83 Comments

Do Animals Create Art and Music? šŸŽµšŸ•šŸŽ¶šŸ’šŸŽ¹šŸ˜šŸ–¼šŸ¬šŸŽØ


SoundEagle in Animal Artistry & Musicality

Having asked
Do Plants and Insects Coevolve? šŸ„€šŸšŸŒŗšŸ¦‹
it is time to ask

Do Animals Create Art and Music?

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

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 ā€˜Biomusicā€™ in 1971, animal composition represents an example of this experimental musical genre, and is realized by ā€œsimply listening to animals create musicā€ as if it is a ā€œnatural theatreā€ 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 ā€œhappeningsā€. 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 ā€œan act of intentional construction, in other words, an act of creation that actualizes an intentionā€.[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 Beardsleyā€™s aesthetics regarding the intentions of the artist, it can be argued by extension to nonhumans that the intentions of an animal (artist) ā€œare utterly irrelevant to the descriptive, interpretive, and evaluative properties ofā€ an animal composition on the basis that the intentions are ā€œneither available nor desirable as a standard for judging the success of a workā€, lest we commit the intentional fallacy of basing our assessment of (the value or meaning of) an animal composition on the animalā€™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 ā€œpurpose and finality to it, shared between the creators of the music and members of their culture, through which they confirm their common identityā€,[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 ā€˜culturallyā€™ the animal species in question is to Homo sapiens ā€” 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 ā€œunadulteratedā€ animal music. To puristsā€™ 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 animalsā€™ 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, shouldnā€™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 ā€œMeditation from Thaisā€, 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 ā€œhidden treasureā€ in Swahili) not only has a 2,000-word vocabulary and understands spoken English, but is also talented at ā€œplaying 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 notesā€.[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 ā€” 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 ā€œanimal instrumentā€, not only in vocalizing or singing to its own playing on a musical instrument but also in ā€œsight-readingā€ 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 Hollandā€™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 Harrisā€™ 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 ā€” 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 ā€œAll Creatures Great and Smallā€, 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 composerā€™s musical intelligence and underestimate the creaturesā€™ 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 Lionā€™s Roar
It Isnā€™t Like the Cry of Any Bird
But Thereā€™s a New Sound
And Itā€™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 Thatā€™s Made by Worms

ā€• Tony Burello and Tom Murray

The lines above constitute a set of spoken lyrics for a song titled Thereā€™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 ā€œIf Itā€™s Really a Horrible Record ā€” Itā€™s Bound to be a Hitā€. 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 ā€œWHEEZ-A WACK, WHEEZ-A WACKā€ under layers of the latest sound effects and reverberations ā€” hence the claim of the ā€œNewest Soundā€. 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 ā€˜low livesā€™, with whom humans are on less intimate terms.

SoundEagle and the Sound Thatā€™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 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 ā€œšŸŽ§ Facing the Noise & Music: Grey Barriers and Green Frontiers of Sound, Society and Environment šŸ”ŠšŸ”šŸžā€, 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 ā€œšŸ¦… SoundEagle in Art, Aphorism and Paramusic šŸā€.

The ISEA Model Identifying Human-Nature Relationships with respect to Sound, Music and Noise 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 animalsā€™ 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 ā€œhuman self-centrednessā€ and some degree of ā€œhumanistic immanenceā€ 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 ā€œspeechesā€ 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 ā€œspeechesā€ 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 ā€” 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 ā€œOn Saving the Planet: Beyond Signifiersā€ as follows:[12]

ā€¦ 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 ā€œa clear line of demarcation between animals and humansā€ (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 ā€œa clear line of demarcation between animals and humansā€, 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 ā€œthe clear qualitative and inherent differencesā€ 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 humansā€™ 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 Earthā€™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 ā€œSixth symphony versus the sixth extinction? An essay on biodiversity loss.ā€, 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 Beethovenā€™s sixth symphony entitled ā€œThe Pastoralā€, 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, donā€™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 wouldnā€™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 ā€“ they are the largest animal family with more than 50,000 species known to science (and many more unknown) ā€“ most people would I think sacrifice one of them for Beethovenā€™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 Natureā€™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, SoundEaglešŸ¦… 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.ā€¦

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 ā€” 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.ā€¦

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 ā€œknown.ā€

This doesnā€™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 Deleuzeā€™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 ā€œdisordersā€ 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 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 SoundEaglešŸ¦…ā€™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 humanā€“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


