Sensory studies arises at the conjuncture (and within) the fields of anthropology • sociology • history • archeology • geography • communications • religion • philosophy • literature • art history • museology • film • mixed media • performance • phenomenology • disability • aesthetics • architecture • urbanism • design

Sensory Studies can also be divided along sensory lines into, for example, visual culture, auditory culture (or sound studies), smell culture, taste culture and the culture of touch, not to mention the sixth sense (however it might be defined)

Blurred Rhythms: a brief audio-textual journey into the messiness of everyday sonic life

Craig Farkash
PhD Student, Social and Cultural Analysis program
Department of Sociology and Anthropology
Concordia University

Image taken by author, Rue Wellington 2022.

STOP! Before you read any further make sure to listen to the accompanying sound composition. As you listen, there are a few things that I would encourage you to think about. What sounds do you hear (or think you hear)? Are there similar sounds in the place you’re listening from? What memories come to mind with certain sounds? How do certain parts of the composition make you feel? Anxious? Calm? Indifferent?

Blurred Rhythms Sound Composition

Done listening? Let us proceed…

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Montreal is loud. That was one of the first things I noticed when I moved here. The day after my partner and I unpacked all of our boxes and started to settle our things the street in front of our apartment was closed and excavators, hydrovacs, gravel trucks, and other equipment moved in and started tearing it up. Every two or three weeks for the next few months, a strip of asphalt would be removed, pipes would be replaced, and the hole would be filled. Even if you couldn’t hear the sounds of construction, you could feel them, as the reverberations of jackhammers traveled through our windows, walls, and floors, bouncing back and forth in a tactile and auditory loop.

Winter hasn’t been much different. I’m not sure what I expected of the sounds of everyday Montreal. The amount of sound might be down to the way the winter season has progressed, with large dumps of snow followed by snow clearing cycles. Back home in Edmonton, the snow and ice on residential streets is largely left to melt with the spring. But here in Montreal, snow isn’t given much time to settle on the road – graters and snowblowers come and go, and through our back window, backup alarms mingle with birds and squirrels. There’s a constant blurring of sonic boundaries. This being my first Montreal winter, I don’t really have anything to compare it against. For that you would have to ask a true local.

Perhaps the loudness that I’m experiencing has more to do with my expectations for the apartment that we moved into. It’s by far the newest place I’ve ever lived, built around ten years ago. My family home in the country was built long before my parents bought it in the 80’s. Every house or apartment I ever rented in Edmonton had a build date of at least the 70s. And one of the places I rented in Belgrade was in an old socialist apartment block, with an open courtyard and bordering an elementary school’s playground. The point is, these were places where you expected the walls to be paper thin. You knew that the scents of your neighbours cooking would waft through the vents and the cracks in doors. You expected to hear your upstairs neighbours’ footsteps meandering through the soundtrack of whatever show you had playing on the television at the time.

It’s not like I’m not used to loudness. The last house my partner and I rented in Edmonton before we moved here bordered the new LRT construction on 83 Street. In Belgrade we had to fight against the din of traffic coming off of Brankov Most, the bridge connecting old Belgrade on one side of the Sava River to Novi Beograd, before pushing through a set of heavy wooden doors that would muffle the sounds behind us. So, it’s not that I think that Montreal is really louder than other cities, it’s just a different loudness formed out of a different combination of sounds, out of a different assemblage of sensory experiences. It is the sense of loudness that happens when fascination gives way to routine and you’re no longer a traveler but living in it.

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines ‘loud’ as “marked by intensity or volume of sound” (n.d.) and we can extend that definition elsewhere. Take, for example, the many ways in which music writers talk of a city or location’s particular sound – of the Nashvhille sound, of Montreal’s indie character, of Chicago Blues, and so on. Do these kinds of labels necessitate that the music being made in these spaces is of an inherent quality? No. There are blues musicians who would melt your mind in Edmonton, just as the quality of Winnipeg’s indie scene might surprise outsiders. A lot of the differentiation of scenes comes down to the strength and ability of local mythmaking practices to filter outwards (Farkash 2019, Fauteux 2015). It just means that there’s a critical mass of vibrations emanating from Montreal or Chicago or Nashville, that their myths are louder than those from elsewhere. Its about more than just the quality of musicians in each place.

