Building a Better Headphone

This Bud’s Not for You: Sometimes an editorial illustration tells its own story.

Virginia Heffernan added another in an ongoing string of sound-related entries with her New York Times Sunday magazine column, “The Medium,” this past weekend, this time about headphones — or, more specifically, earbuds. (See also: the sound design of Hurt Locker and the “beep” as a quintessentially human-constructed sound.)

It was essentially a deafness PSA, stating “The number of teenagers with hearing loss — from slight to severe — has jumped 33 percent since 1994.” That’s one of those statistics that’s more meaningful when you know the original number, back in 1994. A lot of people are going to read that as 33 percent of teenagers have hearing issues. It’s in fact under 20 percent. Still a problem certainly, but in addition to lacking the correlative numbers, there’s the additional question of what constitutes “hearing loss.” (Also worth reading: a time.com story from last year about hearing-loss factors cited other than iPods, including nutrition.)

Anyhow, while iPods and the like are very popular, it’s not as if there are no precedents for daily personal-music exposure. The Walkman reigned supreme for many years. Is there something about the MP3 versus the cassette versus the radio that can explain the (perceived) need for increased volume? The cassette, for example, had a benefit encoded into its failings. Its audio fidelity was famously poor, and the inherent surface noise served as a kind of real-world noise-reduction tool. The hiss evened out the lows and the highs. With the MP3, silence is much closer to “true” silence, leaving a lot more room for the world to creep in, and thus prompting people to raise the volume.

Heffernan ponders similar issues, and refers to MP3s, somewhat exaggeratedly, as “intensely engineered frankensounds” and wonders why the resulting audio is “still called music.” She dismisses the pleasure of solo listening as “antisocial,” quoting The Atlantic‘s Llewellyn Hinkes Jones about how the “shared experience of listening” is “not unlike the cultural rituals of communal eating.” Left out: the fact that concert attendance is, in fact, up; communal listening is on the rise.

The article’s accompanying editorial illustration (what I like to think of as the visual display of qualitative information), by Kevin Van Aelst, reproduced above, may have a stronger conclusion than Heffernan does. She says, in the end, “Make it a New Year’s resolution, then, to use headphones less.” However, the illustration says, in effect, “Build a better headphone.” Or, more to the point, use a better headphone.

The real, practical answer is to not use earbuds, and to instead use ear-covering (or circumaural) headphones. Not all circumaural headphones do a better job of blocking out the world, but circumaural headphones do come in noise-reduction models. And circumaural headphones have the added benefit of better reproducing the normal experience of listening, in that they use the entire ear, rather than — allowing for some additional exaggeration — force-funneling the sound directly toward your tympanic membrane.

(Original Heffernan column, “Against Headphones,” at nytimes.com.)