šŸŽ¼ šŸŽµšŸ•šŸŽ¶šŸ’šŸŽ¹šŸ˜šŸ–¼šŸ¬šŸŽØ šŸ„



Endnotes
[1] David Cope, New Music Composition (New York: Schirmer Books, 1977), 297-8.
[2] Simha Arom, ā€œProlegomena to a Biomusicologyā€, in The Origins of Music, ed. Nils L. Wallin, Bjƶrn 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, ā€œWhen Animals Talkā€, in Readerā€™s Digest (February 2002): 68.
[7] Tim Jay Anderson, ā€œLost in Sound: Cultural-Material Issues in American Recorded Music and Sound, 1948-1964ā€, PhD Diss., Northwestern University, 1998. Vol. 1 (Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI, 1998), 1-4.
[9] Erin Manning, ā€œHistories of Violence: Neurodiversity and the Policing of the Normā€, 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] PƤr Segerdahl, ā€œTrapped in our humanity?ā€. Available at https://ethicsblog.crb.uu.se/2012/01/13/trapped-in-our-humanity/
[11] Wreen, Michael, ā€œBeardsley’s Aestheticsā€, 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 ā€œAuthorial intentā€ at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authorial_intent
[12] AJOwens, ā€œOn Saving the Planet: Beyond Signifiersā€. Available at https://staggeringimplications.wordpress.com/2020/08/31/on-saving-the-planet-beyond-signifiers/
SoundEagle in Animal Artistry and Musicality with Speciesism

83 comments on “Do Animals Create Art and Music? šŸŽµšŸ•šŸŽ¶šŸ’šŸŽ¹šŸ˜šŸ–¼šŸ¬šŸŽØ

  1. Marvellous šŸ‘šŸ‘šŸ‘šŸ˜ŠāœŒļø

    Liked by 5 people

  2. Although amusing and nice article, only humans can create art and music, as neither of these are intuitive. They are contrived, planned and rehearsed, something animals cannot do. Cheers and a lovely day to you.

    Liked by 4 people

  3. Plenty to think about here. I will explore the opinions of a select few people about the kind of things you’ve raised as I think this will help me digest this article.
    Thanks fellow earthling (uncapitalised).
    DD

    Liked by 3 people

    • Asked step daughter who has cats what happens when she’s teaching classical piano or playing a piece. She said that they know she’s too busy to feed them and keep quiet. ‘Not listening?’ I ask. ‘No’. As to music in the meow, perhaps the discussion will prompt the ear to listen in a different way.
      Kind regards
      DD

      Liked by 2 people

  4. Oh yes, I particularly enjoyed the budgies singing with the piano.
    One of the people I’ll talk to about this has lots of birds and used to use art therapy in his practise.

    Liked by 4 people

    • Dear David

      It is delightful and heartening that you have derived so much joy from savouring SoundEaglešŸ¦…ā€™s latest offering with gusto! Your enthusiasm in perusing this post and consulting others regarding matters raised in the multipronged discussions is highly commendable and indicative of your avid interest in nonhuman behaviours in all their diversity as they respond to and interact with humans via the media of art and music in various situations.

      You will be pleased to know that two more videos have been added. They pertain to our avian friends expanding their sonic repertoires by mimicking or assimilating anthropogenic noises and human speeches.

      Also new is a cartoon illustrated by SoundEaglešŸ¦… and appended at the very end of the post. Let us see what you will make of it. Happy mid-August!

      Yours sincerely,Rose Greetingā€
      įƒ±Ü“SoundEaglešŸ¦…

      Liked by 4 people

      • We have been painting the house and that means moving things around. With your video updates in mind, I’m going to attach a subwoofer from the Sunroom to the PC’s stereo and see what they look and sound like. (But with a dentist appointment tomorrow I am going to cut myself some slack if I don’t feel like it).

        Liked by 2 people

      • My cat comes to sit by me when I play guitar and sing. Sometimes she uses her tail to strum the strings. She lies on my music and mellows out. She will come out of hiding when I play, and enjoys the music, especially a couple songs that I think mimics the tone of a cat meow where I sing “How do I know?” and it seems pitched for her to hear it as a meow for some reason.

        Liked by 2 people

      • Dear Deborah

        Thank you for recounting your musical interactions with one of your furry friends who seems to be consistently receptive to your singing and guitar rendition of those songs, which must have been so well delivered as to elicit such an intimate response from your feline companion.

        One wonders what style or genre of music you were performing, and whether you have any video recordings of your cat reacting to your performance. Also, what are the titles of the couple of songs that you mentioned?

        Yours sincerely,Rose Greetingā€
        įƒ±Ü“SoundEaglešŸ¦…

        Liked by 1 person

    • Re-visiting March 2024 –

      A tangential comment:

      Much of the behaviour that I observed during Melbourne’s Covid lockdowns and otherwise during the declared pandemic period shocked me and left me holding two sad if tentative new conclusions about humanity.ā€‚First, a perception that a minority of people take the impact of their actions on others into account when choosing how to act, and second, that many people will chose to believe something even if they suspect it may not be not true.ā€‚This decision to believe anyway makes it harder to persuade them with evidence.ā€‚Additionally, the lockdown experience seems to have left a ‘hardy’ minority with a “Nobody tells me what to do” attitude.

