
There are a lot of things about cats that we don’t understand. Jo Singer made that point in a recent article and I believe we have to accept and respected it, until and if we know more.
http://youtu.be/x_H2kpBjAOs
This last 2 hours. Try it and see!
Cats do have a very good sense of hearing. You can buy music online written for cats. But, to be honest, the manufacturers of the music cannot honestly say that they know for sure what sort of music cats likes. Although I do not know for sure, it would seem that the music that one can buy online created for the domestic cat is a little bit too much like modified human music and we may be projecting our thoughts and ideas onto the cat.
Research has been done on how animals in general respond to music and it has been decided that animals do respond to music. I’m not sure that we know for sure that an animal actually likes music. Responding and liking are different, of course.
My own experience is that my cat does respond to the sound of a chat show on the radio. I believe he likes it. Early in the morning when I wake up I turn on the radio and listen to a chat show that covers news and human stories. If my cat is not on my bed at the time, he comes to it after the radio is turned on. My impression is that he thinks that I am talking. Perhaps he thinks that I’m talking to him and calling him. I don’t know. But it would indicate to me that if I am not in my home for a while it may be a good idea to leave the radio on. I have no experience whatsoever of a cat liking music, even music designed for a cat.
However, a recent post in the San Jose Mercury News entitled “Music Charms the Nervous Cat”, a lady, Lisa Morris, states that her cat likes music. She makes that judgement based on her cat’s behaviour when music is being played. She states that her cat, Lizzie, is nervous because of possible past abuse in a previous home. She accidentally discovered that soothing music helped her to calm down. She states that when she has music on her Kindle, Lizzie would come up and lie near the device and it would calm her down.
Also, Lisa noticed that when she was watching television, Lizzie would get up onto the television stand and place herself next to the television. Sometimes she would lie only a few inches away from the speakers. Lizzie, apparently, particularly liked, “The Phantom Of The Opera”. She stayed close to the television throughout this movie.
It seems that the only information that we have about cats liking music is anecdotal, from cat owners. The domestic cat’s auditory range is different to ours. A cat can hear between frequencies of between 45-64,000 Hertz, while the human hears between frequencies of 64-23,000. Mice have very high frequency squeaks that humans cannot hear sometimes, while the cat can, and it is unsurprising that the cat can detect high frequencies because the mice is the primary prey of the domestic cat. It would seem to be agreed that if cats like music it will be completely different to the sort of music that we like.
Some pet behaviorists suggest that we should play music when we are away from our home or leave the radio on. I rarely do this and I wonder how many cat owners do it? Not many, I suspect.
This really is about knowledge and at present we simply do not have sufficient knowledge about cat emotions and their likes and dislikes of the things that people like. There is one certainty: any sounds that we deliberately create for the benefit of our cat should not be too loud because of the cat’s sensitivity to sound.
If we have to rely on cat owner’s anecdotal evidence, we could do worse than reading Amazon reviews. Out of 6 reviews for one cat music CD, two said that their cats liked the music, one said that their cat liked the radio and 3 said that they liked the music! That sums up the situation, in my opinion. We don’t know and on that basis, personally, I would not buy “cat music”. Chat shows on the radio are another matter, however, because we know that the domestic cat responds to human sounds due to socialisation.
Good on you. An heroic job! The sign of a true cat lover.
Nice point. Nature makes its own music.
I leave the sound off with mine because I want them to hear the birds and things outside. Sometimes at night I put on sounds of birds or rainforest etc because at night its quiet out anyway. But it’s also important they can hear whats going on in the whole apartment.
We had finally managed to trap a feral we called Psycho Cat, for TNR, the people didn’t want her around their property, she was the wildest we’d ever seen and she went crazy in the trap cage. I covered the cage and sat with her singing to her, it calmed her down after a while.
She was spayed and sent off to a feral farm, where hopefully she was happy to be fed and have her freedom back.
Our cats like songs from The Phantom of the Opera and Les Miserables too and I sing them a lot when I’m on my own with them and working around the house.
‘Wishing you were somehow here again’ always hits my heart as it’s one we had at our late mam’s funeral, the packed Church were in tears.
Both Babz and I sing a lot, all kinds of songs and hymns.
I had to laugh one day when a neighbour said ‘Ruth was that you singing opera?’ I forgot the door was open lol She said ‘You have a beautiful voice’ How kind 😉
That’s interesting, Dee. I have a feeling that quite a few people who look after cats sing to them and play music for themselves and for their cats. It may be more popular than I had thought. You may have read Jo’s and Lindy’s comments. I certainly believe that our cats like the sound of our voice and certain mellow sounds in the home as they are reassuring. That is about as far as I will go at the moment!