http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=573&ncid=573&e=4&u=/nm/2002
1106/od_nm/life_gorilla_dc

Koko, California's famous "talking" gorilla, is breaking into song.


The 31-year-old lowland gorilla, who is said to have mastered some 1,000
terms in American sign language, has "written" lyrics for a new album which
should be available by the end of the week, her keepers said on Tuesday.


"The songs show a real depth of emotion. She's a complex person, just like
we are," said Jennifer Patterson, a spokeswoman for the California-based
Gorilla Foundation near San Francisco that has been Koko's home for some
three decades.


The album, entitled "Fine Animal Gorilla" after Koko's term for herself,
runs the gamut of musical styles from low intensity rap and reggae to
lullabies.


While Koko herself does not sing on the album -- that is left to human
vocalists -- she did sign off on the song lyrics and delivery.


"We pretty much run all our lyrics by Koko," album producer Skip Haynes told
KCBS radio. "Now, she's getting to the point where she actually listens to
different mixes and tells us what mix she likes."


Patterson said the CD would be available through the foundation's Web site
(http://www.koko.org), and was expected to cost about $14.


Koko is one of several gorillas which reputedly learned the basics of
American Sign Language, and has frequently been pressed into service as an
ambassador for her species. Lowland gorillas like Koko are threatened by
logging and poaching in their native habitats in central Africa, while their
cousins, the mountain gorillas, now number fewer than 500 in the wild.



xponent

K-Tel Maru

rob


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