      So I have a pessimistic view of overcoming speciesism at the moment.ā€‚Let us hope that I am wrong and that I am still young enough to live to see strong evidence that I am wrong.

      Let’s hope my next comment glistens with optimism.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Another fabulous and thought provoking post, SoundEagle šŸ˜Š Of course we have whale songs, a fascinating mode of communication.

    Our cats love my wifeā€™s singing. They react very positively to it.

    The way magpies can join in too with their trills is fascinating. They are very social creatures.

    Liked by 7 people

  6. Very interesting. Thank you! As I say here:

    Animalia Commonalis: Truth, Suffering and Ethics

    “Speciesism is just a generalisation of racism beyond the borders of homo sapiens.

    In my view, along with Climate Change, Speciesism is the defining issue of our time, and we will be judged by future generations on how we responded to both.

    If Climate Change is an existential crisis, Speciesism can be thought of as a battle for the collective ā€œsoulā€ of homo sapiens.”

    Liked by 3 people

  7. They can certainly enjoy music.

    Liked by 6 people

  8. I do wonder this myself, as well as when humans first created art and music. Just saw a Neanderthal flute (so called)–100,000 years old. Interesting!

    Liked by 4 people

  9. Well, of course they do, Sky Eagle. I think they are much more creative, emotional, and perceptive than humans give them credit. We assume that if they can’t speak our language, they’re “lesser” than we, while in many ways they may be “greater.” Wonderful post, my friend. šŸ™‚

    Liked by 6 people

  10. SoundEagle, your post reads like a doctoral thesis – the passion and effort you bring to your blogging is incredible. At the very least, I hope you publish a book of your work. I remember when underwater whale noises became part of musical songs – the sounds were so interesting and varied. Thank you again was such a wonderful article!

    Liked by 5 people

    • Dear Judy

      Happy mid-August! SoundEaglešŸ¦… would like to convey to you both delight and gratitude in thanking you for your compliments and your keen observation of the worthiness and academic quality of this latest offering, which is entirely in keeping with the ā€œmission statementsā€ set forth in the ā€œAbout šŸ›…ā€ page, where you are very welcome to not merely determine whether SoundEaglešŸ¦… has deviated or digressed in presenting this current post, but also suggest or divulge whatever you may know or excel in, for the sake of improving any aspects of this post to your satisfaction.

      As a further token of appreciation, SoundEaglešŸ¦… is hereby sharing with you this video containing the following description:

      HAWAIIAN ISLANDS

      Whale song – full length humpback whale song – soothing sounds of the sea for meditation

      20 Nov 2020 Whale songs spread through the ocean, a unique and soothing music of the sea for serious meditation. Often you only hear snippets of a song – this one is full length – 30 minutes – with fab footage of whales above and below water by whale experts Mark Carwardine and Doug Allan. The humpback whale male sings its heart out – no one knows exactly why they do it – to attract a mate? To defend their territory? Each year their songs change as they learn new phrases and no two songs are ever the same. Recorded off Hawaii in 1998.

      Should you desire even more multisensory engagement with the sea, then you are welcome to immerse to your heartā€™s content in what SoundEaglešŸ¦… has devised for you through the multimedia magic of šŸšŸ’— Romancing by the Beach and Sea with True Love and Reminiscence šŸ˜¶ā€šŸŒ«šŸššŸŸ.

      Yours sincerely,Rose Greetingā€
      įƒ±Ü“SoundEaglešŸ¦…

      Liked by 2 people

  11. Still not sure whether the cat loved Chopin or hated Chopin. šŸ™‚

    Years ago we had a cat who hated piano music, at least when performed live (he didn’t react negatively to recordings). If he happened to be in the piano room when someone started to play, he immediately got up and stalked out of the room in a huff. It might have been a comment on the quality of my or my kids’ musical abilities, since none of us would ever have been mistaken for a virtuoso.

    Liked by 3 people

  12. I actually was thinking of some of my characters when I saw this

    The Fairy Frogs- they are naturally gifted in the arts. I gave each of them a different art they have the skill in:

    1. Sparkle (my protagonist)- Drawing
    2. Misty- Singing
    3. Aries- Construction
    4. Darcy- Sculpture
    5. Felipe- Woodwork
    6. Celeste- Pottery
    7. Tweetsie- *well, kinda of a spoiler*- Performance

    Liked by 3 people

  13. (It is difficult for me to arrive at the bottom of a typical one of your posts, the present one being a good example, because my eyes begi to ache from all the visual noise, modifications of font, and color and so forth. But somehow I made it this time, so I will offer a comment.)

