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🦅 SoundEagle in Debating Animal Artistry and Musicality 🎵🐕🎶🐒🎹🐘🖼🐬🎨


SoundEagle in Animal Artistry & Musicality

Can Animals Make Art and Music?

… a roundtable on humor writing, featuring some of your favorite funny bloggers … revealed the critical gem that a monkey riding a dog is always funny …

A monkey riding a dog or vice versa may be the fodder of some circus act to titillate spectators expecting comical or quaint juxtapositions of unusual animal behaviours. How much more funny (or serious) could the act be if those animals were to display creativity involving certain artistic elements beyond just technical executions?

SoundEagle with Sun, Kangaroo, Bear, Monkey and Dog on Trampoline

According to the musician David Cope who coined the term ‘Biomusic’ in 1971, animal composition represents an example of this experimental musical genre, and is realized by “simply listening to animals create music” as if it is a “natural theatre” event being broadcast live with or without amplification and electronic modification.[1] This definition can be rather problematic because it implies that the act of listening to animals alone can sufficiently constitute the basis of a piece of animal composition without further contextual underpinnings. The saving grace of such an approach nevertheless lies in its potential for broadening the listening experience in the Cagean sense of sonic “happenings”. However, lurking in the same definition is the one-sided perspective that the mental product or experience of animal composition, whether musical or not, is for the sole consumption of the human being, who until recently, was deemed to be the only species on Earth capable of conceiving and appreciating art. This perspective also assumes that music as an artistic composition must pass the criterion of intentionality, under which all music signifies “an act of intentional construction, in other words, an act of creation that actualizes an intention”.[2] Such an epistemic position ultimately degrades animals if it espouses the view that most, if not all, animal species are largely instinctive automata or hardwired agencies devoid of intentions, inspirations, spontaneity and developmental potential. According to Beardsley’s aesthetics regarding the intentions of the artist, it can be argued by extension to nonhumans that the intentions of an animal (artist) “are utterly irrelevant to the descriptive, interpretive, and evaluative properties of” an animal composition on the basis that the intentions are “neither available nor desirable as a standard for judging the success of a work”, lest we commit the intentional fallacy of basing our assessment of (the value or meaning of) an animal composition on the animal’s (declared or assumed) intentions rather than on our responses to, or aesthetic interest in, the actual composition, even if the animal can (be available or facilitated to) communicate its musical intentions or creative ideas to the human audience.[11] Furthermore, if music must have a “purpose and finality to it, shared between the creators of the music and members of their culture, through which they confirm their common identity”,[3] then the double criteria of having a purpose and intra-cultural identity will lead to the woeful conclusion that the validity and importance of animal sounds and compositions can be decided by how closely related genetically and ‘culturally’ the animal species in question is to Homo sapiens — back to the slippery slope of anthropocentrism!

Another careful reflection on this straightforward definition of animal composition as simply listening to animals in the act of creating music reveals a possible impasse between the perfectionist impressions of nonhuman sound, and the instincts or desires of the human composer or artist to have some measure of involvement. On the one hand, purists defending the right and purity of animal speech will always contend that a true animal composition is that which is performed in a natural habitat away from, or (relatively) undisturbed by, human influence and activity. Unfortunately, the physical world is already so occupied with human presence and affairs that the puritanical will hardly be satisfied by what they encounter as “unadulterated” animal music. To purists’ dismay or abhorrence, mockingbirds and starlings in the northern hemisphere as well as Australian magpies, bowerbirds and lyrebirds in the southern have unhesitantly appropriated into their repertoires the sounds of machine guns, excited monkeys, barking dogs, mating cats, flushing toilets, police sirens, walkie-talkies, mobile phones and computer games.

Purists of animal cries must also pardon or endure the cross-species psychobabbles of spiritually possessed, self-humanizing or auto-civilizing corvids, ravens, magpies, hill mynahs, parrots, cockatoos, cockatiels, galahs, parakeets, rosellas, macaws and budgerigars, and especially the Tweety bird who Tawt it Taw a Puddy Tat. After a brief recovery from being exposed reluctantly to the communicative altered states in which animals incorporate anthropophony (all sound produced by humans, whether coherent such as music, theatre and language, or incoherent and chaotic such as random signals generated mainly by electromechanical means), those purists, now already teetering on forming a new epistemic truce with their own sonic preconceptions, find themselves further jolted by some animals’ uncanny ability to be receptive towards human music, as the following two examples reveal:

There are stories of dogs who hide under the couch for piano works by atonal composers but not for those by, say, Mozart. One music teacher told [the renowned primatologist Frans de Waal] that her dog would heave an audible sigh of relief if she stopped playing complex, fast-moving pieces by Franz Liszt and proceeded to something calmer. And there are reports of cows that produce more milk listening to Beethoven (although, if this is true, shouldn’t one hear more classical music on farms?).[4]

When I practise the piano my four-month-old white budgerigar, Blanco, sits on a tiny stool at an eighteenth-century enamel and gilt grand piano only four and a half inches long and taps it with his beak. Snowy, an older bird, sits on the music-rest and sways to the music.[5]

In the first of the following videos, Debbie Center, a professional pianist and music teacher, observed that her parakeet named Bernie would only sing along whilst she was playing her solo piano arrangement of “Meditation from Thais”, and stopped singing when she stopped playing.

On the other hand, if the strict criterion imposed on animal composition by the purists can be overlooked so as to allow some degree of human involvement, intervention or bonding, then the simplest and most direct form of animal performance can often be found in circus animal acts, or in animals kept for behavioural and cognitive research. Animal behaviours and communications have been found to be far more flexible and complex than previously thought. Many taken-for-granted beliefs or erroneous assumptions about the nature and limits of animals have been challenged by research contexts involving not only observations and experiments that incorporate ecological validity but also environmental enrichment (also called behavioural enrichment) that permits ongoing learning and interactions between carers or researchers and the animals involved. Such a close association becomes an integral part of the research, a journey simultaneously blurring the distinctions between laboratory and playschool, between experimentation and domestication, and between observation and participation. These researches are platforms whose structural elements and interactive processes reveal the interplay between natural inheritance and environmental nurture. Their outcomes are highly dependent on the dedication and ingenuity of the researchers, and also on the opportunities, resources and situations presented to the animal subjects. Arguably, the elevated cultural enmeshment and human identification may be another source of objection for purists who prefer to uphold research objectivity and emotional detachment. Nevertheless, the hands-on experiences and findings afforded by these researches have challenged and revised the definitions of intelligence and culture.

For example, at the Language Centre associated with Georgia State University in Atlanta, a twenty year-old bonobo (or pygmy chimpanzee) named Kanzi (meaning “hidden treasure” in Swahili) not only has a 2,000-word vocabulary and understands spoken English, but is also talented at “playing the drums, xylophone, keyboard and harmonica. Sitting on the floor, this huge ape unzips the xylophone bag and, with great care, sets the xylophone down beside him. Pausing for a moment, he holds his sticks in the air. He nods curtly at his audience, then plays a fast and melodic series of notes”.[6] Accompanied by an animal trainer at the helm, a chimpanzee will effortlessly perform in front of a piano and a score in which the musical notes consist of its own fingerprints — thus resulting in a wonderfully comprehensive exemplar of an animal playing animal music based on animal graphic notation! At the risk of committing another act of objectifying or anthropomorphising under the complicity of music and art making, such a performance situation, whether intentional or incidental, leads to a realistic conclusion that the chimpanzee has literally become a live “animal instrument”, not only in vocalizing or singing to its own playing on a musical instrument but also in “sight-reading” its own creation of animal art in graphical notation. Faced with new possibilities, is the human world patient, bold, curious and yet humble enough for a well rendered Concerto for Amplified Chimpanzee and Chamber Orchestra; or a charming Mr Holland’s Opus no. 2 for the Deaf and Four-Legged, the father and music teacher honouring his hearing-impaired son who has been deprived of paternal love and has undergone animal-assisted therapy; or the next brilliant film sequel and interspecies blockbuster Babe Joins the Boston Pop Orchestra; or a new season of faithful subscriptions to the Animal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by the indomitable Dr Doolittle and sponsored by the charitable RSPCA? These scenarios are not that far-fetched at all given that scientists had considered the dog and the chimpanzee smart enough to be sent into space! For artists and composers contemplating outshining those memorable scientific achievements, the vital ingredients, beside unwavering confidence, perseverance and funding, are the pragmatic confluence of anti-anthropocentrism to dissolve human-animal class divisions, anthrozoology to foster human-animal interactions, biomusicology to arbitrate between ethnomusicology and zoomusicology, postmodernism to destigmatise playfulness and sociomusical deviance, a fair touch of neo-Dadaism and anti-art to deflect any vilification, controversy, derision and disbelief, as well as an episode or two in Dr Harry Cooper or Rolf Harris’ television programme.

Aside from inventive, norm-bending animal antics, nonintrusive artists of less progressive persuasion and more passive approach may settle comfortably with taking field trips to carry out a sound-hunting mission, with the intention to capture, store and manipulate the recorded sounds later, either for composing soundscape compositions, or for conducting research in bioacoustics, soundscape ecology or acoustic ecology (sometimes called ecoacoustics or soundscape studies). Bioacoustics is a cross-disciplinary science that combines biology and acoustics to investigate the sound production, dispersion and reception in animals (including humans) involving the neurophysiological and anatomical basis of sound production and detection, and the relation of acoustic signals to their medium of dispersion. The findings facilitate clues about the evolution of acoustic mechanisms, and the evolution of animals that employ those mechanisms. Soundscape ecology concerns the study of the acoustic relationships between living organisms via the use of recording devices, audio tools as well as conventional components of ecological and acoustic analyses to examine soundscape structure in order to expand current understandings of ecological issues and to deepen visceral connections to ecological data, insofar as the preservation of natural soundscapes is now an acknowledged conservation goal. Acoustic ecology is a discipline concerning the relationship between humans and their environment, as mediated through sound. From its roots in the sonic sociology and radio art to historical soundscapes and psychosonography, its expanded expressions include the increasing attention on the sonic impacts of road and airport construction, the widespread networks of phonographers exploring the world through sound, and the broadening of bioacoustics (the use of sound by animals) to consider the subjective and objective responses of animals to anthropogenic noise.

Avid collectors of natural sounds comprising biophony (the collective sound that vocalizing animals create in each given environment) and geophony (nonbiological natural sound in each given habitat) usually rely on direct amplification of animal(s) with a pickup microphone in their natural surroundings — a practice that will still ruffle the feathers of some purists who insist that the deployment of any sound technology dilutes the immediacy, authenticity and discovery of an aural or musical experience (even as one speaks to an audience through a microphone). However, any logistical fury from the purist can hardly dent the glee of an animal soundaholic encountering or approaching wild creatures in hives, cocoons, burrows, caves or other secluded places. From them, many secret sounds are discovered, explored and admired in nature documentaries, concert halls, recordings, relaxation music, or the adventure of Milo and Otis. Dudley Moore, or far better still, Dr Doolittle, could be enlisted to supply the subtitles or translations. To the extent that nonhuman sounds can be stored, digitized, electronically controlled and algorithmically manipulated, the zoological privileging and postmodern resignification of A Chorus Line by Stephen Sondheim or Peter and the Wolf by Sergei Prokofiev can be reproduced with the sonic equivalent of animatronics. Indeed, digital sampling technology has come very close to realizing a virtual Animal Philharmonic Orchestra for the RSPCA advertisement entitled “All Creatures Great and Small”, in which animal vocalizations are melodically transposed and synchronized to a catchy tune in such a fashion that no audience will ever overestimate the human composer’s musical intelligence and underestimate the creatures’ penchant for singing and stardom.

