Given the healthy Kickstarter support and satisfied early customers, will “Music for Cats” soon be topping the Billboard Singles and Download Charts?
By: Ringo Bones
Yes, folks, it is actually a thing and basing on the
Kickstarter support during the past few years and satisfied early customer
testimonials, it seems like the New York Times actually got it right when it
called Cat Music as the number one idea of the year 2009. Music for Cats was born
out of cellist David Teie’s scientific theory on the fundamental nature of
music appreciation by mammals. He contended that every species has an intuitive
biological response to sounds present in their early development. Felines
establish their sense of music through the sounds heard after they’re born – i.e.
birds chirping or their mother’s purr. With this premise, Teie composed Music
for Cats, incorporating feline-centric sounds and their natural vocalizations
with respect to a cat’s frequency range of hearing. An independent study
conducted by researchers at the University of Wisconsin and published in
Applied Animal Behavior verified that Music for Cats resonates conclusively
with its target audience – namely cats – and writing that “cats showed a
significant preference for and interest in species-appropriate music.”
Cellist David Teie was born into a musical family, spanning
three generations of professional musicians and a long line of musicians,
composers and professional instrumentalists. Since 2014, Teie has been the
conductor and music director of Washington D.C.’s premier chamber orchestra –
the Eclipse Chamber Orchestra – and currently serves on the faculty at
University of Maryland’s School of Music. His career has spanned performing as
a soloist with the National Symphony Orchestra under Russian maestro Mstislav
Rostropovich, acting principal cellist of the San Francisco Symphony where he
performed as cellist on Metallica’s 1999 album S&M. His research has been
published in the Royal Society Biology Letters and in Evolution of Emotional
Communication.
According to Teie, cats were our first choice because they’re
widely kept as pets, allowing us to easily share music with them. While the
most mellifluous of Debussy’s compositions seem to be largely ignored by cats –
i.e. most human-centric music seems to be ignored by cats and raising the
volume only drives them away. Testimonials by those who already manage to
purchase the CD or download the music and tested Teie’s Music for Cats on their
own cats say that it has a relaxing and calming effect on their cats, making
them less hyperactive and more able to adapt in the indoor domestic
environment. Will there soon be hi-fi audio gear specifically designed to
please cats?
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