    I too have loved that portal of nature, animals, plant life, weather, which consists of sound and is approached via our sense of hearing. And I also have played music in such settings, and for the benefit of non-humans. I have never once had the impression that animals are composers of music, nor that animals have an aesthetic sense or simension towards what they are experiencing in their environment. I do not find it persuasive that this observation of mine is an example of speciesism. And I very much would dispute that they are not concrete and vitally significant reasons to conceptually form a distinction between humans and any sorts of animals. (These seem to be key points your article either explicitly makes or hints at.)

    Of course, before really going anywhere near reality in a discussion such as this one has to come up with qualitative and descriptive characterizations of just exactly what one thinks either ‘music’ or ‘art’ or ‘artistic’ means. For me, none of the sometimes very nice examples you have pointed to fall within these categories.

    Liked by 3 people

  14. dogs are smarter than you would imagine. Specism is just an absurd notion of homo sapiens to heave himself upon the throne and do with nature what he wishes. Monkeys and pigs can solve difficult tests. There is proof from. You also have copycat behavior or mimicking.

    Liked by 4 people

  15. Great post! It really goes to show every living being on planet earth is vibrationally based. There’s loads of music I can’t listen to – it is too painful to be around. Animals, plants and other creatures would react in a similar manner being around a vibration that was harmful. Music has changed, the resonance that are soothing and calming to humanity have been tweaked to more harmful frequencies. Too hard to listen too. Interesting topic to be sure, same with animals and art. I saw a book once with paintings done by cats – it was quite cool! Anything in possible!

    Liked by 3 people

  16. wow, are you writing a book on this? amazing amount of info here. makes me think also of Fable The Raven…have you heard of him? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hh52CfnGCK4

    Liked by 3 people

  17. Not to reduce your fascinating post to this, but try living with coyotes! The most incredible animal music i have heard. šŸ’“

    Liked by 3 people

  18. What a fascinating post! ā¤ Very informative, entertaining, and amusing, but also thought-provoking. An invitation to ponder human existence and our relationships with animals. Many more questions than answers remain

    Liked by 3 people

  19. Fabulous post! I was particularly gobsmacked by the painting of flowers created by the elephant. If it hadn’t been filmed in real time, I would have thought it was just a joke, but that was a visually ‘realistic’ reinterpretation of a known object. The stages of cognitive processing that requires are mind boggling.

    Liked by 3 people

  20. So much to take in on your fantastic post SE. Loved the Kangaroo in your graphic .. I can see I will have to revisit often to absorb all here… Loved the Dolphin painting….
    Music .. Sound…. Frequency is important for the soul… and Animals I know create with their own frequency of sound…. Elephants … Whales.. Dolphins….
    Not to mention the birds…. Love the Dawn Chorus and the song of the Blackbird in my garden…
    Loved your post SE.. ā¤ Thank you

    Liked by 4 people

  21. I don’t know if my cat makes music however I sing to her. I even wrote a song for her all in the Welsh language. Very thought-provoking article. Best wishes from the United States

    Liked by 3 people

  22. Wow SoundEagle I love this about animals who are so creative and artistic. Love the videos and I’ll come back to visit to truly enjoy more of your wonderful compilations! Amazing paintings to see the orangutans did!!
    šŸ’–šŸ’–šŸ’–šŸ‘

    Liked by 2 people

  23. Lots of good stuff here, interesting materials and thoughts both/ too much for one sitting to absorb all so I’ll be having a couple of looks at this. Short answer to the leading question is of course yes. Had a young Butcher Bird sing me a beautiful series of songs the other morning as I did my Tai Chi. He seemed to sing for the pure enjoyment of it, warbling through a series of liquid lines building up like a fine concerto. If a line wasn’t exactly right he’d go back and practise it again until he got it right. It was a lovely morning.

    Liked by 3 people

  24. I know that animals respond to music, because I used to take my guitar out by the lake and sit on the boulders and play and sing. Often the little mink that lived in the rocks would stick their heads out and watch me curiously. I’ve also had a bird sit in a branch overhead for nearly an hour.
    In Florida my daughter and I sang at the gazebo by the pond, and on several days we had a whole “audience” – a group of turtles and fish forming a semicircle in front of us. We still laugh at the memory of that “concert.”

    Liked by 3 people

  25. Bonjour ce n’est qu’un petit passage

    Parfois on oublie de remercier les personnes qui rendent notre vie meilleure et plus heureuse.
    Parfois on oublie de leur dire qu’ils sont une partie importante dans notre vie.
    Aujourd’hui est un autre jour et je te remercie pour tout cela
    bise AmitiƩ BERNARD

    Liked by 2 people

  26. I love listening to the sounds of insects and animals in nature. Animals and insects create very beautiful sounds of high vibrations.

