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BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002

22 May 02 - 05:15 AM (#715150)
Subject: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Julie B

Today is Noise Awareness Day in the UK.

For details of the UK Noise Association, see:

So, what noises do you find are the most annoying/intrusive?

Also, do you agree that most amplified music, even at folk concerts, is too loud for you to relax and enjoy? Is there more than a grain of truth in the suggestion that most sound engineers grow partially deaf, but never realise it? If you are a sound engineer/performer of amplified music, when did you last have your hearing checked? Any comments?

Julie


22 May 02 - 05:17 AM (#715153)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Julie B

Sorry! I'll try again....

Today is Noise Awareness Day in the UK. What noises annoy you most?

For details of UK Noise Association, see: http://www.superscript.co.uk/ukna/index.html

Also, do you agree that most amplified music, even at folk concerts, is way too loud? Is there more than a grain of truth in the suggestion that most sound engineers grow partially deaf, but never realise it? If you are a sound engineer/performer of amplified music, when did you ast have your hearing checked?

Julie


22 May 02 - 06:01 AM (#715168)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Sam Pirt

I guess that means all us melodion, banjo and accordion players have to stop playing then????!!!!!

Cheers, sam (who plays accordion)


22 May 02 - 06:39 AM (#715179)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Steve Parkes

All in favour ...?


22 May 02 - 06:43 AM (#715183)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: DMcG

No, you just have to be aware of it!


22 May 02 - 06:45 AM (#715184)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Steve Parkes

Actually, you have to make more noise if you want me to hear. A good rule of thumb is: if I've come to see you I've probably come to hear you too. But Julie's right: there's no excuse for amplified music being too loud. I suppose "how loud is too loud" is a subjective thing, but there are common-sense limits IMO.

And the noisy musicians can always stand behind the quiet ones.

Steve


22 May 02 - 06:49 AM (#715186)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: GUEST,Min

do you agree that most amplified music, even at folk concerts, is way too loud?

No I wouldn't agree with that. I think that my hearing is pretty accute (it's certainly better than most of my friends and family) but concerts are supposed to be on the loud side, aren't they?

Anyhow it's not just amplified music, an orchestra going at full pelt is a lot louder than any folk gig I've been to.

Min


22 May 02 - 07:29 AM (#715201)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Julie B

Seems like I'm in a minority of one so far (well, me plus my friend & flute player Pat Baldwin form Rushden). I had my hearing tested last year and was told it was fine for my age (40)...but I'm starting to think that my contemporaries might not be so lucky and might not know it. I must admit I just cannot for the life of me see the attraction of music that physically hurts my eardrums - am I ultra-sensitive? I think I'd better keep sticking to acoustic gigs....

Julie B


22 May 02 - 08:13 AM (#715224)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: DMcG

Ok, I'll respond seriously this time. I prefer purely acoustic sessions where they make sense, such as pub lounges, etc. When amplication is used it does tend to be set far higher than necessary for pure audability. If you look at club music part of the reason for the high volume is to do with 'atmosphere' and I think that is true of amplified folk music as well. In the outdoors, getting a sensible balance is always difficult. I went a session of the Proms in Hyde Park the year before last and the whole thing was ruined for me by people chattering. The only way to get around this was to move nearer the speakers to drown out the pic-nickers who weren't interested in the music. And this meant that the music had to be amplified even more.

I am bothered more, though, by all-pervasive musak than by volume.


22 May 02 - 08:28 AM (#715233)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: greg stephens

I am running a percussion workshop using bhangra dohl drums tonight, and I will be issuing ear plugs. The number of regularly playing musicians suffering hearing damage is a very sad thing and I'm sure is avoidable in a lot of cases by elementary precautions. A rock musician using high levels of foldback many nights a week is I'm sure at more risk than audience members who occasionally go to noisy gigs, but I think it's something we should all be aware of. And yes. I do think amplification is normally ridiculously loud, particularly at folkie events when you are dealing with acoustically based music: surely "loud enough to hear" is what you need. heavy metal is something else: noise is part of the experience.


22 May 02 - 04:22 PM (#715587)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Mrrzy

I lost a noticeable amount of hearing at one single concert in college. But this Noise Awareness Day should cross the pond... all those cars with music booming so I can't hear NPR... I only crank really GOOD songs, myself (*BG*)...


