1 Music-­Historical  Egyptomania  1650-­1950     Several  years  after  completing  his  grand  Egyptian  opera  Aida,  premiered  in  1871,  the   composer  Giuseppe  Verdi  (1813-­‐1901)  reminded  his  friend  Opprandino  Arrivabene   (1805-­‐1887)  of  a  frustrating  visit  to  the  Egyptian  museum  in  Florence.1  The  two  had   ventured  there  during  the  preparatory  phase  of  the  opera  to  examine  an  ancient   flute,  following  the  claim  by  the  influential  Belgian  musicologist  François-­‐Joseph   Fétis  (1784-­‐1871)  that  the  entire  system  of  ancient  Egyptian  music  could  be  gleaned   from  this  instrument.  This  ancient  musical  system,  Verdi  recalled  reading  in  Fétis’   Histoire  générale  de  la  musique  (1869),  was  in  every  way  the  equal  of  modern  music,   “except  for  the  tonality  of  the  instrument.”2  Verdi  visited  the  museum  in  high  hopes   of  sophisticated  musical  inspiration  for  his  Egyptian  opera  project,  but  what  he  found   instead  was  a  fragment  of  a  simple  “pipe  with  four  holes,  like  the  ones  our  shepherds   have.”3  In  the  letter  to  Arrivabene  recounting  this  incident,  Verdi  repaid  Fétis  with   some  colorful  invective,  culminating  in  a  sarcastic  Così  si  fa  l’istoria!—“This  is  how   history  is  made!”     There  is  more  to  Verdi’s  indignant  flourish  than  the  polemical  context  would  lead   one  to  believe.  In  fact,  the  elusive  nature  of  the  music  of  Ancient  Egypt  can  justifiably   be  described  as  the  oldest  problem  in  music  history.  The  question  of  ancient   Egyptian  music  has  all  but  disappeared  from  contemporary  musicological  discourse,   but  starting  in  the  seventeenth  century  it  was  commonplace  in  music-­‐historical   accounts  to  devote  a  chapter  to  ancient  Egyptian  music.  What  is  problematic  about   this  music  is  succinctly  expressed  in  the  authoritative  Oxford  Encyclopedia  of  Ancient   2 Egypt:  “Clearly,  musical  culture  was  a  well-­‐developed  part  of  society,  yet  the  nature   of  the  music  remains  obscure.”4  This  is  politely  put.  We  simply  have  no  idea  what   ancient  Egyptian  music  sounded  like.  No  sources  of  notated  music  survive;  we  do  not   even  know  whether  Egyptians  had  a  form  of  musical  notation.  While  Egyptologists   have  made  astonishing  discoveries  pertaining  to  musical  culture,  from  a  music-­‐ historical  perspective  many  pressing  questions  remain  unanswered:  textual   descriptions  of  music  have  not  turned  up  anything  particularly  illuminating,  the   stylized  tomb  paintings  of  musicians  have  resisted  interpretation,  and  surviving   instruments  do  not  reveal  what  kind  of  music  Egyptians  played.  For  any  musician,   especially  a  composer  such  as  Verdi,  the  most  important  aspect  of  music,  its  sound,  is   irrecoverably  lost.  No  wonder  that  music  theorists  such  as  Fétis  clutch  at  straws—or   at  paltry  reed  flutes,  for  that  matter.     This  curious  situation  raises  some  basic  questions.  Why  did  music  historians   concern  themselves  with  a  repertoire  for  which  there  was  no  reliable  evidence?   Indeed,  why  should  we?  An  answer  to  these  questions  must  begin  with  some  general   words  about  the  writing  of  music  history.  Musicologist  Richard  Taruskin  recently   explained  the  disciplinary  commitment  to  notated  sources:   Something  over  a  thousand  years  ago  music  in  the  West  stopped  being  (with   negligible  exceptions)  an  exclusively  oral  tradition  and  became  a  partly  literate   one.  This  was,  from  our  perspective,  an  enormously  important  change.    The   beginning  of  music  writing  gives  us  access  through  actual  musical  documents  to   the  repertories  of  the  past  and  suddenly  raises  the  curtain,  so  to  speak,  on   developments  that  had  been  going  on  for  centuries.5     3 By  focusing  on  written  music,  the  sounding  component  of  music  history  is  preserved   in  documentary  evidence,  in  line  with  the  broad  standards  to  which  most  academic   historiography  adheres.  Not  coincidentally,  a  philologically  informed  methodology   was  enshrined  in  the  late-­‐nineteenth  century,  just  as  musicology  became   institutionalized  as  an  academic  discipline.   One  consequence  of  this  concentration  on  written  documents  to  overcome  the   evanescent  nature  of  sound  has  been  a  firm  focus  on  fixed  works—usually  identified   with  scores—and  the  composers  that  created  them.6  On  one  level,  this  move  was  one   of  convenience,  providing  the  historian  with  a  sense  of  dealing  with  a  unified  object.   The  musical  work  possesses  a  famously  slippery  ontology,  hovering  between  the   composer’s  inaccessible  mental  conception  and  an  infinity  of  performances.7   Historians  have  typically  “pinned  down”  works  by  identifying  them  with  the   completed  score,  as  the  material  image  of  the  composer’s  creative  will,  at  the   moment  of  creation.  Needless  to  say,  these  long-­‐lived  assumptions  have  been   challenged  in  recent  years.8     While  this  “life-­‐and-­‐works”  approach  predominated  music  histories  throughout   the  twentieth  century,  even  during  its  heyday  the  sources  on  which  music  history   drew  were  typically  more  heterogeneous.  Even  a  staunch  defender  of  the  work   concept,  the  influential  musicologist  Carl  Dahlhaus,  concedes:  “the  idea  that  music   history  is  exemplified  in  works  …  is  by  no  means  self-­‐evident.”9  Dahlhaus’s   contemporary  Hans-­‐Heinrich  Eggebrecht  would  venture  one  step  further:  “In  the   history  of  the  creation  of  music  there  are  no  leaps,  only  gaps  in  transmission.”10   Documentary  history,  Eggebrecht  argues,  fails  to  capture  the  underlying  continuities:   4 “For  the  historian,  what  is  documented  is  merely  the  result  of  musical  thinking,  its   congealed  surfaces,  be  it  as  (compositional)  ‘practice’  or  as  ‘theory’.”11  Eggebrecht’s   central  historiographic  category—musical  thinking—manifests  itself  variously  in  the   generalizing  statements  of  music  theory,  the  logic  of  individual  works  as  unearthed   by  music  analysis,  and  the  historicity  of  compositional  practice.  The  undocumented   history  of  music,  Eggebrecht  argues,  happens  in  musical  thinking—fathomable  in  its   processual  nature,  but  not  in  its  concrete  activity.12     These  two  positions  represent  the  dual  nature  of  music  history,  one  side   emphasizing  scholarly  responsibility  in  the  service  of  a  history  of  music,  and  the   other  stressing  the  creative  and  artistic  dimension,  reaching  for  the  ineffable,  within   a  history  of  music.  Eggebrecht’s  ideas,  though  somewhat  idiosyncratic,  serve  to   demonstrate  a  widespread  yearning  to  get  beneath  the  documents,  the  musical   notation,  in  hopes  of  gaining  access  to  the  raw  materials  of  historical  change.  Some   music  historians,  notably  the  early-­‐twentieth-­‐century  French  musicologist  Jules   Combarieu,  proposed  a  methodology  that  gives  vivid  expression  to  this  urge  to   comprehend  even  undocumented  stretches  of  music  history  (Ex.1).13   This  urge  to  get  beneath  the  musical  surface  was  fueled  by  the  possibility  of  doing   so  in  fairly  specific  terms:  the  materials  of  music—scales,  rhythmic  patterns,   harmonies,  etc.—can  be  described  in  concrete,  technically  precise  language.  These   are  the  building  blocks  from  which  music  is  created.  Where  documentary  evidence  is   scant  and  does  not  permit  the  full  transmission  of  notated  compositions,  discussion   of  the  musical  material  often  stands  in.  And  not  without  reason:  materials  can   provide  at  least  a  glimpse  of  what  was  possible  within  the  given  parameters.     5 From  this  perspective,  the  quest  for  ancient  Egyptian  music  presents  a  perfect   case  to  examine  the  modes  of  writing  music  history.  It  ponders  a  musical  repertory   about  which  we  have  no  knowledge  whatsoever,  but  whose  dearth  of  evidence  has   not  stopped  music  historians  from  speculating.  From  the  seventeenth  century   onwards,  the  question  of  Egyptian  music  has  played  on  scholars’  minds.  All  major   music-­‐historical  accounts—Burney,  Forkel,  Padre  Martini,  de  Laborde  in  the   eighteenth  century;  Fétis,  Kiesewetter,  and  Ambros  in  the  nineteenth—devote   chapters  to  Egyptian  music  that  we  know  to  be  entirely  speculative.  Writing  about   Egyptian  music  was  de  rigueur—this  is  in  itself  a  circumstance  worth  investigating.     Different  time  periods  gave  different  specific  answers  to  the  question  “Why   Egyptian  music?”  