    Liked by 4 people

  27. Thank you for the discussion. I appreciate you for not only writing this but giving resources for your claims. Nice.

    Liked by 2 people

  28. There’s some great stuff here. I can’t say I agree with some (e.g., how animals are “degraded” by an “epistemic position”) but this essay (which I’ll apparently be reading for the next 6 months) certainly raises some fascinating counter-intuitive issues. And the dancing animals video is priceless!

    Liked by 2 people

  29. Very interesting ideas-perhaps artistry is embedded in the DNA of all life

    Liked by 2 people

  30. Interesting piece. And I have lot to explore!

    Liked by 2 people

  31. Thank you for the ā€œLikeā€ today. I think your website is very interesting. Feel free to visit Alexander Poet at your leisure.

    Liked by 2 people

  32. […] Animal Artistry and Musicality šŸŽµšŸ•šŸŽ¶šŸ’ […]

    Like

  33. Thanks, I feel great resonance here. I’m 63 (and a quarter) years old, and only yesterday, steadily (perhaps never to be repeated), the sky revealed to my blind eyes a world of order, of sky beings, some force of meaning and energy, that the clouds embody, measurable maybe from a scientist’s flatter perspective as interacting currents of inanimate molecules (no disrespect to them intended), but the world is offering itself to us, a world of order, which is intelligence. To think we didn’t consider that the complex order of the sky was an intelligence manifesting. “Something is happening here, but we don’t know what it is, do we Mr. jones?”

    Liked by 3 people

  34. A bit long but very interesting. Most of my art is derivative but I have hope. Graham Nash once told me that a life is a work of art.
    Darwin’s The Descent of Man, does not put us at the pinnacle nor does he think art is outside of evolution. I take long walks in my retirement with the only animal that likes to be with me. I am NOT his superior.
    What would an elephant sacrifice to save humans. It might give an answer to how we are doing?

    Liked by 2 people

    • One of the effects of the Darwinian Revolution was to demolish, at least in theory, human illusions about their absolute difference from, and superiority to, other animals.

      In connection with your question, someone (I have forgotten who) once said that while most humans would regret the extinction of another species, most other animals would rejoice at the extinction of humans, if they could understand the implications for them – a sad comment about our impacts on other living occupants of this planet.

      Liked by 3 people

  35. Art is essence and all living things seem to have this urge to create, whether or not they supress it. My littles and I enjoyed several of the videos, and agree there is more information her to digest in one sitting. Many thanks for spreading this wisdom.

    Liked by 2 people

  36. ā¤ļøšŸ’–ā¤ļø

    Liked by 2 people

  37. Yes, I think animals can very well make music – in a different way. I had one of my most impressive experiences when I was listening to frog concerts in Beijing, near the ruined Summer Palace. I can well imagine that the frogs enjoyed it too.

    Liked by 2 people

  38. Reblogged this on By the Mighty Mumford and commented:
    IN ESSENCE A SCHOLARLY TREATISE, YET READABLE BY WE LAYMEN AND WOMEN VERY IMPRESSIVE

    Liked by 2 people

  39. Wow, you’ve clearly given this a lot of thought… and it is indeed thought-provoking. Instead of saying “Animals can’t plan therefore only mankind is the music maker” it’s probably more fruitful to look at variations along a continuum.

    At Georgian Bay, I used to listen to the chorus of frogs and crickets outside my window as I fell asleep at night (the cottage was near a watery channel). Like birds, the crickets and frogs especially must be aware of one another and respond on some level of consciousness.

    In India, I lived by a small lake and the nighttime chorus was like Georgian Bay on overdrive!ā€‚It was so symphonic in India that at times I mused that these creatures were connecting with ETs. šŸ˜‚

    Just kidding. But we need to keep an open mind and not lapse into our human conventions on this and many other topics.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Dear Dr Michael William Clark

      An apology is owed to you for replying so belatedly. As mentioned in the long and detailed comment submitted to your most recent post entitled ā€œA Psychologist Explains The Phenomenon Of ā€˜Reality Shiftingā€™ā€, the impact of SoundEaglešŸ¦… living a very full life has severely curtailed available time for commenting. Nevertheless, your host here still endeavours to keep up with what others have done by visiting and commenting on their blog posts, including yours, often at great length, as you can see in the said response to your aforementioned post.

      Thank you firstly for your compliment on and recognition of SoundEaglešŸ¦…ā€™s contributions made via publishing this multifaceted exposition, and secondly for your championing nonhumans via acknowledging that their intelligence and significance ā€” even when measured against the cultured terrains of music and art often assumed to be exclusively defined and occupied by the human species ā€” need to be fathomed and experienced in all their potential, diversity and intricacy with open-mindedness and humility. Cultivating such a mindset or attitude is critical since there still exist numerous questions regarding the artistry and musicality of nonhumans, and many of them are by no means straightforward to answer, as the detailed discussions presented in this extensive post have shown. Other areas pertaining to animals are no less challenging to deal with. All in all, this academically written post explores human-animal interactions, consciousness/intelligence and art, as well as consciousness/intelligence and music, not just in humans but also in nonhumans, even including some unique takes on, and certain premises with respect to, interspecies communication in conjunction with our (mis)understanding of animal artistry and musicality. You are very welcome to continue the discussion and offer your feedback, insight, doubt, opinion or the like.

