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any real efforts to measure how nonhuman animals produce and perceive music—what we now call zoomusicology—were far in the future. Early 20th-century attempts to test the oft-misquoted quip ...
“MEOW! Noah what in the world are you and Dad doing these days? Every time I ‘meow’ you two are headed out somewhere and come back with a carload of stuff! What’s up with that?” “Paws ...
“MEOW! My first Thanksgiving with my humans was pawsome! Purrs! Dad bought Noah and me some turkey treats, and they went out to dinner leaving us to enjoy a pawsomely grand, quiet home! Meow ...
So the research fellow in zoomusicology—a field that studies the musical aspects of animal sounds—at Sydney’s Macquarie University teamed up with experts from around the world to investigate whether ...
Now there is a new discipline known as zoomusicology, a branch of biology that studies the songs of birds and other animals with the emphasis on music. A leading investigator in the subject ...
A four day fandango of cutting edge electronic sounds from around the world make up this year's Fusion Festival, which will be `blurring the boundaries between avant-garde classical, experimental ...
The Leonard J. Waxdeck bird-calling competition has been a tradition since the 1960’s in Piedmont, California bringing the town some international notoriety. Producer JoAnn Mar attended this year’s ...
“There are a few names for this—biomusicology, ecomusicology—but zoomusicology is probably the most specific.” The term zoomusicology was coined in 1983 by French composer François-Bernard Mâche.
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