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Why do people play music in public through a phone?

2011-06-15 04:30:28

For many, teenagers playing tinny music to each other on public transport on

their mobile phones can be intensely irritating. Why do they do it?

With mobile phones in many a teenager's pocket, the rise of sodcasting - best

described as playing music through a phone in public - has created a noisy

problem for a lot of commuters.

"All you can hear is 'dush, dush, dush, dush'. It's irritating. So many times I

end up with a headache," says Tracey King, who has signed up to the Shhh!

Scheme set up by bus company Arriva Yorkshire to stop the noise on their

services.

"As teenagers, they don't seem to have the capability to think about others. I

have heard older women turning round and saying 'will you turn that down?' and

sometimes they will and other times I've heard them with abuse and swearing at

other people."

As mayor of London, Ken Livingstone called for the "absolute prohibition on

playing music from a mobile system" as far back as in 2006. Young people can

now have their zip cards - which allow them free travel in the capital -

revoked for "anti-social behaviour", which includes playing loud music.

The issue has even been discussed in the House of Lords. In 2006, the Piped

Music and Showing of Television Programmes Bill was presented to Parliament,

calling for "the wearing of headphones by persons listening to music in the

public areas of hospitals and on public transport" to be made compulsory,

although it never made it into law.

What is sodcasting?

through the speaker on a mobile phone, usually on public transport. Commonly

practised by young people wearing polyester, branded sportswear with dubious

musical taste."

in his series Wyse Words, a list of words that do not exist but should. He

stated that sodcasters were terrified of not being noticed, so they sprayed

their audio wee around the place like tomcats.

So why do people do it? Is it just an act of youthful rebellion?

"I don't think it is intrinsically anti-social, what I would say is that it is

a fascinating human phenomenon of marking social territory," says Dr Harry

Witchel, author of You Are What You Hear.

"With young people, usually loud music corresponds very strongly to owning the

space.

"They are creating a social environment which is suitable for them and their

social peers. But for those not in this group - a 50-year-old woman for example

- instead of confidence, she'll feel weakness and maybe even impotence as

there's nothing that she can do about it."

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

With young people, usually loud music corresponds very strongly to owning the

space

End Quote Dr Harry Witchel Author, You Are What You Hear

But hasn't this always been the case? Most people who remember the 80s can

remember someone with a boom box perched on one shoulder, pumping out the

latest songs to anyone within earshot. Some take this tradition back even

further.

"I reckon I was an early sodcaster," says the poet and broadcaster Ian

McMillan.

"It was way back in the distant 1970s. As a teenager I was a big fan of the

kind of music that made my mother say 'Will you turn that rubbish off?', and my

dad hiss 'I wouldn't mind if it had a proper tune.'

"The fact is that I wasn't allowed to listen to [my favourite artists] in the

house so I had to listen to them outside using a tape player."

But Dr Witchel says something slightly different was happening back then.

"When people went around with their ghetto blasters, you could argue that it

was for the pure pleasure of the music they loved," he says.

"There is no excuse for why you would want to listen to tinny music, except if

you were establishing territory. It just sounds rubbish. It must sound rubbish

to them."

'Elderly people'

A group of schoolchildren on the 277 bus in Hackney, East London, don't all

think that what they are doing is wrong.

"I wouldn't agree [that it was anti-social]," says one.

Find out more...

Ian McMillan

Ian McMillan presents The No.219 Sodcast Project on BBC Radio 4, 1330 BST,

Tuesday 14 June

"The people who think it's anti-social don't really listen to this type of

music."

A second agrees that the bus would be dull without a little bit of music.

"Fair enough, it might be anti-social but the bus is always quiet," she says.

"You need something to listen to, right? We give you [something] to listen to."

Some youth workers argue that what the youngsters are doing is largely

innocent.

"I don't think they [the sodcasters] are being selfish at all," says Dmitry

Fedotov, of the Youth Association.

"I think if young people see sound as preferable to no sound then, if anything,

they're going to be thinking they're doing people a favour."

And something is changing within the music industry itself. With the increase

of songs being played through phones, more attention is being spent on the

parts of the music that can be heard loudest though phone speakers.

"I think we're starting to see evidence that musicians and producers are

thinking about the technology by which their music is listened to," says music

journalist Dan Hancox, who has written extensively on the subject of

sodcasting.

The rap artist Giggs Rapper Giggs is said to be the most sodcasted artist,

though quantifying this is very difficult

"It's something that has been described as treble culture.

"It is the idea that in this particular technological era, things that are

transmittable on low fidelity (low quality) speakers are being heard more and

more in pop music, quite a bit of R&B and hip hop - things which traditionally

had a large and important bass element to them."

So, if this phenomenon is here to stay, what can be done by those who want a

little bit of peace and quiet on their journey?

"Legislation is not the answer, and nor is citizen power, as anyone who has

ever approached a sodcaster to ask them to stop will know all too well," wrote

Julian Treasure, chairman of the Sound Agency, on his blog.

"I believe the heart of the solution is in teaching listening skills in

schools. If we teach our children how to listen properly to the world - and

especially to each other - they will understand the consequences of their own

sound and be far more responsible in making it."