      The post also discusses in detail many outstanding issues that have been preventing humans from relating well to nonhumans and Nature holistically. On the whole, we humans are often too absorbed in our own affairs to notice two big elephants in the room: speciesism and anthropocentricism. Both are highly entrenched, and both are very widespread and often unacknowledged forms of prejudice, discrimination and bigotry. Despite years of fleshing out the (conceptual, philosophical, ethical, practical and/or social) framework in examining the possibility or plausibility of environmentalism meeting the needs and expectations of all humanity to help us to survive as a species, fundamental progress is still far too slow. As you probably already know, we are already in the midst of the Sixth Great Extinction. As mentioned, the main issue is twofold: speciesism and anthropocentricism. Until we critically deal with the main issue, even environmentalism in all its diversity may not suffice to turn things around.

      Being simultaneously witty and serious about a number of outstanding issues, the scope of the discussion actually ventures far beyond whatever its title may suggest or mean to any reader, especially in the very long ā€œConclusionsā€ section, in which the ISEA Model has been devised to define and describe the Instrumental, Spiritual, Pro-Environment and Pro-Animal/Plant perspectives.

      Like many controversial and sociopolitically fraught matters such as nonbinary sexual identity and transgender issues as well as other perennial issues regarding equality, society, race, gender, class, religion and civil rights, a successful mounting of truly multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary exploration of interspecies interactions and communications can be especially complex, challenging and confronting in that they can and tend to transcend many boundaries and expectations imposed by human customs and belief systems.

      As for ā€œconnecting with ETsā€, given the escalating social problems and ongoing environmental crises on Earth, sometimes SoundEaglešŸ¦… might indeed feel that it would be much better in the long run to join Roy Neary in the movie ā€œClose Encounters of the Third Kindā€ so as to leave the Earth for good and to achieve or awaken interstellar or (inter)galactic spiritual revolutionaries! How do you reckon?

      Longing for a better future for all animals big & small with interspecies šŸ’LOVEšŸ’– & šŸŽ†HOPEšŸŽ‡ & šŸŒTRUTHšŸ”®

      Rose Greetingįƒ±Ü“SoundEaglešŸ¦…

      Liked by 1 person

  40. It’s funny you mention this. Just last night I turned on the TV and watched for a short while a show about ice fishing. Far from being respectful, the fisherman pulled the fish out of the hole and held it up before the camera in the freezing cold air. The fish was gasping – gills only work in water – and I’m not sure if the fisherman then tossed it in a bucket or back in the hole. The camera didn’t show where the fish went. This morning when I awoke, the TV displayed the same in a smaller, thumbnail image, while I was looking at a channel guide menu.

    In Canada, we also have a TV show where killing animals like deer in the wild for “sport” is televised. I can’t believe this. When I was a kid in the 70s this kind of ‘programming’ would never have been on air.

    What has happened to our culture? Are we going downhill instead of progressing?

    IMO to watch the killing of animals for ‘entertainment’ is truly sick. On that note, I’m working on a song I wrote back in the 1980s called “sick planet.” It was more an environmental lament then, but now that I’m older and wiser, I think it could include many other ailments humanity seems to be suffering from.

    BTW, I am still thinking about the post you made at my blog. Thank you. Once I digest and process, I will probably make a few more points, other than my summary response explaining how I usually do things.

    Best, MC.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Dear Dr Michael William Clark

      How sad it is that such deplorable ways of thinking about the environment and nonhumans persist! And how arrogant some folks could be in their attitudes towards Nature, and in erroneously believing that they know the inner workings of Nature!

      Many people often mistakenly believe that the word ā€œconservationā€ automatically implies ā€œenvironmentally friendlyā€. Unfortunately, the images and ideals associated with those quoted words often conceal the more sinister and unpalatable aspects of market environmentalism, in which the word ā€œconservationā€ really refers to managing wildlife populations, often involving culling any animal that certain interest groups want to be managed or even exterminated. The deplorable situation can become entrenched and perpetuated through ignorance, fear, power, greed, propaganda and resource exploitation. As a result, certain state and federal authorities as well as conservation policy-makers frequently fail to holistically adopt and recognise the best practices in environmental sustainability aimed at improving ecological wellbeing, especially when some politicians enact laws or when certain administrations pass regulations that are suited to the short-sighted interests of their wealthy supporters, eager stakeholders and targeted constituencies. In short, there has been no shortage of agents trying to turn some wildlife conservation areas into playgrounds for hunters and misguided ecotourism through lobbying and legislation.