To  seek  a  unified  answer  is  not  the  point  here:  this  exploration  of   “music-­‐historical  Egyptomania”  over  three  centuries  of  European  history  spotlights   the  conjunction  between  changing  images  of  Egypt  and  ideas  about  the  nature  and   history  of  music  extracted  from  them.  As  this  essay  focuses  on  efforts  to  recover  the   technical  bases  of  Egyptian  music,  some  other  aspects  of  Egyptomania14—notably   Hermetic  traditions,  Masonic  symbolism,  and  exoticist  musical  representations—are   only  touched  upon,  inevitably,  to  the  extent  they  relate  to  the  main  questions  raised   here.15     A  note  of  caution  is  in  order.  The  hypotheses  concerning  Egyptian  music  explored   here  may  appear  far-­‐fetched,  some  outright  wrong-­‐headed.  Whether  or  not  they  are   correct  is  inconsequential;  absent  sensational  new  discoveries,  we  will  likely  never   know.  What  is  important,  however,  is  that  the  figures  that  articulated  them  were,   almost  without  exception,  regarded  as  the  leading  lights  of  their  generation  and  were   6 eagerly  read  by  their  peers.  From  this  perspective,  the  various  efforts  to   “reconstruct”  the  elusive  music  of  ancient  Egypt  constitute  a  prism  of  predominant   intellectual  trends  of  each  period,  illuminating  in  turn  the  wider  cultural  place  of   music.       While  the  lack  of  sounding  evidence  may  be  an  obstacle  for  uncovering  the   mysteries  of  Egyptian  music,  our  awareness  of  the  conjectural  nature  of  these   histories  clears  the  view  toward  their  historiographic  principles.  Like  Fétis,  much  to   Verdi’s  annoyance,  music  historians  had  to  press  the  scant  evidence  hard  to  get   closer  to  the  mysteries  of  Egypt.  In  this  sense,  studying  the  history  of  Egyptian  music   offers  insights  into  the  mechanisms  underlying  the  production  of  musical  facts  and   historical  trajectories  in  ways  that  few  other  areas  of  music  history  can.       The  Origins  of  Egyptian  Music     Egyptian  music  has  captivated  the  minds  of  scholars  at  least  since  Athanasius   Kircher’s  Oedipus  Aegyptiacus  (1654).  The  Jesuit  polymath  (1602?-­‐1680),  who   published  in  virtually  all  areas  of  knowledge  of  the  early  modern  world,  had   previously  completed  an  authoritative  work  on  musical  thought,  Musurgia   Universalis  (1650).  The  overlapping  questions  between  these  two  books  go  well   beyond  Kircher’s  general  ambitions  in  the  field  of  universal  science,  which  follow  in   the  combinatorial  mold  of  a  Lullian  Ars  magna.16  As  Ulf  Scharlau  has  shown,  Oedipus   complements  and  completes  the  conception  of  music  set  forth  in  Musurgia.  Thus,  the   frontispiece  of  Musurgia  (vol.2)  bears  the  motto  “Musica  nihil  aliud  est,  quam   omnium  rerum  ordinem  scire,”  which  closely  parallels  the  chapter  heading  in   7 Oedipus,  “Quod  Hieroglyphica  Musica  nihil  aliud  fuerit,  quam  scientia  ordinis  rerum   Vniversi.”17     As  is  often  stressed,  the  convergence  of  disparate  spheres  of  knowledge  in   Kircher’s  worldview  is  ultimately  guaranteed  by  the  unity  of  God’s  creation.  But,   beyond  this  theological  conviction,  there  are  several  concrete  connections  between   music  and  the  Egyptian  world.  One  important  aspect  of  Kircher’s  comprehensive   outlook  on  music  concerned  the  Pythagorean  legacy,  which  viewed  music  as  a   manifestation  of  the  universal  truth  expressed  in  numbers.  By  defining  scientia   musicae  as  “sounding  numbers,”18  Kircher  reaffirmed  the  role  of  music  within  the   quadrivium.  Indeed,  the  much-­‐discussed  frontispiece  of  Musurgia  (Ex.2)  assigns   prominence  to  the  scene  of  Pythagoras  in  the  smithy  that,  according  to  legend,   provided  the  philosopher  with  the  key  to  the  mathematical  nature  of  sound.  This   foundation  myth  of  music  theory,  now  known  to  be  an  acoustical  impossibility,  forms   the  cornerstone  of  the  Pythagorean  tradition.  It  was  widely  believed  that  Pythagoras   had  gained  his  mathematical  knowledge  from  the  wisdom  of  Egypt,  where  he  had   apparently  been  educated.     Among  Kircher’s  important  contributions  were  his  efforts  to  decipher   hieroglyphs,  earning  him  the  moniker  “father  of  modern  Egyptology.”19  No  modern   commentator  fails  to  point  out  that  Kircher’s  translations  bear  no  relation  to  what  is   now  known  about  Egyptian  languages,  notably  because  he  assumed  that  all   hieroglyphs  were  ideograms.  Nonetheless,  it  is  generally  agreed  that  Kircher’s   attempts  set  scholars  on  a  path  that  eventually  led  to  their  decipherment.  In  Oedipus,   Kircher  attempted  to  relate  the  word  “music”  both  to  the  Egyptian  moys,  meaning   8 water,  and  to  Moses’s  name.20  Kircher’s  explanation  referred  to  Egyptian  wind   instruments,  which  were  made  from  reeds  growing  on  the  banks  of  the  Nile.   Although  Kircher’s  etymology  has  been  declared  spurious,  his  watery  theory  was   widely  referenced  well  into  the  eighteenth  century.21   In  Kircher’s  thinking,  Egyptian  culture  occupied  a  privileged  position  due  to  its   status  as  the  earliest  known  civilization:  according  to  biblical  authority,  even  in  the   age  of  Abraham,  when  Israel  was  barely  a  nomadic  tribe  in  the  wilderness,  Egypt  was   already  a  powerful  high  culture.22  As  we  shall  see,  Kircher  was  not  interested  in  the   specificity  of  Egyptian  music,  but  rather  what  this  early  stage  of  culture  could  tell  us   about  the  general  nature  of  music.   Kircher’s  intellectual  world  occupied  a  complex  middle  ground  between  church   doctrine  and  humanistic  scholarship.  To  understand  in  what  ways  Egyptian  music   featured  in  these  discourses,  it  is  useful  briefly  to  recapitulate  the  most  important   chapters  of  their  respective  chronologies.23  Since  biblical  chronology  is  a  minefield,   the  dates  mainly  serve  to  remind  ourselves  of  the  stations  that  are  relevant  to   reconstructing  the  history  of  music.  Adam  and  Eve  were  generally  believed  not  to   have  known  music.  Jubal,  “ancestor  of  all  who  played  the  lyre  and  pipe,”  was  widely   believed  to  have  invented  music  in  the  seventh  generation—that  is,  175-­‐280AM,24  As   in  all  early  modern  chronologies,  the  two  milestones  are  the  Deluge  and  the  Tower  of   Babel.  Musical  knowledge  was  acutely  endangered  by  the  Flood,  which  occurred,   according  to  broad  consensus,  in  1656AM.25  The  theological  authorities  offered  no   certainty  that  later  music  was  still  the  same  as  Jubal’s  invention,  but  most  scholars   assumed  so.  Noah’s  offspring  began  to  populate  the  world  anew,  and  among  them,   9 Ham  is  credited  with  settling  in  Africa  and  becoming  the  progenitor  of  the  Egyptian   people.26  Most  scholars  interested  in  music  assumed  that  the  Tower  of  Babel,   marking  the  introduction  of  different  languages,  also  had  a  profound  impact  on  the   paths  music  took.  There  is  little  consensus  on  the  chronology:  most  scholars  dated   the  tower  to  1757–1996AM;  Athanasius  favored  1931AM—275  years  after  the  flood.27     Kircher’s  second  strand  of  thinking  was  based  on  an  intellectual  genealogy,   following  in  the  humanistic  tradition,  in  which  the  Egyptians  taught  the  Greeks,  the   Greeks  taught  the  Romans,  who  in  turn  laid  the  foundation  of  the  modern  world.28   The  humanistic  and  the  theological  strands  take  the  enigma  of  Egyptian  music  in   different  directions.  As  we  shall  see,  one  will  take  us  toward  Greek  music,  and  the   other,  surprisingly  perhaps,  toward  Chinese  music.     While  many  of  his  positions  on  music  were  clearly  rooted  in  Christian  teachings,   Kircher  used  biblical  authority  with  noticeable  freedom.  He  regarded  music  as  a   divine  gift,  given  to  humans  at  the  beginning  of  time.29  For  Kircher,  it  was  thirst  for   knowledge  that  allowed  humans  to  understand  the  principles  of  music.   Correspondingly,  Jubal  becomes  the  inventor  specifically  of  instrumental  music.30  As   for  the  Deluge,  early  modern  musical  thinkers  were  convinced  that  a  musician  was   present  on  Noah’s  Ark.31  Kircher  countered  that  this  does  not  necessarily  follow:   even  if  music  were  lost  during  a  second  deluge,  its  logical  nature,  based  ultimately  in   numbers  and  ratios,  would  allow  humans  to  reconstruct  it.32   Whereas  much  of  Kircher’s  cultural  and  historical  work  attempts  to  bring   classical  scholarship  in  line  with  biblical  accounts,  close  readings  can  reveal  the   fissures  that  opened  up  between  theological  teaching  and  scientific  thinking  during   10 Kircher’s  age.  His  famous  Turris  Babel  (1679),  which  questions  the  mechanical   possibility  of  building  a  tower  reaching  the  moon,  is  a  case  in  point.  Similarly,  while   Kircher’s  work  on  Egypt  is  careful  not  to  cross  biblical  authority,  his  Oedipus  toys   with  the  idea  that  Egyptian  culture  predated  the  Deluge,  a  position  that  was  difficult   to  square  with  the  totalizing  claim  that  the  flood  covered  the  entire  planet.33  From   the  perspective  of  music,  arguably  a  less  sensitive  subject,  this  question  was  fairly   uncontentious,  since  Kircher  was  certain  that  antediluvian  music  sounded  the  same:   “Thus  the  invention  of  music  did  not  originate  with  the  Greeks,  the  Egyptians,  the   Chaldeans,  but  before  the  flood  among  the  first  humans.”34  Properly  speaking,  the   Egyptians  were  the  first  who  re-­established  music  after  the  flood.35  His  interest  in   Egyptian  music,  as  well  as  in  other  early  cultures,  was  ultimately  in  the  service  of   gaining  insights  into  the  nature  and  origin  of  music.     But  if  the  goal  was  the  near-­‐impossible  task  of  reconstructing  antediluvian   culture,  and  if  early  cultures  such  as  Egypt  had  to  stand  in  as  the  closest  substitute,   there  still  remained  the  problem  of  understanding  the  enigmatic  Egyptian  culture   and  its  inscrutable  hieroglyphs.  Kircher,  famously,  tackled  this  problem  by  positing  a   parallelism  between  Egypt  and  China:  hieroglyphs,  he  asserted,  were  related  to   Chinese  characters,  and  pagodas  were  a  version  of  pyramids.36  This  connection  may   seem  curious—to  be  sure,  it  is  baseless—but  against  the  information  provided  by  the   biblical  record  this  conceit  has  a  certain  plausibility.  If  individual  languages  were   created  after  the  Tower  of  Babel  with  humans  scattered  across  the  earth,  it  is   conceivable  that  an  underlying  connection  may  exist.  In  addition  to  being  forefather   of  the  Egyptian  people,  Kircher  speculated,  Ham  was  also  progenitor  of  the  Chinese.37   11 A  similar  pragmatism  prevails  in  his  linguistic  work:  the  strategy  of  relating   hieroglyphs  to  a  living  language  may  seem  a  promising  approach.  As  Umberto  Eco   reminds  us,  Egypt  was  a  “Hermetical  phantom,”  while  China  very  much  a  “tangible   Other.”38  Kircher’s  idea  that  Chinese  culture  could  illuminate  Egypt  was  an  influential   starting  point,  remaining  authoritative  for  generations  to  come.  Over  time  this  theory   was  thrown  into  sharper  relief,  as  it  became  commonly  accepted,  well  into  the   eighteenth  century,  that  China  had  been  a  colony  of  Ancient  Egypt.39     Kircher  never  extended  his  Sino-­‐Egyptian  association  specifically  to  music.  For   him,  the  Egyptians  had  a  philosophical  approach  to  music,  which  explored   particularly  its  mathematical  structure  and  had  succeeded  in  penetrating  its  deep   relations  to  nature.    In  musical  circles,  meanwhile,  Kircher’s  legacy  endured,  even   where  his  influence  was  not  explicitly  acknowledged.40  Thus,  the  Enlightenment   composer  Jean-­‐Philippe  Rameau  (1683-­‐1764)  believed  that  the  study  of  Chinese   music—which  generated  considerable  interest  in  eighteenth-­‐century  France—could   shed  light  on  the  enigma  of  antediluvian  and  Egyptian  music.41   To  be  sure,  Rameau’s  musings  on  chronology  and  the  earliest  music  occurred  in   the  context  of  the  high  Enlightenment  and,  more  specifically,  his  ambitions  vis-­‐à-­‐vis   the  Académie  des  sciences.42  While  the  theological  context  of  Kircher’s  work  had   faded,  the  underlying  anthropological  questions  that  nurtured  this  inquiry  into  the   earliest  high  culture  persisted—with  the  important  difference  that  this  approach  was   now  applied  specifically  to  the  question  of  what  the  original  music  may  have  sounded   like.  Unlike  Kircher,  who  had  viewed  music  through  the  numerical  (and  ultimately   quadrivial)  prism  of  Pythagoreanism,  the  Enlightenment  regarded  music  as  a   12 substance  sui  generis.43  The  problem  of  gaining  direct  access  to  the  music  of  ancient   Egypt  remained  the  same  as  in  Kircher’s  age.  But,  in  true  Enlightenment  spirit,   Rameau’s  age  was  confident  that  the  universal  nature  of  music  could  be  understood   through  Egyptian  music,  whose  secrets  could  in  turn  be  unlocked  by  Chinese  music.       Complicated  Perfection   Before  we  follow  this  intellectual  double  flip  further  into  the  eighteenth  century,   approaching  Egyptian  music,  qua  Ur-­music,  from  the  vantage  point  of  Chinese  music,   we  should  cast  a  glance  on  the  humanistic  tradition,  which  also  framed  the  study  of   Egyptian  music.  This  tradition  takes  us  to  classical  scholarship  and  the  few  remaining   testimonies  about  Egyptian  music  by  ancient  Greek  authorities,  above  all  Herodotus,   Diodorus  Siculus,  and  Plato.     Herodotus  mentioned  in  passing  that  flute  playing  and  singing  played  a  part  in   Egyptian  sacrificial  ceremonies.44  Diodorus’s  testimony  proved  more  troublesome,   asserting  that  the  Egyptians  considered  music  “not  only  useless  but  even  harmful.”45   Needless  to  say,  Diodorus’s  awkward  pronouncement  was  regularly  dismissed  or   explained  away.46  Plato  is  the  nearest  approximation  of  an  ear  witness,  since  he  was   believed  to  have  spent  time  in  Egypt.  In  his  Laws  Plato  reported  that  the  music  of  the   Egyptians  had  attained  unrivalled  perfection.47  Like  painting,  music  was  highly   regulated  in  Egypt:  the  state  prescribed  suitable  melodies  and  appropriate  postures   for  performance;  nothing  else  was  allowed.  As  a  consequence,  Egyptian  art  had  not   changed  in  10,000  years—literally,  as  Plato  insisted.  Because  the  requirements  of  the   13 state  and  the  unchanging  nature  of  the  art  were  so  closely  attuned,  Plato  explained,   Egyptian  music  had  reached  a  miraculous  level  of  perfection.   In  this  passage  in  the  Laws,  Egypt  becomes  the  exotic  utopia  onto  which  Plato   projected  his  anti-­‐democratic  views,  previewly  articulated  in  the  Republic,  of  how   music  and  state  come  together  in  perfect  union.  It  was  disappointing,  though  perhaps   inevitable,  given  the  great  philosophical  weight  that  rests  on  this  utopian  music,  that   Plato  neglected  to  report  anything  else  about  these  perfect  melodies  sanctioned  by   the  Egyptian  state:  posterity  was  left  with  tantalizing  descriptions  of  their  superior   quality  but  no  knowledge  whatsoever  about  their  sound.   Plato’s  testimony  enriches  and  complicates  our  story.  On  the  one  hand,  he  adds   another  important  characteristic  to  the  discourse  on  Egyptian  music:  not  only  is  it   close  to  a  pure  Ur-­‐Music,  but  it  also  constitutes  no  less  than  the  perfect  music.  On  the   other,  we  know  quite  well  from  Plato’s  other  writings  what  kind  of  music  he  favored.   In  the  absence  of  any  indication  to  the  contrary,  we  should  assume  that  Plato  heard   Egyptian  music  as  fundamentally  similar  to  Greek  music—just  a  superior  version  of   it.  Moreover,  we  also  know  that  the  structures  of  Greek  music  of  Plato’s  time  have   very  little  to  do  with  those  of  Chinese  music.  In  other  words,  despite  the  glowing   appreciation  it  offers,  Plato’s  testimony  introduces  a  wrinkle  into  our  story  that  is   difficult  to  straighten  out.     It  is  necessary  to  get  technical  here  (Ex.3).  Greek  music  is  based  on  tetrachords,   spanning  a  perfect  fourth,  whereas  Chinese  music  is  based  on  a  pentatonic  scale.  This   is  not  just  a  question  of  one  note  more  or  less;  rather,  both  systems  follow  essentially   different  principles  of  construction.48  Crucially,  Chinese  pentatonicism  does  not   14 accommodate  intervals  smaller  than  the  whole  tone,  whereas  the  Greek  tetrachord   will  inescapably  include  smaller  intervals.  We  need  not  concern  ourselves  here  with   the  intricacies  of  these  musical  traditions—tuning  systems,  modes,  genera,  etc.—to   conclude  that  they  build  on  different,  largely  irreconcilable,  assumptions.     The  historical  connection  to  Plato  and  Greek  culture  is  a  little  less  fantastic  than   to  China,  given  that  Egypt  had  been  under  Greek  rule  since  Alexander  the  Great.   Nonetheless,  some  scholars  of  Egyptian  music,  especially  in  the  nineteenth  century,   were  concerned  that  the  Greeks  may  have  brought  their  own  musical  traditions  and   that  this  line  of  hegemony,  during  the  Ptolemaic  period,  might  have  sullied  the  purity   of  Egyptian  music.  