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • By day, buses rattle past. By night, when they stop for passengers, the beepy dis/embark melody sounds like a Japanese train station. #
  • Weirdly frequent (and presumably DNS-related) issues accessing various websites this evening. #
  • Starting to find A/B stories on TV just as claustrophobia-inducing as verse/chorus/verse structure in songs. But at least TV has story arcs. #
  • Entirely caught up with email. Zero inbox. Victory! … Er, for 2011. … As for 2010, that's a major backlog. … #
  • Wishing a speedy recovery for Adam Yauch. #
  • RT @vuzhmusic New blog series #netlabel artists recommend free downloads, 2nd post by @disquiet http://www.vuzhmusic.com/blog/?p=704 #
  • Thankful for the #lessambitiousearthquake / Baby's first, slept right through it. #
  • Not one of the @gdgt #CES smartphone favorites has a physical keyboard. #kindabummed #
  • Lab Tech Manhattan #lessambitiouswatchmen #
  • I have unintentionally slurred registered nurses. Allow me to revise… #
  • #lessambitiousmemes #
  • Strawberry 10% #lessambitiousmanga #
  • Registered Nurse Strange #lessambitiouscomics #
  • Justice Club #lessambitiouscomics #
  • Fantastic Three #lessambitiouscomics #
  • Acme Novelty Department #lessambitiouscomics #
  • Trial of "one-time superlobbyist Paul Magliocchetti" sheds light on the Military-Symphony Complex: http://j.mp/fYV9k1 #
  • â–º Video of Latin sung at dawn in Singapore, multiple locations layered; think Lucier divided by Cardiff/Miller: http://t.co/OLlITmc #
  • Noon bells pierce the cold, and the closed windows. #
  • Relieved to learn, first hand, that the "version history" in @simplenoteapp works smoothly and effectively. #
  • That's pretty cool, 250-plus plays of my Unsilent Night field recording @soundcloud http://t.co/OdBMI4y #surveillance #fluxus #
  • Evening sounds: traffic bleeds into hard-drive whir bleeds into general appliance hum bleeds into light tinnitus. #
  • .@Gurdonark Yeah, you know, the second I wrote to you, I started wondering what the mail-art of email is. Spam is like Ballardian email-art. #
  • Just heard "da da" for first time. Sure, just random syllables by four-month-old, but still something. #
  • ♫ Afternoon analog-synth audiostream: Keith Fullerton Whitman live at the Bunker (2010.11.05), cascading-tastic: http://j.mp/9dn6jq #
  • Best recent song title: Derrick Hart's "0073735963" (the code to get to Tyson on the NES game Mike Tyson's Punch Out). #
  • RIP, Ann Southam, Canadian composer (b. 1937) Listen http://j.mp/gna4zV Obituary http://j.mp/gC1ybZ Via @alexrossmusic http://j.mp/gjCgQa #
  • Morton Feldman and Samuel Beckett's Either #lessambitiousoperas #
  • Hydrogen iPod #lessambitiousoperas #
  • Someone at @CNN appears to be learning how to use its email newsblast system this morning. #studentdriver #
  • RIP, Mick Karn (b. Adonis Michaelides, 1958), musician best known as the bassist for Japan. #
  • Pool scenes in recent CSI: Miami ("Match Made in Hell") resembled early Bill Viola video. Yesterday's avant-garde, today's Hollywood effect. #
  • Before designing the new Broad museum in downtown Los Angeles, Diller + Scofidio did this great mesh of corporate logos: http://j.mp/fYC5NT #
  • Very emperor's-new-clothes, these touch tablets/phones. Tech writers describe each like fashion writers do the latest little black dresses. #
  • Libération.fr for real. The DeLillo story from Harper's I mentioned is up there for free now en Anglais. http://j.mp/hgCOaM via @1000DIGIKI #
  • Somewhat Attenuated Jest #lessambitiousbooks #
  • City of Lucite #lessambitiousbooks #
  • ♫ Pre-noon beats: Tictoc's entry in the 199th (!) weekly @stonesthrow Beat Battle: http://j.mp/eRR1tZ #
  • Remembering packing as much information as possible onto a postcard, to save on postage. #lifebeforeemail #
  • "Internet dark" comes in various shades of gray. (Back on Twitter, after two weeks of relative social-media/web silence.) #
  • Happy 70th, Hayao Miyazaki. Flipping thru my Princess Mononoke (もののけ姫) storyboard book bought after Ghibli visit during my first Japan trip. #
  • RIP, Carl Tupper, founder of BSI Comics in Metarie, La, where I used to shop a lot. Stands for "Book Swap Incorporated" http://is.gd/kafJc #
  • Many thanks, belatedly due to my Twitter break, to Natalia Ludmila @n_ludmila for drawing my Twitter background. http://is.gd/kafx5 #
  • Following CES coverage with practical rather than hypothetical self-interest: my G1 is about to die; want to know what next phone will be. #
  • Morning sounds: low (refrigerator hum), middle (bus rumble), high (baby breathing). #

Tangents: Sirens, Netlabels, Silence, …

Recommended reading, news, and so forth elsewhere:

¶ Siren Song: Got a message from Hallgrímur Vilhjálmsson informing me that his Russando, a serenade for six German sirens that I wrote about back in April 2009, is being released as a limited-edition vinyl album. Details at tu-134.de, which quotes this part of my review: “Vilhjalmsson’s playful settings and use of stereo to exaggerate contrasts is highly pleasurable. When the sonic aggression of such sirens is diminished by space ”“ that is, when civil-service sounds are rendered civil ”“ what’s revealed is a taut melodic cycle, an inherently minimalist patterning that is immediately comparable to the compositional stuff of Philip Glass and Steve Reich.” The MP3 is still available for free download: ubu.com.