      There is a great deal of hypocrisy in groups calling themselves ā€œSportsmen for Fish & Wildlifeā€ insofar as they have the audacity and impudence to refer to either fish or widlife in their name when it is patent that they have the intention of making it easier for people to just kill whatever animals that they choose. Numerous hunters who claim to be advocating for wildlife conservation are actually only interested in making sure that there are plenty of elk and mule deer to shoot. Moreover, they demonize wolves because such animals are large mammal predators, to the extent that they have often gravely misunderstood the wolf, an apex predator from which our long domesticated pooches have evolved, and without which there would not have been humanā€™s best friends and nonhuman companions, not to mention that without the wolf long deemed by ecologists as a keystone species, the ecosystem would be dramatically different, progressively weakened or cease to exist altogether.

      Nearly ten years ago, on 23 August 2013, the two-part documentary film ā€œExpedition Wolfā€ was aired on television with the following caption:

      The second episode in this engaging two part natural history series follows the fortunes of one very special pack of wolves as they return to North America’s West Coast.

      Wildlife cameraman Gordon Buchanan and his team of wolf experts spend four weeks camping out in the bitterly cold Cascade Mountains.

      They discover that most of the wolf pack had been killed by locals who live by the motto ” shoot, shovel and shut – up”.

      The team hope that at least some of the pack has escaped.

      As they chase exciting new leads there is a glimmer of hope on the horizon.

      (Documentary Series) (From the UK, in English) (Class TBC) CC

      One really does get the sense that ā€œprotectionsā€ of animals can be very loose, if not haphazard, inconsistent or unsystematic. Often they are poorly enforced because of budgets and the complicity of some of the ā€œprotectorsā€ with the poachers. The problems are not only serious but also hard to police. Some of the trophy hunters would shoot and behead the animals on the spot and leave the carcases to rot, taking the heads or whatever parts that they want in order to make those severed parts into specimens.

      This is getting all too depressing if not macabre! Let us conclude here with something far more uplifting, inspiring and even transcendental as follows. Quoted below is the fifth stanza of an illustrated and animated twelve-stanza poem:

      If my name were Moon tonightā€¦
      Would you propose to me with wolf symphonies
      And hear my soul croon forthright
      Across old memories and new destiniesā€¦?

      SoundEagle in Full Moon, Sky, Mountain and Wolf

      You are cordially invited to assess the rest of the poem by clicking the following title:

      If My Name Were Moon Tonightā€¦ šŸŒ›šŸŒšŸŽ‘šŸˆ· with Clair de Lune šŸŒ•

      Still longing for a better future for all animals big & small with interspecies šŸ’LOVEšŸ’– & šŸŽ†HOPEšŸŽ‡ & šŸŒTRUTHšŸ”®

      Rose Greetingįƒ±Ü“SoundEaglešŸ¦…

      Liked by 2 people

  41. Another thing I find odd is how meat is displayed in the supermarket and in TV ads. I am not a strict veg but feel that future generations will be amazed by that which most of us see as acceptable today.

    If not future generations, perhaps some ET beings (assuming they exist) will be puzzled at how clever and yet brutally insensitive we can be.

    Liked by 2 people

  42. Lots of depth in Nature to ponder, which you nicely overview here. I look forward to opportunities to decode meaning in many varieties of animal communication!

    Liked by 2 people

  43. I’m going to stick my neck out here, add another perspective and ask another question. The breakdown of the world mammal population is as follows:

    4% wild animals

    36% human beings

    60% domestic animals

    Of that 60% the vast majority, billions of sentient beings are raised in industrial concentration camp-type conditions and will be slaughtered in cruel conditions. While this is the basis of our interaction with 60% of our fellow mammals, is it really necessary to ‘understand’ their relationship to ‘our’ music and art? I doubt very much whether the sow in a breeding pen in which she can’t even turn around has never been asked about either. Until we change our agriculture, land use, our urban development, the way we eat, consume, exploit the land and everything that lives on it, whether a budgie prefers Mozart to John Cage is angels dancing on a pin head.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Dear Jane

      There is still much to be done to overhaul or replace many current farming practices, which are outstandingly plagued by a myriad of issues that have been highly detrimental or persistently problematic in so many respects that even just outlining them here is far too lengthy. By the same token, one may indeed apply the same logic or argument and thus come to similar conclusions about the very rich and powerful, which constitute only a small percentage of all human beings, the majority of which have long been far less privileged and often exploited or marginalized. Overall, in fleshing out disadvantages occasioning hardships, deprivations and sufferings along with analysing them in the contexts of epistemic injustice comprising testimonial injustice and hermeneutical injustice impacting on the trust in and interpretation of the words, meanings, status, standing, agency, authority or contributions of an entity, especially one who is also (at risk of being) destitute, deprived, underprivileged, underrepresented, marginalized or even persecuted, any reasonable person can also come to the same conclusion that discussing any disadvantaged human (and for that matter, any disadvantaged nonhuman) with respect to artistry and musicality is also ā€œangels dancing on a pin headā€, to use your figurative words. Likewise, we can apply a similar logic or argument to poetry, much in the vein of what you have already mentioned below, as quoted from your second reply to SoundEaglešŸ¦…ā€™s second comment submitted to your blog post entitled ā€œApocalypse soonā€, which is palpably sharp, insightful and prescient in its relevance:

      Thank you for the invitation. Iā€™ll certainly read your post. I agree that we are far too quick to get up on our high horses over ā€˜issuesā€™ while totally disregarding the whole, the important, the general. Itā€™s whatā€™s happened to left wing politics, which have been reduced to single issue platforms looking for votes from particular groups regardless of the common good. In the virtue-signalling contest, nobody remembers whatā€™s under our feet, in our plates, fields, water systems, the things and sentient beings who canā€™t speak for themselves.
      Thank you for the poetic wishes. Poetry is a way of setting down thoughts. It wonā€™t change one iota, despite what some poets believe. Art is a luxury, self-indulgent, and we shouldnā€™t lose sight of the fact that we are a privileged minority to practice some form of it.

      SoundEaglešŸ¦… would like to commend you highly on your spirit and resolve ā€œto stick [your] neck out here, add another perspective and ask another question.ā€ Such a spirit and resolve is also the impetus for SoundEaglešŸ¦…ā€™s pursuit of truth, knowledge and consilience via interdisciplinarity and multidisciplinarity, as you can amply observe from visiting this website.

      Like history and civic studies, philosophy or critical thinking as a subject, domain or discipline has fallen by the wayside, becoming a specialist field to be taught mainly in the rarefied atmosphere of a university. Deplorably, even tertiary education is not immune from existential crisis affecting its core value, viability and sustainability, and is increasingly vocationalized. In all levels of education, history and philosophy are hardly the only victims of political intrusion and financial calculus. On the whole, art, music and courses in the humanities are usually the most impacted and disadvantaged, even as you questioned the validity or ā€œ[necessity] to ā€˜understandā€™ [animalā€™s] relationship to ā€˜ourā€™ music and artā€. University education and teaching nowadays can be and are often vocationalized, shortsighted, narrowly focused and coopted by economic, commercial, corporate and political interests. The perennial problems of being underfunded, overburdened, vocationalized and instrumentalized are exacerbated when colleges and universities opt to operate even more aggressively under the model of mass education and customer satisfaction, becoming much more performance-managed, metricized, casualized and marketized under the pervasive influence of privatisation, consumerism, audit culture, managerialism and neoliberal orthodoxy.

      In any case, education and legislation are the two major keys for ensuring effective democracy and good governance. However, it is often too late to educate those who have been poisoned for too long and too deeply by the “me” culture driven by self-interest and political expediency to amass power, influence and wealth by plotting control, intrigue, exploitation, corruption and social polarization.

      To be more specific, social and economic polarizations can further exacerbate the issues of wealth and power distribution. The underlying opposition is not so much between the Democrats and the Republicans as between the rich plutocrats and the rest of the population. The incumbent Democrats need to (re)form their party to unite the 90 percent of the people living at an entrenched economic and political disadvantage in order to deal with the plutocrats.

      Saving and rehabilitating the USA aside, we also need the political economy of saving the planet. Yet the entrenched and insidious issues of plutocracy have loomed even larger, thus continuing to thwart many efforts mounted to save the nation and the planet.

      It is going to be a very tall order for the Biden presidency (or any presidency for that matter) to turn things around. It would have been much easier if some Republican senators had been far more honest and incorruptible, for they have been very greedy, uninspired, cowardly and lack criminal, moral and political accountabilities. It is all quite a big mess in danger of getting bigger still. Even a global pandemic still cannot unite folks in the USA and wake them up. Perhaps it will take an even bigger crisis to do so, such as a series of climate change disasters.

      Liked by 2 people

  44. Hello Sound Eagle,

    I must be honest that read about 1/3 of this post and watched 3 videos.

    It is an excellent article, however, I have time constraints. I will come back one day.

    I just want to say that I believe animals to be much more than many humans think. I live with a musician and have had many cats over time.

    The cats love the music, each in their own way. One cat would dance with me.

    Further, I do not eat animals. I left home at a very young age. The first thing I did was stop eating animals.

    Thank you for all your work on this post!

    Liked by 2 people

ā„ ā… ā† Leave some ThoughtsšŸ’­ or CommentsšŸ’¬

Discover more from SoundEagle šŸ¦…ą³‹įƒ¦ą®œą®‡

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading