Roughly ten millennia ago, musicians didn’t lug amps or guitars around to their shows—they lugged lithophones, or instruments made of resonant rocks. The oldest lithophones ever found will be played ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we give our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, ...
Thousands of years after they resonated in caves, 24 stone chimes used by our prehistoric forefathers will make music once more in a unique series of concerts in Paris. Known as lithophones, the ...
The stone musical instrument is one of the world’s oldest, and has recently been attracting the attention of local youngsters eager to play at provincial tourist destinations. TUNE IN: Local young ...
An exciting new exhibition called Tune In! that will be open for a year at Jerusalem’s Bloomfield Science Museum promises to be fascinating for children and adults alike. How does one make music? Just ...
Cavemen's rock-painting and tool-making talents are widely understood, but now Parisians will have the chance to learn about our ancestors' musical side. Thousands of years after they resonated in ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Paleomusicologist and litophone specialist Erik Gonthier plays a prehistoric litophone, in Paris, on March 11, 2014 ...
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