TY - JOUR
T1 - Chimpanzee drumming shows rhythmicity and subspecies variation
AU - Eleuteri, Vesta
AU - van der Werff, Jelle
AU - Wilhelm, Wytse
AU - Soldati, Adrian
AU - Crockford, Catherine
AU - Desai, Nisarg
AU - Fedurek, Pawel
AU - Fitzgerald, Maegan
AU - Graham, Kirsty E.
AU - Koops, Kathelijne
AU - Pruetz, Jill
AU - Samuni, Liran
AU - Slocombe, Katie
AU - Stoeger, Angela
AU - Wilson, Michael L.
AU - Wittig, Roman M.
AU - Zuberbühler, Klaus
AU - Camara, Henry D.
AU - Mamy, Gnan
AU - Ravignani, Andrea
AU - Hobaiter, Catherine
N1 - Funding: The authors received funding from the European Union’s 8th Framework Programme, Horizon 2020, grant no. 802719 (V.E. and C.H.); from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) grant no. W1262-B29 (10.55776/W1262) (V.E. and A. Stoeger); from the Swiss National Science Foundation grant no. 501100001711-166458 (A. Soldati and K.Z.); from a SNSF Eccellenza Professorial Fellowship grant no. PCEFP3 186967 (K.K.); from Homerton College and Newnham College, the A.H. Schultz Foundation, and the Jane Goodall Institute Schweiz (K.K.) and MEXT grants to T. Matsuzawa (K.K. and M.F.); from the Max Plank Society grant no. M.IF.NEPF8103 and M.IF.EVAN8103 (C.C. and R.M.W.); and from the European Union ERC, TOHR, grant no. 101041885 (J.v.d.W. and A.R.). The Center for Music in the Brain is funded by the Danish National Research Foundation no. DNRF117.
PY - 2025/5/19
Y1 - 2025/5/19
N2 - Rhythmic percussion is present across human cultures and has been proposed as one of the earliest evolved forms of musical expression.1 Key features of human rhythmic percussion include individual and regional variation, as well as structural features widespread across musical cultures, such as the use of non-random timing and isochrony (i.e., evenly spaced note onsets).2,3,4,5 Comparative studies of drumming in our ape relatives contribute to understanding the evolutionary origins of human rhythmic percussion. In this context, large, diverse datasets allow testing for species-level universals and regional variation. Chimpanzees and bonobos, like humans, drum on instrumental substrates.2,6,7,8,9 Wild chimpanzees drum on resonant tree buttresses, showing individual variation during traveling and resting contexts, and often integrate drumming into their long-distance pant-hoot vocalizations.6,7,8 But whether wild chimpanzee drumming shows structural musical features and regional variation in rhythm or in its integration within pant-hoots remains unknown. We show that wild chimpanzees drum with non-random timing and isochrony, providing evidence that rhythmic drumming on instrumental substrates may have been present in our last common ancestor.2 Furthermore, we found subspecies-level regional rhythmic variation, showing that western chimpanzees drum isochronously, while eastern chimpanzees drum by alternating shorter and longer inter-hit intervals. Western chimpanzees also produce more drumming hits, drum at a faster tempo, and integrate drumming earlier in the pant-hoot vocalization, typically during the rhythmic build-up phase. Chimpanzee buttress drumming shows both species-level structural features of human musicality and stable subspecies regional differences across diverse ecologies.
AB - Rhythmic percussion is present across human cultures and has been proposed as one of the earliest evolved forms of musical expression.1 Key features of human rhythmic percussion include individual and regional variation, as well as structural features widespread across musical cultures, such as the use of non-random timing and isochrony (i.e., evenly spaced note onsets).2,3,4,5 Comparative studies of drumming in our ape relatives contribute to understanding the evolutionary origins of human rhythmic percussion. In this context, large, diverse datasets allow testing for species-level universals and regional variation. Chimpanzees and bonobos, like humans, drum on instrumental substrates.2,6,7,8,9 Wild chimpanzees drum on resonant tree buttresses, showing individual variation during traveling and resting contexts, and often integrate drumming into their long-distance pant-hoot vocalizations.6,7,8 But whether wild chimpanzee drumming shows structural musical features and regional variation in rhythm or in its integration within pant-hoots remains unknown. We show that wild chimpanzees drum with non-random timing and isochrony, providing evidence that rhythmic drumming on instrumental substrates may have been present in our last common ancestor.2 Furthermore, we found subspecies-level regional rhythmic variation, showing that western chimpanzees drum isochronously, while eastern chimpanzees drum by alternating shorter and longer inter-hit intervals. Western chimpanzees also produce more drumming hits, drum at a faster tempo, and integrate drumming earlier in the pant-hoot vocalization, typically during the rhythmic build-up phase. Chimpanzee buttress drumming shows both species-level structural features of human musicality and stable subspecies regional differences across diverse ecologies.
KW - chimpanzee drumming
KW - chimpanzees
KW - drumming
KW - music
KW - regional variation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105004808986
U2 - 10.1016/j.cub.2025.04.019
DO - 10.1016/j.cub.2025.04.019
M3 - Article
C2 - 40347944
AN - SCOPUS:105004808986
SN - 0960-9822
VL - 35
SP - 2448-2456.e4
JO - Current Biology
JF - Current Biology
IS - 10
ER -