ONE man’s mission to make music for animals has resulted in an album especially designed for cats, and the proof is in the purrs.
More than 8,000 investors have got behind U.S. composer David Teie’s idea to create music especially designed for the listening pleasure of cats.
“I know, it sounds like a joke. But it’s 100 percent real,” Teie says on his Kickstarter page, which has gained over US$195,000 in support for the project.
In 2008, Teie wrote two songs that the Washington Post said “would have been major hits on the cat-music Billboard charts, if there were such a thing.”
He says the songs brought out positive reactions from 77 percent of cats that heard them, while human music spurred virtually no interest in the felines.
Teie, who says he has been a cellist in the National Symphony Orchestra for more than 20 years, has spent the last 12 years studying what types of music makes different species tick and why.
“For example, it’s because we heard our mother’s pulse in the womb that we like drums in our music; the sound intrigues us because it evokes heartbeats. It’s no coincidence that our mother’s resting heart rate is almost exactly the same pace as music we find relaxing.”
His first project was composing music for monkeys, in which he wrote songs at higher pitch and faster pace than human music, because of their high-pitched voices and fast pulse. For his next project, cats seemed like the obvious choice, he said.
Using musical instruments, Teie has incorporated sounds like chirping birds, the sucking of milk and purring and matched it to the frequency range that cats use to communicate.
(SD-Agencies)
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