Music in Easton's Bible Dictionary
            Jubal was the inventor of musical instruments (Gen. 4:21). 
The
 Hebrews were much given to the cultivation of music. 
Their whole
 history and literature afford abundant evidence of 
this. After
 the Deluge, the first mention of music is in the 
account of
 Laban's interview with Jacob (Gen. 31:27). After 
their triumphal
 passage of the Red Sea, Moses and the children of 
Israel sang
 their song of deliverance (Ex. 15).
 But the period of Samuel, David, and Solomon was the 
golden
 age of Hebrew music, as it was of Hebrew poetry. 
Music was now
 for the first time systematically cultivated. It was 
an
 essential part of training in the schools of the 
prophets (1
 Sam. 10:5; 19:19-24; 2 Kings 3:15; 1 Chr. 25:6). 
There now arose
 also a class of professional singers (2 Sam. 19:35; 
Eccl. 2:8).
 The temple, however, was the great school of music. 
In the
 conducting of its services large bands of trained 
singers and
 players on instruments were constantly employed (2 
Sam. 6:5; 1
 Chr. 15; 16; 23;5; 25:1-6).
 In private life also music seems to have held an 
important
 place among the Hebrews (Eccl. 2:8; Amos 6:4-6; Isa. 
5:11, 12;
 24:8, 9; Ps. 137; Jer. 48:33; Luke 15:25).
                          
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