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octoberlib

(14,971 posts)
Tue Jul 8, 2014, 01:23 PM Jul 2014

Listen to the Oldest Song in the World: A Sumerian Hymn Written 3,400 Years Ago [View all]

In the early 1950s, archaeologists unearthed several clay tablets from the 14th century B.C.E.. Found, WFMU tells us, “in the ancient Syrian city of Ugarit,” these tablets “contained cuneiform signs in the hurrian language,” which turned out to be the oldest known piece of music ever discovered, a 3,400 year-old cult hymn. Anne Draffkorn Kilmer, professor of Assyriology at the University of California, produced the interpretation above in 1972. (She describes how she arrived at the musical notation—in some technical detail—in this interview.) Since her initial publications in the 60s on the ancient Sumerian tablets and the musical theory found within, other scholars of the ancient world have published their own versions.

The piece, writes Richard Fink in a 1988 Archeologia Musicalis article, confirms a theory that “the 7-note diatonic scale as well as harmony existed 3,400 years ago.” This, Fink tells us, “flies in the face of most musicologist’s views that ancient harmony was virtually non-existent (or even impossible) and the scale only about as old as the Ancient Greeks.” Kilmer’s colleague Richard Crocker claims that the discovery “revolutionized the whole concept of the origin of western music.” So, academic debates aside, what does the oldest song in the world sound like? Listen to a midi version below and hear it for yourself. Doubtless, the midi keyboard was not the Sumerians instrument of choice, but it suffices to give us a sense of this strange composition, though the rhythm of the piece is only a guess.




http://www.openculture.com/2014/07/the-oldest-song-in-the-world.html
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Kicking for later!! arcane1 Jul 2014 #1
K&R burrowowl Jul 2014 #2
It's become one of my favorite sites. octoberlib Jul 2014 #8
Hmmm...needs more autotune. Tommy_Carcetti Jul 2014 #3
Fascinating, thanks! Wish we knew what the rhythm was. mainer Jul 2014 #4
Thanks, I like that. I found a video of it played on a lyre: freshwest Jul 2014 #5
Wow, thanks! bananas Jul 2014 #7
The midi was good, too, and the cadence and sounds sounded like many other works. freshwest Jul 2014 #15
Cool! Thanks for this! octoberlib Jul 2014 #9
Also found some ancient Eqyptian meditation stuff I'll be listening to. Thanks for tuning us in. freshwest Jul 2014 #14
beautiful roguevalley Jul 2014 #17
Thank you. n/t Judi Lynn Jul 2014 #19
Tantalizing, and it brought to mind ... Babel_17 Jul 2014 #21
It sounds like something Ken Burns would use in a more optimistic part of his Civil War series yurbud Jul 2014 #6
I like it. Its got a good beat and I can dance to it, I'd give it a 78. marble falls Jul 2014 #10
Heh.... progressoid Jul 2014 #11
Didn't think anybody'd catch it! marble falls Jul 2014 #12
An oldie but goodie. Uncle Joe Jul 2014 #13
how did they figure out how to transfer the notes? yurbud Jul 2014 #16
Professor Kilmer supposedly explains how in this interview. octoberlib Jul 2014 #18
Beautiful (nt) Babel_17 Jul 2014 #20
Fascinating, Ma'am The Magistrate Jul 2014 #22
Interesting but somehow LiberalElite Jul 2014 #23
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