I try to listen to
the still, small voice within
but I cant hear it
above the din
from Little Audreys Story by
Eliza Ward
As a reader of this booklet,
it is possible that you attach a certain significance to sound.
You may have noticed
how important sound can be in communicating mood, meaning, and context.
Perhaps when listening to a "soundscape"sound heard
in a real or "virtual" environmentyou have been transported
to another time, another place. Conversely, perhaps you have experienced
the "here-and-now" even more acutely as a result of listening
intently. Your awareness of soundspecifically your level of
awareness of the acoustic environment at any given timeis an
issue central to the interdiscipline of Acoustic Ecology (also known
as Ecoacoustics).
The philosophy underpinning Acoustic Ecology
is simple, yet profound: its author, R. Murray Schafera musician,
composer and former Professor of Communication Studies at Simon Fraser
University (SFU) in Burnaby, B.C., Canadasuggests that we try
to hear the acoustic environment as a musical composition and, further,
that we own responsibility for its composition (Schafer 1977a, 205).
Like many issues emerging from the explosion of ideologies in the
late 1960s, the profundity of Schafers message is now hidden
behind a single, soundbite-friendly issue: noise pollution. This
is unfortunate since Schafer has far more to offer. However, some
22 years after his ideas were first fully articulated in print, they
remain unknown to the general public and mostly unknown to environmental
acousticians. Where Schafer is well known within the contemporary
music community, it is mostly for his large-scale, often site specific,
musical/theatrical work rather than his acoustic ecology. Composer
John Cage was aware of both; when asked if he knew of any great music
teachers, he replied "Murray Schafer of Canada" (Truax
1978, sleeve note).
So what did Schafer say and what is its relevance
at the beginning of a century?
Eye Culture
Schafers starting point was
to note the incredible dominance of the visual modality in society"eye
culture" as
it has been termed elsewhere [1]and to reveal that childrens
ability to listen was, in his experience, deteriorating. So concerned
was Schafer about this problem that he argued passionately for listening
skills to become an integral part of the national curriculum. Schafer
both demonstrated and addressed the issuewhich he termed "sonological
competence" through the practical exercises he developed
in working with music students, such as: list any five environmental
sounds (not music) that you remember hearing today; and list five
sounds (not music) you like and five you do not.
As a former lecturer in Music Technology, I
often began a lecture series with these exercises and I can confirm
Schafers experience: many students do not recall "consciously" having
heard any sounds during the day, and many do not complete the sound
list even after fifteen minutes. Schafers response to the problem
was to develop a range of "ear cleaning" exercises including "soundwalks," a
walking meditation where the object is to maintain a high level of
sonic awareness (see Schafer 1967 and 1969).
By the early 1970s, Schafer
had enrolled his colleagues at SFU into his work and the World
Soundscape Project
(WSP) was created, its first major project being a field study of
the Vancouver Soundscape. The study involved level measurements (producing
isobel maps), soundscape recordings and the description of a range
of sonic features. The study resulted in both a book [2] and
a collection of recordings [3]. Further WSP field studies in
Europe led to the publication of Five Village Soundscapes (Schafer,
1978b) and European Sound Diary (Schafer, 1977b). Schafers The
Tuning of the World (1977a) [4], remains the best known and
the most comprehensive text on Acoustic Ecology.
Soundscape Features
A fascinating book that changed
my understanding ofand relationship withsound, The Tuning of the World formalised
the soundscape terminology Schafer had devised during his field studies
with the WSP: Background sounds he defined as "keynotes" (in
analogy to music where a keynote identifies the fundamental tonality
of a composition around which the music modulates); foreground sounds
(intended to attract attention) are termed "sound signals." Sounds
that are particularly regarded by a community and its visitors are
called "soundmarks"in analogy to landmarks. Natural
examples of the latter include geysers, waterfalls, and wind traps
while cultural examples include distinctive bells and the sounds
of traditional activities. (Schafer 1977a: 9, 55-56, 173-175, 272-275;
Truax 1978: 68, 119, 127; 1984: 22, 58-60).
Schafers terminology helps to express
the idea that the sound of a particular locality (its keynotes, sound
signals and soundmarks) canlike local architecture, customs
and dressexpress a communitys identity to the extent
that settlements can be recognised and characterised by their soundscapes.
Unfortunately, since the industrial revolution, an ever increasing
number of unique soundscapes have disappeared completely or submerged
into the cloud of homogenised, anonymous noise that is the contemporary
city soundscape, with its ubiquitous keynote: traffic.
