The Birth of Music
Music is a universal impulse but what do we know about music in Neolithic times? Jude Rogers and guests test out some theories with instruments in a prehistoric burial chamber.
The ancient West Kennet Long Barrow burial chamber near Avebury in Wiltshire was built around 3650 BC. Its cave-like spaces, formed by vast rocks, are the setting for Jude Rogersβ exploration of how Neolithic people of that time might have made music.
We canβt know for sure of course, but music, ritual and dance are universal features of human life, and so it must have been even in pre-history. So what might be the links between prehistoric music gatherings and dance music culture today? A rave in the cave?
Jude is joined by Professor Rupert Till from the University of Huddersfield aka Professor Chill, a DJ and electronic music producer who knows about sound frequencies in ancient sites, and Letty Stott, a musician and PHD student who can get a tune from a conch. Historical context is provided by Dr Ben Chan, a highly experienced archaeologist from the University of Bristol who works at Avebury nearby.
We also hear from Ritta Rainio in Finland, whose research into prehistoric pendants culminated in a wild dance in a costume of rattling elk teeth. Artist and musician Jem Finer tells us the story of the Gurdy Stone.
Meanwhile musician βSpaceshipβ Mark Williamson is hard at work recording sounds inside a neolithic tomb in Anglesey.
Presented by Jude Rogers
Producer: Victoria Ferran
Executive Producer: Susan Marling
A Just Radio production for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4.
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