Sunday, June 27, 2010

Animals of Africa: Sounds of the Jungle, Plain & Bush


[uncredited artist] - Animals of Africa: Sounds of the Jungle, Plain & Bush

released on LP in 1973


Current research among naturalists tends to break down any remaining class-distinction between animals and man; the more we know about the other creatures on our common planet, the sillier it seems to judge homo sapiens either as superior to all others, as the ancients dreamed, or as the lowest conceivable form of beast, as some of us might suspect today. It turns out that nearly everything we thought unique to our species - city-building, war-making, tool-using, the ability to employ logic - can be already found in some other animal's daily behavior. Even a cursory listening to this record will dispel the notion that we are the sole possessors of the concept of language: I am sure that at least some of these animals' speech is as articulate as ours - all we lack is an effective interpreter, a Rosetta stone that would let us in on their secrets.

But for me, as a composer and musician, the most fascinating aspect of these animal sounds is their musicality, their phrasing. There is never any unclarity or tentativeness in their statement, and that is enviable from any artist's standpoint. Children have this directness, but when we grow up we cloud our speech, befog our meaning, lose our animal voice. Half the struggle of any good singer, actor, instrumentalist, or composer is to find that voice again, to recreate with great care what seemingly comes naturally to the hippo or the leopard. Some of us almost succeed in this, and that is why we respond so strongly to a Bille Holiday, to a Mozart, to a Varese.

It should be unnecessary to say what follows, but I think I must. Listening to this recording in the relative safety and confinement of one's living room could lead all too easily to the waggish parlor-game of finding amusing parallels between, say, the cry of the hyena and the opening of Varese's Integrales, the trumpeting of the elephant and a fanfare in a Mahler symphony, the chattering of the vervet monkey and that of the strings in a Beethoven scherzo. There exist, already, recordings in which bird and animal "noises" have been electronically reprocessed to make little tunes; I need hardly mention the craze, a few years ago, for jungle sounds accompanied by filtered-in sentimental music. All this shows a lack of respect for the animals themselves, for the dangerous and blazing beauty they possess and we have so often lost in our circumscribed lives. The African recording engineers have done so well to give us the voices of their wildlife as they are, where they are, in the forest, bush, hillside, and savannah of an enormous continent few of us have visited, and we are privileged for the gift. Listen carefully, and even some of the language-barrier between man and beast disappears; I find, for example, the passionate love-call of the "unbeautiful" rhinoceros as moving as anything in human music.
(William Bolcom)


Tracklisting:


Side One


1. Leopard {1:08}


2. Vervet Monkey {3:05}


3. Hyrax {2:42}


4. Rhinoceros {2:24}


5. Zebra {1:49}


6. Wildebeeste {2:09}


Side Two


1. Lion {2:51}


2. Hyena {2:07}


3. Wild Dog {2:11}


4. Silver-Backed Jackal {1:21}


5. Elephant {2:55}


6. Hippopotamus {2:59}


(1)

10 comments:

  1. i saw this once in a catalogue & have been looking for a long, long time!!!!

    =D

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm so glad you posted this! I used to have it on LP but couldn't find it on CD.

    I used to turn the Hippopotamus up real loud and drive the dog crazy.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanx for this post...
    great blog!!!
    cheers

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi there!
    Any chance of a re-up?
    Pleeeeease ;-)

    ReplyDelete
  5. I'm already listening to it, Many thanks!!

    ReplyDelete