The contrast between pre-industrial
and post-industrial acoustic environments is well expressed in Schafers
use of the terms "hi-fi" (high fidelity) to characterise
the former and "lo-fi" (low fidelity) to describe the latter
(1977a, 272). He defines a hi-fi soundscape as an environment where "sounds
overlap less frequently; there is more perspective-foreground and
background" (1977a, 43). In transcribing recordings of hi-fi
environments, Schafers team noted that the level of natural
environmental soundssuch as weather and animalsvaried
in repeating cycles. The team created a rudimentary level versus
time diagram charting the more prominent sonic features of the soundscape
over a twelve-month period (reproduced here as Figure 1).
Figure 1: The cycles of the natural soundscape of the west coast
of British Columbia showing the relative level of sounds (from Truax
1984: 142).
Schafer concluded that the
vocal "give and
take" between species (evident in Figure 1) is probably a characteristic
feature of natural soundscapes. In addition to the rhythmic balance
in sound level Schafer identified in natural habitats, Krause (1993)
suggested an equilibrium is also apparent across the audio spectrum.
The possibility of a natural spectral balance occurred to Krause
during long sojourns in the wilderness as he attempted to record
the vocalisations of specific creatures. Listening intently to the
soundscape to capture specific sounds (often waiting for up to thirty
hours in one sitting), Krause noticed that "When a bird sang
or a mammal or amphibian vocalised, the voices appeared to fit in
relation to all the natural sounds in terms of frequency and prosody
(rhythm)" (1993, 159).
Acoustical spectrographic maps transcribed from
2,500 hours of recordings confirmed his suspicions: animal and insect
vocalisations tended to occupy small bands of frequencies leaving "spectral
niches" (bands of little or no energy) into which the vocalisations
(fundamental and formants) of other animals, birds or insects can
fit. As urban areas spread Krause suggested that the accompanying
noise might "block" or "mask" spectral niches
and, if mating calls go unheard, a species might die out (1993,158).
While there has been little corroborative research into Krauses "Niche
Hypothesis," (or into Schafers suggestion that give and
take occurs in terms of sound level), a recent Royal Society for
the Protection of Birds (RSPB) study suggested that birds living
near roads "... cannot hear one another which leads to difficulty
in learning songs and communicating with potential mates" (Barot
1999).
In acoustics, the word "mask" has
a very specific meaning [5]. The relevance of this effect for
the soundscape is that since quieter sounds do not generally mask
each other (unless
their frequencies are close together), a hi-fi soundscape can be
characterised by its lack of masking from noise and other sounds,
with the result that all soundsof all frequencies"can
be heard distinctly" (Schafer, 43). As SFU colleague Hildegard
Westerkamp puts it, there is "no anonymous sound." The
lack of masking facilitates the propagation of "acoustic colouration" caused
by echoes and reverberations that occur as sound is absorbed and
reflected from surfaces within the environment, and due to the effects
of weather related factors such as temperature, wind, and humidity.
The resulting colouration offers significant information for the
listener, providing cues relating to the physical nature of the environment
and expressing its size in relation to the listener. This fosters
a sense of place for individuals as they move around the community.
SFU colleague Barry Truax conveys this concept well when he states "...
the sound arriving at the ear is the analogue of the current state
of the physical environment, because as the wave travels, it is charged
by each interaction with the environment" (Truax 1984, 15).
Another characteristic of the pre-industrial revolution, hi-fi
soundscape, is that the "acoustic horizon" may extend for
many miles. Thus sounds emanating from a listeners own community
may be heard at a considerable distance, reinforcing a sense of space
and position and maintaining a relationship with home. This sense
is further strengthened when it is possible to hear sounds emanating
from adjacent settlements, establishing and maintaining relationships
between local communities.
In the lo-fi soundscape, meaningful sounds (and any associated
acoustic colouration), can be masked to such an extent that an individuals "aural
space" is reduced. Where the effect is so pronounced that an
individual can no longer hear the reflected sounds of his/her own
movement or speech, aural space has effectively shrunk to enclose
the individual, isolating the listener from the environment. If the
masking of reflected and direct sounds is so severe that an individual
cannot hear his/her own footstepswhich is common on the streets
of many cities"... ones aural space is reduced to
less than that of human proportions" (Truax 1984, 20). Under
such extreme conditions, sound is either smothered (in the sense
that particular sounds are not heard)or sounds merge and sonic
information mutates into anti-information: "noise."
While the hi-fi soundscape is, as Acoustic Ecologists suggest,
balanced in terms of level, spectra and rhythm, the lo-fi soundscape
features an almost constant level. This creates a "Sound Wall" (Schafer
1977a, 93), isolating the listener from the environment. Spectrally,
the contemporary lo-fi soundscape is biased towards the low frequency
range (thanks to the internal combustion engine and sounds related
to electric power). Due to the twenty-four hour society, the rhythms
of daily routine are, in some localities, significantly eroded.
