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Why Music is Universal

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Wednesday, April 01, 2009

According to recent findings, there may be a scientific basis to the reason Western music has been so readily distributed around the globe. We discuss the study, which demonstrates a universal recognition of music that expresses the emotions of happiness, sadness and fear. Also: musician and poet Lee Ranaldo, co-founder of Sonic Youth, joins us live to discuss his new collaborations with the Bang on a Can All-Stars.

Guests:

Lee Ranaldo

Worldwide Music, Worldwide Emotions

Native African people who have never even listened to the radio before can nonetheless pick up on happy, sad, and scared emotions in Western music, according to a new report published in the journal Current Biology. Dr. Thomas Fritz of the Max-Planck Institute tells us about visiting an isolated village ...

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The Global Sounds of Africa

Western music has demonstrated its global reach in countless ways, and in recent years this has been particularly pronounced in the sounds of Africa. Groups like Amadou & Mariam, from Mali, and Buraka Som Sistema, from Angola, blend electro-pop and urban dance forms. Music journalist Will Hermes joins us to ...

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Lee Ranaldo

Musician and poet Lee Ranaldo made his name as a guitarist in the groundbreaking rock band Sonic Youth. He joins us to talk about his new work with a very different groundbreaking band, the Bang on a Can All-Stars.

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Music and Emotion

Today we're looking at a German study that shows that a remote Cameroonian group known as the Mafa were correctly able to identify Western music as being happy, sad, or fearful, even though they'd not heard any Western music before.

This study is quite provocative because it suggests that ...

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