23 May 02 - 06:25 AM (#715965)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Julie B

...Yes Mrrzy, that, for me, is the worst noise of all. The thumping bass music that pounds from cars, shops and houses nowadays, and gets louder every year. I hear that, in the extreme form, it's now referred to as 'Acoustic Terrorism'. I've had personal experience of having long periods of shattered nerves and sleepless nights due to very ignorant neighbours who didn't see why they shouldn't have their right to play their music loud day and night. Every day and night. Apparently it was 'their music' and 'their right' ! :-) Funnily enough, I didn't seem to have any 'right' to the peace, quiet and sleep that I so desperately craved...


23 May 02 - 06:46 AM (#715968)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: McGrath of Harlow

They kept very quiet about this Noise Awareness Day, didn't they?

"I am running a percussion workshop using bhangra dohl drums tonight, and I will be issuing ear plugs." Now that was a very paradoxical way to mark the occasion, Greg!

I generally find that the best sound from most open air folk concerts is from way way back; and from indoor bands they sound best from outside the hall. In the bar for example.

You need amplification to be heard in many settings, and to get a balance where the quieter instruments can be heard in the blend, but too often there is far too much, and especially too much bass. Folk music really suffers when sound technicians who have all their experience with rock bands and such get charge of the equipment, and that is only too likely to happen when they are dependent on, for example, whoever the people setting up the venue happen to hire.


23 May 02 - 07:58 AM (#715994)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Dave Bryant

Ah well, I didn't do any singing yesterday - so I suppose that I've made my contribution !


23 May 02 - 08:27 AM (#716006)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Steve Parkes

I happen to know Julie went to a session last night, so if the good people of Newport Pagnell have any complaints, they know where to come!

Steve


23 May 02 - 09:44 AM (#716046)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: vectis

I, like many others, avoid concerts like the plague or listen from way, way back (the bar is good).
All the sound engineers that I know have damaged hearing from too much too loud music. I do not intend to join them if I can help it.
I play accordion and practice quietly most of the time.
My hearing was damaged when I was a baby so I treasure the fact that I can hear at all and am desparate to conserve whart I have for as long as possible. If a concert is too loud I walk out and protest to the organisers. I have missed some top acts because of this but there is no way I will inflict volume reaching the pain threshold on myself. People who determinedly stay in the concert are mugs and until they start walking out en masse nothing will change.
YES I want to hear the act clearly but it does NOT have to hurt to do it.
As you can see this is a hobby horse of mine.


23 May 02 - 09:57 AM (#716057)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Sam Pirt

Yes you are right it is a serious issue, and in Sweden they have the best solution (as usual) It is common place to wear ear plugs that let all of the right sounds in and get rid of the bad noise that does your ear drums in. I have often seen many swedes wearing ear plugs at festivals and in music sessions. It seems pritty sensible to me!!

Tack, Sam


23 May 02 - 10:00 AM (#716059)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: greg stephens

Vectis, good on you. It should be everyone's hobby horse. The number of people with music related hearing loss is growing every day and people have got to be warned. We are all in danger of losing the ablity to enjoy the thing we love dearly. Walk out, complain (noisily) to festival and venue managements. In particular< complain ( in a friendly way, they don't twiddlethe knobs) to performers. Just say" I came to hear you, I'd have loved to listen, but the noise was intolerable, so I walked out. I'm sorry". This will be taken seriously by any performer, who will then feel backed up when pleading with a cloth-eared soundman to keep thelevels down. I'm sure the problem can be solved, but only by performers and management putting pressure on soundmen(women). So keep complaining!! They're your ears, and they're theonly pair you've got.


23 May 02 - 10:41 AM (#716084)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Dave Bryant

I agree with Vectis and most of the previous postings about over-amplification at concerts - ceilidhs at festivals are sometimes even worse.

I do use PA gear, but generally only in the open air or for large pub gigs where there's a lot of background noise. The system I use indoors has a maximum power of only 2x30w. The larger one which is only used outdoors (and in big marquees) is 2x150w.

I try to use a PA for just sound reinforcement. Once I asked an audience member after a big waterways concert, "Could you hear OK at the back ?" "Perfectly", he answered. "So the PA was alright then ?" I queried. His answer of "What PA ?" was the best one which I could have received.

One of the biggest problems with over-amplification is that it makes audience participation in choruses almost impossible - even for noisy b*****s like me !