This  concern  was  compounded  by  the  fact  that  Greek  music,  which   was  monophonic,  bears  little  resemblance  to  modern  music,  whose  essential   achievement,  the  eighteenth  century  firmly  believed,  was  the  invention  of  harmony.   For  this  reason,  unlike  the  other  arts  of  antiquity,  the  music  of  ancient  Greece  was   widely  thought  to  be  inferior  to  its  modern  counterpart.49 Still,  at  that  stage  few  were   prepared  to  rupture  the  golden  chains  linking  modern  culture  with  the  Romans  and,   beyond  that,  Greeks  and  Egyptians.50     This  dual  derivation,  which  located  Egyptian  music  awkwardly  between  China   and  Greece,  posed  a  particular  challenge  that  all  scholars  of  Egyptian  music  in  the   eighteenth  and  nineteenth  century  faced.  Jean-­‐Philippe  Rameau,  widely   acknowledged  to  have  put  music  theory  on  a  scientific  footing  by  providing  a   universal  system  of  understanding  the  nature  of  music,  found  an  elegant  (if   problematic)  solution  to  sidestep  the  differences  between  the  two  systems.51  Instead   of  treating  pentatonicism  and  tetrachords  as  separate  entities,  Rameau  viewed  these   15 two  constructs  through  the  lens  of  his  concept  of  the  “triple  progression,”  explained   in  Ex.4.  In  a  word,  the  triple  progression  was  considered  the  paragon  of  how  all   music  works;  it  represented  nothing  less  than  a  Newtonian  law  of  the  musical  world.     Rameau  had  originally  conceived  of  the  triple  progression  to  explain  musical   structures  as  were  commonly  found  in  the  tonal  music  of  the  French  eighteenth   century.  But,  in  the  ebullient  spirit  of  the  age,  the  specificity  of  the  musical  structures   was  subsumed  under  Enlightenment  ideas  of  universality.  As  his  theories  gained  hold   through  the  1750s,  Rameau  began  to  extend  the  scope  of  the  theory  and  sought   applications  to  non-­‐Western  repertories.  In  this  spirit,  Rameau  argued  that  both   Chinese  pentatonicism  and  Greek  tetrachords  were  ultimately  but  subsets  of  the   triple  progression.  To  make  this  argument,  he  had  to  ignore  all  cultural  and  musical   contexts,  most  importantly  the  fact  that  both  Chinese  and  Greek  music  are   monophonic  traditions  that  do  not  employ  triadic  harmonies.  Rameau   conceptualized  the  harmonic  foundation  in  these  emphatically  non-­‐harmonic  musical   traditions  on  the  basis  of  his  triple  progression.  These  efforts  to  highlight   commonalities  may  seem  egregiously  procrustean  in  their  disregard  for  specificity   and  difference—as  indeed  they  are—but  they  are  born  of  the  firm  belief  in  the   universal  basis  of  all  music,  given  directly  by  nature.52  In  Rameau’s  view,  then,  both   pentatonicism  and  tetrachords  are  merely  partial  aspects  of  the  principles  that  were   fully  brought  to  light  by  his  discovery  of  the  scientific  truth  about  music,  embodied   by  the  triple  progression.   In  his  attempt  to  reconcile  both  musical  traditions,  Rameau  engaged  in  wild   speculation,  as  he  sought  to  underscore  his  argument  with  historical  depth:     16 Could  not  even  those  who  labored  at  the  construction  of  that  tower—be  it  a  son   of  Noah,  be  it  others  to  which  this  son  might  have  transmitted  it,  and  who  would   then  move  on  to  China,  even  to  Egypt  if  you  will—could  they  not  have  already   reflected  upon  a  similar  progression?  Is  it  not  possible  that  the  tetrachord  might   have  been  carried  to  other  places  in  that  way?  All  this  is  likely.53   In  this  extraordinary  passage  Rameau  construed  the  biblical  patriarch  as  a  modern   Enlightenment  figure:  both  noticeably  rational  and  musical,  Rameau’s  Noah  “could   not  seriously  have  failed  to  gather  everything  that  he  would  believe  proper  for   several  uses,  of  the  sort  of  the  triple  progression,  even  the  tetrachord,”54  and,  the  way   Rameau  describes  these  concepts,  one  might  be  forgiven  for  thinking  that  they   almost  take  on  the  shape  of  physical  objects.     During  these  years,  Rameau  highlighted  the  scientific  aspect  of  the  triple   progression:  its  mathematical  underpinnings  were  such  that  Noah  “had  already   drawn  several  benefits  from  the  progression  as  far  as  the  sciences  are  concerned.”   Understanding  the  principles  of  music,  he  argued  in  this  reversal  of  the  standard   Pythagorean  position,  can  teach  us  something  important  about  the  nature  of   arithmetic  and  geometry.55  Rameau  reiterated  his  conviction  that  the  ancient   Egyptians  must  have  been  in  possession  of  the  triple  progression,  since  Pythagoras’s   education  took  place  in  Egypt.56  In  his  essay  “L’origine  des  sciences,”  published  two   years  later,  tracing  the  origins  of  scientific  inquiry  back  to  ancient  Egypt,  he  would   even  suggest  that  Pythagoras’  trigonometric  theorem  might  have  been  inspired  by   the  basic  properties  of  the  triple  progression.57  Against  this  background  it  becomes   17 understandable  why  Rameau  would  make  the  astonishing  claim  that  during  Noah’s   age  understanding  music  would  have  led  to  many  other  scientific  insights.     But,  to  continue  this  musical  interpretation  of  Rameau’s  biblical  narrative,  even   Rameau  had  to  concede  that  after  the  flood  subsided  and  the  earth  needed  to  be   resettled,  Noah  had  other  things  to  worry  about  than  music  theory.  In  this  situation,   Rameau  blithely  conjectured,  it  seemed  only  natural  that  Noah  would  delegate  and   command  “his  sons  to  revisit  the  treatises  that  he  had  collected,  in  order  to  report  to   him  on  them.”  And  as  his  sons  set  about  repopulating  the  world,  so  musical   knowledge  would  also  be  passed  into  the  distant  corners  of  the  world:  “Could  it  not   be  the  case  that  the  progression  had  fallen  into  the  hands  of  one  son  and  the   tetrachord  into  the  hands  of  another,  and  that  they,  unable  to  see  the  propitious  time   to  make  use  of  them,  carried  them  into  different  parts  of  the  world?“58  In  this   process,  the  originally  complete  knowledge  of  music,  in  the  form  of  the  triple   progression,  would  break  up,  and  Greece  was  left  with  the  tetrachord,  while  the   progression  made  it  to  China  and  Egypt.  As  Rameau  believed  that  China  was  the   oldest  world  culture,  older  even  than  Egypt,59  it  seems  the  events  following  the   Tower  of  Babel  would  only  exacerbate,  but  not  cause,  the  subsequent  breakup  of   music  into  different  systems.   The  music  theorist  Pierre-­‐Joseph  Roussier  (1716-­‐1790?),  who  began  his  musical   career  as  an  enthusiastic  follower  of  Rameau,  took  the  elder  musician  to  task  for  not   going  far  enough.  Rameau  had  concluded:  “Even  if  the  Chinese  and  Pythagoras  follow   this  [triple]  progression,  the  systems  that  they  extracted  from  it  have  no  relation  to   each  other,  no  more  than  to  the  tetrachord.”60  For  Roussier,  however,  Rameau’s  focus   18 on  the  broken  fragments  of  Greek  tetrachords  and  Chinese  pentatonicism  missed  the   larger  unifying  truth  of  music.  Roussier  set  out,  by  contrast,  to  prove  that  this   negative  conclusion  was  based  on  a  misapprehension  of  the  profound  relationship   between  these  diverse  systems.61     Roussier  was  an  autodidact  who  quickly  rose  to  the  ranks  of  an  expert  in  ancient   musical  cultures.  His  Mémoire  sur  la  musique  des  anciens  (1770),  attempting  to   reconcile  Chinese  music  with  Greek  and  Egyptian  music,  must  count  as  the  boldest   effort  in  the  history  of  this  problem.  Crucially,  Roussier  regarded  the  triple   progression  not  as  a  closed  harmonic  unit,  but  considered  the  fundamental  fifth-­‐ relation  on  which  it  is  based  as  the  universal  key  to  scale  formations.  Put  simply,  the   pentatonic  scale  C-­‐D-­‐E-­‐G-­‐A  consisted  of  four  fifths-­‐relations  C-­‐G-­‐D-­‐A-­‐E  reordered;  by   adding  two  more  fifths,  F-­‐C-­‐G-­‐D-­‐A-­‐E-­‐B,  Roussier  would  arrive  at  full-­‐blown   diatonicism.  This  open-­‐ended  perspective  allowed  him  to  reconsider  the   evolutionary  potential  of  music  (Ex.5).  In  the  exuberant  spirit  of  Enlightenment   universality,  Roussier  drew  up  a  table  of  the  musical  systems  of  the  ancient  world,   through  which  the  double  octave  of  the  full  Greek  system  gradually  emerged.62   However,  in  Roussier’s  evolutionary  chart  a  gap  is  noticeable  between  the  Greek   four-­‐  and  six-­‐note  formations,  which  he  boldly  closed,  undeterred  by  any   chronological  or  geographic  concerns,  by  interpolating  Chinese  pentatonicism.   Egyptian  music  stands  apart  from  the  evolution  depicted  in  Roussier’s   representation  (Ex.6).  