Great Animal Orchestra: Finding the Origins of Music in the World's Wild Places
Bernie Krause
Bernie Krause is one of the world's leading experts in natural sound. He has spent the last 40 years recording ecological soundscapes and has archived the sounds of over 15,000 species--half of the wild soundscapes he has on tape don't exist anymore because of human actions. Krause divides natural sound into three categories. Biophony is the sound made by animals and plants, like the shrimp that makes noises underwater equivalent to 165 decibels; geophony is natural sound, like wind, water and rain, which led different tribes to have different musical scales; and anthrophony is human-generated sound, which affects animals as it changes, for example causing disoriented whales to become beached.
In 'The Great Animal Orchestra' he invites us to listen through his ears to all three as he showcases singing trees, contrasting coasts, and the roar of the modern world. Just as streetlights engulf the stars, Krause argues that human noise is drowning out the sounds of nature, but that our focus on the visual today is blinding us to this. 'The Great Animal Orchestra' shows why it is critical to preserve what remaining soundscapes we have, and will make you hear the world entirely differently. 288 pages.
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