Music Whale – A Musician and His Whale Skeleton

While jogging on a Wellfleet, Massachusetts beach after work one day in 1971, a young music teacher stumbled upon the partially buried skeletal remains of a long-finned pilot whale.  

He collected all the bones and discovered that the bones, played like a xylophone, could be used to teach, compose, and perform music. His discovery shaped his musical pursuits and inspired many students and adults along the way.

In 2019, that music teacher, Dr. Paul Berliner, contacted Keith Rittmaster of the NC Maritime Museum and Bonehenge Whale Center expressing interest in creating a permanent display of the whale’s rearticulated 14’ skeleton. That project was completed and installed in a Durham, NC studio on March 6, 2021.

The “Music Whale” installation team of (L to R) Paul Berliner, Frank Konhaus, Ellen Cassilly, Louise Mentjes, James Baxter, and Keith Rittmaster
The “Music Whale” installation team of (L to R) Paul Berliner, Frank Konhaus, Ellen Cassilly, Louise Mentjes, James Baxter, and Keith Rittmaster

The story is featured in the Fall 2021 issue of Maritimes, the official publication of the Friends of the Maritime Museum. It is also the subject of a fun 6 minute video montage set to music that can be viewed below.

The following links expand on points about the Gulf of Mexico whale in John Ososky’s talk at the University of Florida Gainesville on 31 October 2024:

For more information about marine mammal stranding networks please visit https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-life-distress/marine-mammal-health-and-stranding-response-program.

 

Whales on the Brink Symposium, Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, November 2023

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQmxS2U3B6KaUPksTqmC2BLUPwXFEHnCN

 

100 Scientists Open Letter on the Gulf of Mexico whale to the Biden Administration

https://www.neaq.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Scientist-statement.-GoM-whale.-Oct.-2022.pdf

 

Great Whale Conservancy – Economic Value of Living Whales

The Economic Value of Living Whales | GWC | Great Whale Conservancy

 

To learn about the Gulf of Mexico Rice’s whale, current status, methods of research, and threats to its existence please visit: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/species/rices-whale

 

How a Whale Skull at the Smithsonian Became a Beacon for Marine Mammal Conservation

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/blogs/national-museum-of-natural-history/2023/11/16/how-a-whale-skull-at-the-smithsonian-became-a-beacon-for-marine-mammal-conservation/

 

Open letter regarding Cuvier’s whale and other whale common names

It’s time to rename Ziphius cavirostris the “goose-beaked whale” – CIMA Research Foundation (cimafoundation.org)

https://www.cimafoundation.org/en/news/its-time-to-rename-ziphius-cavirostris-the-goose-beaked-whale/#:~:text=The%20authors%20request%20a%20change,problematic%20legacy%20of%20Georges%20Cuvier.

We Are All Whalers by The Hopeless Idiot (soundcloud.com)

https://soundcloud.com/thehopelessidiot/we-are-all-whalers

 History of whale research and conservation at the Smithsonian video playlist

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQmxS2U3B6KafwKbPd5qSunMSZjrmw908

 NOAA Rice’s whale

https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/species/rices-whale

 Last Great American Whale by Lou Reed

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oua4ysqIFlY

 Gulf by Jack E. Davis

https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/jack-e-davis

 

 

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