Of  early  musical  systems,  Roussier  claimed,  Egyptian  music   alone  boasted  a  fully  formed  chromatic  scale,  just  as  is  found  in  modern  western   music.63  He  commented  coyly:     19 Whether  the  Egyptians  had  a  system  similar  to  the  one  we  just  saw,  we  cannot   know  for  sure.  However,  what  is  certain  is  that  they  have  a  twelve-­‐fold  series  of   triple  progressions,  as  is  proven  by  the  reunion  of  the  Greek  and  Chinese  systems,   encapsulated  in  potential  and  as  if  implicitly,  in  the  Lyre  of  Mercury.  64   The  lyre  of  Mercury,  with  its  four  strings  tuned  at  two  fourths  separated  by  a  whole-­‐ tone,  is  Roussier’s  unassuming  starting  point  for  a  journey  from  simple  beginnings  to   complex  and  highly  developed  musical  systems.  Roussier’s  evolution,  however,  does   not  progress  in  strict  chronological  terms.  The  evolutionary  goal,  Roussier’s  Egyptian   41-­‐step  chromatic  scale,  is  technically  the  earliest  musical  system  considered  in  this   book.  Roussier  conceded  that  what  he  ended  up  with  was  “more  or  less,  the  current   system  of  the  moderns.”65  In  Roussier’s  view,  then,  the  scientific  principles  that   Rameau  boasted  his  music  theory  had  uncovered  were  merely  a  re-­‐discovery  of  what   had  long  been  ancient  esoteric  knowledge,  a  carefully  kept  secret  of  the  Egyptian   priests.66   Roussier’s  startling  conclusion,  in  which  the  very  oldest  music  theory  was  the   same  as  the  most  recent,  may  raise  some  eyebrows.  The  justification  of  this  position   is  ultimately  a  consequence  of  the  Platonic  judgment—with  a  twist:  if  Egyptian  music   was  perfect,  it  surely  had  to  be  every  bit  as  good  as  modern  music.  With  this  startling   theory,  Roussier  effectively  cut  through  the  Gordian  knot  of  the  Querelle  des  anciens   et  des  modernes  that  was  still  simmering  in  Enlightenment  musical  circles.  Perhaps   the  most  ingenious  part  of  Roussier’s  daring  hypothesis  was  that,  in  the  absence  of   even  a  shred  of  musical  evidence,  there  was  no  way  to  disprove  his  theory.         20 Music-­historical  Orientalism   Napoleon’s  Egyptian  campaign  of  1798-­‐1801  may  have  ended  in  military  failure,  but   it  was  a  genuine  boon  to  scholarship.67  Unusually  for  a  military  campaign,  Bonaparte   had  taken  with  him  167  scientists,  engineers,  and  artists  to  ennoble  his  mission  in   the  spirit  of  Enlightenment  inquiry.  The  findings  of  these  savants,  written  up  in  the   monumental  Description  de  l’Egypte  (1809-­‐1829),  provided  the  basis  of  modern   Egyptology,  which  blossomed  in  France  and  Britain  as  a  direct  consequence  of  the   expedition.  The  spoils  of  the  invasion  did  not  stay  with  the  French  for  long:  the   Egyptian  antiquities  taken  by  the  French  were  claimed  by  the  British  in  the  1801   capitulation,  including  the  Rosetta  stone,  which  found  its  way  into  the  British   museum.68   Guillaume-­‐André  Villoteau  (1759-­‐1839),  considered  an  otherwise   “undistinguished”69  musician,  was  the  scholar  in  charge  of  music  on  Bonaparte’s   expedition.  The  Description  contains  two  treatises  by  Villoteau  concerning  modern   Arabic  music,  which  continue  to  be  held  in  high  regard,  whereas  his  contribution  to   ancient  music  disappointed  many  of  his  learned  readers.70  In  this  treatise,  Villoteau   related  the  music  of  ancient  Egypt  to  Greek  ideas,  filtered  through  a  Rosseauian  lens   concerning  the  joint  origin  of  music  and  language.  In  the  Republic,  Villoteau  argued,   Plato  may  have  found  musical  practice  in  Greece  wanting,  but  the  musical  principles   he  absorbed  there  set  him  on  a  path  that  allowed  him,  in  the  Laws,  to  appreciate  the   genuine  perfection  of  Egyptian  music:  “One  would  produce  a  very  complete  treatise   of  the  music  of  the  Egyptians  if  one  were  to  follow  Plato  in  all  the  details  he  goes  into   about  the  manner  of  teaching,  learning  and  practicing  this  art”71  among  the  Greeks.   21 Villoteau’s  starry-­‐eyed,  outdated  embrace  of  Platonic  positions  was  roundly  rejected   by  other  scholars.72  Later  commentators  speculated  that  the  treatise  might  even  have   been  written  before  the  expedition.73   Despite  these  shortcomings,  the  Description  did  open  up  a  new  source  of   information:  musical  instruments  depicted  in  tomb  paintings  and  reliefs.  Before  the   Napoleonic  campaign,  only  few  such  representations  were  known,  notably  a  two-­‐ stringed  lute  engraved  on  an  obelisk  discovered  in  Rome  (Ex.7).  The  English  traveler   and  music  writer  Charles  Burney  (1726-­‐1814),  who  included  the  image  in  his   General  History  of  Music,  speculated  about  the  music  that  could  be  played  upon  this   instrument.  If  the  strings  are  tuned  a  fourth  apart,  he  imagined,  it  could  play  two   conjunct  tetrachords,  whereas,  tuned  a  fifth  apart,  they  would  produce  disjunct   tetrachords  or  a  whole  octave.  Burney  enthused:  “This  instrument,  therefore,  is  not   only  a  proof  that  music  was  cultivated  by  the  Egyptians  in  the  most  remote  antiquity,   but  that  they  had  discovered  the  means  of  extending  their  scale,  and  multiplying  the   sounds  of  a  few  strings,  by  the  most  simple  and  commodious  expedients.”74  Potential   became  quickly  hypostatized  into  solid  proof  in  Burney’s  conjecture.     The  largest  number  of  instruments  found  and  depicted  are  cymbals  and  sistra   (Ex.8).  Although  these  unpitched  noise-­‐makers  played  a  major  part,  especially  in   rituals,  they  were  usually  given  short  shrift  in  the  literature  since  their  information   value  concerning  musical  systems  is  close  to  zero.  The  Description  included  musical   representations,  notably  several  harps  with  varying  numbers  of  strings  (Ex.9).  The   German  scholar  Gottfried  Wilhelm  Fink  (1783-­‐1846)  found  that  most  harps  were   depicted  with  9-­‐11,  15-­‐16,  or  21  strings  and  concluded  that  the  Egyptians,  like  the   22 Chinese,  must  have  employed  pentatonicism,  the  “oldest  scale”:75  multiples  of  5   strings  (10  or  15)  would  provide  all  the  tones  of  the  scale,  whereas  multiples  of  5   plus  1  (11,  16,  or  21)  would  additionally  provide  the  fundamental  note  of  the  scale  as   its  highest  string.76  Fink  was  comparatively  tight-­‐lipped  in  his  explanation  of  how  the   nine-­‐stringed  instrument  would  fit  into  this  scheme.     By  the  1830s,  associations  with  China  were  becoming  increasingly  outmoded.77   Fink  remained  alone  in  his  conviction  that  the  number  of  harp  strings  proved  the  use   of  pentatonicism  in  ancient  Egypt.  But  others  were  equally  eager  to  find  ways  to  read   musical  parameters  out  of  the  specific  dimensions  of  the  instruments  and  their   representations.78  The  frustration  with  lacking  concrete  musical  knowledge  was   thrown  into  relief  by  the  successes  in  other  areas  of  the  study  of  Egyptian  culture,   notably  the  decipherment  of  the  trilingual  Rosetta  stone,  inscribed  with  texts  in   Demotic,  Greek,  and  hieroglyphs.79  Just  how  grave  this  frustration  was,  and  how   fiercely  scholars  were  searching  for  an  answer,  can  be  gleaned  in  the  extent  to  which   they  were  prepared  to  speculate  wildly.     The  Belgian  musicologist  François-­‐Joseph  Fétis,  whom  we  encountered  initially,   was  convinced  that  he  had  found  the  key  to  solving  the  mystery  of  Egyptian  music.80   After  noting  that  “nothing  is  more  difficult  than  to  form  a  fair  idea  of  a  music  whose   elements  are  absolutely  different  from  those  that  form  the  basis  of  the  music  one  has   heard  for  one’s  whole  life,”81  Fétis  argued:   All  these  instruments  have  mounted  a  large  number  of  strings;  these  indicate  the   habitual  use  of  an  extended  musical  scale,  and  likely  also  of  intervals  smaller  than   those  that  divide  the  European  scale.  This  trait  is  characteristic  in  the  music  of  the   23 Orient,  particularly  in  that  of  the  Egyptians  and  Arabs,  but  it  is  only  by  induction   that  we  can  arrive  at  an  approximate  understanding  of  the  ancient  state  of  that   music.82   Where  Fink  had  interpreted  the  large  number  of  harp  strings  as  an  indication  of  wide   tonal  range,  up  to  four  octaves,  Fétis  countered  that  they  suggested  the  use  of   microtones,  intervals  smaller  than  a  semitone.  His  conflation  of  Egyptian  with  Arabic   music  under  the  catch-­‐all  term  of  “Oriental”  is  telling:  Arabic  music,  to  be  sure,  uses   smaller  intervals  than  European  music,  but  the  inclusion  of  ancient  Egyptian  music  is   questionable.        