Yet this also points to the subjectivity of sensory experience and of listening more specifically. What we define as loudness may also point as much to how we’ve trained ourselves (and been brought up) to hear. We all have different volume or intensity thresholds for different sounds. I’m often amazed at how my father and mechanics like him can diagnose certain problems through sound or feel. In much the same way, as someone trained in music and who has written about music and sound previously, I find it amazing the different tones and textures of sound that musicians and sound artists can detect compared to others. It was with this in mind that I set about recording my apartment and the surrounding community of Pointe-Saint-Charles.

In her chapter in A Different Kind of Ethnography, Boudreault-Fournier discusses the process of recording and editing, both of visual and sonic materials, and its usefulness for ethnography.  Recording devices allow us to “creatively and imaginatively relate with the various environments in which we conduct research,” (Boudreault-Fournier 2017: 71), producing montages that are both fluid and fragmented. This process also requires intensive listening, “both directly with the ears and via the microphone, a process that engages both creator and listener directly in their environment” (Boudreault-Fournier 2017: 81-82). But the act of recording also “alters what it records” (Kim-Cohen 2009: 179), not only performing a Schaferian schizophonia, but reorienting the act of listening, conjuring images unrelated to the physical environs and directing the listener’s attention as much to how the editor hears as themselves. Hearing, in this sense, is also non-cochlear (Kim-Cohen 2009).

At the end of Boudreault-Fournier’s chapter, a series of student exercises are suggested, the first on producing some sort of audiovisual sequence and the second in performing a soundwalk. In following these suggestions, my soundscape composition fell somewhere in between. As mentioned earlier, I’ve found myself increasingly interested in the boundlessness of sound, in the ways that the sounds of public and private spaces permeate one another.

I started by drawing a map of my apartment (figure 1) and decided that I would try to capture a selection of the sounds that I would normally hear or create within its bounds in a given day, synthesizing a portion of my daily sonic experience –  the sounds of daily chores (coffee making, dishes, laundry) and hobbies (guitar and piano), as well as my general movements around the space. Yet, not all of the sounds in my apartment were being made in my apartment. It became necessary to turn my attention to the sounds of the city that trickled into the apartment from elsewhere. At the time of recording, there had been a relatively recent snow dump and machinery revved up and down the streets surrounding our apartment. Inside the apartment I set up my Zoom H6 field recorder on a tripod, and using a stereo shotgun mic capsule attachment, recorded the comings and goings of that equipment.

Figure 1. A hand drawn map of our apartment with sonic markers

While I had mentioned earlier that this apartment was by far the newest space I had lived in, it also differs substantially in its layout. It is relatively long and rectangular, with sightlines (and therefore soundlines) all the way from the master bedroom to the street-facing window. There are fewer walls and corners to trap and reflect sound. Sounds both within and without the apartment travel relatively freely through the space. After the snow had cleared I set out into the surrounding neighbourhood with the same recording set-up and tried to track down the sources of some of these sounds. These included the sounds of birds chirping in the trees and bushes around the house, the nearby trains whose horns would make their presence known, the buses, the screams of children playing in parks, traffic, and construction, among others. A far more detailed bank of sounds featured in the composition is included towards the end of this document.

As I walked I found myself attuned to the texture of the sounds that I was hearing and creating. I know there are those that may scoff at the idea of sound as textured, reserving that descriptor for tactile experiences. But I believe it to be apt. Music, and by extension sound, is inherently tactile, particularly in its creation. A “G” chord feels very different in any of its positions on a guitar’s neck when compared to the many ways it can be played on a piano’s keyboard. Even a theremin – the only instrument played without touch – requires specific movements to create certain notes and tones. In this sense the boundary between hearing and touching is blurred. I’m not proposing that music making is totally synaesthetic, only that the relations between these senses, and therefore how they are described, are interchangeable.

As I moved through the neighbourhood I also found myself attempting to listen for different rhythms of life. The rhythms of the work day. The comings and goings of the people around me. The patterns and presence of sounds throughout the day – what Lefebvre might refer to as “polyrhythmia” (1992: 77). In the process of editing I attempted to juxtapose the rhythms and routines of my personal life with that of the outside world. In listening closely to my small corner of Montreal there is a certain verticality of sound, as people walk up and down the wrought iron stairs to their apartment, as they move up and down the mountain on their commute or pass into tunnels. A city built on an island can only grow so much before you have to start planning up instead of out.