The Newest Sound Around
The Strangest Sound That You Have Ever Heard
Not Like a Wild Boar or a Jungle Lion’s Roar
It Isn’t Like the Cry of Any Bird
But There’s a New Sound
And It’s Deep Down in the Ground
Any Everyone Who Listens to it Squirms
Because This New Sound, So Deep Down in the Ground
Is the Sound That’s Made by Worms

― Tony Burello and Tom Murray

The lines above constitute a set of spoken lyrics for a song titled There’s a New Sound composed by the songwriter and jazz pianist Tony Burello, and his colleague, Tom Murray. The song was released in 1952 on their own Horrible label, which declared that “If It’s Really a Horrible Record — It’s Bound to be a Hit”. It was indeed selling well over six figures by the spring of 1953.[7] Without actually recording the real sound made by worms moving underground, the song periodically featured an imaginary equivalent of the sound of worms rendered with a human voice uttering “WHEEZ-A WACK, WHEEZ-A WACK” under layers of the latest sound effects and reverberations — hence the claim of the “Newest Sound”. The song was sold to the public as a source of novelty and pleasure through comic showcase, parody and histrionics without appreciable concern about the ramifications of substituting, distorting, fabricating or misrepresenting the sound of ‘low lives’, with whom humans are on less intimate terms.

SoundEagle and the Sound That’s Made by Worms

Conclusions

The sounds and languages found in Nature, and the associations between humans and animals couched in expressive forms of composition, narrative, performance art, popular culture and science, often challenge conventional expectations or entrenched assumptions not only about animals, their individuality, intelligence and social roles, but also about art and music, as well as the procedures, contexts and interpretations involved.

The domestication of animals and plants has in turn domesticated the human species, so much so that we have come to be critically dependent on many floras and faunas not only as food and produce but also as food for the mind, to the extent that they have come to be surrogates, representations and caricatures for our own characters and behaviours, as well as for our need to have companions, to reach out to the other kinds not possessing our language and form, but nonetheless is still able to respond to each other with some common grounds and mutually beneficial interactions, coexisting and co-depending. Just as humans have studied, mimicked, appropriated and even inherited the calls, dances, movements and anatomies of some animal species, many animals have also evolved and learnt to read our emotions, gestures and commands, perform various tasks on cues, detect smells, drugs, dangers, diseases or missing persons, guard against loneliness, accidents or intrusions, and look out for the sick, injured or disabled. One wonders whether the autonomy and sanctity of animals, in the sense of their ultimate importance and inviolability, and of their inalienable status as sentient beings, must be so categorically measured against what has so characteristically defined us as humans, especially when both humans and nonhumans still have so much to learn from each other, the outstanding language barrier notwithstanding.

The ISEA Model comprises blue, red, green and yellow quadrants corresponding to the Instrumental, Spiritual, Pro-Environment and Pro-Animal/Plant perspectives

As discussed in the post entitled “🎧 Facing the Noise & Music: Grey Barriers and Green Frontiers of Sound, Society and Environment 🔊🏡🏞”, and as indicated in both images located immediately above and below, there are compelling reasons to continue to question our complicity with the Instrumental perspective, which values animals (as well as plants and the natural world) in means-end rationales and anthropocentric terms. These reasons can serve to problematize and scrutinize the concepts of, and the relationships between, artistic expression and interspecies communication. The Instrumental perspective is in diametrical contrast with the Spiritual perspective: the latter attaches importance to deep empathy and identification with animals (as well as plants and Nature), whereas the former is often framed in rights, privileges, access, consumption and quality of life with respect to amenity and recreational opportunity. In the current climate of mounting anthropogenic forces and ecological issues, there is a much belated need to align ourselves more to the Spiritual perspective so as to encourage outlooks that seek to identify and empathize with animals through the world of environmental sound, music and art. Spiritually oriented sound making and listening are firmly and enchantingly grounded in the holistic experience and acoustic connection with fauna, flora and biosphere, opening and maintaining communicative channels essential for preserving identity, intimacy and integrity of a sentient world and its inhabitants. An exemplar of such an approach that both challenges and transcends traditional concepts, mainstream ideas and dominant practices of art and music is given its due or debut in a special post entitled “🦅 SoundEagle in Art, Aphorism and Paramusic 🏝”.

The ISEA Model Identifying Human-Nature Relationships with respect to Sound, Music and Noise

One may also question the necessity or relevance of animals painting on canvases or playing musical instruments, and whether these are rather clumsy, ill-conceived or anthropocentric attempts at amusing ourselves at the expense of animals. We may indeed question whether whatever resulting from those attempts could constitute art or music. Even if the results could or should be considered as art or music, we may still question why we often, if not invariably, interpret animals’ artistic or musical creations in human terms, which reflect the imposition of human concepts or expectations on animal behaviours. Ultimately or tentatively, we may come to speculate about whether animals do create anything that constitutes art independent of humans.

There are at least two important factors or criteria to consider in answering those questions. The first is that humans are bound by their languages and communicative devices as much as they are by their tools, toys, terminologies and technologies. Therefore, a certain form of “human self-centredness” and some degree of “humanistic immanence” are necessary or inevitable, to the extent that our conception and consideration of nonhumans have their ultimate reference point in our humanity.[10] Humans are also still in the early phase of systematically and scientifically decoding nonhuman “speeches” and behaviours, and are thus still limited in the means of investigation and interaction via which artistic creations of animals can be properly elicited, facilitated, identified and/or interpreted. In other words, until humans have the means to sufficiently understand how and what animals communicate, there is no way to properly and adequately determine whether animals have been and can be creative in their speeches and actions. However, humans can readily identify and conclude with certainty about the quality of nonhuman creativity when some animals perform certain human activities such as talking, singing, signing, painting, solving puzzles and doing arithmetic.

Whilst the first factor or criterion relates to finding some common communicative grounds or means whereby one species can detect and understand the creativity of another and vice versa, the second concerns interspecies discovery, learning, exchange, enrichment, empowerment and coevolution. Taking both factors or criteria into proper and systematic considerations may mitigate or transcend the predominantly utilitarian view or recreational approach towards animal artistry and musicality so that the results far surpass those whose main aim or design amounts to little or nothing more than ungainly, undignified, misguided, inane, senseless, puerile or anthropocentric endeavours at satisfying humans at the expense of nonhumans, even if the latter seem to be obeying, enjoying or participating at their own discretions. After all, we as humans have had hundreds if not thousands of years to adapt and tailor our art-creating devices to suit our anatomy and ergonomics, whilst animals, regardless of their sizes, forms and postures, have had to make do with whatever tools handed or available to them, whether or not they can appropriately handle those tools with their mouths, limbs or appendages. Just as humans are beginning to design smart devices, implants and prostheses to cybernetically enhance or augment the senses, movements, functions and enjoyments of regular folks as well as individuals who are physically or mentally compromised, perhaps there will be a day when animals can be given their own tailor-made paintbrushes, musical toys, creative playthings and art-making gadgets, which will much better complement and draw out their native talents, inventive impulses and gamesome curiosities, especially if humans have had sufficient time and resources to systematically and scientifically decode nonhuman “speeches” and behaviours, so that artistic creations of animals can be properly elicited, facilitated, identified and interpreted. Whilst some may still argue that it is unnatural or unnecessary for parrots, monkeys, elephants or dolphins to draw, paint, dance, create art or make music, one can do very well to remind oneself that human ancestors were not doing a great deal of what modern citizens are excelling in and finding indispensable every day, including driving cars and using computers. By the same token, there are yet more undiscovered ingenious ways to elicit, facilitate, identify and interpret creative animal behaviours. The quantum leap in recognizing and capturing animal intelligence and creativity in the future could be as great as the portentous outcome of discovering extra-terrestrial intelligence or encountering some interstellar civilization(s), whose vastly superior wisdoms and advanced technologies could amplify human intellect and achievement manifoldly.

SoundEagle in Biomusic, Biosphere, Ecology, Flora, Fauna, Astronaut, Earth, Moon, Sun, Star and Space

Therefore, we can begin to look upon the age-old dichotomy of humans versus nonhumans with scepticism and even disdain, and start to see living things as entities interconnected in multiple ways through common evolutionary heritages, in which various physical, mental and social manifestations, including emotion, intelligence, creativity, sapience, self-awareness, intentionality and even culture, are the hallmarks of sentient beings — hallmarks that are not exclusively confined to Homo sapiens, but commonly found and functionally comparable in both humans and nonhumans. Bearing the goal or desire to dissolve the human-nonhuman dichotomy (whether conceptually, ideologically or existentially), how does one contemplate the nature and crossroads of humanity and nonhumanity? How does one fathom what is it like to be nonhuman? Answering these questions, whether via solid research or solemn introspection, and also by way of interspecies communication (including the artistic and musical kinds already discussed), will slowly and surely reveal something deeper or darker about our own species as we scrutinize our own views of, and relationships with, our fellow creatures on Earth, even as we struggle to acknowledge and reconcile that humans, through ignorance, hubris and greed, have repeatedly erred and committed discrimination and even atrocities against nonhumans, such as exploitation, displacement, vivisection and extermination. One significant way of relating our (way of) being with that of the nonhuman beyond (the rules and limitations of) linguistic, literary or textual means, beyond (the traps and constraints of) the dominant paradigms of the modern and postmodern, and beyond subsuming reality with signifiers and becoming prisoners of discourse, has been revealed and contemplated by AJOwens in a post entitled “On Saving the Planet: Beyond Signifiers” as follows:[12]

… The immediacy of our connection with the other, the basic phenomenon of experience, is what is real.

As the modern begins to consume itself and become the postmodern, this is the way forward: to go beyond the elusive public reality of the text, and to embrace the reality of private experience, not only as an idea, but as a way of being, a way of interacting with the world, meaning everything from people, to animals, to plants, to landscapes, even desert and rock. These mean inexpressible things to us because we share their being.

This is the true solution to the problem of climate change and other difficulties with our relationship to nature: not to ask whether they are real, or what the discourses and truths of science or economics or politics have to say about them, in search of some instrumentalist way of managing the problem; but to tackle the problem at the root, by partaking as beings in the immediacy of all other beings we sense around us. In this way we may hope to prevent the mechanistic neglect, or blindness, or selfishness toward nature and the other that has brought us to our current condition. This is only to say: to be poetic, to appreciate Nature, as Spinoza or Whitehead might suggest; but in way that relates our own being, as Kierkegaard might remind us. (To be fair, all of them would insist on bringing God into it.)

