ancient music

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The mosaics by Dioskourides from Samos - "Theatrical scene with street-musicians" - Detail - 2nd-1st century BC (Alexandria in Egypt?) - from Pompeii - Naples Archaeological Museum
The mosaics by Dioskourides from Samos - "Theatrical scene with street-musicians" - Detail - 2nd-1st century BC (Alexandria in Egypt?) - from Pompeii - Naples Archaeological Museum | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
Bridgeman Images
Statuette of a woman playing a double flute, from Tunisia (polychrome stone). Punic, (4th century BC) / Musee National de Carthage, Carthage, Tunisia / Giraudon / The Bridgeman Art Library
Odysseus and Calypso. Red-figure vase. Clay. | Ancient greek art, Greek paintings, Greek art
Odysseus and Calypso. Red-figure vase. Clay. Paris, Louvre Museum.:
Aulos. In Classical Greece, the aulos seems to have been a simple double-reed woodwind, usually with only four or five fingerholes. Characteristically, two were played at once, as we see in the images below.
"Six Concerts Avec Plusieurs Instruments" (4)
Aulos: conocido como la "flauta griega". Era un instrumento de músicos profesionales. Se utilizaba en los banquetes, en los funerales, en los sacrificios religiosos y para marcar el ritmo y la cadencia a los soldados.
agorà
Athena playing the “aulos”--Vase. (375-350 BC.), National Archaeological Museum in Arezzo, Italy --The “aulos” is the double flute invented by the goddess Athena: so it is told by a literary tradition that was handed down by the poet Pindar (shiningjasmin)
Louvre G313. Aulos player. Attic red-figured kylix, ca. 490 BC. From Vulci.
Two-handled storage jar (pelike) depicting young athletes jumping
Two-handled storage jar (pelike) depicting young athletes jumping | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Aulos (instrument) — Wikipédia
La música nos vuelve humanos (entérate por qué)
La música nos vuelve humanos