Tag Archives: Gorillas

Gorilla vs. Whale

The internet likes animals. And music. And music and animals. I am not particularly surprised. Though the mariachi beluga video meme was one. It appeared within 48 hours of the release of our gorilla video. And went viral.

As interest in the beluga video ballooned on a massive scale, we were totally upstaged. But I’m not complaining. The gorilla video debuted on the Fader, was up on Gorilla vs Bear, and covered by various news outlets in Canada, New York, and Mexico. The alt weekly, Boston Phoenix, wrote an article too “How Grass Widow came to play a concert a small group of great apes.” But let’s be honest. The beluga was more interesting. Because it seemed so unplanned and it probably was. And well, because it was a whale. What’s striking about that beluga video is how expressive he is. Gorillas, even though they are more closely related to us, aren’t expressive with their faces. Unlike chimps, and us, they seem pretty detached most of the time. But they’re not. They just don’t use their faces to express emotion like we do.

I visited Mystic Aquarium (where the mariachi fan lives) to chat with their head veterinarian and the trainers almost two years ago and they told me that one of the belugas really liked music. Especially harmonica music. I can’t tell from the youtube video if it’s the same whale, but it probably is. He’s been on my mind ever since.

Here’s the thing though. Our video was unplanned and unstaged too. We had no idea how those gorillas would react. And it was supposed to be an experiment. We were going to come back at a later time and shoot a “real” video once we knew what the gorillas liked. We decided to shoot the trial run anyway though. And that is the footage that became the video.

We didn’t plan for Kiki to bring her baby over the glass to show Raven (the guitarist) when the band stopped playing. We didn’t ask Gigi (the older female) to come sit inches away from Hannah (the bass player) for the whole show, alternatively making eye contact with each of us, or bemusedly gazing into the middle distance. And we certainly didn’t expect Kimani to come up and bang on the glass in front of Raven and Lilly (the drummer) and then stare in interest.

The thing that I like about playing shows for other animals is that you have no idea what will happen. For the musicians it’s probably a little like busking on the sidewalk. Except even if you’re great, you’re not going to make any money. And if someone throws something at you, it’s probably not in disgust. Though it might be.

Hannah Lew,  as our dinner conversation is drowned out by mariachis in SF

Music for Animals

Most people who make music for animals today think they prefer classical.

I don’t buy it.

Which is why I’m on my way to Boston, together with Grass Widow, to find out what gorillas like.

Hopefully it’s them.

And on Fader.

Coney and the Congress for Curious Peoples

Dear New Yorkers, if you’re in town this week get yourself to the Congress for Curious Peoples on Coney Island. There is a bearded lady who juggles machetes. A killer clown named Koko. Tons of lectures about fireworks, science as spectacle and a show by the world’s smallest fire-eating lady.

If you stay through the afternoon on Sunday you’ll find me talking about Tip the elephant. And probably John Daniel the gorilla too.

Time Out NY lists their top five things to see at the Congress.

Gorillas. And getting things wrong.

A female gorilla on exhibit at the Bronx Zoo, with plucked patches on her forearms and knees.

I used to have nightmares about showing up days late for exams. Or of one really tall and one really short man looking for me in a lemon orchard. Don’t ask me why. But now I only have nightmares about getting things wrong. In writing.

This just happened. So here is the retraction. In the Of Mice and Mania article that I wrote about hair-plucking (or trichotillomania) in humans and other animals for Cabinet Magazine, I wrote that two young gorillas (Joe and Okie) brought the plucking behavior with them to the Franklin Park Zoo in Boston. Turns out that they didn’t. A male named Kit was already there, already plucking and came to the zoo plucking in the first place. Joe and Okie started plucking after spending time with him. Why on earth does this matter?

Because the keeper staff at a place like the Franklin Park Zoo need me to get it right. No one wants to be blamed for letting such a behavior develop unchecked in one’s charges. The problem is that keeper staff can’t really help it. Sometimes a gorilla (or parrot, or cat, for that matter) will pluck even if they seem to be fine in all other ways. So looking at plucking alone as a measure of animal happiness doesn’t get you very far. Temple Grandin wrote about this very thing (well not plucking, but about other repetitive behaviors like pacing) in Animals Make Us Human and brought up a very good point. It could be that the pacing tiger or the plucking ape, may actually be better off than their non-pacing non-plucking cage-mate. She argues that the behavior may be engaging their mind in a way that sitting still and doing nothing may not be. Furthermore, an animal who plucks or paces now, may have developed the behavior a long time ago as a self-soothing mechanism and the behavior itself has endured well after the stressful situation has passed.

That being said, a gorilla or cat or parrot or human who is too contented doing other things to pluck, is ideal. In Kit’s case, he was born at the Audobon Zoo in New Orleans. But both of his parents were born at Yerkes Primate Research Center in the mid-1970s. I hear his parents were pluckers too but I haven’t confirmed it. There is a documentary though, about life at Yerkes in the mid-1970s for the gorillas, chimps, and others who lived there and were being used for breeding and psychological studies. It’s called Primate.

Yerkes the man, a psychobiologist, ethologist, and sometimes-eugenicist who founded the research center in the 1920s, has a long and complicated history of working with primates in the United States. Donna Haraway has a wonderful essay about him in Primate Visions. His first gorilla was Congo.

Photos of Congo From Yerkes’ Mind of a Gorilla: Part 1. Published in 1927. Page 51.

In 1925, Congo arrived in the United States. She was the first mountain gorilla in the US and became an experimental subject for Yerkes (here she is using a stick at his first facility in Florida). For more on Congo and Yerkes, check out ‘Infinite Loneliness’: the life and times of Miss Congo, a paper by Georgina Montgomery.

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