The journey towards seeking some ontological truth of, and epistemic truce with, our place on Earth and our prejudices rooted in our self-imposed human-nonhuman dualism may eventually uncover that speciesism is not, in and of itself, a complete answer to the root cause of our defence mechanism and offensive stance towards otherness and animality. Considering that speciesism entails the assignment or attribution of different rights, values, justifications or special considerations to individuals solely on the basis of their species membership (in other words, what species they belong to), it can indeed be argued that speciesism is a pervasive form of prejudice akin to racism, ageism or sexism, insofar as the treatment of those nonhuman individuals by human beings hinges on group membership and physical differences rather than ethics, decency, morality or equality. Upon closer examination, we are bound to discover that the crux of speciesism, as of anthropocentrism, and of every otherness that we could discern, is our deplorable ineptitude as humans to (be)hold difference and sameness together. This fundamental inability has handicapped the formation of an outreaching mindset capable of recognizing that both humanity and nonhumanity are part of being earthlings, that each is often necessary to the other, and that we, in the light of species richness, interdependency and biodiversity, can only truly possess and preserve our humanity when both the uniqueness and commonality of other nonhuman species are held in high esteem as treasures equally worth preserving for their own sake, and for their intrinsic significance. What is and has been mistakenly construed as “a clear line of demarcation between animals and humans” (let alone multiple lines) can be quite illusory and segregating, often creating misunderstandings, denials, conflicts, exploitations, denigrations, decimations and/or even extinctions (potentially including our own). Rather than dwelling on the rigid and delusional belief in there being “a clear line of demarcation between animals and humans”, one should be openminded, receptive and observant towards the spectra and continua on which humanity and animality exist, merge, converge and diverge. In other words, what can be perceived and distinguished as “the clear qualitative and inherent differences” as well as the likenesses, affinities, and similarities of forms and characteristics both between and within human and animal species actually coexist and manifest in multiple continua, just as many aspects of Nature and the human and nonhuman worlds are continua or platforms affording many opportunities and avenues for humans to (be)hold difference and sameness together. Furthermore, the human-nonhuman dichotomy has tenuous currency and feeble validity when we are able to acknowledge that the diffuse (evolutionary and ecological) boundaries and separateness between humans and nonhumans defy absolutely clear demarcations or easy categorizations, given that nonhumans have coevolved with, and contributed to, humans and their culture, even more so since the advent of domestication, and lately, of genetic modification. The unfolding and blossoming of this intricate interspecies dance can be quite contrary, if not diametrical, to the frequently stark and rigid stereotypes promulgated by certain myths, beliefs, cultures, traditions and even some outmoded scientific claims. In this regard, the tragedy of speciesism has been something long encoded in the human world and etched in human history, and thus cannot be erased retrospectively with continual denial, and also cannot be overlooked or ignored with persistent inaction or indifference, if humans were to live sustainably whilst curtailing their ever-burgeoning ecological footprints.

Indeed, the human-nonhuman dichotomy has become so immense and lopsidedly tipped in humans’ favour that the Anthropocene has been proposed as the more deserving name of the current geological epoch than the Holocene to mark the significant human impact on the Earth’s geology and ecosystems, including anthropogenic climate change, which could ultimately lead to a catastrophic global mass extinction, one that some scientists consider to be the sixth and well on the way to imperilling our very own survival. In his post entitled “Sixth symphony versus the sixth extinction? An essay on biodiversity loss.”, Dr Ray Cannon, a retired principal entomologist at the Food and Environment Research Agency, invites us to weigh the portentous but often sidetracked issue of the nonhuman world disappearing as a result of being endangered or diminished by human encroachment, and asks hypothetically whether we are prepared to save animal species from extinction by relinquishing ever knowing and enjoying a musical masterpiece such as Beethoven’s sixth symphony entitled “The Pastoral”, as opposed to sacrificing a nonhuman species, especially a charismatic one like the panda or the elephant, for the cherished symphonic jewel created from the crucible of imagination and inspiration in the first place:[8]

I chose the Sixth symphony because we are said to be on the verge of the Sixth Extinction. Unlike previous extinction events in the history of the planet, this one is going to be caused by us. Directly or indirectly, consciously or unconsciously, most people are starting to wake up to the scale of the impact we are having on our fellow travellers. But what is the value of all this wildlife (?), a cynic might ask. They might be cuddly, heart-warming and beautiful, but how concerned should we be if they disappear? I think most people would be horrified by such sentiments, we love and treasure nature and the living world, don’t we? If so, why are we, as a species, pushing so many other species into oblivion?!

Most people would probably agree, that if it ever came down to such a ridiculous choice, we probably would forgo the wonderful Pastoral symphony for the sake of having elephants on this planet in perpetuity. We might lose one masterpiece of human creativity, but for the sake of keeping, or saving such an iconic species for future generations to enjoy, it might be worth the sacrifice. After all, there is so much beautiful music left. Just simply for the sake of the elephants themselves to enjoy their own existence, it would be worth the sacrifice wouldn’t it?

But what about other, smaller, less iconic, unnoticed or even unloved species? Would it be worth losing a musical master piece for one of them? Maybe not you might say? Faced with the choice of losing just one of the hundreds of thousands of weevils say – they are the largest animal family with more than 50,000 species known to science (and many more unknown) – most people would I think sacrifice one of them for Beethoven’s Sixth Symphony. Just one of the 50,000. No contest! They mostly go unnoticed and unloved anyway! Some people might argue on the other hand, that all species are so precious, that it is not worth sacrificing even one, even for something as magnificent as the Sixth Symphony, because the latter is a product, an artefact, and more can be produced. Maybe not as good or as unique, but music is being produced all of the time by us humans. Species are not. It takes millions of years to produce new species. Yes, evolution can work over surprisingly short time scales, but on the basis of the rate of creation of new species after previous extinction events, it took a long time, a very long time indeed by human dimensions, to begin to replace the lost diversity.

Whether or not we are required to choose or allowed to sit on the fence, in the face of such a confronting scenario, and at the precipice of such an existential conundrum, we are uncomfortably reminded by the vexed question as to whether art, the conscious product of human creation, especially in the pinnacle form of a Nature-inspired classical symphony sonically depicting a nostalgic, romanticized or idealized country life, is worth more or less than a nonhuman species, the unconscious product of Nature’s creation, which, if allowed to survive in perpetuity, can continue to evolve and interact with other species, including humankind. It is high time that humans re-evaluate their priorities in order to gauge and understand the ecological and existential implications of having to answer such an unsettling question, as hypothetical or speculative as it appears to be. Indeed, can such a question even be truly answerable when humans still often deny or underestimate the validity of animal intelligence, the centrality of biodiversity, the urgency of wildlife conservation, the severity of habitat destruction, the gravity of climate change, and the finality of species extinction?

Even if we could recognise and appreciate the creative impulse and adaptability of our fellow creatures in their canny problem-solving and uncanny humanlike behaviours, there is something tacitly uncomfortable and inescapably anthropocentric if not morally apprehensive that our keenest ties and closest emotional bonds with nonhumans seldom extend beyond those animals outside their roles as pets, companions, human surrogates or status symbols. The seemingly insatiable appetite to possess and to be amused, heeded or obeyed, even if not on a gratuitous, mocking, cavalier, demeaning or condescending basis, has somewhat marred our ability and masked our inability to relate to nonhumans more on their terms and in their own right. Beyond the human need and capacity to be fascinated and entertained by the cuteness, playfulness, antics or buffoonery of animals endlessly paraded on social media, it is also high time that humans elevate the status of animals by granting the long-overdue recognition of, and engagement in, animal artistry and musicality, such that nonhuman voice and creativity arising from the emotional world and cognitive realm of animal participants can flourish by means of communicative interfaces, expressive media and interactive conduits informed by, and engendered from, the art and science of interspecies communication. Moreover, given the ecological ramifications and existential implications, this belated reprioritization or reorientation towards a much more balanced human-nonhuman alliance is only viable, genuine and accountable when humankind confronts its ongoing imposition of a substantially instrumental, resourcefully totalitarian and stultifyingly anthropocentric relationship on both the land(scape) and the nonhumans being domesticated, exploited, subjugated or even decimated.

As further food for thought, SoundEagle🦅 is offering you an extract from Canadian cultural theorist and philosopher, Erin Manning, who holds a University Research Chair in Relational Art and Philosophy in the Faculty of Fine Arts at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada:[9]

What autistic perception teaches us is that things are not necessarily as they seem. Just because something can be categorized as an object or a subject does not necessarily mean [that] they are more vital than other modes of welling experience. What is needed are not more categories but more sensitivity to difference and a more acute attunement to qualities of experience. This would allow us to see that knowledge circulates and it is through this circulation that learning happens: language and other forms of expression move through us and it is through this movement that we learn.…

In The Minor Gesture, I proposed the concept of artfulness to allow us to move away from the concept of art-as-object. Even with the proliferation, for at least the last half century, of more ephemeral works of art (including performance, installation, et cetera), there tends to remain a very strong association of art with an object, and thus with form. If you add to that the current tendency to canalize art toward a set of concerns or issues (as advanced by the now ubiquitous artist statement), what we have is too strong a tendency, I believe, to connect art to communication, and by extension to the order-word. I am much more interested in the force of art for the invention of free indirect modes of discourse. This is where the concept of the artful comes in — a notion that what creates a shift or an opening in experience carries with it the quality of artfulness. This can include an artwork but is not limited to it. Nor is it limited to the human.…

Creation as resistance begins here, I would say, where artfulness cleaves experience to produce not a recognizable set of frameworks, but new modes of knowing, of feeling, of acting. There is no question that neurodiversity opens the way to such practices, even if only by unsettling the norms through which objects and subjects come to be differentiated and “known.”

This doesn’t mean that resistance is a given within the field of neurodiversity, however. Resistance is always to be crafted. The work must do its work, and for that, the conditions of experience have to be recalibrated each time anew in relation to the ecologies of practices with which they composes [sic]. In Deleuze’s vocabulary, artfulness always calls forth a people to come.

Cultural acceptance or rejection of the behavioural patterns and interpersonal qualities manifesting in certain mental conditions can be very significant to the public receptions and overall social outcomes of those individuals saddled with neurodevelopmental or neurodegenerative issues affecting emotion, memory, self-control and learning ability as well as socialization and communication. Such individuals have been labelled as (mentally challenged) sufferers, patients or victims whose behaviours and “disorders” need to be corrected or moderated with therapies and medications. Nevertheless, a permitting culture or an enabling environment will promote understanding and allow those individuals exhibiting such mental conditions to have a better chance of finding acceptance, empathy, dignity, autonomy, acknowledgement and meaningful social roles. In these cases, what necessitates the need for correction or (re)assessment is not so much the mental conditions, psychological problems and behavioural issues as the cultural biases and social blinkers leading to denigration, prejudice, ignorance, exclusion, isolation or abandonment. Similarly, what obligates the need for rectification or (re)adjustment with respect to animal artistry and musicality is not so much the scope, definition, differentiation and delineation of animal mind, behaviour and culture in comparison with their human counterparts as the conventional expectations or entrenched assumptions not only about animals, their individuality, intelligence and social roles, but also about art and music, as well as the procedures, contexts and interpretations involved, so that we can have a far better understanding of, and a much improved engagement with, the sounds and languages found in Nature, and the associations between humans and animals couched in expressive forms of composition, narrative, performance art, popular culture and science.

