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Why does the brain create music? What is it about certain abstract patterns of sound that makes us want to dance? How can songs have deep emotional power despite lyrics that are simple and trite?
We tend to think of the arts as luxuries rather than necessities, and as inventions of society rather than evolution. Yet the origin of musical ability was a turning point in the evolution of modern humans. Every culture, without exception, has some form of music. Is this really a luxury or does it answer some basic biological need? If so, what? In Beethoven's Anvil, William Benzon takes up the fascinating and unexplored link between music and the brain. Among early humans, he says, there was no distinction between music, dance, ritual and religion—they were all part of the same activity, and this activity used every part of the conscious brain. Language, movement, vision, emotion, hearing, touch and social interaction were all involved. In fact, Benzon argues, music is necessary precisely because it engages so many different parts of the brain. It literally keeps the brain in tune with itself and with the brains of others. The ultimate form of musical experience is that feeling of oneness with a larger entity that we identify as transcendent religious experience. We feel this way because that’s precisely what the brain is doing: becoming one with a larger unit, the human tribe.
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Beethoven's Anvil: Music in Mind and Culture
October 2002, Basic Books
in English
0465015441 9780465015443
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Book Details
First Sentence
"IF WE ARE going to undertake a study of music we need to begin with some sense of just what it is we are going to study."
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 301-324) and index.
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The Physical Object
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Feedback?December 3, 2020 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
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