“…But in many communities in Africa and beyond, we find a secondary auditory modality: musical surrogate languages. In these systems, linguistic content is encoded in musical form, using instruments like membrane drums (Carrington 1949, Winter 2014, Akinbo 2019, slit-log drums (Seifart et al 2018), xylophones (Zemp and Soro 2010, McPherson 2019a, Struthers-Young 2021, flutes (Poss 2005, Carter-Ényì et al 2021, Moore and Meyer 2021, or jaw harps (Pugh-Kitingan 1982, Proschan 1994, Falk 2003, Blench and Campos 2010. Most-but not all-of these systems encode phonemic aspects of the languages on which they are based, and as such they can be a valuable tool for probing phonological structure and musician's metalinguistic awareness of it (McPherson 2019b).…”