What can this composition teach us, anthropologically, about how we hear? On its own, probably not all that much. It only documents my movements of hearing around my neighbourhood. It’s one example of one act of ‘hearing’ or ‘listening.’ But as a talking point – as something that provokes conversation about what works, what doesn’t, what was taken for granted by the researcher and what was taken for granted by the listener – this is where it might prove most useful. And how we hear has implications outside the bounds of our respective homes. For those of us who are housed, we can employ strategies to quiet or alter our sonic spaces. We can close windows, move to different rooms, play music, or wear headphones. As Michael Bull articulates in a study of Walkman users and headphones, “the urban consumer might be seen, not so much as protecting the site of experience from others, but as creating, albeit ambiguously, a utopian space of habitation” (2005: 188). Headphones create a sonic barrier between wanted and unwanted sounds, just as closed doors and windows quiet our private spaces. But this also points to privilege and recalls a number of questions for future study. How might we listen more empathetically? How might we consider the needs of those that are unhoused or sleeping rough who can’t manipulate their sonic environments?

As Boudreault-Fournier suggests, “we often take sounds for granted” (2017: 94). The Montreal I hear is different from how my partner hears it or, for that matter, the Montreal that you, the listener, hear. And with that in mind, how might we begin to create better approaches to sound and hearing that work for more than just those of privilege, who have the time to play with the sounds around them as I have?

Craig is a student in the Social and Cultural Analysis Phd program in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Concordia University. His research interests include ethnographies of sound, sonic justice, and combining his research and musical practices.

SOUND BANK

Unless otherwise noted, all sounds were recorded using a Zoom H6 with the SSH8 mic extension, a shotgun mic that includes built in stereo microphones to capture left and right stereo audio. This recording system allowed for focused sound recordings that include the ambient sonic environment around them.

