2021
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.674289
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A Flute, Musical Bows and Bamboo Clarinets that “Speak” in the Amazon Rainforest; Speech and Music in the Gavião Language of Rondônia

Abstract: The Gavião, a native Amazonian group in Rondônia, Brazil, use three different traditional musical instruments that they identify as “speaking” ones and that are characterized by a very tight music-lyric relation through similar pitch patterns: a flute (called kotiráp), a pair of mouth bows (iridináp), and three large bamboo clarinets (totoráp), played by three different players, each one playing a single-note clarinet. They show in different ways the relation of acoustic iconicity which exists between the word… Show more

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“…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).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…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).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He argues that, since postlexical rules such as vowel elision or tone sandhi between words are uniformly encoded in speech surrogates but intonational effects are not, the conversion of spoken language to surrogate phonology must take place at a level after postlexical rules but before "postsyntactic" rules like downstep/downdrift and ultimately phonetic implementation. However, more recent work on musical surrogate languages, including Akinbo (2019) on the Yorùbá tension drum, Struthers-Young (2022) on the Northern Toussian balafon, Meyer and Moore (2021) on Gavião wind instruments, and McPherson (2022) on the Igbo ọ ̀jà flute show that these intonational elements, especially downstep and downdrift, are in fact encoded in some instrumental surrogates. The question, then, is whether deeper study of Akan surrogates will reveal any of these intonational effects, and if not, what makes its surrogate systems different from those that do.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%