Orchestral Musicians Bring Whales To Surface – This Will Take Your Breath Away

Optus, the second-largest telecommunications company in Australia, has a long association with nature so M&C Saatchi, Sydney set about exploring communication between humans and animals, specifically Humpback whales.

“Whale song is a form of communication,” says Ben Welsh, executive creative director, M&C Saatchi Sydney. “It’s a form of communication that the scientists at The University of Queensland have been able to decipher and learn.

I was intrigued by this fact and so we asked ourselves whether it would be possible to emulate a male humpback: to write our own love song and then play it, using the instruments of an orchestra? Could we serenade a humpback ourselves?

Then imagine what could happen if the whales were to hear our song. We thought that would prove that when it comes to communication, anything is possible.”

4 thoughts on “Orchestral Musicians Bring Whales To Surface – This Will Take Your Breath Away”

  1. Absolutely darling, the entire thing! Two of my favorite things connected in a pure and light-embodied way, music and animals. Just perfect!! Music heals and animals know it.

  2. Exactly my thoughts, except that I might add that we should be ultimately concerned and cautious, so that we never chance saying something which might convey a negative, “bad” or even insulting message to these incredible creatures. But again, they may well be much smarter than us and are simply laughing at our efforts.

  3. But we have NO idea whatsoever what the orchestra ‘said’ to the whale.

    There are krill over here?
    The water is lovely?
    When you blow it smells like haddock?
    Your fin looks a bit funny?

    And we’ll probably never know.

Leave a Comment