In an age when the ideas of neuroplasticity and neurodiversity are beginning to catch up to, and align with, the now familiar concepts of, and desirable allowances for, multiculturalism and biodiversity, we can better guard against the pitfalls of overly normalizing, regimenting or pathologizing human behaviours, gender identities, sexualities, appearances, comportments, etiquettes, lifestyles, career aspirations, work-life balances, interpersonal communications, body politics and cultural expressions, as they begin to enter the public awareness and discourse in greater frequency and magnitude, especially with respect to bigotry, conformity, integration, inequality, segregation, criminalization, discrimination, marginalization, ostracization and stigmatization. Ostensibly, what was once woefully misunderstood and regrettably deemed as hopeless, intractable or undesirable, including neurodevelopmental conditions such as autism spectrum disorder, has been gradually seen in a different light, insofar as certain peculiar modes of perception or idiosyncratic facets of cognition are observed to be responsible for breeding savants, including artists and animal whisperers possessing astounding or unusual abilities. Set against our normality, the apparent otherness of such people can nonetheless allow them to excel in what they do, often single-mindedly in precious, unexpected and admirable circumstances. How do humans, animals and plants organise themselves and communicate with each other (thumbnail) Accordingly, we may indeed have even more compelling grounds to cherish the fascinating encounters or engagements with certain animal (cap)abilities, for despite their much greater otherness with respect to their human counterparts, whether neural or otherwise, innate or cultivated, some animals have consistently exhibited uncanny sameness to human beings in these skills in which they excel, not the least in the almost ritual-like practice and precision of the bowerbird in designing, the lyrebird in mimicking, the bird-of-paradise in dancing, the nightingale in singing, the cockatiel in talking, the peacock in dazzling, and the crow in problem-solving, never mind that these creatures are not bothered with (re)producing or communicating from architectural blueprints, artistic sketches, original manuscripts or compositional scores as definitive proofs of concepts, or as aesthetic statements of intents, visions and missions. Therefore, in the greater spirit of openness and empathy, in the increasing acknowledgement of plurality and multiplicity, and in the essential rebalancing of the Instrumental perspective with the Spiritual perspective, instead of always so exclusively or anthropocentrically admiring and celebrating the supposedly towering human achievements, human beings can finally be free to reflect on their hubris and their disconnect with Nature in order to truly appreciate their closeness and kinship with other animal species: the nonhumans and all their neuroplasticity and neurodiversity, waiting to be fully uncovered, recognized and engaged.

The ISEA Model Examining Human-Nature Relationships with respect to Sound, Music and Noise

Overall, the discussions here have yielded significant glimpses of animal artistry and musicality to provide the impetus or catalyst for future debates and discoveries in the following contexts:

  1. The (re)examining and pushing the boundaries of conventional expectations and entrenched assumptions in art and music as well as the procedures, contexts and interpretations involved in expressive forms of composition, narrative, performance art, popular culture and science
  2. The Instrumental, Spiritual, Pro-Environment and Pro-Animal/Plant perspectives in SoundEagle🦅’s ISEA Model identifying human-nature relationships with respect to sound, music and noise
  3. The nature, interaction and enhancement within animal interactions and human-animal relationships
  4. Affective (emotional) or relational bonds between humans and animals
  5. Human perceptions and beliefs in respect of other animals
  6. How some animals fit into human societies
  7. How this fit varies between cultures and changes over time
  8. The history of domestication
  9. The study of animal domestication: how and why domestic animals evolved from wild species (paleoanthrozoology)
  10. The social construction of animals and what it means to be animal
  11. The human-animal bond
  12. Parallels between human-animal interactions and human–technology interactions
  13. The symbolism of animals in literature, art, architecture, song, dance and ritual
  14. The intersections of speciesism, racism and sexism
  15. The place of animals in human-occupied spaces
  16. The social, cultural, spiritual and religious significance of animals throughout human history
  17. Exploring the cross-cultural ethical treatment of animals
  18. The critical evaluation of animal abuse and exploitation
  19. Mind, self and personhood in nonhuman animals
  20. The potential human health benefits of companion animal ownership


🎼 🎵🐕🎶🐒🎹🐘🖼🐬🎨 🥁



Endnotes
[1] David Cope, New Music Composition (New York: Schirmer Books, 1977), 297-8.
[2] Simha Arom, “Prolegomena to a Biomusicology”, in The Origins of Music, ed. Nils L. Wallin, Björn Merker and Steven Brown (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000), 27.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Frans de Waal, The Ape and the Sushi Master (2001), 153-4.
[5] A letter to a newspaper; quoted in Leslie, Ayre, ed, The Wit of Music, with an Introduction by Sir John Barbirolli (London: Leslie Frewin, 1966), 92.
[6] Julie Cohen, “When Animals Talk”, in Reader’s Digest (February 2002): 68.
[7] Tim Jay Anderson, “Lost in Sound: Cultural-Material Issues in American Recorded Music and Sound, 1948-1964”, PhD Diss., Northwestern University, 1998. Vol. 1 (Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI, 1998), 1-4.
[9] Erin Manning, “Histories of Violence: Neurodiversity and the Policing of the Norm”, Brad Evans interviews Erin Manning, 2 JANUARY 2018. Available at https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/histories-of-violence-neurodiversity-and-the-policing-of-the-norm/#!
[10] Pär Segerdahl, “Trapped in our humanity?”. Available at https://ethicsblog.crb.uu.se/2012/01/13/trapped-in-our-humanity/
[11] Wreen, Michael, “Beardsley’s Aesthetics”, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2014 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.) Available at https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2014/entries/beardsley-aesthetics/. See also “Authorial intent” at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authorial_intent
[12] AJOwens, “On Saving the Planet: Beyond Signifiers”. Available at https://staggeringimplications.wordpress.com/2020/08/31/on-saving-the-planet-beyond-signifiers/
Submitted as a response to Weekly Writing Challenge: The Best Medicine.

90 comments on “🦅 SoundEagle in Debating Animal Artistry and Musicality 🎵🐕🎶🐒🎹🐘🖼🐬🎨

  1. All nature is art and music…

    Liked by 3 people

    • Hi Michael, thank you for your comment. You seem to have a very poetic view or art-centric conception of Nature, whilst also possessing the sensitivity to perceive art and music through and in Nature. Here’s a book that might be of great interest and relevance to you: John D Barrow’s “The Artful Universe: The Cosmic Source of Human Creativity“. Happy reading!

      Liked by 2 people

      • Indeed I do, I’m very spiritually connected to all…and music and film scoring is my whole world and occupation…Mitakuye Oyasin my friend…and thank you for the book to read. Many blessings, Red Crow

        Liked by 2 people

      • You are very welcome, Red Crow (Michael). Four informative videos demonstrating animal art and intelligence have now been included in the post.

        Liked by 1 person

      • Great, Wado my friend. That means thank you in Tsalagi tongue, Cherokee.

        Liked by 3 people

  2. To the extent that any art is a creation that should take the recipient on an emotional journey, or elicit an emotional response, animal art – which to me includes painting, music and so forth – has valid function for humans. But the question, I guess, is whether the animal producing the material perceives it as we do. That is unanswerable, but to pose it – and attempt to answer – becomes a useful tool for insight into our own thought processes and perception.

    My take is that the animal probably doesn’t see the material as we do; they perceive it in their own way. It will not be ours – from which flows the question; why do we interpret the animal’s creation in our own terms? There is also a related question; all this art reflects the imposition of human concepts across animal behaviour. Do animals create anything, themselves, that constitutes art? A much wider philosophical issue, I think.I speculate, entirely without any evidence, that aspects of whale music may well constitute such for them.

    Liked by 4 people

    • Thank you, Matthew, for your astute observation and post-mortem pondering. Whilst differences in how humans and animals behave and perceive are apparent, many animals, especially mammals, do share a great deal of genetic similarities with humans, and therefore similarities do exist in spite of those apparent differences.

      Interspecies interactions and communications have illuminated the extent of overlapping in perception, which can be similar and also different both between and within species. For example, many parrots can speak, even sing, and also solve problems and answer questions post by their human companions. Some believe that certain animals (other than parrots) could have articulated if they had been endowed with the vocalizing apparatus that humans possess.

      That both humans and nonhumans share some perceptual similarities could be ascertained to the extent that animal psychologists and behavioural scientists have been able to use similar tests designed for humans to uncover nonhuman behaviours, and to teach sign language to some nonhuman species with great success.

      As for your question “why do we interpret the animal’s creation in our own terms?” and your related question “all this art reflects the imposition of human concepts across animal behaviour. Do animals create anything, themselves, that constitutes art?”, there are at least two important factors to consider in answering those questions. The first is that humans are bound by their languages and communicative devices as much as they are by their tools, toys, terminologies and technologies. Humans are also still in the early phase of systematically and scientifically decoding nonhuman “speeches” and behaviours, and are thus still limited in the means of investigation and interaction via which artistic creations of animals can be properly elicited, facilitated, identified and/or interpreted. In other words, until humans have the means to sufficiently understand how and what animals communicate, there is no way to properly and adequately determine whether animals have been and can be creative in their speeches and actions. However, humans can readily identify and conclude with certainty about the quality of nonhuman creativity when some animals perform certain human activities such as talking, singing, signing, painting, solving puzzles and doing arithmetic.

      Whilst the first factor relates to finding some common communicative grounds or means whereby one species can detect and understand the creativity of another and vice versa, the second factor concerns interspecies discovery, learning, exchange, enrichment, empowerment and coevolution. Whilst some may argue that it is unnatural or unnecessary for elephants or dolphins to draw, one can do very well to remind oneself that human ancestors were not doing a great deal of what modern citizens are excelling in and finding indispensable every day, including driving cars and using computers. There are yet more undiscovered ingenious ways to elicit, facilitate, identify and interpret creative animal behaviours. The quantum leap in recognizing and capturing animal intelligence and creativity in the future could be as great as the portentous outcome of discovering extra-terrestrial intelligence or encountering some interstellar civilization(s), whose vastly superior wisdoms and advanced technologies could amplify human intellect and achievement manifoldly.

      Liked by 2 people

      • “…discovering extra-terrestrial intelligence or encountering some interstellar civilization(s)…”

        Are you sure? 😎

        Liked by 2 people

      • Oh wise migarium, do enlighten us with your reservation(s) as well as your take on the Fermi paradox. 👽

        Liked by 2 people

      • Haha! You are a smart human! But I cannot say anything about the living species at outer space, there is a item which is recorded in page of 69.009 of the book of “The Act on the Protection of Data of the Species” by Galactic Council. According to this code, we, the extraterrestrials, cannot broke this rule by announcing the informations about the other species at the universe. (The reason for the large number of pages in that law book is that the first sixty-five thousand pages were written about which disagreements among the species are not handled by Galactic Council; in terms of reducing work intensity of council.:))

        And about the Fermi paradox: While many observations made by the human beings about the universe are made indirectly, I think there are a lot of road of the human beings will take, for the causality of Fermi paradox to gain the certainty.

        Actually human beings are afraid, my earthling friend. Fear is already the essence of every action and every movement (and many things) of the every living creatures; but the fear into complex minds which are like human brains that determine the reactions of living species that give the neurological reactions without absorbing chemical acquisition of the experience, so the responses that result of the hormonal reactions, is more at the forefront.

