What do the following have in common?
slamming down a phone,
the pop of flashbulbs,
the clickety-clack of typewriters,
the jackpot sound of cascading coins,
the ka-ching of cash registers,
the screech of a phonograph needle,
the clatter of home movie projectors
You don't hear them anymore in our increasing digital age. These sounds are becoming obsolete, except in our memories if you are of a certain age. But they are not forgotten. At least not by Dan Sheehy whose job is to preserve America's acoustic heritage for the Smithsonian Institution. Sheehy says sounds are like smells. They can transport the listener to another time and place. Such is the emotional power of vintage sounds that a cell phone ring tone that mimics an old-fashioned rotary phone is the most popular ring tones offered by Valentino Production Music, the nation's oldest sound-effects warehouse. Full story by Roy Rivenburg of the Los Angeles Times
It makes you think about what sounds you might want to capture and preserve. Your grandbaby's gurgles, your son's laughter, the commotion of everyone getting out the door on a school day. Pick one day and be a sound gatherer in your own life. You'll be delighted with it in 10 years.
Posted by Jill Fallon at January 19, 2005 3:17 PM | PermalinkNPR had a segement some while back about a man who recorded a lot of his life over the years. They played an interview he recorded of him asking questions of his five-year-old daughter (who is now an adult). I can see how sound can revive the past in your memory as much as Proust's madeline.
Posted by: Bill Peschel at January 23, 2005 8:11 PM