Fétis’s  argument  was  far-­‐reaching:  he  believed  to  have  found  the  long-­‐lost   notation  of  ancient  Egypt.  The  key  to  Egyptian  music,  he  believed,  lay  in  the  musical   notation  of  the  Coptic  Church,  Egyptian  orthodox  Christians.  Their  liturgy  continued   to  use  the  Coptic  language,  an  idiom  related  to  Late  Egyptian  (which  was  written  in   hieroglyphs),  which  was  commonly  spoken  until  the  seventeenth  century.  “If  the   original  people  of  Egypt,”  Fétis  asked  hypothetically,  “have  preserved  their  original   language  after  so  many  centuries,  despite  the  mixture  of  foreign  peoples  in  the   country  and  their  long  dominance,  is  it  not  presumable  that  the  same  people  had  also   retained  the  same  ancient  musical  system?”83   Fétis  explained  that  the  music  of  the  Orient—by  which  he  meant  Arabic  singers,   Greek  Christian  monks,  Coptic  Church,  and  Jewish  synagogues—was  marked  by  an   extraordinary  number  of  embellishments.  Their  singing  style,  “overburdened  with   ornaments,  comprises  an  extended  scale  and  moves  with  great  speed  from  low  to   24 high  and  from  high  to  low.”84  These  features,  Fétis  argued,  lend  a  distinctive   character  to  Oriental  music,  which  sounds  “rather  strange”  to  the  European  ear.   The  progressive  use  of  this  “excessively  ornate  singing,”85  Fétis  continued,   necessitated  a  fundamentally  different  notation.  Rather  than  notating  each  tone  in  its   own  right,  as  does  western  notation,  the  rapid  movement  of  this  ornamented   Oriental  music  called  for  a  notation  capturing  groups  of  sounds  and  phrases.  The   notation  specifically  suited  to  these  demands,  Fétis  argued,  was  ultimately  derived   from  Demotic  script—not  coincidentally,  perhaps,  one  of  the  scripts  included  on  the   Rosetta  stone.86  While  the  notation  of  Eastern  chant  is  normally  ascribed  to  the   seventh-­‐century  Saint  John  of  Damascus,  Fétis  made  an  impassioned  case  that  this   notation  was  actually  much  older  and  dated  back  to  ancient  Egyptian  times:  “Since  it   cannot  possibly  be  applied  except  to  music  overladen  with  embellishment,  and   requiring  great  flexibility  of  voice,  it  follows  necessarily  that  the  present  music  we   find  in  the  Greek  church  and  among  some  African  nations  gives  us  an  exact  idea  of   the  music  of  ancient  Egypt.”87     Let  us  review  the  various  stages  of  Fétis’s  complex  argument.  Based  on  his   interpretation  of  the  large  number  of  strings  found  in  harps  depicted  in  tomb   paintings,  Fétis  started  with  the  assumption  that  ancient  Egyptian  music  was   microtonal,  using  smaller  intervals  than  European  diatonic  scales.  From  there,  he   pivoted  to  grouping  together  various  Eastern  chant  traditions,  asserting  by  extension   that  Egyptian  music  must  have  sounded  similar.  He  then  identified  the  notation  of   orthodox  Byzantine  chant  as  derived  from  Demotic.  The  traits  of  this  script  appeared   to  him  as  the  visual  equivalent  of  the  overly  ornate  style  that  for  him  characterized   25 this  conglomerate  of  Eastern  chants.  Since  the  script,  apparently  the  only  adequate   form  of  notation  for  this  music,  related  to  an  Egyptian  language,  Fétis  concluded,  it   must  be  the  long-­‐lost  notation  of  the  ancient  Egyptians.     Fétis’s  extravagant  argument  begs  the  question:  his  idea  of  the  excessively  ornate   Egyptian  singing  is  both  precondition  and  consequence  of  his  identification  of  the   elusive  notation  in  Demotic  script.  Nonetheless,  we  can  glean  certain  important   features  from  this  argument.  First  of  all,  Fétis  had  great  faith  in  the  power  of   notation.  His  argument,  based  on  cursory  knowledge  of  the  craze  surrounding  the   decipherment  of  hieroglyphs  during  the  1820s,  held  that  if  the  Copts  preserved   elements  of  ancient  Egyptian  languages,  their  script,  Demotic,  would  hold  clues  as  to   Egyptian  notation.  Fétis  was  certain  that,  along  with  this  system  of  notation,  the   Copts  must  have  simultaneously  imported  wholesale  the  traits  of  the  earlier  Egyptian   music.  We  only  need  to  decipher  the  notation  to  get  “an  exact  idea”  of  ancient   Egyptian  music.  If  that  is  the  case,  by  the  same  token,  we  should  be  able  to  deduce  an   exact  idea  of  the  nature  of,  say,  a  Bach  fugue  from  a  score  of  a  Beatles  song.  Second,   Fétis’s  argument  was  clearly  carried  by  the  persuasive  power  of  Orientalism.88  Gone   are  the  speculative  connections  to  China  of  the  previous  generation.  Instead,  the   sweeping  assumptions  underlying  Fétis’  argumentative  structure,  equating  Arabs   with  ancient  Egyptians,  and  beyond  that  with  Jewish  and  Greek  orthodox  traditions,   only  make  sense  against  the  background  of  this  motley  conglomerate  as  establishing   an  “Other”  that  differs  from  and  mirrors  certain  important  traits  about  the  European   tradition.     26 A  marked  rift  becomes  discernible  during  this  time  between  French  and  German   scholarship.  Egyptophilia  was  still  prevalent  in  France,  with  many  scholars  eager  to   build  on  the  imagined  cultural  links  to  ancient  Greece,  a  much  better-­‐known  ancient   culture,  while  German  scholars  increasingly  cast  doubt  on  the  insights  Greek  music   could  provide,  and  indeed  whether  Egyptian  music  was  all  that  it  was  cracked  up  to   be.  German  critics,  always  eager  to  introduce  finer  historical  differentiation,  pointed   out  that,  despite  Egypt’s  pervasive  image  as  a  never-­‐changing  culture,  there  were  in   fact  distinctive  periods.89  The  Greek  conquest  of  Egypt  and  the  subsequent  Ptolemaic   rule  suggested  strongly  that  Egyptian  culture  did  not  remain  free  from  foreign   influence.  Raphael  Georg  Kiesewetter,  Fétis’s  chief  adversary,  argued  that  Fétis’s  faith   in  the  Egyptian  Christians  was  misplaced  because  it  ignored  the  complexities  of  the   political  and  historical  forces  involved  in  any  process  of  cultural  transfer:     One  would  search  in  vain  among  the  Copts  for  the  music  of  the  ancient  Egyptians.   Language,  it  is  true,  is  transplanted  from  parents  to  children  under  any   circumstance  in  family  life,  and  only  the  complete  integration  with  new   inhabitants  can  cause  a  complete  loss.  Inherited  music,  however,  is  gradually   quietened  under  the  pressures  of  tyranny,  of  poverty,  and  of  misery,  with  the   regression  into  barbarism.  Even  if  an  original  form  of  music  were  to  be  found   among  the  Copts  (which  is  doubtful),  who  would  be  able  to  say  it  was  still  the   same  as  that  of  their  forefathers?90     Despite  Fétis’s  adventurous  Orientalist  efforts,  and  despite  the  renewed  hope  the   Egyptian  campaign  had  instilled  in  the  researchers  of  solving  Egypt’s  long-­‐standing   mysteries,  certainty  about  its  elusive  music  was  simply  not  forthcoming.     27   Interpreting  Gestures   While  the  Napoleonic  era  added  a  large  number  of  sources  to  the  study  of  Egyptian   music,  the  primary  group  of  scholars  to  interpret  them  were  musicians,  who  viewed   the  evidence  through  the  lens  of  organology,  the  study  of  musical  instruments,  but   often  lacked  tools  to  interpret  the  wider  context  in  which  music-­‐making  happened.   The  professionalization  of  archaeology,  around  the  turn  of  the  twentieth  century,   ushered  in  a  new  era  in  the  systematic  study  of  tomb  paintings.     Musicologists  and  Egyptologists  began  examining  larger  musical  scenes  on  tomb   paintings,  including  instrumentalists  and  dancers.  These  musical  scenes  typically   depict  sizeable  ensembles  of  musicians,  including  wind  players  and  harpists  (Ex.10).   Efforts  to  reconstruct  ancient  instruments  by  measuring  images  and  building  exact   replicas  were  thwarted  by  the  high  level  of  stylization  characteristic  of  Egyptian   painting.  Instead,  scholars  took  to  more  holistic  interpretations  of  musical  scenes  and   deduced  from  the  presence  of  instrumental  ensembles  that  Egyptian  music  was  likely   not  monophonic.91  This  refueled  the  intriguing  prospect  that  the  Egyptians  might   already  have  known  the  secret  of  harmony.  Even  a  skeptic  as  Kiesewetter  was  swept   up  by  this  tantalizing  possibility.  Noting  that  a  harpist  is  depicted  as  plucking  more   than  one  string  at  a  time,  he  suggested  that  Egyptian  music  must  have  been  multi-­‐ voiced,  and  hence  harmonic.92   As  before,  caution  must  be  urged  in  the  interpretation  of  visual  sources.  