Abstract

Music is at the centre of what it means to be human – it is the sounds of human bodies and minds moving in creative, story-making ways. We argue that music comes from the way in which knowing bodies (Merleau-Ponty) prospectively explore the environment using habitual ‘patterns of action,’ which we have identified as our innate ‘communicative musicality.’ To support our argument, we present short case studies of infant interactions using micro analyses of video and audio recordings to show the timings and shapes of intersubjective vocalizations and body movements of adult and child while they improvise shared narratives of meaning. Following a survey of the history of discoveries of infant abilities, we propose that the gestural narrative structures of voice and body seen as infants communicate with loving caregivers are the building blocks of what become particular cultural instances of the art of music, and of dance, theatre and other temporal arts. Children enter into a musical culture where their innate communicative musicality can be encouraged and strengthened through sensitive, respectful, playful, culturally informed teaching in companionship. The central importance of our abilities for music as part of what sustains our well-being is supported by evidence that communicative musicality strengthens emotions of social resilience to aid recovery from mental stress and illness. Drawing on the experience of the first author as a counsellor, we argue that the strength of one person’s communicative musicality can support the vitality of another’s through the application of skilful techniques that encourage an intimate, supportive, therapeutic, spirited companionship. Turning to brain science, we focus on hemispheric differences and the affective neuroscience of Jaak Panksepp. We emphasize that the psychobiological purpose of our innate musicality grows from the integrated rhythms of energy in the brain for prospective, sensation-seeking affective guidance of vitality of movement. We conclude with a Coda that recalls the philosophy of the Scottish Enlightenment, which built on the work of Heraclitus and Spinoza. This view places the shared experience of sensations of living – our communicative musicality – as inspiration for rules of logic formulated in symbols of language.

Highlights

  • Reviewed by: Antonio Damasio, University of Southern California, United States Marc Leman, Ghent University, Belgium Jerome Lewis, University College London, United Kingdom

  • Following a survey of the history of discoveries of infant abilities, we propose that the gestural narrative structures of voice and body seen as infants communicate with loving caregivers are the building blocks of what become particular cultural instances of the art of music, and of dance, theatre and other temporal arts

  • “The act of musicking establishes in the place where it is happening a set of relationships, and it is in those relationships that the meaning of the act lies

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Summary

The Human Nature of Music

Reviewed by: Antonio Damasio, University of Southern California, United States Marc Leman, Ghent University, Belgium Jerome Lewis, University College London, United Kingdom. Bernstein applied the new technology of movie photography to make refined ‘cyclographic’ diagrams of displacements of body parts, from which he analyzed the forces involved to fractions of a second His findings reported in Coordination and Regulation of Movements became widely known in English translation in 1967, at the same time as video records of infant behaviors were described more accurately (see Section The Genesis of Music in Infancy – A Short History of Discoveries), revealing their anticipatory motor control adapted for intelligent understanding of how objects may be manipulated, as well as for communication and cooperation (Trevarthen, 1984b, 1990b). These have been precisely defined by acoustic analysis of vocalizations of adult and infant in dialogs and games (Malloch et al, 1997; Malloch, 1999; Trevarthen, 1999; Trehub, 2003)

CASE STUDIES OF INFANT MUSICALITY
COMMUNICATIVE MUSICALITY AND EDUCATION INTO THE CULTURE OF MUSIC
COMMUNICATIVE MUSICALITY AND RESILIENCE OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT
MUSICAL AFFECTIONS OF THE EMBODIED HUMAN BRAIN
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS

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