Columbia University in the City of New York

Apr 25, 20247:00 pm
Performance and Dialogue

Music on the Brain with the National Jazz Museum: It's Not Just for the Birds

Helen Sung & Dr. Sarah Woolley
Helen Sung and Dr. Sarah Woolley

Music on the Brain with the National Jazz Museum in Harlem Featuring Helen Sung and Dr. Sarah Woolley

April 25th, 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm at The National Jazz Museum in Harlem

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Bringing together jazz music and science as we celebrate the way that music affects our brains and bodies.

The early 20th century Danish linguist Otto Jesperson wrote, "In the beginning was the voice. Voice is sounding breath, the audible sign of life." The earliest songs were likely individualistic and improvisatory, an imitation of the sounds heard in nature, and while it is unknown when vocalization of meaningful, communicative sounds began, singing was no doubt a crucial step in the development of spoken language. Zuckerman Institute neuroscientist and principal investigator Dr. Sarah Woolley's research of song birds is helping decode how the brain interprets sound -- and what happens during development when those sounds are disrupted.

 

Join the Zuckerman Institute's 2019 Artist-in-Residence jazz pianist/composer Helen Sung and Dr. Woolley for a special evening, discussing her latest research highlighted by jazz music inspired "by the birds."

 

Music on the Brain is a collaboration between the National Jazz Museum in Harlem and Columbia University’s Zuckerman Institute.
 

Learn more and register.

 

Venue: The National Jazz Museum in Harlem
The National Jazz Museum in Harlem 58 W 129th St, New York, NY 10027, USA

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