The Guardian (USA)

Sounds Wild and Broken review – a moving paean to Earth’s fraying soundtrack

- Tim Adams

Lockdown was, among other things, a sudden collective experiment in volume control. Sound waves from the regular rush-hour thrum of cities usually penetrate more than a kilometre below the Earth’s surface. When Covid-19 forced humans inside, seismologi­sts noticed the muzak of their subterrane­an instrument­s was quieted. The ancient rock of our planet came closer to the silence that it had known for nearly all of the first 4bn years of its existence. And the relative stillness was felt on the surface, too. People noticed voices from beyond the human world a little more readily, and those voices felt less need to shout to be heard. Scientists in San Francisco discovered that the city’s sparrows reverted to softer and lower pitched songs of a kind not heard since the invention of the freeway.

Biology professor David George Haskell’s often wonderful book is all about listening to those kinds of lost frequencie­s. It is a sort of rigorous scientific update on that 1960s imperative to “tune in and turn on”: a reminder that the narrow aural spectrum on which most of us operate, and the ways in which human life is led, blocks out the planet’s great, orchestral richness. Haskell’s previous acclaimed book, The Forest Unseen, was a thrillingl­y curious investigat­ion of the life of one square metre of ancient Tennessee woodland. This new volume gives you the experience of closing your eyes in such a space and having your senses flooded with the background cacophony.

It took our sun a good while, Haskell argues, to work out the means of filling the planet with sound. Eventually it discovered the cymbal crash of life. A microphone in a muted laboratory can pick up the sounds of colonies of bacteria. When these are amplified and played back to the bacterial cultures they grow at an accelerate­d rate, detecting the noise through cell walls. No one knows how or why. Bacteria had this ultimate chill-out playlist to itself for nearly 2bn years. The first sea creatures were voiceless. The evolutiona­ry quirk that set life on the road to hearing was a “tiny wiggly hair”, a cilium on a cell membrane that allowed organisms to “hear” eddies and changes in water flow that might help them to locate food. Haskell traces, beautifull­y and brilliantl­y, the stages from that developmen­t to the wonders of human and animal hearing – all the infinite serial interactio­ns between communicat­ion and reception. “When we marvel at springtime birdsong, or the vigour of chorusing insects and frogs on a summer evening,” he writes, “we are immersed in the wondrous legacy of the ciliary hair.”

Crickets and their ancient relatives were among the prime movers in this evolutiona­ry soundscape. In immersing himself in the mechanics and music of insect song, Haskell transports his reader to imagine the first instrument­s and notation: he examines the fossil tracery of prototype grasshoppe­r wings, preserved in Permian rock, which clearly reveal the shift from a flat surface to one with an unusual ridge, the gene genie mutation that allowed the insect to create and amplify its sawing sound. Such discoverie­s lead Haskell to all sorts of places: the developmen­t of echolocati­on, the “hearing feet” of certain species, the insatiable human need to recreate and delight in Caliban’s isle “full of noises”, and the ways in which technology – from antlerhorn pipes to reed instrument­s to digital soundtrack­s – has often advanced in creating through rhythm and music.

The earliest ears of all species were on high alert for novelty – just like teenagers hungry for the newest beats. Some corners of the animal world are richer with this kind of innovation than others. Humpback whales, Haskell writes, concentrat­e their hit factory in “an innovation zone” off the coast of Australia, where new calls are developed and tested. Once establishe­d, the latest humpback songs will have spread throughout the oceans within a few

months. Tragically, evidence suggests, this natural wonder has met with brutal interferen­ce in recent years: the calls of whales and dolphins can get lost in the “sonic fog” produced by container ships’ engines. Mating and distress calls go unheard. And oil prospector­s’ sonic surveys, producing underwater decibel explosions every minute, are thought to have forced whales – enormously sensitive hearing creatures – out of the ocean to escape the torture.

Human noise pollution is everywhere on land and Haskell’s investigat­ion into natural sound often takes on the tone of a valedictor­y lament. He goes in search of wild places – forests at dawn, riverbanks at evening – where the diversity of bird and insect noise is at its overwhelmi­ng richest, and contrasts them with the eerie silent springs of pesticide-scoured agrarian landscapes. The ambition to tell the history of our planet through descriptio­n of sound is given a profound urgency by these chapters. Meanwhile, the sense of what is being lost is revealed in how even the thesaurus of Haskell’s descriptiv­e language struggles to keep up with the nuance and variety of the musical world. You often sense him, as he attempts to convey in words what he is hearing, in the position of Keats: no match for the nightingal­e.

• Sounds Wild and Broken by David George Haskell is published by Faber (£20). To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at guardianbo­okshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

 ?? Lillian King/Getty Images ?? Sounds unfamiliar: red-eyed tree frogs, native to South and Central America. Photograph:
Lillian King/Getty Images Sounds unfamiliar: red-eyed tree frogs, native to South and Central America. Photograph:
 ?? ?? David George Haskell.
David George Haskell.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States