        For centuries, humanity, by looking upwards, wonders whether they are alone or not; because the determining factor is fear. (Unfortunately those who best make use of this fear are Hollywood screenwriters, by showing the extraterrestrials as the monsters)

        In fact, this question “are we alone?” is not the right question; in fact this question is not honest either. Of course there are those who are honest, like Blaise Pascal. He had said like that: “The eternal silence of these infinite spaces frightens me.” With the right admission, it could be human beings can take more steps to come close to the other species at universe.

        Actually Blaise Pascal had said this for another situation, but that is quite excellent sentence which suits on the situation of people’s fear about outer space. 😉

        Liked by 3 people

      • Hi Wise migarium👽,

        One year has passed since we last communicated with each other here. How have you been?

        Given the escalating social problems and ongoing environmental crises on Earth, sometimes SoundEagle🦅 might indeed feel that it would be very nice to join Roy Neary in the movie “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” and to leave the Earth for good to achieve or awaken interstellar or (inter)galactic spiritual revolutionaries!

        SoundEagle🦅 would like to inform you that this post has undergone a major improvement. The length of the post has more than doubled. There are also several new videos and six additional images. One of these newly incorporated images is of considerable interest to you, and is entitled “SoundEagle in Biomusic, Biosphere, Ecology, Flora, Fauna, Astronaut, Earth, Moon, Sun, Star and Space”.

        As you can see, the Astronaut👨‍🚀 in the image signifies that humanity is at the cusp of moving into space. Many utopians and technocrats are often too conveniently optimistic about the future of the human species. The repeated statement “We are a perfectly good model for the psychology of an advanced civilisation…” shows such a high degree of conceit, if not a kind of delusion. Humans are doomed if they cannot learn to behave sustainably as individuals and as a species. Given that the environmental, social, political and economic issues and problems seem to be getting larger (and in many cases more dire) by the year, SoundEagle🦅 seriously wonders whether space travel is even affordable and/or sustainable in the future, even when there are many who reckon and advocate that going into space is the (only) solution. The problem is whether humans could leave the Earth before they wreck it, and before serious disasters cause the decimation or even extinction of the human species.

        Besides, since the human species has not (always, adequately and/or consistently) been a good custodian of the environment and the Earth (not to mention countless wars, atrocities, resource depletions, species extinctions, environmental degradations and so on, plus an area of rainforest as big as 100,000 football fields is being cleared or destroyed everyday), there is no guarantee that once the human species migrates to another planet, the same problem would not again surface and plague that planet, perhaps at an even quickening and/or devastating pace as a result of better and greater expansion, production and technology. It seems that humanity would export its baggage and problems to other worlds!

        Perhaps we could liken humans to cancer cells on the petri dish that is Earth. Extinction is a euphemism for extermination, considering how many and the manner in which members of many endangered species have met their fate and untimely end.

        In the broader scheme of things, there is the really sobering fact that 99% of all species that ever appeared on Earth since life began are already extinct. The average lifespan of a species is one million years. Humanity (counting the early hominids) has lasted six million years. Extinction is the rule; survival is the exception.

        Where are you now in Space💫, migarium👽? We desperately need you to save the Earth from human follies and transgressions, now causing the sixth extinction, as discussed in the new portion of the post.

        Also, according to your observations and your flairs in conducting interspecies communication, what are the best ways of eliciting animal artistry and musicality?

        Liked by 4 people

      • So, it’s been a year, my earthling friend! Wow! As you pointed because of, “the escalating social problems and ongoing environmental crises on Earth”, many of us(so the extraterrestirals;) we can not find time in most time. We do have hard work on earth; did I mention before, even if we do not have any union, Galactic Council does not allow to be unionized for us. Anyway, I do not want to decrease my salary, and I stop talking about this.:))

        And yes! I have realized the length of the your post has more anymore. Thank you let me know! How do you do this? I am amazed always! And your reply to me, it is so creative my friend! Inside it, there are many figures! Like a magician! Are you?:) I only add links and pic. videos. But what you did is really stunning! Actually not only figures of course. You are trying people to illuminate. It is more valuable!

        Also, you are mentioning about extinction. When if comes to human beings we can always mention about extincion, you know.;) My opinion(it is just an opinion, not confirmed information:)) is that homo sapiens will be extinced by another up kind of human species. How homo sapiens wiped out neanderthals, in same way, another one will destroy homo sapiens. Or it is already started, who knows, haha!

        But my bet is always on Robots’s revolution.:)) Because I think, regardless of who(human kind) will come, someday, AI based robots will get the power on planet earth at future. I think human beings should must from now, how they can be inside in this future.

        And you know also my earthling friend, we cannot intervene to any events on earth. We just observe and report. But our big sorrow is always for the good people and children, all animals and nature on the planet. But any extraterrestrial cannot any intervene unfortunatelly…

        You also asked me “Also, according to your observations and your flairs in conducting interspecies communication, what are the best ways of eliciting animal artistry and musicality?”
        Unfortunately I do not have any idea about this subject. But it would be very good to listen a choir consisted dolphins, whales and seals.:) Their melodies should be wonderful!

        Liked by 3 people

    • Happy Father’s Day to you, Matthew! It has been a while since we last communicated. Please be informed that there is a newly published, interdisciplinary and highly stylized post that might be of great interest to you at the following:

      In addition, a conversation between SoundEagle and Prof. Pär Segerdahl highlights some of the issues discussed in this post about Animal Artistry and Musicality:

      Hi Prof. Pär Segerdahl,

      Hello! SoundEagle is delighted to have stumbled upon your blog and be acquainted with you and your work here. Since your “research has focused on the language of apes, animal welfare and gender”, please allow SoundEagle the liberty for commenting as follows:

      Interspecies interactions and communications are special in that they can and tend to transcend many boundaries and expectations imposed by human customs and belief systems. Perhaps you have heard of or studied such disciplines as zoo-anthropology or anthrozoology?

      What do you think of the writings of David Abram, specifically his book entitled “Becoming Animal”?

      To what degree does your research entail seeing animals outside of the box of human expectations or ideas that humans have about “utility” (not necessarily limited or pertaining to the utilitarian perspective or paradigm)?

      How do you find Frans de Waal’s book “The Ape and the Sushi Master”, which argues that animals are capable of forming and developing cultures and complex societies?

      Would you agree and/or recommend that we could learn a great deal about ourselves and Nature via the notion of “Biophilia” as first proposed by Edward O Wilson?

      SoundEagle says:

      Hi Prof. Pär Segerdahl,

      Thank you for directing SoundEagle to this post. Based on the studies of, and the findings in, epigenetics, gene-culture coevolution, biophilia (and biophobia) as well as animal whisperers such as Temple Grandin, SoundEagle is very much inclined to agree with you that it would be amiss or misguided to insist “that we become human primarily with other humans (a purification of what is human)”.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. no intelligent response from me just a grin…umm Perhaps there is a mystical music the resonates throughout nature; some songs are audible to human ears, others are not. Perhaps nature, animals, humans, the Spirit in nature and for me God, are all intricatly connected in a divine dance of harmony. As for art, simply another expression of creativity that is the root of all of creation.

    Liked by 2 people

  4. have nominated you for the ABC Award-AWESOME BLOG CONTENT:if you don’t do awards, it is still yours

    Liked by 2 people

  5. Impressed by your research and videos – also inspired by the sounds of nature, heard or felt – ever constant crows fill my days with constant craving….

    Liked by 3 people

  6. […] SoundEagle in Debating Animal Artistry and Musicality (soundeagle.wordpress.com) […]

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Interesting post! I know my own cats have preferences in music, although their preference is generally for something that lulls them to sleep.

    And did you know that there are fashions in whale song? Apparently their songs are not just random: they change, sometimes gradually, and sometimes drastically, and a new song takes about 2 years to get around the world. Here’s a link to the research: http://www.uq.edu.au/grad-school/news-whale-research

    Liked by 2 people

    • Indeed! SoundEagle has realized for many years that cetaceans have not just “fashions” but also “sound change”, “dialects” and “subcultures”, to use the terms in sociolinguistics. Thank you for sharing the link, Alison! May you have a great weekend and hopefully, you will become a subscriber so that we can have meaningful exchanges from time to time as new posts appear.

      Meanwhile, feel free to click SoundEagle’s Favourite Books to see a small fraction of SoundEagle‘s favourite books, many of which inform SoundEagle‘s worldview and values towards life.

      Liked by 1 person

    • Judging from your gravatar, you must have been a great devotee to your cats, which seem to have learnt to choose, identify and like certain music as lullabies or relaxation tunes. One wonders which tunes they prefer, and which they dislike.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Yes, the image is Siusin, my sole remaining cat. Her preference is for anything in the cello-oboe sort of range: soothing, not too percussive, and very mellow. She’s a very timid cat, who came from a shelter, so I think she had a rough time before she I found her. Anything loud or sudden startles her, so things like the slower Bach trios or Albinoni’s adagio work well, although she’s also keen on the more mellow stuff from Massive Attack.

        My previous two were pretty fearless, and would scamper about the house and romp when I played Madness – ska crosses species boundaries, I guess. 🙂

        Liked by 2 people

  8. In my teens I knew a keen and accomplished musician with a singing dog! Sue

    Liked by 2 people

  9. […] Can Animals Make Art and Music? … a roundtable on humor writing, featuring some of your favorite funny bloggers … revealed the critical gem that a monkey riding a dog is always funny … A monkey rid…  […]

    Liked by 1 person

  10. This offers such a good mental floss! I thoroughly enjoyed reading the post! Your identification with music is very clear. I love the way you have chosen to write this post!

    Liked by 2 people

  11. I have been exploring for a little for any high quality articles or blog posts on this sort of space . Exploring in Yahoo I at last stumbled upon this site. Reading this info So i am happy to express that I have a very good uncanny feeling I came upon just what I needed. I so much indubitably will make certain to do not overlook this web site and give it a glance on a constant basis.

    Liked by 2 people

  12. Bonjour mon Amie ou Ami du Net

    Un petit coup de pouce pour l’avenir
    Un petit mot que l’on dis régulièrement tous les jours.
    Bonjour comment vas-tu , moi ça vas , merci
    Ce sont des petits mots qui font plaisir à entendre et d’une belle sincérité
    Une grande marque de confiance
    C’est du soleil en abondance
    Si tu leur donnes un sens

    On ressent que ceux-ci viennent du cœur
    Avec un clin d’œil moi je te les adresse
    C’est la recette du bonheur accepte les moi je les prends en régal pour ce jour

    Belle journée , gros bisous plein de douceur

    Bernard

    Liked by 2 people

  13. Hello. Thank you very much. Please read more from my blog. I welcome everyone. I see you have interesting things on your blog too. Take care.

    Liked by 2 people

  14. Fascinating discussion on how much we may share with animals who we used to think much different from ourselves.

    Liked by 2 people

  15. At least one study has shown that there are beautiful and complex rhythms in the natural world. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

  16. A very fascinating and intriguing article! Thank you for sending it. I do not agree with everything in it, and I’m sure you’re aware also of the potential for abuse when human beings make use of animals to create “art” (not to mention sending them into space!); however, I know that that is not what you are primarily talking about. Instead you are writing about an intrinsic ability of animals to genuinely create art and to be truly in touch with aesthetic and spiritual levels of reality. This is a refreshing and profound perspective. Thank you very much for your very perceptive insights!

    Liked by 2 people

    • Sending you big December greetings as the festive season approaches!

