Global musical diversity is largely independent of linguistic and genetic histories

Authors

Passmore, Sam
Wood, Anna L.C.
Barbieri, Chiara
Shilton, Dor
Daikoku, Hideo
Atkinson, Quentin D.
Savage, Patrick E.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Access Statement

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Music is a universal yet diverse cultural trait transmitted between generations. The extent to which global musical diversity traces cultural and demographic history, however, is unresolved. Using a global musical dataset of 5242 songs from 719 societies, we identify five axes of musical diversity and show that music contains geographical and historical structures analogous to linguistic and genetic diversity. After creating a matched dataset of musical, genetic, and linguistic data spanning 121 societies containing 981 songs, 1296 individual genetic profiles, and 121 languages, we show that global musical similarities are only weakly and inconsistently related to linguistic or genetic histories, with some regional exceptions such as within Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Our results suggest that global musical traditions are largely distinct from some non-musical aspects of human history.

Description

Citation

Source

Nature Communications

Book Title

Entity type

Publication

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until