Zürcher Nachrichten - Jungle music: Chimp drumming reveals building blocks of human rhythm

EUR -
AED 4.2267
AFN 81.23848
ALL 98.123618
AMD 441.714131
ANG 2.059737
AOA 1054.255251
ARS 1338.000941
AUD 1.770291
AWG 2.07168
AZN 1.953021
BAM 1.957209
BBD 2.322843
BDT 140.691277
BGN 1.957771
BHD 0.434145
BIF 3425.766046
BMD 1.150934
BND 1.478264
BOB 7.966666
BRL 6.307804
BSD 1.150463
BTN 99.423594
BWP 15.525648
BYN 3.764925
BYR 22558.296643
BZD 2.310934
CAD 1.571905
CDF 3311.236195
CHF 0.940537
CLF 0.028347
CLP 1087.804605
CNY 8.269411
CNH 8.276581
COP 4719.782634
CRC 580.718031
CUC 1.150934
CUP 30.499738
CVE 110.343472
CZK 24.803719
DJF 204.863702
DKK 7.458325
DOP 67.928899
DZD 149.874591
EGP 58.181298
ERN 17.264003
ETB 157.859435
FJD 2.586435
FKP 0.851728
GBP 0.855357
GEL 3.130861
GGP 0.851728
GHS 11.849427
GIP 0.851728
GMD 82.282012
GNF 9967.174894
GTQ 8.835283
GYD 240.601107
HKD 9.034638
HNL 30.037623
HRK 7.537001
HTG 150.87861
HUF 403.443655
IDR 18830.077749
ILS 4.023652
IMP 0.851728
INR 99.476391
IQD 1506.984807
IRR 48483.073801
ISK 143.590233
JEP 0.851728
JMD 182.921677
JOD 0.815992
JPY 166.690275
KES 148.654656
KGS 100.64866
KHR 4607.316588
KMF 493.751192
KPW 1035.798267
KRW 1583.407998
KWD 0.35252
KYD 0.95879
KZT 597.690249
LAK 24817.619728
LBP 103079.63678
LKR 345.631807
LRD 230.09263
LSL 20.81972
LTL 3.398408
LVL 0.696188
LYD 6.255693
MAD 10.519881
MDL 19.701782
MGA 5199.743047
MKD 61.555511
MMK 2416.209915
MNT 4123.096426
MOP 9.300095
MRU 45.716909
MUR 52.58622
MVR 17.730112
MWK 1994.835987
MXN 21.804377
MYR 4.892036
MZN 73.602194
NAD 20.819087
NGN 1779.838159
NIO 42.330472
NOK 11.444135
NPR 159.072509
NZD 1.909485
OMR 0.442529
PAB 1.150438
PEN 4.155892
PGK 4.73641
PHP 65.861028
PKR 326.08535
PLN 4.272582
PYG 9181.888826
QAR 4.195384
RON 5.029585
RSD 117.235216
RUB 90.234367
RWF 1661.195816
SAR 4.318008
SBD 9.615318
SCR 16.994834
SDG 691.128387
SEK 11.022139
SGD 1.478765
SHP 0.904453
SLE 25.867262
SLL 24134.504291
SOS 657.473284
SRD 44.71359
STD 23821.999769
SVC 10.066246
SYP 14964.024087
SZL 20.820621
THB 37.54978
TJS 11.561623
TMT 4.028267
TND 3.408024
TOP 2.695603
TRY 45.507807
TTD 7.799852
TWD 34.000645
TZS 3044.218733
UAH 47.965928
UGX 4142.946313
USD 1.150934
UYU 47.004245
UZS 14573.490761
VES 117.428942
VND 30041.090807
VUV 137.958131
WST 3.026527
XAF 656.429532
XAG 0.030987
XAU 0.00034
XCD 3.110455
XDR 0.816388
XOF 656.449509
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.328034
ZAR 20.806686
ZMK 10359.781658
ZMW 27.581694
ZWL 370.600118
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Jungle music: Chimp drumming reveals building blocks of human rhythm
Jungle music: Chimp drumming reveals building blocks of human rhythm / Photo: Adrian Soldati - University of St Andrews/AFP/File

Jungle music: Chimp drumming reveals building blocks of human rhythm

Out west, they groove with fast, evenly spaced beats. In the east, it's more free-form and fluid.

Text size:

Like humans, chimpanzees drum with distinct rhythms -- and two subspecies living on opposite sides of Africa have their own signature styles, according to a study published Friday in Current Biology.

The idea that ape drumming might hold clues to the origins of human musicality has long fascinated scientists, but collecting enough clean data amid the cacophony of the jungle had, until now, proven elusive.

"Finally we've been able to quantify that chimps drum rhythmically -- they don't just randomly drum," lead author Vesta Eleuteri of the University of Vienna told AFP.

The findings lend fresh weight to the theory that the raw ingredients of human music were present before our evolutionary split from chimpanzees six million years ago.

Previous work showed chimpanzees pound the huge flared buttress roots of rainforest trees to broadcast low‑frequency booms through dense foliage. Scientists believe these rhythmic signals help transmit information across both short and long distances.

For the new study, Eleuteri and colleagues -- including senior authors Catherine Hobaiter of the University of St. Andrews in the UK and Andrea Ravignani of Sapienza University in Rome -- compiled more than a century's worth of observational data.

After cutting through the noise, the team focused on 371 high-quality drumming bouts recorded from 11 chimpanzee communities across six populations living in both rainforest and savannah-woodland habitats across eastern and western Africa.

Their analysis showed that chimpanzees drum with definitive rhythmic intent -- the timing of their strikes is not random.

Distinct differences also emerged between subspecies: western chimpanzees tended to produce more evenly timed beats, while eastern chimpanzees more frequently alternated between shorter and longer intervals.

Western chimps also drummed more frequently, kept a quicker tempo, and began drumming earlier in their signature chimp calls, made up of rapid pants and hoots.

The researchers do not yet know what is driving the differences -- but they propose that it might signify differences in social dynamics.

The western chimps' faster, predictable pulse might promote or be evidence of greater social cohesion, the authors argue, noting that western groups are generally less aggressive toward outsiders.

By contrast, the eastern apes' variable rhythms could carry extra nuance -- handy for locating or signalling companions when their parties are more widely dispersed.

Next, Hobaiter says she would like to study the data further to understand whether there are intergenerational differences between rhythms within the same groups.

"Music is not only a difference between different musical styles, but a musical style like rock or jazz, is itself going to evolve over time," she said.

"We're actually going to have to find a way to tease apart group and intergenerational differences to get at that question of whether or not it is socially learned," she said.

"Do you have one guy that comes in with a new style and the next generation picks it up?"

O.Meier--NZN