24 May 02 - 06:32 AM (#716637)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Julie B

Easlier this year I attended a concert by Bill Jones where she had to practically swear at the sound engineer from the stage mid-songs to get him to turn the volume down to a reasonable level(sound was distorting badly too, as it was so loud). Despite her protestations, he kept insisting on turning it up again (obviously thought he knew best - obviously deaf!). I think she gave him a good talking to during the interval, as things improved in the second half - but only marginally - she still had to complain again!

I saw duo 'Show of Hands' for the first time the other week at St Neots. Great, but again, too loud. Would love to see them acoutically. My friend had a word with the sound engineer during the interval and he was at least slightly sympathetic. It is worth making your feeling known. You're probably not alone!!!

Julie


24 May 02 - 07:10 AM (#716648)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: McGrath of Harlow

"Despite her protestations, he kept insisting on turning it up again (obviously thought he knew best - obviously deaf!). " (Julie B)

He probably actually was. As vectis remarked: "All the sound engineers that I know have damaged hearing from too much too loud music."

There's a vicious circle here. Before anybody gets to control the volume they are going to have had to go through an "apprenticeship" which ensures that by the time they have the power to turn the volume down, they feel they need to turn it up.

A lot of the problem is people assuming that the way to make it easier to hear things is just to turn up the volume, and it's a lot more complicated than that. And the main problem, and the main damaging factor, is cranked up bass and percussion. My understanding is that, if your hearing is going off, which happens to most people sooner or later, even without the loud music, that isn't likely to be the part of the sound which needs amplifying to help you hear what is going on.


24 May 02 - 08:46 AM (#716683)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: GUEST

Dave is right. If the audience can hear you clearly and don't realise that a PA is being used then the volume and mix is just dandy.
A PA that is too loud merely distorts sound and destroys the enjoyment of the audience.
People who want music loud enough to burst eardrums go to heavy metal or rock concerts not folk concerts.


25 May 02 - 07:42 PM (#717386)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: GUEST,Julie B at home

Cheers McGrath,

You read my mind when you said: "There's a vicious circle here. Before anybody gets to control the volume they are going to have had to go through an "apprenticeship" which ensures that by the time they have the power to turn the volume down, they feel they need to turn it up." I agree entirely. All the evidence suggests that budding sound engineers have all been brainwashed and deafened by the time they take charge! Also, is there a chance that they get badgered by hard-of-hearing audience members to turn levels up, even when 90% of the audience may be hearing things perfectly?

My own father, who is 77, is hard-of-hearing but refuses to use a hearing aid. Instead, TV and radio are turned up to levels that are painful to others (inc. neighbours, I'm sure!). My mother knows that her own hearing has suffered from being exposed to this.

Julie B

P.S. So, let me get this right. "The Bovril's with the gravy, but the Marmite's with the Jam". Yes? :-)


25 May 02 - 07:57 PM (#717400)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: GUEST,Julie B at home

Following on from comments above, there's now a new thread dedicated to discussion about sound engineers and volume levels. It's:

Sound Engineers - Deaf/Sending us deaf?"

Julie B


25 May 02 - 08:35 PM (#717423)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: The Shambles

To most people, including those in power, the words noise and music have come to mean the same thing, unfortunaely. This has and is causing many problems.

A lot of music, presenting no real noise concern is being prevented because of this perception. Any suggestions as to how this can be changed?


26 May 02 - 10:11 AM (#717543)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: RichM

Musicians, a point to consider when you are on stage, trying to judge sound volume : you can't judge what the audience is hearing from your side of the mic!

This doesn't excuse you and the sound techs from responsibility; as a performer who does sound for his own groups, and also uses sound people for some gigs--I understand the frustration with sound quality (and volume) expressed here. Perhaps one way to resolve it is to have one of the performers go down to the audience at the beginning of the performance--and perhaps more often if possible.

Sound systems should, as Dave said above, be transparent to the listener. We have a responsibility to entertain, AND to respect but not damage the audience's ears...

Rich McCarthy


26 May 02 - 03:43 PM (#717629)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Liz the Squeak

I didn't realise it was Noise awareness day... I hadn't heard!

LTS


01 Jun 02 - 03:22 AM (#720981)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: GUEST

MC THREAD NOISE AWARENESS DAY????

When?


03 Jun 02 - 11:56 PM (#722549)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: GUEST

I can't hear you


05 Jun 02 - 11:10 AM (#723558)
Subject: RE: BS: UK Noise Awareness Day - May 22nd 2002
From: Julie B

It was May 22nd 2002 (in UK). Not very well publicised, I agree. Our local radio station (BBC Three Counties) had a phone in about it.
Julie B