  1. Creaking floorboards – despite the age of the apartment and its flooring, there are a number of loose floorboards that creak and moan in a variety of ways as you move over them. What do these sounds say about the space? Were they installed too quickly or by inexperienced hands? Has fluctuating humidity caused them to shrink, creating gaps between the individual boards?
  2. Coffee Sequence – Each morning I wake up at 7 am and make a coffee. We have a variety of coffee making apparatuses: an DeLonghi espresso machine, a French press, a džesva I bought in Serbia for making Turkish coffee. On this particular morning it was made in our drip coffee machine, a Cuisinart model we picked up at London Drugs, perhaps. Depending on how tired I am the evening before I’ll add the ground beans and water before going to bed so all that I have to do is press start in the morning.
  3. Opening window – the front window in our apartment is a floor-to-ceiling one that spans the width of our apartment. While it lets ample light in it also lets in the sounds of the nearby train tracks, container yard, and construction both on the road and of a nearby building.
  4. Closing window
  5. Tractor Trailers coming and going from the container/shipyard – Directly down Rue Grand Trunk is a little park that points like an arrow towards the entrance to a container yard where cargo from ships and trains is loaded onto tractor trailers and taken inland. Depending on the day and the sequence of lights on that corner, you might see four or five loaded trucks exiting the yard on a green light or you might see none.
  6. Buses – on either side of our apartment is Rue Centre and Rue Wellington, two more well-travelled roads in the neighbourhood. Bus stops frame our building and buses wheeze their pneumatic doors and grind their engines on a scheduled basis.
  7. General traffic – Rue Wellington, Rue Centre, Rue Grand Trunk, Rue St. Patrick.
  8. Construction – all around us, it seems, are sonic markers of construction. In the opposite direction of the shipyard and a couple blocks past the nearby school, Grand Trunk is closed and, as it once was in front of our apartment, the road has been torn apart. On the opposite side of our apartment kitty-corner across the alley, a newer apartment building is being erected. And, as gentrification from Griffintown and elsewhere creeps across the canal, more and more of these style apartments are springing up.
  9. Crafter CT120 acoustic/electric guitar played through a Fender Super Champ tube amp – I bought this guitar with my mom’s money about a decade ago, drawn in first by its metallic blue colour and then by its sound. The amp was a later addition to my collection. I had purchased a Vox AC 30 from a friend a number of years back but never had the chance to really turn it up to where the sound gets good because of my living circumstances and so I traded it for something a bit smaller and a bit more manageable space-wise. The song being played is one that I’ve been working on for some time and find myself returning to now and again.
  10. Snow clearing alarms – in the build-up to the snow being removed from Rue Grand Trunk, tow trucks paraded back and forth, pleading with a siren for residents to remove their cars from the street. I silently pled with them.
  11. Snowblower – the first big, loud snowblower to be recorded. I left my microphone set up at our front window as the trucks went back and forth and selected the most memorable bits to include in the final composition.
  12. Closing the back door of our apartment, as I rustle with my keys and try to find the lock one-handed while holding my recorder in the other
  13. Footsteps – my own. I recorded my own footsteps, searching for different textured steps, as I walked through snow and gravel and salt and puddles.
  14. Airplane – we seem to be in the line of the departures from Pierre Elliott Trudeau International airport. The one in question at the time of recording was smaller, not a passenger jet, but whether a jet or a prop plane, these flying machines are a constant part of our sonic environment.
  15. Birds – recorded in a bush near the end of Rue Grand Trunk.
  16. Birds and Helicopter – as I recorded the birds, what appeared to be a news helicopter flew over, although I can’t be sure, I didn’t have my glasses on.
  17. Car Horns, Rue Wellington
  18. Sewer – What I’ve noticed on a number of my walks is that it seems to be rare to find running water under manhole covers, at least in this part of town. I tested a number of manhole covers for sounds and there was only one on my walk that had running water. This contrasts with Edmonton where I’ve found that most emanate sounds of running water of varying frequencies
  19. Canal – I often walk or run or cycle along the canal and have noticed a number of seasonal changes as the locks are drained and water runs a bit more freely.
  20. Canal – Ducks. While on one side of the locks a small, man-made waterfall had formed, on the other ducks rested on the ice, basking in the sun and calling out for spring.
  21. Canal Bridge sounds – there is an old, steel bridge that crosses the canal as part of Rue des Seigneurs. It’s the kind of bridge that, rather than asphalt or concrete, has a steel grate as its road surface. It is particularly fascinating to sit and listen to the different tones and notes that tires of different sizes make as they pass over it.
  22. Snowblower, this time further away
  23. Snowsteps
  24. Doorbuzzer – every time that someone calls to a different unit in our apartment the ringing of the door alarm finds its way up the stairs and into our unit. I can usually even hear it from my office space.
  25. Building Entrance – a heavy, glass, buzzer-operated door, that clicks open and shut.
  26. Metronome de Maelzel – my grandma gave this metronome to me a few years back, when we were moving her from the apartment she’d shared with my grandpa in Vermilion to a condo in Sherwood Park. In all the years I’d known my grandparents I had never seen this metronome. She must have kept it out of sight. It had belonged to my great-grandma and from what I can tell dates to the last 1800s/early 1900s. It has a certain old-wood smell that’s hard to describe but you know as soon as you smell it. I think it may be mahogany and its echoes when used sound strong.
