|  | Beethoven¹s Anvil: Music in Mind and Culture
 William Benzon
 Basic Books, 2001
 ISBN: 0-465-01543-3
    
         
           
            "A provocative and persuasive treatise. 
              Unlike most who write about this greatest of all mental mysteries, 
              William Benzon is equally comfortable with the science and the art 
              of music." Howard Gardner     * * * * * Why does the brain create music? What is it about certain abstract patterns 
        of sound that makes us want to dance? How can songs have deep emotional 
        power despite lyrics that are simple and trite? We tend to think of the arts as luxuries rather than necessities, and 
        as inventions of society rather than evolution. Yet the origin of musical 
        ability was a turning point in the evolution of modern humans. Every culture, 
        without exception, has some form of music. Is this really a luxury or 
        does it answer some basic biological need? If so, what? In Beethoven's 
        Anvil, William Benzon takes up the fascinating and unexplored link between 
        music and the brain. Among early humans, he says, there was no distinction 
        between music, dance, ritual and religion^Ëthey were all part of 
        the same activity, and this activity used every part of the conscious 
        brain. Language, movement, vision, emotion, hearing, touch and social interaction 
        were all involved. In fact, Benzon argues, music is necessary precisely 
        because it engages so many different parts of the brain. It literally 
        keeps the brain in tune with itself and with the brains of others. The 
        ultimate form of musical experience is that feeling of oneness with a 
        larger entity that we identify as transcendent religious experience. We 
        feel this way because that¹s precisely what the brain is doing: becoming 
        one with a larger unit, the human tribe. * * * * *  
         
          
            ContentsPreface: Speculative Engineering
 1. Some Varieties of Musical Experience Part I: Collective Dynamics2. Music and Coupling
 3. Fireflies: Dynamics and Brain States
 4. Musical Consciousness and Pleasure
 Part II: Music and the Mind5. Blues in the Night: Emotion in Music
 6. Rhythm Methods: Patterns of Construction
 7. Bright Moments
 Part III: The Evolution of Musical Culture8. The Proto-Human Rhythm Band
 9. Musicking the World
 10. Music and Civilization
 11. Through Jazz and Beyond
 * * * * *  
         
          "Beethoven's Anvil presents the compelling and entertaining thesis 
            that we humans above all are musical creatures. From neural circuits 
            to social circles, from elementary consciousness to concerts and rituals, 
            Benzon explains how music and dance provide the social technologies 
            that link minds into communities. This is original work of the highest 
            importance."
 Walter Freeman, author of How Brains Make Up Their Minds                  
         
          "I admire Benzon¹s mastery of so many diverse idea-worlds 
            and congratulate him as a virtuoso both of thought and of performance. 
            Beethoven's Anvil is a rare combination; learned, proficient, and 
            profoundly provocative. Reading it was a great experience for me."
 William H. McNeill, author of Plagues and Peoples and 
        Keeping Together in Time                   
         
          "The cutting edge rarely cuts deep. For decades we have been 
            tantalizingly exposed to scraps of research on the brain and the origins 
            of language and culture. But there was no synthesis. Then suddenly 
            this suitably ambitious project appears. Beethoven's Anvil is surely 
            destined to orchestrate an exciting debate for everyone interested 
            in the evolution of mind."
 Mary Douglas, author of Natural Symbols                   
         
           "In this truly remarkable book, Bill Benzon shows how the timed 
            and synchronized flow of music creates pleasure in our brains, and 
            how music can and does and did contribute to our survival as a species. 
            Everyone who enjoys music will find this new understanding of the 
            basics both eye- and ear-opening."
 Norman N. Holland, editor, PSYART: A Hyperlink Journal 
        for the Psychology of the Arts                 |  |