
On a train, speeding north from London, a young man, seated
at a table in a standard-class carriage, opened his laptop and decided that this
was the perfect environment in which to conduct a business video conference call.
Everyone within three or four seats in all directions was included –
irrespective of their wishes or even the interests of business confidentiality.
These are two snapshots of a modern Britain where
humans have become noise incontinent. And they will be familiar to most of us.
But it is not just a matter of conversations made public. It’s one thing for headphones to leak sound, but at
least the wearer is making an effort.
Yet it is now the norm, in urban areas, for the first
good weather of the year to see windows and balcony doors flung open, and music
‘shared’ with neighbours.
“Music,” that is, consisting of little more than
booming bass. The same “music” that you’ll hear from passing cars, whether the
windows are down or not.
But this is not simply a matter of individual
behavior.
In shopping arcades, going far beyond the curse of
muzak, shops blast out sound – presumably, because a psychologist somewhere has
discovered that hi-tempo, booming tracks encourage spending and quickly.
The Arndale in Manchester is one example: on a visit
one Sunday morning, only the Waterstones Bookshop and Games Workshop were peaceful
– although both were busy. Even the Disney Store was playing music loudly –
hi-tempo and with a beat, albeit rather more in keeping with little pink princesses.
On a larger scale, it is now apparently acceptable for
a rave festival to be arranged and staged within 50 metres of homes, and if
residents do not like feeling their bones rattled, that’s their misanthropy.
It never is, incidentally, Chopin rattling someone else’s windows – or Johnny Cash or Dean Martin or even Abba or the Stones.
But try to find a coffee shop – chain or independent –
that doesn’t insist on providing some sort of soundtrack to your morning
cappuccino. It might just be the radio, but you could be forgiven for thinking
that we are scared to sit peacefully; to allow ourselves the opportunity to
hear ourselves think.
There is a narrowing of basic good manners here – not
a conscious one, but resulting from a sense of individual entitlement that
requires no justification and expects no challenge.
‘Why do you think it’s fair for you to make other people
listen to your conversation/music?’ This is not a question that usually earns a
classier philosophical response than some form of take on a shrugged ‘because’.
Although in order to do so would require a way of
explaining why the ‘right’ to converse or play your music in such a way as to
force it on others trumps their right not to have it thus inflicted. Since nobody is saying that you cannot play your music or have your private conversation, then that would be difficult.
Perhaps much of it is about consumption.
On one level, we consume the gadgets that allow us to
converse wherever we want. And then we consume anything we put on them. Except that, since we are encouraged increasingly to keep it in the ‘cloud’, we don’t really have it at all. When we want to conspicuously consume that tune again, we have to download or stream it once more – possibly with added consumption via whatever charges our telecommunications provider might levy.
On another level, there is a growing emphasis on consumption
as a core part of citizenship: see all manner of things, from the small-state fundamentalism of the concept of the ‘citizen consumer,’ to the
rising importance in the economy of the retail sector (and therefore of our personal and collective consumption).
You can find florid declarations of spending as a patriotic duty
to aid the nation’s economy, while increasing suggestions that we’re in for a
period of sustained low interest rates (in part because of past and present
spending on ludicrously-inflated mortgages) produces a concomitant sense that we
might just as well spend our hard-earned, then.
Once having consumed, we then have the right to enjoy
that consumption. And after all, if it is a patriotic act we have carried out, then who can
deny us enjoying it in whatever way we please? There’s no such thing as society any more anyway.
The ‘rights’ and ‘entitlement’ of the conscientious
consumer sit well with an era in which the desire for privacy can be viewed as
an admission of some guilt or other.
Consume, let others see your consumption – and never
worry if you’re being overheard or watched, because it’s happening anyway. Quiet and privacy cannot be bought and sold: they have little value.
This incontinence of sound – this droning, banging,
driveling bombardment of noise – is itself symptomatic of something wider: of a
dumbed-down public discourse where whoever shouts loudest is heard; where
considered arguments are battered out of the way by sensation and fact-free
claims.
Will it take until all the satellites fail and all the
‘clouds’ burst and all the gadgets seize up to make us appreciate once more,
quietness, a private conversation and music enjoyed without the need to foist
it on others?
Or before then, will it dawn on people that all this incontinent noise is simply one more cover for our intellectually incontinent politicians and the corporatocracy on whose behalf they work?