MyDoorsAreOpen
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2003
- Messages
- 8,549
I think appreciation of rhythm is hard to reduce to any one thing, because our bodies, and the world around us, all move to various rhythms. It's probably not an accident that people tend to prefer music between 50-100 beats per minute, the same as the normal range of human heartbeats. Following rhythm most definitely builds coordination. Certainly rhythmic music has been a part of people's mating rituals in many places. But I don't think that's nearly the only primitive use or significance of it.
Drums and drone sounds -- deep, low frequency reverberations like the didgeridoo -- were almost certainly used for communication across distances, especially in the context of war I'd reckon, long before they were ever thought of as music or art. Until contact with African, Indian, and Middle Eastern music, the West and China never used drums for much besides wartime communication, and never fully integrated precussion sounds heavily into their native music forms. To this day, these musical traditions are heavily melody-based, rather than beat-based.
Drums and drone sounds -- deep, low frequency reverberations like the didgeridoo -- were almost certainly used for communication across distances, especially in the context of war I'd reckon, long before they were ever thought of as music or art. Until contact with African, Indian, and Middle Eastern music, the West and China never used drums for much besides wartime communication, and never fully integrated precussion sounds heavily into their native music forms. To this day, these musical traditions are heavily melody-based, rather than beat-based.