The first time Hollis Taylor really listened to the sing, she was standing transfixed in a desert in Western Australia. To her trained ear as a violinist and composer, the stocky songbird sounded like a musical prodigy.
鈥淚 heard a startlingly arresting birdsong鈥攏o, a trio!鈥 Taylor says. 鈥淚 was in the middle of three Pied Butcherbirds, each singing a different part in a rich, clear voice.鈥
That experience more than a decade ago proved to be life-changing for Taylor, who has been studying and recording the species, a virtuoso among songbirds, ever since. Pied Butcherbird songs sound like minimalist jazz riffs, she says, in 鈥渢he adding and subtracting of notes in these magnificent, flute-like songs that slowly unfold and transform.鈥
Taylor isn鈥檛 alone in her adulation. As long as people have recognized melodies, we鈥檝e been enthralled and inspired by the beauty of birdsong. Whether birdsong qualifies as music with aesthetic value, rather than serving only functionally as communication between birds, is hotly debated. Still, Taylor thought the unique complexity of Pied Butcherbird songs was worth a closer look.
Listen to the nocturnal solo song of a Pied Butcherbird (with another Pied Butcherbird and an Australian Magpie in the background), recorded by Hollis Taylor near Trephina Gorge in Western Australia in August 2016.
So the research fellow in zoomusicology鈥攁 field that studies the musical aspects of animal sounds鈥攁t Sydney鈥檚 Macquarie University teamed up with experts from around the world to investigate whether Pied Butcherbird songs might have more in common with music than anyone realized. Taylor collected recordings of 17 birds in the wild and sent the tracks to Eathan Janney, who was finishing biology graduate work at the City University of New York, for analysis. When he applied a neurological algorithm that visualizes birdsong like brain activity, he found that Pied Butcherbirds mix repetition and novelty in a very musical way.
Each butcherbird in the study performed a repertoire of musical phrases, and the most skilled crooners sometimes knew more than 30 such pieces. The researchers found that individual birds often included the same themes鈥攚hat musicians call 鈥渕otifs鈥濃攚ithin those phrases. The motif forms the backbone of the phrase, while variations in pitch and rhythm make each one unique.
Musicians, particularly jazz and blues artists, also use motifs to keep their listeners engaged by returning repeatedly to a familiar melody, even as they modify it slightly through improvisation. Janney, a pianist, thinks the study, which was , provides compelling evidence of the commonalities of music and birdsong. However, he does admit that it would take more extensive research on the Pied Butcherbird and other species鈥 songs to really prove that point.
鈥淭here is an open argument about bird song: is it like how we experience music or is it something completely different?鈥 Janney says. 鈥淭his balance [between repetition and novelty] is giving us a clue that these birds may experience their songs like music.鈥
Additionally, the most skilled birds that knew more songs used motifs more regularly, and even seemed to keep time to a musical rhythm. Taylor speculates that the repeated motifs might prevent the complex songs from confusing their avian audience. 鈥淭he birds are keeping interest going by having these different phrase types,鈥 she says.
The question of whether birdsong can be called music is one that the study authors continue to ponder, with Taylor publishing a book on the subject next year. She's currently in the Australian Outback recording the springtime nocturnal songs of Pied Butcherbirds鈥攚hich for her is part work and part pleasure.
鈥淪ince each bird sings differently, and the songs can change annually, each night is always a thrill,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he musician in me recognizes the musician in them.鈥
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