The  non-­‐ instrumentalists  in  these  images  have  continuously  puzzled  modern  interpreters.   Music  historian  August  Wilhelm  Ambros  (1816-­‐1876),  for  one,  thought  they  must   28 have  been  singers.93  But  their  position—each  facing  an  instrumentalist  and  not  each   other,  as  one  would  expect  in  musical  ensembles—indicates  that  more  is  going  on.   Modern-­‐day  Egyptologists  have  suggested  that  this  image  should  be  read  as   cheironomic,  that  is,  as  indicating  music  with  gestures:  the  non-­‐instrumentalists   seem  to  indicate  in  the  first  place  that  music  is  being  played  and  heard.94     Hans  Hickmann  (1908-­‐1968)  went  further  than  others  when  he  asserted  that   these  figures  constitute  no  less  than  the  elusive  musical  notation  of  Egyptian  music.   We  see  each  of  these  figures  kneeling  in  a  similar  position,  with  one  hand  resting  on   the  knee,  with  index  finger  and  thumb  bent  toward  each  other  to  form  a  circle.  (This   would  also  explain  why  the  harp,  plucking  two  strings,  is  assigned  two  figures.)   Hickmann  identified  two  distinct  hand  gestures—the  circle  shape  or  a  flat  open  palm.   He  explained  that  these  hand  positions  represent  the  fundamental  and  the  fifth,  the   dominant,  whereas  the  angle  of  the  forearm  specifies  the  precise  interval  relative  to   the  hand.95     If  true,  this  would  be  sensational  because  it  would  finally  provide  the  long  sought-­‐ after  evidence  that  the  Egyptians  in  fact  possessed  a  form  of  harmony,  or   simultaneous  voices  moving  at  different  pitches—something  that  is  noticeably   absent  from  both  Greek  and  Chinese  music  (Ex.11.)  The  biggest  problem  of  this   hypothesis,  however,  is  the  fact  that  this  notation  has  no  temporal  dimension.  All  we   see  in  the  images  is  a  pictorial  representation  of  a  snapshot  of  sound.  The  kind  of   music  that  can  be  captured  with  this  notation  would  necessarily  be  static:  it  can   contain  drones  or  long  held-­‐out  pitches  and  harmonies,  but  not  even  the  simplest   rhythms  or  melodies.  Notating  music  with  anything  resembling  a  melody  would   29 require  a  comic  strip  of  such  images,  and  no  archaeologist  has  so  far  found  such  a   musical  storyboard.     If  we  were  to  follow  Hickmann’s  interpretation,  the  great  mystery  of  Egyptian   music  would  be  sadly  deflated:  the  music  could  indeed  be  multi-­‐voiced,  as  had  been   hoped  over  many  generations,  but  it  would  also  be  much  less  sophisticated  than  the   collective  scholarly  imagination  had  led  us  to  believe.  And  imagination—or  “learned   reveries,”  as  Kiesewetter  put  it  in  the  1830s96—is  the  key  word:  for  the  last  two   millennia  the  dream  of  the  lost  perfection  of  Egyptian  music  has  provided  fertile   ground  for  all  kinds  of  music-­‐theoretical  projections.  One  can  easily  empathize  with   Ambros’s  sigh:  “If  only  we  could  hear  for  half  a  minute  what  we  so  often  see  in  old   monuments.”97       But,  to  return  to  Verdi  and  the  Egyptian  flute,  the  starting  point  of  our   exploration,  while  the  lack  of  sounding  evidence  may  be  frustrating  from  one   perspective,  from  another  it  is  a  rare  affordance.  The  pressing  desire  to  reconstruct   this  repertory  of  which  virtually  no  musical  trace  remains  shows  all  the  more  clearly   the  underlying  historiographic  principles.  Conceived  as  an  early  or  indeed  the  first   musical  culture,  Egypt  occupies  a  privileged  position  in  a  musical  thinking  that   attributes  special  significance  to  points  of  origins  and  outlines  historical  trajectories   of  music  actualizing  itself  over  long  periods  of  time.  The  speculative  thought  that   carries  much  of  this  discourse  lays  bare  the  assumed  underlying  principles  of  music   and  the  ways  in  which  the  unfolding  of  music  history  is  imagined.     The  example  of  the  elusive  Egyptian  music  provides  a  sharp  reminder  that   theorizing,  in  the  service  of  “musical  thinking,”  goes  far  beyond  the  mere  analysis  of   30 musical  structures,  and  actually  establishes  a  complex  relationship  between  the   repertory  and  the  intellectual  foundation  of  the  theoretical  edifice.  It  is  for  this   reason  that  theorizing  even  a  repertory  from  which  we  know  no  music  is  not   worthless.  On  the  contrary,  music  historians  and  theorists  cannot  help  but  put  their   cards  on  the  table—when  they  imagine  Egyptian  music  as  the  perfect  balance  of   music  and  political  culture,  as  a  surprisingly  advanced  stage  in  a  universally   emerging  music,  or  an  orientalist  fantasy.  Paradoxically,  the  less  actual  music  there   is,  the  clearer  a  view  we  gain  of  what  happens  when  music  is  being  theorized.   Moreover,  in  an  extreme  case  as  here,  where  musical  repertory,  performance   traditions,  even  musical  notation  are  lacking,  another  question  suddenly  moves   center  stage:  how  is  such  music  transmitted?  This  question  is  often  all  but  ignored,   even  though  its  answer  can  be  extremely  complex.  Thinking  about  Egyptian  music   forces  us  to  think  through  the  media  by  which  music  is  communicated  and  to  extract   any  potential  information  from  them.  When  Fétis  tried  to  extract  the  essence  of   Egyptian  music  from  Demotic  script,  which  he  believed  to  be  the  basis  of  its  non-­‐ extant  notation,  this  may  have  seemed  like  a  particularly  ill-­‐fated  effort,  all  too  easy   to  dismiss.  But,  up  to  a  point,  as  anyone  working  with  non-­‐standard  repertories   knows,  that  is  precisely  what  music  historians  do  most  of  the  time.  The  notation   before  us  provides  the  parameters  and  limitations  within  which  music  is  normally   considered.  Likewise,  the  attempts  by  Fink  and  others  to  squeeze  any  musically   useful  information  out  of  the  physical  appearance  of  Egyptian  instruments  may   appear  similarly  fanciful.  However,  the  use  of  instruments  as  “epistemic  things”98— objects  that  actively  contribute  to  knowledge  acquisition—is  a  practice  widely   31 discussed  in  the  history  of  science  and  deemed  not  only  legitimate  but  rather   inescapable.  Verdi’s  snarl  notwithstanding,  Così  si  fa  l’istoria  hits  home.  It  is  because   of,  not  despite,  its  extremity  that  the  story  of  ancient  Egyptian  music  presents  an   important  lesson  about  the  mechanisms  involved  in  the  creation  of  musical  thinking.     32 NOTES   1  A  preliminary  version  of  this  article  in  German,  “Die  ägyptische    Spieldose,”  was   given  as  a  keynote  to  the  conference  Konstruktivität  von  Musikgeschichtsschreibung   (Göttingen,  2012).  Letter  8  February  1878,  in  Annibale  Alberti,  ed.,  Verdi  intimo:   categgio  di  Giuseppe  Verdi  con  il  conte  Opprandino  Arrivabene  ([Milan]:  Mondadori,   1931),  209.  See  also  Gabriela  Cruz,  “Aida’s  Flutes,”  Cambridge  Opera  Journal  14  1/2     (2002),  177-­‐200.     2  Alberti,  Verdi,  209.  Verdi’s  ambiguous  and  polemical  phrase  differs  somewhat  from   Fétis’s  explanation.  François-­‐Joseph  Fétis,  Histoire  générale  de  la  musique  (Paris:   Firmin  Didot,  1869),  i:223.     3  Alberti,  Verdi,  209.     4  Bo  Lawergren,  “Music,”  in  Oxford  Encyclopedia  of  Ancient  Egypt,  ed.  Donald  B.   Redford  (New  York:  Oxford  University  Press,  2001),  ii:450-­‐454.   5  Richard  Taruskin,  Oxford  History  of  Western  Music  (Oxford:  Oxford  University  Press,   2005),  1.     6  See  Carl  Dahlhaus,  Foundations  of  Music  History  (Cambridge:  Cambridge  University   Press,  1983).   7  Roman  Ingarden,  The  Work  of  Music  and  the  Problem  of  Its  Identity  (Berkeley:   University  of  California  Press,  1986).   8  See  Susan  McClary.  Feminine  Endings:  Music,  Gender,  and  Sexuality  (Minneapolis:   University  of  Minneapolis  Press,  1991).   9  Dahlhaus,  Esthetics  of  Music  (Cambridge:  Cambridge  University  Press,  1982),  10.     33 10  Hans-­‐Heinrich  Eggebrecht,  “Musikalisches  und  musiktheoretisches  Denken”  in   Geschichte  der  Musiktheorie,  ed.  Frieder  Zaminer  (Darmstadt:  Wissenschaftliche   Buchgesellschaft,  1985),  i:58.   11  Eggebrecht,  Musikalisches  Denken  (Wilhelmshafen:  Heinrichshofen,  1977),  137.   12  Ibid.     13  Jules  Combarieu,  La  musique  et  la  magie  (Paris:  Alphonse  Picard,  1909),  24.     14  See  Jean-­‐Marcel  Humbert,  Michael  Pantazzi  and  Christiane  Ziegler,  eds.,   Egyptomania:  Egypt  in  Western  Art  1730-­1930  (Ottawa:  National  Gallery  of  Canada,   1994);  Humbert,  L’Égyptomanie  dans  l’art  occidental  (Paris:  ACR  Édition,  1989),  and   James  Stevens  Curl,  The  Egyptian  Revival:  Ancient  Egypt  as  the  Inspiration  for  Design   Motifs  in  the  West  (New  York:  Routledge,  2005).       