  27. Yamaha P-115 Digital Piano – I purchased this piano from one of my favourite music shops in Edmonton, Giovanni’s (a combination music store, school, and art gallery that has since shut down due to COVID). I hadn’t really planned to buy it when I went into the store, I was only looking for some guitar strings. But one of the old guys working there convinced me to try a few out. I couldn’t really afford it but there was a boxing day sale on. Since I’d moved out of my parents place, I only had a small keyboard. I missed the feel of the weighted keys and my playing had suffered as a result. I brought this home with me that evening. In this clip I’m playing a portion of a song (minus vocals) I wrote after a conversation I’d had with my grandma after my grandpa had passed away.
  28. Stove – Whirlpool Accubake model. I’m not sure what that means but its temperature is consistent and because I enjoy cooking it is a source of many of the sounds in our apartment throughout the day
  29. Emptying Dishwasher – it’s almost impossible to empty a dishwasher quietly. This means that there are certain times in our apartment where it is better to do these chores than others, as sound carries up and down the length of the apartment fairly easily.
  30. Running Dishwasher – Kenmore brand. Relatively quiet as well, which is convenient in an open space.
  31. Washing Machine
  32. Washing Machine 2
  33. Bottle opening – Heineken beer bottle, although I wish it was a Moretti
  34. Bathroom door closes
  35. Vocals – recorded with a SHURE SM-58 microphone.
  36. Acoustic Guitar – my Takamine Dreadnought that I brought with me. I bought this guitar in 2017 after noticing it on-sale on the Long and McQuade website. I’d been looking for one like this for quite a while both in stores and second-hand. It’s the guitar model used by one of my favourite musicians, Glen Hansard, and it has both a powerful, driving sound that can carry more delicate melodies easily as well.
  37. Acoustic Guitar 2 – In the second portion of this melody, I have my acoustic guitar plugged into an acoustic amp that I bought a few years before COVID that made playing medium-small gigs a little easier. The amp in question is an Acoustic Solutions 75T, built by Godin, a Quebec company that supplied Leonard Cohen with his guitars later in his career. I’d been testing this amp for years before I finally gave in and purchased it.
  38. Electric guitar – same set-up as before. Because the sounds from outside were recorded in-situ, in single takes I wanted the recorded sounds of my instruments to mirror that, and recorded them in a similar way. Because of this they’re a little less polished than I would like but better reflect the messiness of the everyday.
  39. Backup Alarms, recorded just off Rue Centre, a couple blocks away from my apartment
  40. Bike Trainer – For the past few years I had been using a normal ‘dumb’ trainer – a Tacx Blue Matic – with my road bike in the winter. It would create a pretty loud, droning sound that was pretty annoying for my partner and neighbours. I finally purchased a ‘smart trainer’ that allows me to connect to apps and ride in different places around the world, albeit virtually. An upside of this new trainer is that it hovers around 65 decibels for most rides which is still noisy but less so than my past options.
  41. Upstairs neighbours. I think the neighbours upstairs must have purchased a rowing machine or some kind of stationary bike because for about an hour or so most evenings now this rhythmic whirring will pass through their floor/our roof, in much the same way that I’m sure my bike trainer echoes into my downstairs neighbours’ unit.
  42. Trains – no horns this time but it transports me to my childhood. Occasionally I’ll be sitting at my desk and hear a train horn that instantly transports me to being a kid in Parkland County. My parents’ home is near (at least in country terms) to a railroad. We’d become desensitized to the train horns after a certain point – they weren’t that loud because we weren’t that close – but their horns would punctuate the otherwise calm sounds of country life. And for some reason, hearing the trains here in Montreal, from our apartment, takes me back to playing in the yard on a hot summer day, building jumps for our bikes or a zipline that I nearly broke my back on or any of the other shenanigans my brother and I got up to.
  43. In an underpass below the train tracks near our place I recorded the sounds of traffic and not one, but two VIA Rail trains passing by!
  44. Generators – from the nearby apartment construction, running fairly steadily, typically from around 9 am until 4:30 pm.
  45. Snowblowers

 

Works Cited

Boudreault-Fournier, Alexandrine. 2017. “Chapter 4: Recording and Editing.” In A Different Kind of Ethnography: Imaginative Practices and Creative Methodologies, edited by Denielle Elliott and Dara Culhane, 70-91. University of Toronto Press.

Bull, Michael. 2004. “Thinking about Sound, Proximity, and Distance in Western Experience: The Case of Odysseus’s Walkman.” In Hearing Cultures: Essays on Sound, Listening, and Modernity, edited by Veit Erlmann, 173-190. New York: Berg.

Farkash, Craig. 2019. “How Blue Can You Get? Urban Mythmaking and the Blues in Edmonton, Alberta.” Master’s Thesis, Edmonton: University of Alberta. Education and Research Archive.

Fauteux, Brian. 2015. Music in Range: The Culture of Canadian Campus Radio. Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press.

Kim-Cohen, Seth. 2009. In the Blink of an Ear: Toward a Non-Cochlear Sonic Art. New York: Continuum.

Lefebvre, Henri. 1992 [2004]. Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time, and Everyday Life. New York: Bloomsbury.

“Loud.” n.d. In Merriam-Webster. Accessed March 1, 2022. www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/loud