The Soundscape and Society
In describing the soundscapes capacity
to convey information, Truax (1984) describes sound as a mediator
between listener and the
environment. This relationship is illustrated in Figure 2.

Figure 2: The mediating relationship of an individual
to the environment through sound (modified from Truax 1984, 11). As the soundscape deteriorates, so awareness
of the subtleties of environmental sound has withered in proportion.
As a result,
the meanings sound holds for the listener in contemporary soundscapes
tend to be polarised into extremes"loud" and "quiet",
noticed or unnoticed, good (I like) or bad (I dont like).
Compare this level of sonic awareness (and the results of the listening
tests mentioned earlier) with the Kaluli men of Papua New Guinea
who, according to Feld (1994) can "... imitate the sound of
at least 100 birds, but few can provide visual descriptive information
on nearly that many." In other words, environmental sounds
for the Kaluli tribe comprise a continuum offering a limitless
range of subtleties.
In the developed world, sound has less significance and the
opportunity to experience "natural" sounds decreases
with each generation due to the destruction of natural habitats.
Sound becomes something that the individual tries to block, rather
than to hear; the lo-fi, low information soundscape has nothing
to offer. As a result, many individuals try to shut it out through
the use of double glazing or with acoustic perfumemusic.
Musicthe virtual soundscapeis, in this context, used
as a means to control the sonic environment rather than as a natural
expression of it. Broadcast speech and music provide the same opportunity
for control, turning the sonic environment into a commodity. Networks,
transmitters and satellites extend the acoustic community across
the entire planet, a fact that has been utilised for fair deeds
and foul. Schafer refers to the latter use of sound as "sound
imperialism" (1977a, 77).
A 1993 survey of public attitudes to noise in the United Kingdom
lists "neighbours" and specifically, sources of broadcast
or recorded sound (which Schafer calls "schizophonic" sound)
as the premier source of irritation, toppling traffic from the
number one spot it had occupied for many years (Grimwood, 1993).
As Slapper (1996) reports: "Nationally, councils now receive
300 complaints a day about unacceptable noise from neighbours" and
more disturbingly "Over the past four years, 18 people have
been killed" [due to disputes over noisy neighbours].
The psychological significance of sound used as a controlling
forceas an (offensive) weapon or as a (defensive) barrier
against the soundscapeis that the environment and the community
become the enemy. As with any war, the environment becomes a battleground
and suffers as much as its inhabitants. Schafer estimated that
the battle between sonic expression and control was helping to
increase environmental sound levels by around 0.5 to 1 decibel
per year-a "noise generator" as illustrated in Figure
3.

Figure 3: The Noise Generator (source: the author).
Inner Noise
If community and environmental
noise is the enemy without, the noise of unwanted thoughts and
feelings represents the
enemy within. The use of sound as an "audioanalgesic" (Schafer
1977a, 96)a soundwall to block the unceasing (and often critical)
inner dialogue and the uncomfortable emotions the dialogue evincesprovides
the illusion of mastery over emotion. A basic tenet of the psychoanalytical
approach is the notion that unexpressed thoughts and feelings can
result in inappropriate actions ranging from a burst of anger over
an insignificant event, to the kind of horrific incidents that seem
increasingly, to make the front pages of newspapers the world over.
Despite an increased awareness of psychotherapeutic principles, the
belief that emotion is somehow controlled through distraction prevails.
The physical and psychological cost of unexpressed
emotion is an epidemic of stress related illnesses that reflects
a struggle to adapt to a new way of livingthe speed, busy-ness
and sustained arousal of city life. Such is the contrast between
the character of life in towns and cities compared to that in rural
and tranquil areas, that Newman & Lonsdale (1995) refer to city
dwellers as "homo urbanus". Appreciative descriptions of
the "buzz" of the city frequently refer to its noise, as
well as its speed and activity (Newman & Lonsdale 1995, 34).
As the city represents excitement, so the countryside, the plains
and wilderness areas have come, for many, to represent boredom and
incredibly, a disconnection from life, since "life" has
become associated with continuous noise and activity. The corollary
to this is that "quiet" and highly differentiated environmentscharacteristics
of hi-fi soundscapesare equated with boredom, conformity, lassitude,
lack of choice "... and most importantly, the fear of being
out of touch" (Newman & Lonsdale 1995, 10). The latter expression
is a masterly example of sophistry since while being "in touch" with
the noise of opinion and technology (objectivity), the quiet reality
of how "I" feel now (subjectivity)is devalued or
ignored.
