Inglés, pregunta formulada por padillaortegonjd, hace 1 año

El origen de los instrumentos musicales. Lo cierto es que el origen de la música y los instrumentos musicales asociados a ella ha de remontarse a varios milenios. ... Así, todos los instrumentos de cuerda, como violines, violonchelos, contrabajos y guitarras, vendrían derivados del arco y las flechas.


carlosaraujo231106: :v que emocion tu primera pregunta

Respuestas a la pregunta

Contestado por maricielo06062010
1

The truth is that the origin of music and the musical instruments associated with it has to go back several millennia. In the caves of southern France, a kind of bone flute associated with our near-dental relatives has been found that is a whopping 40,000 to 60,000 years old. We all remember the images of ritual dances that our most distant ancestors left painted in prehistoric caves, but did they already use musical instruments? I want to think that yes, just as a small child immediately starts pounding on a metal bucket, the same should have been our pre-musicians with any instrument that nature gave them to pass the time between hunting and hunting.

In any case, we do preserve 100% reliable flutes originating from China with 9,000 years old, as well as lyres and harps with more than 4,500 years discovered in the mythical city of Ur, in Mesopotamia. So musical history goes back a long way and is closely related to the first civilizations.

But as we said, according to Professor Fletcher, the invention of musical instruments has a lot to do with the art of war, and it is there that all the poetics of the matter are a bit ruined. Thus, all string instruments, such as violins, cellos, double basses and guitars, would be derived from the bow and arrows. Its shape and design remind us of it, we only have to think of the harp, an instrument of classical Greece par excellence.

harp

In the same way, the arrival of the Age of Broce and the discovery of metals, opened to our ancestors new musical horizons: metallic sounds and their tonalities. These new instruments arose precisely from the impact between bronze weapons, that is, shields and swords, which when struck produced a sound that must have impacted our ancestors.

Thus arose the bells, the gongs, the xylophone and new wind instruments with different shapes and new tones to add to the poetry of always. Poems adorned with the sound of battle, curious and disturbing in equal measure.

The origin of the instruments makes us think about the damned importance that war has in the development of humanity. Also the history of music is punctuated by violence, something that no matter how strange it may seem, is still happening. Gansta rap comes to mind, that new style of hip hop that appeared just a couple of decades ago and owes so much to street violence. Perhaps we have not changed so much over the millennia and we continue to repeat the same social parameters: violence makes us move forward.

But hey, we will better think positively, let's say that human beings are capable of transforming violence into music, weapons into instruments, and language into poetry. Better, much better.Respuesta:


maricielo06062010: Esta en ingles
Contestado por carlosaraujo231106
1

Respuesta:

Me viene a la mente mi G@nso, ese nuevo estilo de hip@ hop@ que apareció hace apenas un par de décadas y que tanto le debe a la iterrupcion


carlosaraujo231106: :v
carlosaraujo231106: aquien le parecio util esta informacion :v
carlosaraujo231106: lo traducci una parte de la respuesta de maricielo06062010
carlosaraujo231106: por eso lo traducio en ingles XD
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