The origins of music

Music is a fascinating topic for evolutionary theory, natural philosophy, and narrative construction: music is a highly valued feature of all known living cultures, pervading many aspects of daily life, playing many roles. And music is ancient. The oldest known musical instruments appear in the arch...

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Main Author: Anton Killin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-02-01
Series:Music & Science
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2059204317751971
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spelling doaj-cda7ad7955bb4e2ca8b70a98bca9f2a82020-11-25T03:16:32ZengSAGE PublishingMusic & Science2059-20432018-02-01110.1177/2059204317751971The origins of musicAnton Killin0 Australian National University, Australia; and Florida International University, USAMusic is a fascinating topic for evolutionary theory, natural philosophy, and narrative construction: music is a highly valued feature of all known living cultures, pervading many aspects of daily life, playing many roles. And music is ancient. The oldest known musical instruments appear in the archaeological record from 40,000 years ago (40 Kya) and from these we can infer even earlier musical artefacts/activities, as yet unrepresented in the archaeological record. I argue that, following research couched in the social brain hypothesis framework, a theoretical basis is emerging for the proposition that the (incremental) evolution of proto-music took hold in the late mid-Pleistocene, roughly 400 Kya, and perhaps earlier. Subsequently, musical activities and traditions incrementally evolved throughout modernity (from 250 Kya onwards), global dispersal from Africa (currently thought to be from 60-100 Kya onwards), and the Holocene (from 12 Kya). In this article I provide an overview of recent research and a sketch of music’s evolutionary career. I identify avenues for future research, including work in the evolution of the emotions, and the application of signalling theory to music archaeology.https://doi.org/10.1177/2059204317751971
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anton Killin
spellingShingle Anton Killin
The origins of music
Music & Science
author_facet Anton Killin
author_sort Anton Killin
title The origins of music
title_short The origins of music
title_full The origins of music
title_fullStr The origins of music
title_full_unstemmed The origins of music
title_sort origins of music
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Music & Science
issn 2059-2043
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Music is a fascinating topic for evolutionary theory, natural philosophy, and narrative construction: music is a highly valued feature of all known living cultures, pervading many aspects of daily life, playing many roles. And music is ancient. The oldest known musical instruments appear in the archaeological record from 40,000 years ago (40 Kya) and from these we can infer even earlier musical artefacts/activities, as yet unrepresented in the archaeological record. I argue that, following research couched in the social brain hypothesis framework, a theoretical basis is emerging for the proposition that the (incremental) evolution of proto-music took hold in the late mid-Pleistocene, roughly 400 Kya, and perhaps earlier. Subsequently, musical activities and traditions incrementally evolved throughout modernity (from 250 Kya onwards), global dispersal from Africa (currently thought to be from 60-100 Kya onwards), and the Holocene (from 12 Kya). In this article I provide an overview of recent research and a sketch of music’s evolutionary career. I identify avenues for future research, including work in the evolution of the emotions, and the application of signalling theory to music archaeology.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2059204317751971
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