"We're used to going on
our travels and looking out for beautiful vistas and wonderful
architecture, but we tend not to think about the sound," Trevor Cox, (a British acoustic engineer who, armed with a microphone and
digital recorder, has spent several years earwigging his way around the
planet in search of what he calls its "sonic wonders."), who
was struck by the notion of exploring a wider world of sound while
investigating echoes in, of all places, a London sewer.
"So then I began to think
about where I would go if you wanted listen to the most remarkable
sounds in the world and I was surprised to find there was relatively
little information," he tells CNN. "That's when I thought I should
gather it myself."
Where: Moru Kopjes, Serengeti National Nark, Tanzania -- and other sites across Africa
What: Not a prog rock group, but one of several eons-old boulders that produce mellow notes when whacked with smaller stones.
Tonally, their range can
be a bit on the monotonous side, but the fact that it probably
resonates back to the dawn of civilization helps raise neck hairs.
Cox says: "Among
the earliest evidence we have of what our ancestors might have listened
to is left over bits of musical instruments like these rock gongs."
Stay: You'll need pockets big enough to hold a gong rock to afford to stay in the swanky safari camps of the southern serengeti.
A tourist playing the 'gong' rock (sounds like a bell) |
Click the link below to see the video and hear the sound of this mysterious rock!
Hear the rocks
Hear the rocks
BEEN THERE AND LOVED IT
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