New article: Prehistoric sound, modern classification
What significance did various kinds of sound have for people in the distant past? How can we approach this question today? My article “Classification of Sound, Sound Tools, and Soundscapes” discusses some issues of sound, meaning and classification. It is based on a paper given at XII Nordic Theoretical Archaeology Group meeting in Oulu, Finland, and is now published in Monographs of the Archaeological Society of Finland 2. The article discusses many ways of approaching and classifying sounds, sound tools and soundscapes of the past. For instance, sounds might be regarded as either man-made or non-man-made, and either intentional or non-intentional. “Music” is a problematic concept with an ethnocentric bias, while “intentional sound” is a better concept. The article suggests a tripartite classification of intentional sound, distinguishing between sounds made for functional reasons, for ritual reasons, and, finally, for pleasure and pure expression.
Lecture in Tianjin
Yesterday I gave a lecture at the Conservatory of Music in Tianjin. I was invited…
Jew’s harps from the Bronze Age!
I have now travelled for some days in the Northern parts of China. In Chifeng…
On the way to China
Today I travel to China to give a lecture at the Tianjin Conservatory of Music…
New bronze lur replicas
The trombonists Jens Chr. Kloster and Gaute Vikdal has arranged, in collaboration with the bronze…
A warm welcome for Jordas skjulte toner
The book is now out and available on the market. The response so far has…

