If you enjoy listening to music, you will tend to find your enjoyment of it constantly disrupted by external noise sources. Perhaps if you listen to intense, wall-of-sound music, such as heavy metal, at high volumes, you can successfully screen the world out, but not all music is of this nature. Many serious musicians and musicologists agree that the finest music ever written is Beethoven’s late string quartets. Subtle and spiritual, punctuated with pauses and quiet passages, it would be today almost impossible to get through a listening of it from beginning to end without enduring an interruption of some sort. Whether it’s an ice cream van playing its cacophonous chimes, an aircraft flying overhead, a noisy neighbour with a gardening machine, a car alarm going off or just traffic rumbling along outside, you can be certain that something will turn up to disrupt your enjoyment.
In summer, when the sun is out, you can be sure that neighbours with noisy gardening machines are going to be out too. Thanks to them, the average afternoon spent sunbathing in the garden is going to sound much like it would if you were sunbathing in the middle of a car factory instead. Was this changeover to electrified gardening equipment really necessary? Did all the many generations of human beings before us not manage to tend their crops and gardens perfectly well without it?
Curiously, some of this invasive noise even has statutory protection. I find it amazing, for example, that the clangourous music of ice cream vans is specifically sanctioned by law. If a greedy hawker of wares decided to stand outside your house with a loudspeaker and read out a list of what he was selling, there is no doubt that he would contravening some local ordinance and the police would soon put a stop to it. Make it music instead of speech and put it in a van, however, and suddenly he enjoys legal protections.
In recent decades the popularity of fireworks has dramatically increased in Britain. Once reserved for special occasions such as the celebration of the judicial murder of freedom fighter Guy Fawkes on November 5th, they now seem to be used for weeks if not months stretching both before and after this hallowed date. The evenings of autumnal Britain are now regularly punctuated by the sighs, shrieks and pops of fireworks exploding. Dogs run around
frightened in the home, trembling with fear as they move from room to room in a vain attempt to escape the sounds that haunt them.
Do you ever hear birds singing at night where you live? Ever wondered why they do this? Researchers
found that birds had started singing at night because it was the only time they could find enough peace and quiet to facilitate this mode of communication. Competition from noise pollution during the day was so great that they thought it wasn’t worth bothering then.
We tend to think of noise as no more than an irritant. But this is to underestimate its effects. Studies have shown that the presence of noise can induce or aggravate serious health problems. For example, numerous studies have found that those regularly subjected to the noise of overflying aircraft suffer from high
blood pressure to a much greater extent than those living elsewhere. Even noise of which we are not consciously aware, because it occurs at night and we are asleep, can have a
damaging effect on our health. In fact, research as shown that noise can bother us and adversely affect our health before we are even born! Babies in the womb can react to noise and studies have found that women living in the presence of environmental noise are more likely to suffer complications during childbirth or give birth to children with birth defects.
Exposure to noise releases stress hormones such as adrenaline, cortisol and noradrenalin into our bloodstream. The presence of these hormones is linked to death through heart-related illness. The World Health Organisation (WHO) studied the issue of noise-related illness in Europe and concluded that approximately 3% of all deaths through heart complications could be attributed to noise. In Britain, this means that between 3000 and 4000 people are
dying each year because of noise, far more than have ever died, or are ever likely to die, through terrorism. It’s a silent September 11th occurring each year. Yet no one cares about it. No one is proposing to overhaul our societies, do away with our civil liberties or reshape world politics in response to the problem of noise pollution.
The European Commission considers that living close to an airport is a significant risk factor for heart-related health problems. Moreover, it found that 20% of the European Union’s entire population fell into this category.
Noise also disrupts our concentration. A study of pupils at a school in Munich examined the effects of aircraft noise on pupils’ learning. The school was in the flight path of Munich’s old airport. But because a new airport was being constructed in a different location, and the school would be outwith the flight path of the new airport, a comparison could be conducted. It found that the test results of the children improved
dramatically once the noise was gone. This chimes perfectly with an international study which looked at the reading abilities of different groups of children who had varying levels of exposure to environmental noise, principally from overflying aircraft. It found that those subjected to the noise had a markedly lower
reading age than the control groups.
For a long time, the issue of noise was simply not on the public radar screen. There were no organisations dedicated to campaigning about it. It was not considered a serious issue. Thankfully, that is now beginning to change. In Britain, for example, there is now the Noise Association which campaigns on noise-related issues. Thanks to them, a
Noise Action Week will take place between May 19-23.
It is time that both we and the politicians who represent us began to take the problem of noise seriously. Laws and regulations designed to limit the impact of noise, and the mental and physical health problems which flow from it, should be introduced and enforced. And we should all begin to think about whether we are contributing to the problem, or to its solution.