In my view, the hi-fi environment represents
a deep psychological fear for anyone whose purpose (consciously or
unconsciously) is to avoid their feelings. In a wide variety of psychotherapeutic
experiences, I have witnessed many timesin myself and othershow
being quiet tends to bring emotions to the surface. As psychologist
James Swan quoted in Gallagher (1993, 203) offers: "Just sitting
quietly in that atmosphere [a quiet place] allows most people to
process a lot of emotions and issues they havent been dealing
with."
It is no coincidence that in much art and literature,
nature is used to symbolise emotion: both are wild and uncontrollable
and the history of humanity could be described in terms of a need
to dominate both. This domination has taken the form of ephemeral
realities built upon life-as-it-is. In the case of nature, the construction
refers to electrically powered communities whose ephemerality is
a function of their power source. Contemporary society cannot operate
without electricity; if the plug is pulled by nature, terrorists
or the depletion of natural resources, society will collapse. As
for emotion, the ephemeral constructions are the "schizophonic" sounds,
television pictures and eventually, the "data suits" and
other "cybersense" technologies that are creating a "virtual" reality.
Built on top of the electric society, cyber-reality is twice as ephemeral,
doubly fragile.
Acoustic Ecology Today
Schafer suggests that there
are two ways to improve the soundscape. The first is to increase
sonological competence through
an education programme that attempts to imbue new generations with
an appreciation of environmental sound. This, he believes, will foster
a new approach to designthe second waythat will incorporate
an appreciation of sound and thus reduce the wasted energy that noise
represents.
Schafers ideas are laudable and I endorse
them. However, it is vital that Acoustic Ecologists do not underestimate
what Schafer is asking; in order to listen we need to stop or at
least slow down (physically and psychologically) becoming a human
being instead of a "human doing." "Be here now" is
one of the main messages to emerge during the 1960s, and a major
tenet of the multitude of Eastern philosophies that have been imported
into the west ever since. For homo urbanus, stopping and listening
is a tough call, though many try and keep trying. For others, being
here now, listening o the soundscape, valuing the soundscape, is
anathema. Porteous (1990) confirms this in his critique of the original
WSP surveys noting that "experts" always bring with them
their own agenda. In this case, he says, the agenda is that people
should value the soundscape, specifically a balanced one; surveys
of public opinion, he notes, indicate that the peoplethe "inperts"do
not.
Today, interest in Acoustic Ecology is growing
thanks to the activities of the World Forum for Acoustic Ecology
(WFAE), which was founded during "The First International Conference
on Acoustic Ecology" in Banff, Alberta, Canada, in August of
1993. Through newsletters, this Soundscape journal, regular
conferences (since 1993) and more recently a listserver and web site
available to anyone with access to the Internet, knowledge of acoustic
ecology and the activities of the WFAE is beginning to spread to
a wider audience; Westerkamp (1995) reports that the WFAE has enrolled
steering committee representatives in Europe, Asia-Pacific, South/Central
America and the U.S.A. and has had a well-functioning international
board since 1998.
In summary then, it is my view that the values
espoused by Acoustic Ecologythe value of listening, the quality
of the soundscapeare values worth evangelising. However, it
is vital that we do not underestimate the enormity of what we are
asking at the end of the busiest, loudest century in recorded history.
Published, with slight variations, in the Journal
Of Electroacoustic Music, Volume
2, March 1999, in
the brochure for the "Drift:
Sound Art & Acoustic Ecology Event," Glasgow, November 1999,
and in Soundscape: The Journal of Acoustic Ecology, Volume
1, Spring 2000).
Kendall Wrightson is a freelance writer. For
more on his work, visit: kendallwrightson@mac.com.
Notes
1. The dominance of eye culture at the expense of
the aural modality is explored in Berendt, J. E. [trans. Nevil, T.] The
Third Ear, Henry Holt, New York, 1988.
2. Schafer, R. M. [Ed]. The Vancouver Soundscape,
ARC Publications, 1978a.
3. Now available as a double CD set including a
1996 comparative study: The Vancouver Soundscape1973/Soundscape
Vancouver 1996, Cambridge, 1996. Records CSR-2CD 9701.
4. Schafer, R.M. The Tuning of the World,
Knopf, New York, 1977. [republished in 1994 as The Soundscape-Our
Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World, Destiny Books,
Rochester, Vermont].
5. Over a relatively
narrow frequency range, quiet sounds will be inaudible (i.e. "masked")
in the presence of loud sounds of a lower frequency. If the frequencies
of two sounds
are within a few hertz, a beating effect is heard which makes it
easier to detect the masked one (Backus, 1977, pp. 101-103).
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