15  See  Joscelyn  Godwin,  Music  and  the  Occult:  French  Music  Philosophies  1750-­1950   (Rochester:  University  of  Rochester  Press,  1995),  Jean-­‐Pierre  Bartoli,  “À  la  recherché   d’une  réprésentation  sonore  de  l’Égypte  antique  en  France  de  Rossini  à  Debussy,”  in   Humbert,  ed.,  L’Égyptomanie  à  l’épreuve  de  l’archéologie  (Paris:  Gram,  1996),  479-­‐ 506,  and  Jan  Assmann,  Die  Zauberflöte:  Oper  und  Mysterium  (Munich:  Hanser,  2005).   16  See  Thomas  Leinkauf,  Mundus  combinatus:  Studien  zur  Struktur  der  barocken   Universalwissenschaft  am  Beispiel  Athansius  Kirchers  (1602-­1680)  (Berlin:  Akademie-­‐ Verlag,  1993);  Godwin,  Athanasius  Kircher’s  Theater  of  the  World:  The  Life  and  Work   of  the  Last  Man  to  Search  for  Universal  Knowledge  (Rochester:  InnerTraditions,  2009),   and  John  McKay,  “Universal  Music-­‐Making:  Athanasius  Kircher  and  Musical  Thought   in  the  Seventeenth  Century”  (PhD,  Harvard  2012).   34 17  Ulf  Scharlau,  Athanasius  Kircher  als  Musikschriftsteller  (Marburg:  Görich  &   Weiershäuser,  1969),  67-­‐68.  Kircher,  Oedipus  Aegyptiacus  (Rome:  Vitalis  Mascardi,   1654),  ii.2:119-­‐138.   18  Kircher,  Musurgia  universalis  (Rome:  Francisco  Corbeletti,  1650),  i:  566.  See   Scharlau,  Musikschriftsteller,  77.   19  For  instance,  Erik  Iversen,  “The  Hieroglyhic  Tradition,”  in  John  R.  Harris,  ed.,  The   Legacy  of  Egypt  (Oxford:  Clarendon  Press,  1971),  170-­‐96.   20  Kircher,  Prodromus  Coptus  sive  Ægyptiacus,  (Rome:  S  Cong  de  Propaganda  Fide,   1636),  138-­‐39,  Oedipus,  ii.2:120-­‐123  and  Musurgia,  i.1:44.  See  Scharlau,   Musikschriftsteller,  293.   21  Scharlau,  Musikschriftsteller,  293,  contains  an  extensive  list.     22  Subsequent  generations,  less  steeped  in  theological  certainties,  had  to  spell  out  this   rationale.  See  Johann  Nikolaus  Forkel,  Allgemeine  Geschichte  der  Musik  (Leipzig:   Schwickert,  1788),  i:72;  Heinrich  Christoph  Koch,  “Kurzer  Abriß  der  Geschichte  der   Tonkunst,”  Journal  der  Tonkunst  2  (1795),  ii:217.     23  See  Anthony  Grafton,  “The  Chronology  of  the  Flood,”  in  Sintflut  und  Gedächtnis:   Erinnern  und  Vergessen  des  Ursprungs,  ed.  Martin  Mulsow  and  Jan  Assmann  (Munich:   Wilhelm  Fink,  2006),  65-­‐82,  and  “Kircher’s  Chronology,”  in  Athanasius  Kircher:  The   Last  Man  Who  Knew  Everything,  ed.  Paula  Findlen  (New  York:  Routledge,  2004),  165-­‐ 179.   24  Gen.  4:19-­‐22.     25  Gen.  7:10-­‐24  and  8:1-­‐14.  On  the  intricacies  of  chronology,  see  Grafton,   “Chronology”  65-­‐82.     35 26  Ps.  78:51,  105:23  and  27,  106:22.   27  See  Grafton,  “Kircher’s  Chronology,”  174.       28  See  Forkel,  Geschichte,  i:74,  and  Koch,  “Abriß,”  ii:215-­‐16.   29  Oedipus  ii.2:121,  and  Musurgia  i.1:44.  See  Scharlau,  Musikschriftsteller  289.     30  Oedipus,  ii.2:121.     31  See  Warren  Dwight  Allen,  Philosophies  of  Music  History  (New  York:  Dover,  1962),   50-­‐58.     32  Musurgia  i.1:44.  See  also  Thomas  Leinkauf,  “Kirchers  Musikverständnis,”  in  Ars   magna  musices:  Athanasius  Kircher  und  die  Universalität  der  Musik,  ed.  Marcus   Engelmann  and  Michael  Heinemann  (Laaber:  Laaber,  2007),  15.     33  Oedipus,  i:65-­‐82.  See  Grafton,  “Chonology,”  80.     34  Musurgia  i.1:44,  and  Oedipus  ii.2:120.     35  Oedipus  ii.2:121.   36  Kircher,  China  monumentis  (Amsterdam:  Johann  Jansson,  1667),  166-­‐167.     37  Kircher,  Arca  Noe  (Amsterdam:  Johann  Jansson,  1675),  210.     38  Umberto  Eco,  The  Search  for  the  Perfect  Language  (Oxford:  Blackwell,  1995),  161.     39  Joseph  de  Guignes,  Mémoire  dans  lequel  on  prouve  que  les  Chinois  sont  une  colonie   égyptienne  (Paris:  Desaint  et  Saillant,  1759).  Don  Cameron  Allen  reviews  the  history   of  scholarship  in  “The  Predecessors  of  Champollion,”  Proceedings  of  the  American   Philosophical  Society  104/5  (1960),  527-­‐547.   40  See  Gottfried  Wilhelm  Fink,  Erste  Wanderung  der  ältesten  Tonkunst  (Essen:   Baedeker,  1831),  53.     41  See  n.  53.   36 42  See  Thomas  Christensen,  Rameau  and  Musical  Thought  in  the  Enlightenment   (Cambridge:  Cambridge  University  Press,  1993).   43  See  Brian  Hyer,  “Before  Rameau  and  After,”  Music  Analysis  15  (1996):  75-­‐100.   44  Herodotus,  2.48.2.   45  Diodorus,  Bibliotheca  historica,  1.81.7.     46  See  Forkel,  Geschichte,  74-­‐76;  Koch,  “Abriß,”  ii:217-­‐19;  Charles  Burney,  A  General   History  of  Music  (London:  T.  Becket,  1776),  i:200-­‐203.   47  Laws  656-­‐7.   48  See  De  Pauw,  Philosophical  Dissertations  on  the  Egyptians  and  Chinese  (London:  T.   Chapman,  1795),  i:221.     49  Koch,  “Abriß,”  ii:205-­‐210  and  226.   50  The  nineteenth  century  was  less  squeamish:  see  Raphael  Georg  Kiesewetter,  Über   die  Musik  der  neueren  Griechen,  nebst  freien  Gedanken  über  altegyptische  und   altgriechische  Musik  (Leipzig:  Breitkopf  und  Härtel,  1838),  61.     51  See  Christensen,  Rameau,  esp.  295-­‐298.   52  See  David  E.  Cohen,  “The  ‘Gift  of  Nature’:  Musical  ‘Instinct”  and  Musical  Cognition   in  Rameau,”  in  Music  Theory  and  Natural  Order  from  the  Renaissance  to  the  Early   Twentieth  Century,  ed.  Suzannah  Clark  and  Alexander  Rehding  (Cambridge:   Cambridge  University  Press,  2001),  68-­‐93.     53  Rameau,  Nouvelles  réflexions  sur  le  principe  sonore,  225.   54  Ibid.     55  Ibid.,  228-­‐237.     56  Ibid,  234.     37 57  Rameau,  L’Origine  des  Sciences,  (Paris:  S.  Jorry,  1762),  préface,  3-­‐4.   58  Rameau,  Nouvelles  réflexions,  226.   59  Ibid.,  préface,  3.   60  Ibid.,  224.     61  Pierre-­‐Joseph  Roussier,  Mémoire  sur  la  musique  des  anciens  (Paris  :  Lacombe,   1770),  114.  Roussier  is  discussed  in  Godwin,  Occult,  31-­‐46.     62  Ibid.,  24.     63  Ibid.,  64.     64  Ibid.,  65.     65  Ibid,  69.   66  Ibid.,  xvj-­‐xvij  and  70.   67  Modern  considerations  start  with  J.  Christopher  Herold,  Bonaparte  in  Egypt   (London:  Hamish  Hamilton,  1963).  The  last  decade  has  seen  resurgent  interest,  see   among  others,  Irene  Bierman,  ed.,  Napoleon  in  Egypt  (Reading:  Ithaca  Press,  2003);   Paul  Strathern,  Napoleon  in  Egypt  (New  York:  Bantam,  2009).   68  Nina  Burleigh,  Mirage:  Napoleon’s  Scientists  and  the  Unveiling  of  Egypt  (New  York:   Harper  2008),  209-­‐218.   69  Herold,  Bonaparte,  30.  Fétis  includes  Villoteau  in  his  Biographie  universelle  des   musiciens  et  bibliographie  générale  de  la  musique  (Brussels:  Leroux,  1844),  viii:459-­‐ 464.   70  Guillaume-­‐André  Villoteau,  “Dissertation  sur  la  musique  des  anciens  égyptiens,”  in   Déscription  de  l’Egypte  (Paris:  Imprimerie  impériale,  1809),  ii.1:357-­‐426.     71  Ibid.,  394.   38 72  Besides  the  ever-­‐cantankerous  Kiesewetter,  see  Fink,  Wanderung,  12     73  Kiesewetter,  Musik,  42.     74  Burney,  History,  205-­‐06.   75  Fink,  Wanderung,  53.     76  Ibid.,  236-­‐37.     77  As  philologists  turned  their  attention  to  Sanskrit  as  the  presumptive  Ur-­language,   hypotheses  on  the  evolution  of  music  were  increasingly  filtered  through  Indian   music.  This  paradigm  shift  is  epitomized  in  Adrien  de  la  Fage’s  (unfinished)  Histoire   générale  de  la  musique  et  de  la  danse  (Paris:  Imprimeurs  unis,  1844),  which  treats   Egyptian  music  after  extensive  discussion  of  China  and  India.   78  Reproductions  of  such  paintings  were  notoriously  unreliable.  See  Carl  Engel,  The   Music  of  the  Most  Ancient  Nations  (London:  J.  Murray,  1870),  185.   79  See  Francis  Griffith,  “The  Decipherment  of  the  Hieroglyphs,”  Journal  of  Egyptian   Archaeology  37  (1951),  38-­‐46.     80  Fétis’s  early  theory,  reviewed  here,  was  significantly  bolder  than  his  1869  History   of  Music,  which  Verdi  read.     81  Fétis,  “Résumé  philosophique  de  l’histoire  de  la  musique,”  Biographie  universelle,   i:xl.   82  Ibid.,  i:lxvii.     83  Fétis,  Biographie,  i:  lxviii.     84  Ibid.     85  Ibid.  lxix.   86  Ibid.  lxx-­‐lxxi.   39 87  Ibid,    lxxi.   88  See,  of  course,  Edward  Said,  Orientalism  (New  York:  Vintage,  1978).     89  See  Fink,  Wanderung,  12.   90  Kiesewetter,  Musik,  35.     91  August  Wilhelm  Ambros,  Geschichte  der  Musik  (Leipzig:  Breitkopf  und  Härtel,   1859),  i:157.     92  Kiesewetter,  Musik,  46.     93  Ambros,  Geschichte,  i:143.     94  Lise  Manniche,  Music  and  Musicians  in  Ancient  Egypt  (London:  British  Museum   Press,  1991).   95  Hans  Hickmann,  Musicologie  pharaonique  (Kehl:  Librairie  Heitz,  1958).   96  Kiesewetter,  Musik,    41.   97  Ambros,  Geschichte,  i:157.   98  Hans-­‐Jörg  Rheinberger,  Toward  a  History  of  Epistemic  Things:  Synthesizing  Proteins   in  the  Test  Tube  (Stanford:  Stanford  University  Press,  1997).