Breathing life into Europe's ancient musical instruments – DW – 05/20/2019 (2024)

"While you live, shine /Have no grief at all /Life exists only for a short while /Time demands its tribute."

These simple lyrics hardly seem out of place in the present day, despite having been writtenthousands of years ago to one of the world's oldest complete melodies. Penned during the Hellenistic period of Ancient Greece (323 to 31 B.C.), this uplifting poem was inscribed on a stone pillar by a man named Seikilos and discovered by archaeologists in present-day Turkey.

A replica of the stone was on display, accompanied by an audiorecording of a Viennese choir singing the song,last Friday in Berlin at an event celebrating the 190th anniversary of the German Archaeological Institute (DAI). The eventfeatured representatives from the DAI's international branchespresenting their latest finds.

Breathing life into Europe's ancient musical instruments – DW – 05/20/2019 (1)

The Seikilos stone waspart of an exhibition called "Archaeomusica: The Sounds and Music of Ancient Europe,"the fruit of a 5-year research project by the DAI's Orient department. Through interdisciplinarycollaboration, archaeologists, instrument makers, ethnomusicologists, musicians and other specialists came together to combine their research on Europe's earliest instruments and create playable replicas of each instrument.

Although the Archaeomusica project ended in 2018, the instruments are currently in the DAI's collection and a wide-ranging selection was brought to the event in Berlin,from bone pipes to golden trumpets. Attendees could see and touch replicas of some of the first musical instruments to be played in Europe, ranging from the Paleolithic period c. 40,000 B.C. to late antiquity, or the3rd-8th century A.D., while simultaneously listening to their sounds through audio headsets.

Breathing life into Europe's ancient musical instruments – DW – 05/20/2019 (2)

Bullroarers and mammoth bones

The earliest sound tools known to archaeologists today are from the Paleolithic area, part of the early Stone Age, when the first anatomically modern hom*o sapiens are thought to have arrived in Europe. Theearliest known European instruments were cave finds from southern Germany.

"This does not mean that the that humans didn't make music before,"Arnd Adje, a music archaeologist who curated the exhibition, pointed out. "But by that time, we can say, ok, they played on bone flutes, bone pipes then later bullroarers, which are little objects that are swung and whirled through the air and make a buzzing sound."

Later bone rasps and mammoth bones, found in present-day Ukraine, were probably used inpercussion ensembles. Only hard materialslike antler horn, perforated shell and bonehave stood the test of time."It's just a small selection of all possible sound instruments they may have played"Adje said, asinstruments like wooden drums covered in animal hide also may have existed.

Breathing life into Europe's ancient musical instruments – DW – 05/20/2019 (3)

What makes the Archaeomusicacollection unique is that each replicainstrumentcan be loaned and played by trained musicians.

"Thousands of musical instruments are stored in museums worldwide,"Adjesaid, and in many cases the objects are in display cases or locked away in storage and out of reach. These real instrumentsgenerate the most interest from musicians, who, lacking archaeological qualifications required to handle the old instruments, are barred from playing them.

Archaeomusica's reproductions are based on painstakingly gathered research and created with materials as close to possible as the originals.

"It's a huge treasure because in most cases we have no clue about the actual music that was played,"Adje said. This means the possibilities for new collaborations on these ancient instruments are abundant.A Baroque musician would use his or her technical skills to freestyle a tune on an ancient Greek double flute differently than an indigenous person in Papua New Guinea playing the very same instrument, Adje explained. "It's just fantastic to explore these objects and look at what other possible sounds that these objects generate."

Read more:Sound magician: Mongolian composer Zulan modernizes ancient musical traditions

Breathing life into Europe's ancient musical instruments – DW – 05/20/2019 (4)

A new area of interest in architecture

Although many may associate archaeology with the excavation of large structures such astombs and temples, the field today is actually much broader. As itwidens, the area of music archaeology is gaining momentum, since it deals with what Adje calledthe "soft aspects of the past."

"We try to get behind these material remains to learn more about what the people thought or felt, and that is really interesting with this research because it's so open and experimental.It's music performance, it's digging, it's acoustical analysis."

In looking back at the past, one might even find that it's not so different from the present. Adje pointedout that in the period around 40,000 B.C., "These instruments can produce music which is very much comparable with what we know today,"but of course, they could have also produced music which might now be classified as "noise."

In contrast to later periods, there are no written records and fewpaintings from thistime, so no one really knows how these ancient humans preferred to jam. Maybe this mystery will inspire new collaborations on these instruments.

Breathing life into Europe's ancient musical instruments – DW – 05/20/2019 (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Catherine Tremblay

Last Updated:

Views: 5647

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Catherine Tremblay

Birthday: 1999-09-23

Address: Suite 461 73643 Sherril Loaf, Dickinsonland, AZ 47941-2379

Phone: +2678139151039

Job: International Administration Supervisor

Hobby: Dowsing, Snowboarding, Rowing, Beekeeping, Calligraphy, Shooting, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Catherine Tremblay, I am a precious, perfect, tasty, enthusiastic, inexpensive, vast, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.