I'm looking for a publication, preferably on the web, that documents a
practice used by businesses during pre-modern times. Apparently
accountants used songs to record business transactions. At the time I
read it I found it fascinating but didn't take notes. What I recall
is that the songs were used as a mnemonic device intended to record
what customers bought and/or what they owed to the business.
I have read this somewhere but I don't remember where or what
historical period(s) this was practiced. If you have any suggestions
for further reading ...any help will be appreciated.
You might want to post this in rec.music.theory. They really know
their stuff.
Best of luck,
Karen R.
Songs are used to recall large amounts of information like family trees,
legends, history, and multiplication tables. Apparently the French
students sing their multiplication tables as American students do the
alphabet.
I know an ethnomusicologist I could ask about it. I'll do that.
Here is an answer not worth waiting for. According to the
ethnomucologist, he never heard of such a thing but he wouldn't be
surprised if somebody did it somewhere, just because songs are used in
so many other ways.
Good luck.
Hmm.
I once thought of majoring in Ethnomucology, but contemplating all
that multi-cultural mucus was just too depressing.
I took up the banjo instead.
~Pete