      Thank you very much for reblogging the special post entitled “❄ ❅ ❆ Snowflakes, Tell Me Why You Are…” at your blog called “Echoes in the Mist”, and for repeating your latest comment here as it first appears in your post entitled “Local Knowledge Aids Scientific Understanding”. It is delightful to receive your feedback and compliment.

      SoundEagle🦅 would like to inform you that this post has been greatly enhanced to include more detailed discussions, so much so that the post is now about twice as long as it was when you first commented here slightly more than three months ago. One of the points being raised is that we are more likely to fail to comprehend the nature of our connection and relationship to animals when such connection and relationship are predicated mostly or entirely on ownership and control. Another new aspect introduced into the extended post relates to speciesism. Perhaps what may potentially fascinate you the most is SoundEagle🦅’s ISEA model, which features the Instrumental, Spiritual, Pro-Environment and Pro-Animal/Plant perspectives.

      There is also an interactive poll in which you can participate and view the results.

      SoundEagle🦅 looks forward to receiving your feedback or critique on the newly added texts, images, videos, model and poll!

      Liked by 1 person

  17. Reblogged this on It Is What It Is and commented:
    Amazing … ‘The sounds and languages found in Nature, and the associations between humans and animals couched in expressive forms of composition, narrative, performance art, popular culture and science, often challenge conventional expectations.’ … more in the post!!

    Liked by 2 people

  18. Great stuff here SE. One book that really inspired me was reading Jared Diamond’s The Third Chimpanzee. The book looks at how different we really are from our closest DNA relatives. I think the common perception is that we are far away from the animal world but a closer investigation reveals so many similarities, not only with chimps but many other members of the animal kingdom. If I remember correctly he goes through 6 qualities that we tend to think our uniquely human and proceeds to show that those behaviors exist elsewhere in the animal kingdom. Mostly with primates, but also looks elsewhere as well. Art is one of the chapters and he talks about much of what you are showing here with regards to chimps, elephants, and even the bower bird, which is really a fascinating bird. He argues also that perhaps one of the reasons why some animals in the wild have not developed artistic talents is simply because they lack the leisure time to do so.

    One note regarding elephant painting though is that I think we should be a little skeptical. Not so much that elephants aren’t smart enough to paint, but whether or not they can paint actual visuals of what they see is questionable, and some animal rights activists say the animals in captivity in Thailand where elephant painting tourism is huge mistreat the animals in training them to paint. Again, not to diminish an elephant’s abilities, but I think we might questions some of the methods being used to get the elephants to paint.

    This snopes article looks more at the spontaneity of the painting itself and how much long training plays in getting the elephants to paint.
    https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/elephant-painting/

    Not sure about this source, but it seems plausible. I would say that this one is partially true in that I believe the extremes happen in some cases.
    http://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsandnature/why-making-an-elephant-paint-is-cruel-not-cute/

    This article is far more researched and well-balanced and also looks at the possible cruelty to the elephants but also the trainers. The discussion is far more balanced in regards to the practice elephant tourism in general.
    https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2016/05/elephants-tourism-thailand/483138/

    Liked by 2 people

    • Hello Swarn Gill,How do humans, animals and plants organise themselves and communicate with each other (thumbnail)

      Thank you for your comment and compliment, which SoundEagle🦅 appreciates, and for mentioning Jared Diamond’s book entitled “The Third Chimpanzee” as well as the three articles, all of which have been incorporated into the list of Related Articles located just above the Comments section.

      It is a great delight that SoundEagle🦅 had recently managed to find the time and inspiration to expand this post by one third by adding eight more paragraphs and six additional images as well as five new videos.

      Three of the images depict SoundEagle🦅’s ISEA model, which comprises blue, red, green and yellow quadrants corresponding to the Instrumental, Spiritual, Pro-Environment and Pro-Animal/Plant perspectives overlayed with the horizontal axis (Instrumental↔Spiritual) and vertical axis (Pro-Environment↔Pro-Animal/Plant).

      Each perspective or quadrant contains a set of three major attributes. The four yellow double-arrows (Atomistic, Individualistic, Holistic and Integrative) connote overlapping features between adjacent perspectives. You are welcome to enlarge or comment on some or all of the images by clicking them.

      There is also an interactive poll in which you can participate and view the results.

      May you find the newly added texts, images, videos, model and poll engaging and meaningful!

      Liked by 1 person

  19. […] Elephants can not just count but also make art and music, as discussed in my special post Animal artistry and musicality. […]

    Liked by 1 person

  20. Great post on the natural rhythms enjoyed by all of life

    Liked by 2 people

  21. Fascinating read. Behind all the scientific talk, there’s a nature-loving, utopian, hippy vibe I’m feeling.

    “…we can begin to look upon the age-old dichotomy of humans versus nonhumans with scepticism… and start to see living things as entities interconnected in multiple ways through common evolutionary heritages…”

    Illuminating as ever, SoungEagle. Thank you.

    Liked by 2 people

  22. Animals are fascinating creatures indeed!!

    Liked by 2 people

  23. Music being one of the oldest forms of communication, it should come as no surprise that animals respond to and can even create it. Most every other species was on earth long before humans, after all, and humans are arrogant creatures if they think they are the only ones who can create beauty in whatever format. Good post, great fun videos! Thank you!

    Liked by 2 people

  24. A delightful post. I believe animals are far more intelligent, emotional, insightful than humans will ever understand. In general, we assume that every other creature on the planet is inferior when it might be quite the opposite.

    Liked by 2 people

  25. There is a huge amount of scientific evidence that animals experience emotions, learn from experience, have empathy, etc. It is not anthropomorphic to consider them people who are different from humans.
    Even intelligence doesn’t set us above them. How would a human do on an intelligence test designed by an elephant or octopus?
    Apart from experimental evidence I am aware of, I’ve also had some personal encounters that made me think. Once, a beetle was walking along the floor, straight for my foot. Being an obliging person and not wanting to block its path, I moved my foot to the side. The beetle made a right angle turn, and aimed for my foot again. Intrigued, I kept moving my foot, about 10 times, and every time, the beetle changed direction. At last, I kept still. It climbed up and sat there, king (or queen) of the castle.
    I challenge anyone to describe this in non-anthropomorphic terms. It had exhibited purpose, determination, obstinacy.

    Liked by 3 people

  26. I love animals, and nature, and music, and all sorts of sound phenomena which may be experienced in the natural world. I have spent an inordinate amount of time, compared to the average person, engaged in the perceiving and enjoyment and considering of these things during my life.

    That said, I have no reason to call any of the sound phenomena I have heard in these natural contexts, emanating from various species as well as from simple natural processes themselves, compositions. You can do this poetically of course, and I am certain I have in life. You can also perform all sorts of pedantic twists around the ways words and meanings are used. But to not be able to notice the clear qualitative and inherent differences between such sound phenomena and human music is in my opinion simple willfulness or confusion.

    The other point which ran through this thread, lengthy as it was, which I found suspect, was the accusations around speciesism, or the idea put forth that a human cultural intellectual norm exists which too strongly imagines the differences between animals and human beings. I find the opposite to be the case. There in fact exists a strongly biased meme within academic, scientific, and intellectual circles which is constantly trying to minimize the distinction between humans and animals. I never hear anything convincing along these lines. (In particular in this post I found the ISEA 4-quadrant concept to be unclear and not rigorously laid out.) I think this tendency arises, of course, from received wisom concerning Darwinian evolution and it’S more recent elaborations and even ideological manifestations — whereupon thinkers sees required at every opportunity to insist that humans are a kind of animal, period. The other ingredient I suspect which flavors this unclear miso soup is the lack of inclination many people have to deeply introspect. But, that’S just one ‘higher animal’s’ take. 🙂 Cheers. And kudos for all your efforts, though your posts tend to be encyclopedic.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Welcome Robert! Thank you for your feedback, which contains a number of gross simplifications, oversights and misunderstandings. Whether or not you consider “any of the sound phenomena [you] have heard in these natural contexts, emanating from various species as well as from simple natural processes themselves, [to be] compositions”, it would be rather absurd or perfunctory to claim that deeming any sounds or sonic phenomena originating from nonhumans (biophony) or habitats (geophony), as opposed to from humans (anthropophony), to be (a form of) compositions is categorically the result of some poetic licence, wishful thinking, “simple willfulness [sic] or confusion”, or “pedantic twists around the ways words and meanings are used”, given all that have been discussed in this post, not to mention that there is hardly any sane or normal human being who can fail “to notice the clear qualitative and inherent differences between such sound phenomena and human music”, to use your own words.

      Furthermore, “the idea put forth that a human cultural intellectual norm exists which too strongly imagines the differences between animals and human beings” has never been “the opposite” of “a strongly biased meme within academic, scientific, and intellectual circles which is constantly trying to minimize the distinction between humans and animals”, since there are and have been a great deal of overlaps between the two. In addition, neither the former nor the latter has been solely, invariably, necessarily, or even remotely influenced by, or a product of, “received wisom [sic] concerning Darwinian evolution and it’S [sic] more recent elaborations and even ideological manifestations — whereupon thinkers see[m] required at every opportunity to insist that humans are a kind of animal, period.” Seeing animals as (equivalents, embodiments, personifications or reincarnates of) humans, pseudo-humans, ancestors or spirits and vice versa has occurred for a long time since antiquity. Many legends, stories, kinships, rituals, liminal entities, bohemians, freethinkers, philosophers, theologians, poets, artists, visual artists, performance artists, soundscape artists, installation artists, avant-garde artists, experimental artists, musicians and composers, as well as nature lovers, animal activists, ethicists, visionaries, naturalists, conservationists, scientists, psychologists, developmental psychologists, behavioural scientists, neuroscientists, physiologists, geneticists, biologists, zoologists, taxonomists, comparative anatomists, anthropologists, anthrozoologists, zoomusicologists, biomusicologists, ethnomusicologists, postmodernists and the like, have all variously contributed to the contemplating, questioning, critiquing, blurring, dissolution or disintegration of the human-animal dichotomy, whether through cross-collaborations, whether by design or by accident, whether independently or codependently, and whether concurrently or not, plus the cumulative results, benefits and synergies from the convergence of evidence from diverse disciplines and researchers who may or may not be collaborating and/or aware of each other’s findings and activities in the first place. These are the outcomes of multiple lines of pursuit or inquiry, and never just the purviews of research(ers) on/in evolution and evolutionary sciences, regardless of whether you or anybody deem humans to be “higher animals” (or to be animals at all), and irrespective of whether or not you subscribe to science, religion and/or spiritual beliefs.

      Considering that you deem SoundEagle🦅’s ISEA Model Identifying Human-Nature Relationships with respect to Sound, Music and Noise “to be unclear and not rigorously laid out”, you are cordially invited to venture boldly into the post entitled “🎧 Facing the Noise & Music: Grey Barriers and Green Frontiers of Sound, Society and Environment 🔊🏡🏞”, which is the original source bearing the detailed exposition and discussion of the model, as already mentioned in this post.

      In any case, SoundEagle🦅 is delighted that you have savoured this post and left your intellectual footprint here. It is wonderful and reassuring to be informed that you “love animals, and nature, and music, and all sorts of sound phenomena which may be experienced in the natural world”, and that you “have spent an inordinate amount of time, compared to the average person, engaged in the perceiving and enjoyment and considering of these things during [your] life.”

