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An Ever Noisier World

Episode 29 of 30

David Hendy explores how the volume of modern life has risen inexorably, visiting the noise rich capital of Ghana, Accra.

The 20th century brought attempts to distinguish between 'necessary' and 'unnecessary' noise. In New York, the authorities tried to clean up Coney Island fairground, banning barkers from using megaphones and targeting street sellers, newspaper boys, and buskers. But the volume of modern life has risen inexorably.

Professor David Hendy of the University of Sussex travels to Ghana's capital, Accra, a city so loud that visitors describe its streets as a visceral shock, and introduces an elegiac recording of the wild soundscape we've lost, captured by the celebrated naturalist, Bernie Krause.

30-part series made in collaboration with the British Library Sound Archive.

Signature tune composed by Joe Acheson.
Producer: Matt Thompson

A Rockethouse production for BBC Radio 4.

15 minutes

Broadcasts

  • Thu 25 Apr 201313:45
  • Thu 26 Nov 201514:15
  • Fri 27 Nov 201502:15
  • Thu 27 Jun 201914:15
  • Fri 28 Jun 201902:15

Noise retold by Matthew Herbert

Noise retold by Matthew Herbert

The head of the New Radiophonic Workshop retells the Noise series using only the sounds.