At a Symposium of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in 2000 the Curator of Ornithology and Mammology at California’s Academy of Sciences, Luis Baptista, played an extraordinary tape recording of bird song recorded in the wild to an amazed, even incredulous audience. It consisted of one of the most famous musical motifs in all of musical history, that used by Beethoven in the first movement of his 5th Symphony, this being sung by the White Breasted Mexican Wood Wren.
Just as startling was a tape recording made in 1953 which Baptista also played at the same meeting of singing from the European Blackbird (which is apparently rarely heard) which corresponds almost exactly with the lilting opening to the Rondo of Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, Op. 61. (Baptista remarked that reports have been made by several orthithologists that the same tune has been heard as recently as 1991 from the same bird species in the wild – suggesting that Beethoven may have heard this very same birdsong at the time when he wrote his concerto.
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