1. What is something you learned about another culture this term that surprised or intrigued you?
The lament in Ecuador at the child’s wake particularly moved me. It was heart wrenching, but it was a beautiful expression of universal human emotion. The love for a child and grief for her loss was mingled with a celebration for the afterlife. I was intrigued that these emotions were expressed though dissonant music (vacacion). I felt that the order of the music was metaphorical for the way we cope after death. The wailing had the greatest affect on me. It's still very potent in my mind.
2. What is something that you realized about your own culture through our discussions.
I realized the despite that the distance between my home and the places we’ve studied, the musical cultures are not so far removed. My culture shares many of the same values. We have music for mourning, fighting, courting, dancing, and worship. I also observed how intermingled music becomes. Not only do we have similar reasons for making music, but our musical styles, especially in popular music today, have adopted music from all over the world.
3. What is something that this course has inspired you to learn more about.
The Tibetan monks have inspired me to learn more about the practice of sustained notes. I was fascinated by how low the voices were singing and how they achieved the obvious overtones. I also want to learn more about music enhances meditation and how music helps keep balance among the chakras.

A lot of people found the lament very touching and wrote about it in their blogs. I have always found it interesting the different ways people cope with death. Just studying funeral rituals would be an interesting class, but rather depressing I suppose.
ReplyDeleteThe mother's lament for her child was very touching. I love how you mentioned that it was a demonstration how emotions are universal. No matter where you are in the world, the grief a mother feels when she loses a child is intense. Even though our cultures, religions, and music are different we could still connect to that mother in some way as women.
ReplyDeleteThe karate video is awesome. I love stuff like that. I put acrobats on mine...you should check it out :)
ReplyDeleteand speaking of depressing rituals...I still can't get over the group presentation where they would re-bury the bodies and danced with them over their heads!
I've never heard something so beautiful and depressing. The mother's lament for her child also intrigued me because we associate consonance with good and dissonance with evil...so why is it that the dissonance sound is used to guard the child's spirit, you would think the evil spirits would find it pleasing.
ReplyDeleteOh Sarah, you would put Taylor Lautner. :P But wow he is really amazing, and hes only 11. That was really impressive. Oh and that Austrailan kid was too funny! Sometime we should go to Austraila to go party with him! lol
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