Birds playing guitars? That is something to see—and hear.
When my friend told me about From
Here to Ear at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, MA, I didn’t really
believe her. She said, “There are musical instruments, and birds, and they
interact somehow.”
It was the “somehow” that perplexed me. How can you play a
guitar without hands? I imagined a complicated set-up. Maybe the guitars were
attached to something that reacted to the birds’ actions, like a cable or
another apparatus. I couldn’t picture the interaction between bird and guitar
happening without an intermediary of some kind in the system. But that’s exactly what we saw: birds playing guitars.
When it was 10:20 a.m. and the guards let us into the gallery, we saw small,
colorful zebra finches going about their normal bird business—eating, preening,
flying, perching—and thereby playing guitar.
I’d made a lot of assumptions about
what it means to “play” a guitar. The instruments weren’t oriented in a typical,
vertical guitar-playing position. Instead, they were mounted horizontally on
drum stands so they provided an ideal surface for the tiny birds to perch on. Expensive guitars doubled as tree branches and finch feet
became guitar picks. The birds’ tiniest movements became sources of melody,
electronic but peaceful. The guitars were tuned in harmony with each other, and
there was nothing dissonant in the random, reverberating notes.
The effect was an odd but affecting combination of nature
and industry. My friend pointed out how noisy it was in the gallery and that
the finches didn’t seem to mind it. They also weren’t bothered by having a
group of people gawking at them. They just flew around, ate, perched, and sang
their own songs—much as I imagine they would amid ambient sounds in
nature, especially if they lived near a particular source of noise, such as a
waterfall or a highway.
I wanted to spend the whole day there. I wanted to live in
there. I wanted to be tiny and have a finch’s eye view of the world. But soon
our 15 minutes were up and we were ushered out of the gallery, birdsong and
guitar chords reverberating in our minds.