¶ 2010 Continues: C. Reider of vuzhmusic.com has invited folks whose work he enjoyed in 2010 to share some of their favorites, as part of an admirable attempt to get the community of netlabel musicians and supporters to communicate more. Reider contributed to the Disquiet projects Lowlands: A Sigh Collective and Despite the Downturn, the latter of which he singled out as one of his favorites of the year. My response to his request is at vuzhmusic.com, and includes some thoughts on netlabel messaging strategies.

¶ Eastern Silence: The Winter 2010 edition of arteeast.org takes “silence” as its subject. The publication is based in New York, and its focus is “the works of contemporary artists from the Middle East, North Africa and their diasporas.” The issue is guest-edited by Hakan Topal, with contributions by Defne Ayas, Anne Barlow, Regine Basha, Dan Cameron, Aslihan Demirtas, Cevdet Erek, Tony Chakar, and Micah Silver.

¶ BPM Madness: Slow Down is the name of an app that slows down your playlist depending on the speed you intend to drive at. It’s like the Inception app, just literal-minded: lifehacker.com. The whole quantitative nature of BPMs can be easily overvalued. A lot of music has not just the primary beat but also slower, encompassing beats and quicker internalized beats — not to mention songs that change tempo. Wonder how this app compensates for such things. Anyhow, in a year of slo-mo Justin Bieber, the Inception movie score and app, and revived interest in DJ Screw (see frieze.com), the slomo theme continues.

¶ Monster Mash: The New York Times traces the “mash-up” from Charles Ives to Girl Talk: nytimes.com (via artsjournal.com/gap). There seems to be an inherent contradiction in documenting a phenomenon that involves dense simultaneity by highlighting just a handful of individuals over an extended period of time (104 years, in this case).

Saw a New Netlabel Just the Other Day

It’s on a brand new netlabel, and it’s a single track, and it was recorded and released on that most singular of days, January 1, 2011 (aka 1.1.11, or 11.1.1 depending on how you plot it). It’s Devin Sarno‘s appropriately titled “first-impression,” appropriate given that it’s the first track off his new, nicely named netlabel, Absence of Wax. As in, digital-only. The brief liner note states that it’s “an improvised composition for bass guitar and field recordings.” The field recordings include a barking dog and wind chimes, and the guitar is not recognizable as such. It’s more of an epic expanse of bass-ness, out of which the field recordings occasionally peek (MP3).

[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/first-impression/first-impression.mp3|titles=”first-impression”|artists=Devin Sarno]

It ends a beat prematurely. As a result, it hints at something larger. The same, one might hope, applies to the label itself.

Sarno runs the new netlabel, which is located at devinsarno.com/absenceofwax. Also on Twitter, at twitter.com/absenceofwax.

Malibu: The Surf Sounds Loudly

While visiting the Adamson House on the Malibu coast during a recent trip to Los Angeles, I saw the following sign:

Surf Music: A sign at the Adamson House in Malibu, California

The Adamson House, a small compound really, dates from 1929, when its construction began. The sign, part of the site’s historical tour, reads, in part:

the Chumash people lived in a thriving village they called Humaliwo meaning, “the surf sounds loudly.”

The name Malibu is a reduction of “Humaliwo,” and thus the place takes its name from the sound of the surf — not so much the sound, but the volume of the sound. Today, depending on where you stand, you can’t really hear the surf, due to the sound of the road: the Pacific Coast Highway, this stretch of which, ironically, was initially named Roosevelt Highway, after America’s great naturalist president.

More on the Humaliwo at parks.ca.gov. In The Chumash World at European Contact (University of California Press, 2008), author Lynn H. Gamble links the translation to Chester King (books.google.com). More on Adamson House at adamsonhouse.org.