1927
DOI: 10.2307/913812
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Palaeolithic Music

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“…An early exponent, Harold E. Davies, published analyses of Aboriginal song in central Australia, suggesting that Aboriginal people, 'whose language is so inherently musical, will probably take the lead in a subsequent development of the art of music' (Davies 1927, 695). Nevertheless, he considered Aboriginal musics to represent an earlier stage of evolution (Davies 1927(Davies , 1947. Until the 1950s, music research in Australia focused almost exclusively on western classical traditions, and it was largely anthropologists like T.G.H.…”
Section: Representation In Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An early exponent, Harold E. Davies, published analyses of Aboriginal song in central Australia, suggesting that Aboriginal people, 'whose language is so inherently musical, will probably take the lead in a subsequent development of the art of music' (Davies 1927, 695). Nevertheless, he considered Aboriginal musics to represent an earlier stage of evolution (Davies 1927(Davies , 1947. Until the 1950s, music research in Australia focused almost exclusively on western classical traditions, and it was largely anthropologists like T.G.H.…”
Section: Representation In Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%