Recreating the sound of Aztec 'Whistles of Death'Story Highlights
Researchers study whistles, flutes and wind instruments unearthed in
Mexico's ruins
Until recently archaeologists dismissed ancient
instruments as toys
Noisemakers provide rare glimpse into how ancient
cultures sounded
Medical doctors believe Aztecs may have used
sounds to treat illnesses
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MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AP) -- Scientists were fascinated by the ghostly
find: a human skeleton buried in an Aztec temple with a clay, skull-shaped
whistle in each bony hand.
Roberto Velazquez has devoted his career to recreating the forgotten
sounds of his distant ancestors.
But no one blew into the noisemakers for nearly
15 years. When someone finally did, the shrill, windy screech made the
spine tingle.
If death had a sound, this was it.
Roberto Velazquez believes the Aztecs played
this mournful wail from the so-called Whistles of Death before they
were sacrificed to the gods.
The 66-year-old mechanical engineer has devoted
his career to recreating the sounds of his pre-Columbian ancestors,
producing hundreds of replicas of whistles, flutes and wind instruments
unearthed in Mexico's ruins.
For years, many archaeologists who uncovered
ancient noisemakers dismissed them as toys. Museums relegated them to
warehouses. But while most studies and exhibits of ancient cultures
focus on how they looked, Velazquez said the noisemakers provide a rare
glimpse into how they sounded. Hear some of the spine-tingling sounds
of the ancient Aztecs »
"We've been looking at our ancient culture
as if they were deaf and mute," he said. "But I think all
of this is tied closely to what they did, how they thought."
Velazquez is part of a growing field of study
that includes archaeologists, musicians and historians. Medical doctors
are interested too, believing the Aztecs may have used sound to treat
illnesses.
Noisemakers made of clay, turkey feathers, sugar
cane, frog skins and other natural materials were an integral part of
pre-Columbian life, found at nearly every Mayan site.
The Aztecs sounded the low, foghorn hum of conch
shells at the start of ceremonies and possibly during wars to communicate
strategies. Hunters likely used animal-shaped ocarinas to produce throaty
grunts that lured deer.
The modern-day archaeologists who came up with
the term Whistles of Death believe they were meant to help the deceased
journey into the underworld, while tribes are said to have emitted terrifying
sounds to fend off enemies, much like high-tech crowd-control devices
available today.
Experts also believe pre-Columbian tribes used
some of the instruments to send the human brain into a dream state and
treat certain illnesses. The ancient whistles could guide research into
how rhythmic sounds alter heart rates and states of consciousness.
Among Velazquez's replicas are those that emit
a strange cacophony so strong that their frequency nears the maximum
range of human hearing.
Chronicles by Spanish priests from the 1500s
described the Aztec and Mayan sounds as sad and doleful, although these
may have been only what was played in their presence.
"My experience is that at least some pre-Hispanic
sounds are more destructive than positive, others are highly trance-evocative,"
said Arnd Adje Both, an expert in pre-Hispanic music archaeology who
was the first to blow the Whistles of Death found in the Aztec skeleton's
hands. "Surely, sounds were used in all kind of cults, such as
sacrificial ones, but also in healing ceremonies."
Sounds still play an important role in Mexican
society. A cow bell announces the arrival of the garbage truck outside
Mexico City homes. A trilling, tuneless flute heralds the knife sharpener's
arrival. A whistle emitting cat meows says the lottery ticket seller
is here.
But pre-Columbian instruments often end up in
a warehouse, Velazquez said, "and I'm talking about museums around
the world doing this, not just here."
That's changing, said Tomas Barrientos, director
of the archaeology department at Del Valle University of Guatemala.
"Ten years ago, nothing was known about
this," he said. "But with the opening up of museum collections
and people's private collections, it's an area of research that is growing
in importance."
Velazquez meticulously researches each noisemaker
before replicating it. He travels across Mexico to examine newly unearthed
wind instruments, some dating back to 400 B.C. and shaped like animals
or deities. He studies reliefs and scans 500-year-old Spanish chronicles.
But making replicas is only part of the work.
Then he has to figure out how to play them. He'll blow into some holes
and plug others, or press the instrument to his lips and flutter his
tongue. Sometimes he puts the noisemaker inside his mouth and blows,
fluctuating the air from his lungs.
He experimented with one frog-shaped whistle
for a year before discovering its inner croak.
Renowned archaeologist Paul Healy, who made an
important discovery of Mayan instruments in Belize in the 1980s, said
many of the originals still work.
"A couple of these instruments we found
were broken, which was great because we could actually see the construction
of them, the actual technology of building a sound chamber out of paper-thin
clay," he said.
Still, their exact sounds will likely remain a mystery.
"When you blow into them, you still can
get notes from them, so you could figure out what the range was,"
Healy said. "But what we don't have is sheet music to give us a
more accurate picture of what it sounded like."
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"If Brown (vs. Board
of Education) was just about letting Black people into a White
school, well we don’t care about that anymore. We don’t
necessarily want to go to White schools. What we want to do is
teach ourselves, teach our children the way we have of teaching.
We don’t want to drink from a White water fountain...We
don’t need a White water fountain. So the whole issue of
segregation and the whole issue of the Civil Rights Movement is
all within the box of White culture and White supremacy. We should
not still be fighting for what they have. We are not interested
in what they have because we have so much more and because the
world is so much larger. And ultimately the White way, the American
way, the neo liberal, capitalist way of life will eventually lead
to our own destruction. And so it isn’t about an argument
of joining neo liberalism, it’s about us being able, as
human beings, to surpass the barrier."
- Marcos Aguilar
(Principal, Academia Semillas del Pueblo)