      It is too late to wish you, Sha’Tara and your respective families a Happy New Year 🎉🎊🎄☃️. However, there is still time for SoundEagle🦅 to wish you a Happy Chinese New Year, which will occur in two days and last for 15 days, as explained in another “encyclopaedic” post entitled “🦅 SoundEagle in Chinese New Year Celebration, Spring Festival, Lion Dance, Traditional Culture and Architecture 🏮🎋🦁⛩”.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Hi Craig,
        I do not find your rhetorical style conducive to communication. In fact, I would nearly conclude that communication amd understanding is not your primary objective within these comments — rather just to generate more dialoging and clicking. Which is not of interest. You have not made a case for there not being a clear line of demarcation between animals and humans on many general levels, and also upon the level of produced sound. I do not need to read further of your posts to confirm or test this observation. If you cannot make the case simply and clearly, you cannot make it. Speciesism has nothing to do with realizing that human music and natural sound are entirely and qualitatively different phenomena. Contrariness and unorthodoxy merely for the sake of it are not useful in the present cultural impasse. Your posts tend to blast with information. The world has enough information; what it starves for is understanding and wisdom.

        If you wish further dialogue, I will only consider doing so if I deem that your subsequent communication is simple, elegant, and authentic. Thanks.

        Like

      • It is very obvious that your previous reply is replete with misunderstandings, conflations and unjustified dismissals, as well as an inability or a refusal to properly acknowledge, accept and comprehend (some of) the contents of this post and SoundEagle🦅’s previous comment, which you summarily consign or construe as having been directed at you in a/the “rhetorical style [in]conducive to communication”, even when plenty of cares and thoughts have been clearly exercised by SoundEagle🦅 to communicate holistically with you (as well as other readers and commenters) in the aim of reaching consilience and conveying certain substantive and pressing issues, some of which have global and existential consequences, contrary to your rather dismissive, desultory and perfunctory assertion that SoundEagle🦅’s “posts tend to blast with information. The world has enough information; what it starves for is understanding and wisdom”, to use your own words.

        Both your approach and your comments so far not only fail to guarantee or engender substantive comprehensions and communicative depths, but also present problematic conflations, encumbrances, stumbling blocks, blinkers, stereotypes, assumptions and/or prejudices. Considering that you are a new reader here, please kindly click “About 🛅” to receive a good orientation plus useful recommendations on selected tools and features in order to be familiar with the nature and purpose of this website or blog. Of course, you may not even bother with this, even though caring about truth requires us to be consilient, open-minded and multidisciplinary rather than being narrowly focused or entrenched in certain ways.

        There is also another conflation or confusion on your part that needs to be corrected. Please be informed that SoundEagle🦅 is not Dr Craig EisemannClick here to learn more about CRAIG EISEMANN.. Needless to say, should you continue your approach and misapprehend SoundEagle🦅 and/or Dr Eisemann, as evidenced from many of the statements in your comments in this and other posts, then a reasonable person can indeed conclude that good words have indeed fallen on deaf ears. Of course, you are likely to think or counter that we are the ones with defective or dysfunctional ears (and minds). Then we shall have nothing more to offer, not to mention that you have already jumped to the retort, insinuation, defence or conclusion that one or both of us and our posts and/or comments are not only rhetorical but also long on “information” but short on “understanding and wisdom”.

        You have once again committed the strawman fallacy, defined as “a form of argument and an informal fallacy based on giving the impression of refuting an opponent’s argument, while actually refuting an argument that was not presented by that opponent.” Neither this post nor SoundEagle🦅’s previous comment has ever tried to make the case that there is not “a clear line of demarcation between animals and humans on many general levels, and also upon the level of produced sound”, not to mention that there is hardly any sane or normal human being who can fail “to notice the clear qualitative and inherent differences between such sound phenomena and human music”, to use your own words. Nor has this post made the case that “[s]peciesism has [anything or something] to do with realizing that human music and natural sound are entirely and qualitatively different phenomena.” On the contrary, this post has indicated that what is and has been mistakenly construed as “a clear line of demarcation between animals and humans” (let alone multiple lines) can be quite illusory and segregating, often creating misunderstandings, denials, conflicts, exploitations, denigrations, decimations and/or even extinctions (potentially including our own). Rather than dwelling on the rigid and delusional belief in there being “a clear line of demarcation between animals and humans”, one should be openminded, receptive and observant towards the spectra and continua on which humanity and animality exist, merge, converge and diverge. In other words, “the clear qualitative and inherent differences” as well as the likenesses, affinities and similarities of characteristics coexist and manifest in multiple continua, just as many aspects of Nature and the human and nonhuman worlds are continua or platforms affording many opportunities and avenues for “humans to (be)hold difference and sameness together… [with] the formation of an outreaching mindset capable of recognizing that both humanity and nonhumanity are part of being earthlings, that each is often necessary to the other, and that we, in the light of species richness, interdependency and biodiversity, can only truly possess and preserve our humanity when both the uniqueness and commonality of other nonhuman species are held in high esteem as treasures equally worth preserving for their own sake, and for their intrinsic significance”, quoting a passage from this post.

        Whether or not you wish to make further comment(s), please note that no “further dialogue” is required or necessary if you so wish, whether or not you or anybody “deem that [y]our subsequent communication is simple, elegant, and authentic.” Thank you for your visit, input and understanding.

        Liked by 1 person

  27. Bonjour mon ami(e) ou bonsoir

    Une jolie cascade de Bonheur

    Arrive sur ton univers
    Comme une fontaine magique
    Elle t’imprègne de son doux parfum
    Appelé “Amitié”
    Sur une rivière de tendresse
    Ou tombe une pluie de bisous
    Je te souhaite une bonne journée​
    Belle journée ou soirée​
    Bisous
    Bernard

    Liked by 1 person

  28. I hope you will click this to see when animals and humans could choose: https://traceademeyer.pressbooks.com/front-matter/870/

    Liked by 1 person

  29. Loved your content, definitely awe-inspiring and leaves me with lots to ponder. We certainly know from experience that animals have intelligence. But I have never looked at the research in any great depth.

    Liked by 1 person

  30. What a wonderful and extensive research, my friend! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  31. Rebecca from PennNeuroKnow here. Thanks for the question about the neuroethology of animal artistry and musicality you left on my article (http://pennneuroknow.com/2019/06/25/neuroethology-the-wild-side-of-neuroscience/)! The definition of neuroethology refers to the study of the neural circuits behind behaviors that occur in a natural environment. When it comes to animal “music” or “art”, I believe that the field would generally study behaviors that occur without training. A common musical behavior seen in animals can be seen in birds called zebra finches that learn songs for communicating with other zebra finches (1). Zebra finches are a classical model in neuroethology since they learn these songs in their natural environments. However you can debate whether these songs are considered ‘creative music’.

    It has also been demonstrated that other animals are capable of understanding rhythm (2), such as Ronan the sea lion (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sYisjieeKK8) that was trained to follow rhythmic beats (3). While this demonstrates that certain animals can understand and maintain rhythms, this is not typically a trait they display in the wild. That makes it an interesting psychological and biological phenomenon but not an ethological one.

    As for visual art, one example of a natural behavior would be from bowerbirds, who build nests in order to attract mates. Unlike most nests, bowerbird nests are large and complex. There have been some studies to look at the brain size of these animals (4,5). These studies found that the bowerbirds had larger brains than a non-bower building species. But among the different types of bowerbirds, their brains did not vary that much except in a region called the cerebellum, where it looked like more complicated nests needed a larger cerebellum to help with building.

    Overall, most of the artistry seen in animals is not naturally occurring but might be possible with assistance or training such as giving an animal a paint brush. Thus, most of these studies might be interesting in other fields but not necessarily neuroethology. Many studies have been done looking at the possibility that animals can make art or music, but whether these are naturally occurring behaviors is what would make them ‘ethological’.

    1. Spierings M.J., Cate C. Zebra Finches As a Model Species to Understand the Roots of Rhythm Frontiers in Neuroscience (2016)
    2. Hattori Y., Tomonaga M., Matsuzawa T., Spontaneous synchronized tapping to an auditory rhythm in a chimpanzee. Scientific Reports 3, Article number: 1566 (2013)
    3. Diamond J., Animal art: Variation in bower decorating style among male bowerbirds Amblyornis inorantus. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 83 3042-3046 (1986)
    4. Madden J., Sex,bowers and brains Proceedings: Biological Sciences 268, No. 1469 pp. 833-838 (2001)
    5. Day L., Westcott D.A., Olster D., Evolution of Bower Complexity and Cerebellum Size in Bowerbirds. Brain Behav. Evol 66:62-72 (2005)

    Liked by 2 people

  32. Coucou toi , mon Ami Amie

    Dans le chemin du bonheur
    Il existe des virages nommés erreurs
    Des feux de signalisation nommés amis ou amies
    Des lumières de précaution nommées famille
    Sur la route comme en famille et en amitié
    Tout se paie comme au péage
    Mais tout peut être accompli
    Comme un pneu de rechange nommé Décision
    Dans le cœur tu as un puissant moteur nommé Amour
    Dans la tète un réservoir avec beaucoup de carburant nommé Patience
    Mais en toi tu as surtout un conducteur expert nommé Courage
    Pardonne ces erreurs
    Je te souhaite une belle journée ou soirée
    Bisou amical Bernard

    Liked by 1 person

  33. Thank you so very much for making me wade through the animal kingdom and their mode of behaviour. We humans require something special while deciphering different notes coming out of the animals. You have to have an outstanding association with the animals to know how these innocent creation of our Almighty God react and be happy when we human show the inclination of being joyful. They enjoy the must, they produce the music, they dance to the tune of music, but we humans require the sixth sense/ intuition to know what is being meant by these gems of a creation.

    I know, whenever I go out for a walk, a group of street dogs accompany me, virtually dance with joy and taking out a particular sort of sound which I have not hitherto heard. I also have the experience of knowing the love expressed by the cows, calf, and other domesticated animals. They exhibit their pleasure in so many ways. It produces a warmth in us for these animals. We just introspect; if these innocents were not there in our life, then, how unpleasant and empty our lives would have been.To understand them thoroughly we have to be like them.

    I know an incident of around 20 years. It so happened that a wild money entered the residence of our neighbour. It started raising mayhem and also started biting the small kids. By chance I was there. I just stood there just smilingly, just concentrating on the money. The monkey changed its antics and I went to that fellow and patted it on the back. At first it was rebellious a little but after sometimes it climb on my shoulder and started a dance of its own. What a feeling I had and my neighbours were very excited and surprised too!

    The poem by Tom Murray is really very nice.

