very long time. |
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If the scale in question is the anhemitonic pentatonic scale (I'm unable to listen to the link with this set-up), then the circumstance that it appears in autonomous musical cultures was already evidence (if not quite "proof") that it isn't culturally relative, but rather than "built-in our brains" it's built into our acoustic environment, for the anhemitonic pentatonic scale, like the Pythagorian diatonic scale, is built by taking of each pitch in turn the most prominent harmonic not an octave multiple, an extremely simple and basic algorithm.
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
07:10 on Thursday, July 2, 2009
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Re: Which is the oldest musical instrument in human mankind?
03:12 on Friday, July 3, 2009
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Scotch (660 points)
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It's a pity you cannot listen to the examples in my link. Please do as soon as you can modify your present setup and post your comments about what scale is the one being used. |
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Well, I might be able to on another computer, but this is the one where I usually find myself involved in these sorts of discussions. I'm really very, very curious to know what pitches this flute plays. Can you say in the mean time what pitches you think you're hearing?
Your comment is very interesting, but I could not understand the algorithm you explained. Could you elaborate or provide some link where I can read about this? |
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My term algorithm may be too grandiose. To put it in a pithy manner, we derive like scales by multiplying by integer powers of three, assuming octave equivalence (geometric modulo two).
To put it in a less pithy manner, let's assume the flute plays these notes (or some transposition): C, D, E, G, A. Ethnomusicologists call this the anhemitonic pentatonic scale, pentatonic because it has five notes, and anhemitonic because it has no semitones. It can be ordered as a series of perfect fifths: C-G-D-A-E.
Let's suppose we have a flute with no finger holes of such a length that it sounds a C when you blow into it. If you overblow with sufficient force it will sound the C an octave higher, and if you overblow with more force you can make it sound the G, a perfect twelfth (an octave and a perfect fifth)above the original C. This is possible because these notes are on the low C's overtone series (or, more scientifically, harmonic series), and overblowing is an easy way a person or a people with virtually no scientific culture can discover that the harmonic series exists. It's how I myself discovered it exists at age fifteen, in fact. (I used a soprano recorder.)
The frequency of the second C will be twice the frequency of the lower C. More generally an integer power of two times the lowest frequency will give us a pitch we designate with the same letter name, precisely because this arithmetical relation is so simple, and if we're to build a scale using the harmonic series in any way, as a practical matter we have to avoid these; they don't get us anywhere. As we ascend the series, successive harmonics are progressively softer. The loudest that is not a note we call C is the third harmonic, G, three times the frequency of the low C.
So if we derive G from the C series, we can analogously derive D from the G series and so on. If we stop at five pitches, we've got an anhemitonic pentatonic scale. If we stop at seven pitches, we've got a Pythagorian diatonic scale. If we stop at twelve pitches, we've got a Pythagorean chromatic scale.
Also, I would appreciate your explanation of the difference between the "acoustic environment" (as we perceive it with our ears/brain system) and a kind of neurally wired-in perception of harmony (the kind we enjoy still today) |
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I do not believe we do "enjoy" a "neurally wired-in perception of harmony". It's been shown, in fact, that our "ears/brain system" isn't even capable of telling us what fundamental a particular overtone belongs to. In other words, when a newborn baby listens to a flute sonata, it has no a priori way of knowing whether a given overtone was produced by the flute's fundamental or the piano's fundamental. This information is not hard-wired; it is gradually inferred or induced (from the "acoustic environment") as the baby grows and is exposed to more music.
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