Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Monkeys Don't Go For Music, Unless It's Made For Them

Don't know if Snowball totally buys it, but evidence suggests that emotive response to music may be species specific. Full story, as well as sample pieces of "fearful" and "happy" tamarin music at Wired Science.

Teie, a cellist in the National Symphony Orchestra, came up with the idea of composing music for monkeys because he wanted to test his theories about how certain basic elements of music can be used to manipulate emotions. But because most people have been listening to music for so long, and therefore have significant likes and dislikes that color their emotional responses, he decided to test his ideas on a totally different species....

Although the tamarin songs don’t sound much like music to us, Teie said he wasn’t just imitating the monkey’s calls. “The very nature of music itself is that it’s stylized, that it almost extracts the emotional parts of the sound and makes it impossible to identify.” Teie used the same patterns to create the monkey music as he uses when composing human music, and he wrote out each song for the cello so that other cellists could play it too.

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