220 Empty night Cornish air (sleep safe and best with headphones / Airpods)
Leave a reviewWest Looe at night. A Cornish town on the edge of the Atlantic ocean. An edge where human things end and emptiness begins. We’ve shared a few captured sound scenes from here over the last month. This is the one if you’re searching for the sound-feel of long, true night quiet.
© Hugh Huddy | 52:50
|Episode: 224 |
Full episode description
Episode One: Episode 1 – Suffolk wood at 6am
This is an Episodic show. You can listen to it in any order, but episode one is always a great place to start.Full Episode description
West Looe at night. A Cornish town on the edge of the Atlantic ocean. An edge where human things end and emptiness begins. We’ve shared a few captured sound scenes from here over the last month. This is the one if you’re searching for the sound-feel of long, true night quiet.
What is true night quiet? Capturing rich and detailed audible quiet, in contrast to dead meaningless silence, is what we’re always trying to do with Lento. By rich and detailed we mean those aural essences, those often very delicate sound signatures, that give a place its own sound feel, and that aren’t actually created by anyone. The sound feel of a place is formed and shaped by what’s in it, its geography and its weather.
On this part of the Cornish coast we found very little human made noise during the night. No aircraft overflying. Next to nothing on the roads. Just long stretches of time where the softness of the place’s sound-feel can be experienced with clarity. This episode is a section of time from around 3am in early April. A blustery weather front was blowing in from the sea, billowing along the narrow lanes of West Looe, cuffing in the roof gaps, whistling somewhere in a distant chimney pot. Fresh. Very spatial. A true and uncluttered piece of time.
Here are our top tips about how to re-experience this captured quiet. Find a relatively peaceful spot and listen through headphones or airpods. If you have Apple Airpod Pros set the volume just over half way at about 60%. This closely matches the sound levels that would have been landing on your eardrums by actually being at the location. Volume levels do vary between headphones so we can’t give reference levels for other types of ear phones. Having now tested decent noise cancellation we can say when it works it can be like turning the lights off to watch a film. Clean listening, largely free of extraneous noise. Nothing beats a quiet room with a comfortable couch though, if you have one, and a pair of velvet headphones.
© Hugh Huddybop| Status: Active, 249 episodes | Kind: Episodic | Episode URL
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