 I found a surprising musical link between Ancient Europe and South India. In South India today, there are musical traditions and systems and instruments that are very similar to instruments played 2,000 years ago in many different parts of Europe. There's horn instruments being used in a completely different way to western melodic horn instruments. And that's the exact same way that we used in parts of Ireland, Gaul, the British Isles and all of the northern Scandinavian regions as well. Horns were deposited with great religious significance. In India today you can see exactly why instruments like that would have such significance and why they'd be so cared for by the communities. There are many traditions happening today in plain sight that are over 2,000 year old. The way that people make metal there, the way people prepare certain types of food and the music. We're literally listening to something that was happening 2,000 years ago while we're seeing something that we can experience it. Which is as close as anyone's going to get to time, fellow. Not only musically can we learn a lot about the Irish artifacts from looking at the surviving musical cultures in India today. But South India in particular can learn a whole great deal more about the past of their instruments and the development of their music through looking at the artifacts that have survived in Europe.