Fitch W Tecumseh
Department of Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2015 Mar 19;370(1664):20140091. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2014.0091.
As a species-typical trait of Homo sapiens, musicality represents a cognitively complex and biologically grounded capacity worthy of intensive empirical investigation. Four principles are suggested here as prerequisites for a successful future discipline of bio-musicology. These involve adopting: (i) a multicomponent approach which recognizes that musicality is built upon a suite of interconnected capacities, of which none is primary; (ii) a pluralistic Tinbergian perspective that addresses and places equal weight on questions of mechanism, ontogeny, phylogeny and function; (iii) a comparative approach, which seeks and investigates animal homologues or analogues of specific components of musicality, wherever they can be found; and (iv) an ecologically motivated perspective, which recognizes the need to study widespread musical behaviours across a range of human cultures (and not focus solely on Western art music or skilled musicians). Given their pervasiveness, dance and music created for dancing should be considered central subcomponents of music, as should folk tunes, work songs, lullabies and children's songs. Although the precise breakdown of capacities required by the multicomponent approach remains open to debate, and different breakdowns may be appropriate to different purposes, I highlight four core components of human musicality--song, drumming, social synchronization and dance--as widespread and pervasive human abilities spanning across cultures, ages and levels of expertise. Each of these has interesting parallels in the animal kingdom (often analogies but in some cases apparent homologies also). Finally, I suggest that the search for universal capacities underlying human musicality, neglected for many years, should be renewed. The broad framework presented here illustrates the potential for a future discipline of bio-musicology as a rich field for interdisciplinary and comparative research.
作为智人的一种典型特征,音乐性代表了一种认知复杂且有生物学基础的能力,值得深入进行实证研究。本文提出四项原则,作为未来生物音乐学成功发展的先决条件。这些原则包括采用:(i)一种多成分方法,该方法认识到音乐性建立在一系列相互关联的能力之上,其中没有一种能力是首要的;(ii)一种多元的廷贝亨观点,该观点处理机制、个体发生、系统发生和功能问题,并同等重视这些问题;(iii)一种比较方法,该方法寻找并研究音乐性特定成分的动物同源物或类似物,只要能找到;(iv)一种受生态启发的观点,该观点认识到需要研究一系列人类文化中广泛存在的音乐行为(而不是仅专注于西方艺术音乐或熟练的音乐家)。鉴于舞蹈以及为舞蹈创作的音乐普遍存在,它们应被视为音乐的核心子成分,民间曲调、劳动歌曲、摇篮曲和儿歌也应如此。尽管多成分方法所需能力的确切分类仍有待讨论,不同的分类可能适用于不同目的,但我强调人类音乐性的四个核心成分——唱歌、击鼓、社会同步和舞蹈——是跨越文化、年龄和专业水平的广泛且普遍的人类能力。这些成分在动物王国中都有有趣的类似情况(通常是类比,但在某些情况下也有明显的同源性)。最后,我建议应重新开展对人类音乐性背后普遍能力的探索,这一探索已被忽视多年。这里提出的广泛框架说明了未来生物音乐学作为一个丰富的跨学科和比较研究领域的潜力。