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June brings a special treat—the flute-like songs of thrushes. What’s amazing is that the thrush sings a musical series—and this songster can easily sing over 50 distinct songs! Learn more about the magical thrush of the forest.
With the June breeding season finally here, many of us have an opportunity to hear a bird with a unique song, the thrush—especially the hermit thrush, wood thrush and veery.
From the words of Thoreau’s Journals in 1852, “The thrush alone declares the immortal wealth and vigor that is in the forest. Here is a bird in whose strain the story is told … whenever a man hears it, it is a new world and a free country, and the gates of heaven are not shut against him.”
The thrush’s flute-like “ee-oh-lay” is the middle phrase of a three-part song. In the third part of the song, it sounds as if it’s singing two notes at the same time—in harmony. The harmonic qualities originate from the paired valve syrinx in the bird’s throat which permits two notes to be played at once resulting in the flutelike qualities of the song.
There are many sounds in the thrush’s song we cannot hear.
Charles Hartshorne in Born to Sing gives the highest rating for song quality which is repeated 2 to 3 times higher on the musical scale.
Thrush song has been called a “musical microcosm of notes sounded simultaneously and judged the highest summit in the evolution of animal music so far known to us”.
The wood thrush learns its song from other wood thrushes and sings several. A male can sing over 50 distinct songs! Listeners with a sharp ear can identify individual birds by the way they repeat their variants of the middle phrase.
With most birds, the males square off by answering a rival’s song with the same song, perhaps seeing who sings better. But the male thrush would never copycat. They almost always answer a rival’s song with a different song of their own.
Image: Wood Thrush. Paul Reeves Photography/Shutterstock
Folks in the Eastern United States, Mountain West, and Canada are most likely to hear the songs of the thrushes. After a summer of lovely evening music, the thrush quietly departs for southern climes in the United States and Central America.
Image: Veery on the ground. Paul Reeves Photography/Shutterstock
As Anton Chekhov said, “Whoever once in his life has seen thrushes migrate in the autumn, when on clear, cool days, they sweep in flocks over the village, will never really be a townsman and to the day of his death will have a longing for the open.”
Tom Warren is a lifelong bird enthusiast. Tom is also committed to protecting birds and their habitat as a Trustee for both Massachusetts and New Hampshire Audubon, and the Harris Nature Center. Read More from Tom Warren
As a singer I have, from an early age, been enchanted by songbirds.
Their songs are natural, soothing sounds in the world.
Even in the urban setting where I live, they are all around us, it just takes the effort to hear them.
Thank you for your wonderful piece on the thrush and for providing recordings of so many others.
Maggie Evans
I also wanted to know what bird sang. Thanks. Funny how just today it landed on the tree outside my window. Looked right at me and sang. Once in a million. Hermit thrush.