    With regards,

    HARBANS

    Liked by 1 person

  34. Post too long for my comfort. …Am Impressed by the way the Elephant started his next stroke from earlier points. Thanks for sharing. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

  35. Hey buddy, hope you are well. I enjoyed the diversity and video explanations on the bioacoustics. I’d never thought of the range of sound evolving so each specie occupies an available bandwidth, filling it in such a way seems so obvious now you mention it. Determining a healthy forest can be done just by listening to it, or the absence of its sounds. We briefly discussed the ethnosphere, and the importance of human diversity in interpreting and being is just as important to the health of the planet.
    One of the things that troubles me with science is the continuation of the near eastern philosophy of subduing, controlling, and being lord and master over the earth is only going to damage it further. When will we learn to not interfere? Seems every fix just compounds the problem.
    Excellent post. I didn’t catch all the videos but hope to return. Regards

    Liked by 2 people

  36. Truly a page for all of us who love our four-legged friends! The eight-legged variety I am not so sure about (LOL). The videos you’ve chosen are delightful, SoundEagle. We must try harder to good stewards of this planet we inhabit. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

  37. Thank you. It’s very comprehensive and informational. Fascinating subject. There is immense ecological weavings in the study of communication and self expression. Semiotics is worth the study if you’re interested in pursuing animal communication, the use of signs, and the inherent flaw humans reveal when attempting to understand communication solely from the language container we have developed. A position of “Sui Generis” seems to be required if one wants to see with a clearer perspective. Thanks for this.

    Liked by 2 people

  38. A re-reading of this put me in mind of Aesop’s Fables. Did you know that they are credited to a slave who lived in ancient Greece? The tales still contain contain surprising wisdom.

    Liked by 2 people

  39. So great. We all are animals, It is just the ones that aren’t us, seem better.

    Liked by 2 people

  40. If we transfer this domestication knowledge from animals to crop breeding, we may be able to rapidly deliver some useful benefits. As the earth s population grows and we increase crop production by growing plants in ever diverse environments, we improve our crops by breeding in increased environmental resilience and disease resistance. However many of these traits are complex and controlled by numerous genes, and environmental tolerance breeding attempts have in recent years met with more limited success.

    Like

  41. Wow, what a comprehensive study about the spirits of those creatures that inhabit this world with us. I did not have time to watch all the videos but I did what several. They are amazing and I believe that all things are connected. You and I think a lot a like I believe. Scientists often want to explain away things they don’t really understand. I am amazed at what you had to say and the videos you showed to demonstrate your meaning. Two of my favorites was the woman who was playing so beautifully but the cat would open the door and stop her. The bird that immediately began to sing with the piano playing and stopping the second she stopped playing. My favorite is the painting elephant, just amazing. What a lovely piece of writing and I can’t imagine the time and effort that went into putting together this piece. Just BRAVO! I believe the trees clap and talk to us we just can’t hear them. One day I will! Thank you again my friend. Big hugs and lots of love to you. xoxoxo

    Liked by 1 person

  42. We don’t have to choose between preserving human-made music like Beethoven 6th or Elephants and panda bears, because the sixth extinction is so great that they’re both threatened to be lost. I’m glad we don’t have the technological capability to fly off the Earth and leave it to its own regeneration or demise. We are here to stay, bonded to the cradle in which we were born. The cowards among us cannot run away and hide in a fancy spaceship in search of a new planet to mess up. Those that have created the most amount of harm are the biggest cowards. They knew/know are resources are finite but go about business as usual anyways, seized by their own fear. It would be easier to confront our human failings if we knew it embodied by one person or name, but it is not.

    Many of these videos on sound make the assumption that the animals are drawn to the sounds of the instruments or voices, but I would argue that it is on a more basic level of association, the passage and vibrations of air. (ie, The horse that it interested in the man playing the native flute.) When I laid under my Grandmother’s piano as she played, it was not for the enjoyment of “boring” classical music that she was playing, it was for the soft striking of the hammers on the chords and the strong “clonk” of the foot pedal being used. It also reverberates the air under a piano differently than standing next to it. There is more to sound than surface notes, just as there is more to soil than dirt.

    I am particularly sensitive to low frequency noise. There is construction of nine house occurring near me and nothing I can do about it because it’s not regulated like other forms of pollution. Many of my animal friends have shifted their range to avoid it for now, but as we are about to enter “construction season” (warm weather months) it will be hard for all of us to escape. I wonder if we humans could build buildings not only with better building practices in terms of materials and design, but also quieter. To benefit all existing residents, human and nonhuman alike.

    Liked by 1 person

  43. This is an amazing post. I love all the videos and artwork. Animals truly are amazing, whether influenced and taught by humans or on their own. The sound of birds singing is music to my ears!

    Liked by 1 person

  44. Long ago, when I ran, I wore headphones and listened to man-made music. I have quit the addiction long ago. The music of the world is enough, and should not be attenuated.

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  45. We skimmed your post. It is another long one. We are already generally familiar with what you were writing about, if many of the scholarly details were new to us. We don’t necessarily have a directly and entirely relevant response to offer. But we could emphasize a point you made, that it’s not merely other species creating art, performing, or whatever in relation to humans. The relationship goes the other way as humans are inspired by the non-human world. Paul Shepard goes so far as to argue non-human animals, particularly wildlife, are what made humans ‘human’.

    And it’s not necessarily about whether humans should or should not use other lifeforms but how we relate in ecological interdependency. If we think very deeply, we delve into complex and strange territory. Many hunter-gatherers, such as totemic cultures, don’t necessarily treat animal others as distinct individuals and, from our perspective, they might seem rather indifferent toward their suffering. To their minds, a species is a communal identity and individual death, including for humans, is less significant as we think about it. That touches upon ego theory of mind vs bundle theory of mind, not to mention 4E cognition, a topic we won’t get into at the moment.

    In our most recent post, we also wrote about animals and humans, but with a focus on how we relate. It was maybe more written as a reminder to ourselves than something to inform others. We have a great talent in connecting with certain non-human species. We’re specifically a cat person, but we tend to get along with a wide variety of creatures. It’s mostly that we’re interested and persistent in engaging with them. If we see a cat, we often will automatically and immediately drop down low to begin the process of entering their world. There is something palpably lacking in our own world when we don’t have non-human animals, domestic and wild, to regularly interact with.

    Our experience of human society is a whole other matter, at least modern WEIRD society that separates the human from the animal. As an introvert, we have limited energy of engagement with most humans. Part of it is that it simply requires more energy and effort to deal with the typical person, beyond everyday superficialities and formalities. There are more games and dishonesty involved. But having been raised in the respectable upper middle class, we were modeled and taught the social niceties and so we can do small talk with strangers or schmoozing with a boss, however much we dislike it. So, it’s not a lack of ability.

    We suspect that interacting with less domesticated and civilized humans likely would be less stressful and tiresome; or else if we acted less domesticated and civilized. What we were thinking is how improved our human relations might be if we applied the same rules that we know work with so many other animals. We all share a common evolution, that is in going back far enough. Even reptiles have some basic affective and neurocognitive capacities similar to that of humans. If you move slowly and gently enough, be it in the presence of a housefly or an alligator, they won’t perceive you as predator or prey, and so their sympathetic nervous system won’t be elicited.

    You simply won’t fit into their instinctual repertoire. Such behavior is evolutionarily novel within the umwelt of some species. It’s similar to the issue of singing and music. For many species, what is novel is ignored, irrelevant, or not perceived. But for other species, novelty is responded to with curiosity or even playfulness. In either case, your encouraging and creating the context where you might be able to relate more pleasantly, at least from a human perspective and maybe for many other species as well. Besides the predator-prey dynamic, playfulness is not an uncommon interspecies behavior, specifically among creatures with higher intelligence, whether between a cat and a human or between a dog and a dolphin.

    Of course, a human or other predator can use various techniques to deceptively get others to lower their defenses (e.g., a cat slowly stalking a bird). One’s intentions are important. And though humans can have a talent for hiding or misrepresenting intentions, like any other animal, we also have the capacity to honestly communicate intentions. But modern WEIRD humans, specifically, are more prone to hiding as a default mode, to be reserved and repressed. And admittedly, we maybe are no different than other WEIRDos in our human-to-human behavior.

    But with animals it is different for us. We’ve become aware of this over the years. Most people we know would be embarrassed to act as we do around animals. For example, we’ll use a high-pitched voice in talking to cats. Scientific research actually shows cats prefer such a tone, presumably because higher pitch instinctively equates to an animal that is smaller and less threatening. Yet we’ve never met another person in our life who will do this in order to befriend or calm a cat. Interestingly, our Libyan friend says he never knew any Libyan to talk to any animal with any voice because that would be considered insane.

    We love cats. So, with the various cats we’ve lived with over the years, we tend to be happy or even gleeful to see them, such as when we come home from a draining day at work. We’ll express our excitement and cats, like dogs, will typically express excitement in return. The funny thing is, even if we were happy to see a close human friend, we’d never act this way. In our society, it’s considered improper or, to some, even disturbing to greet another human with a child-like effusion of unfiltered emotion. Such feelings, according to mainstream American social norms, should be kept to oneself or better yet suppressed entirely.

    Why is that? Humans are animals too. And like other mammals, affective expression is an important part of communication. Why do we emotionally cripple ourselves, a foot-binding of the soul? When we tell our cat that we love her, we don’t worry about how she’ll take it or if she’ll reciprocate; and we don’t obsess over what ‘love’ really means or whether we really believe what we are saying. It’s simply a feeling we are making known without any worries about the words. The cat knows what we mean, at the most basic level.

    Similarly, we also don’t worry what a cat thinks about it’s own name. In our experience, many cats, like dogs, do know their own names and like to hear them spoken (so do humans, as suggested by Dale Carnegie in his book How to Win Friends and Influence People). They probably don’t think of the sound of their names in the way do humans. But they understand it means you’re talking to them, that your full attention and interest is turned toward them. We had a cat who knew all of the names of her fellow feline housemates and would accordingly twitch her tail, awake or asleep.

    Some wild species also use personal names, such as prairie dogs. They’ll give names to individual others, including humans who regularly visit them. Human language is built on hundreds of millions of years of proto-linguistic behaviors. A few species like whales might even have evolved their own languages or something akin to it, if we can’t begin to comprehend what they might be saying. By the way, a number of human cultures have music-languages, drum-languages, whistle-languages, and hum-languages; demonstrating how different language might sound.

    It’s not an issue of anthropomorphism. Rather it’s quite the opposite. Or else it’s that we are falsely projecting anthropomorphism on humanity. We forget that humans are animals too. The concept of humanity as separate from other lifeforms is a social construct that disconnects us from biological reality and immediate experience. We are earthlings on a shared planet. In this context, we can’t see how anthropomorphism doesn’t touch upon anthropocentrism.

    The first stage of anthropomorphism, in our understanding, is socially constructing and then internalizing the ideology of the anthropos as defining the center of human experience. So, anthropocentrism is not merely a species bigotry as it prioritizes a false sense of self and being-in-the-world. The society we’ve built over millennia is not only harmful to many other species but also, in many ways, contradictory to our own biological nature: industrialized agriculture, mass urbanization, high inequality, etc.

    This area of thought comes up in postmodernism, specifically the work of Michel Foucault but also in that of Bruno Latour, with apparently some influence on anthropologists (e.g., Paul Rabinow). They question the human exceptionalism and human essentialism of the anthropos (Greek, “the human thing”). We are only vaguely conversant with such postmodern critiques, but they generally fit in with our thinking. Our main difference is that we are more drawn to metamodernism, in that we aren’t satisfied with ending with mere critique.

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  46. There is a wealth of fascinating ideas, information and insights in this article. One can spend days and days thinking about and researching further the ideas put forward and the questions raised in this post. Thank you for sharing your wisdom and insights with us, SoundEagle.

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