The world is a noisy place these days….

Philosophers have debated for centuries about whether or not we hear silence. Many have insisted we don’t and contend that we hear only sounds and infer silence from their absence. Others argue that we don’t hear only noises but also their absence as well. Either way, silence can be difficult to find at times.

During my working life in Cork, it wasn’t unusual to receive complaints about buskers kicking up a racket in the city centre. The calls came mostly during the daytime and mainly from retailers complaining about excessive noise outside their premises.

The buskers would be accused of either playing their music too loudly or badly or both and when the staff could no longer tolerate it, they sent for the gardai.

In those days there wasn’t much the gardai could do about it, except move them on but then they took up residence outside another other shop and became a problem for somebody else. Buskers were normally agreeable characters though and changed locations when asked.

Gardai were often criticised by the public for interfering with the musicians who they felt were just trying to make a living. There were times too when buskers couldn’t understand what all the fuss was about. As far as they were concerned, they were providing wonderful entertainment.

In many cases they were, but there were some buskers who hadn’t a note in their head. Listening to them over a protracted period could certainly induce a migraine. There were others who couldn’t find the proper note on their instrument if their lives depended on it, and these were often the people who played the loudest.

I remember a young guy who had a repertoire of one song only, and he sang that over and over again until everyone working nearby wanted to kill him. There was another chap who played the thin whistle but not as it was intended. I say played but in reality, all he did was blow into it while placing his fingers over random holes.

Because of those experiences, I have a lot of sympathy for the traders in Killarney. RTE reported that a council meeting was informed that businesses in Killarney were turning up their amplifiers and putting speakers outside their premises in an attempt to outperform the noise from mobile buskers.

The issue of regulating buskers in the tourist town has been on the agenda for years and council management said it is preparing draft byelaws which will go before the public this winter.

Mayor of Killarney Niall Kelleher defended good busking saying “There was nothing better than quality busking in any town and that’s what we strive to have. But we don’t have that, and businesses are putting up speakers to keep others from their doors,” he said.

Some locals and tourists have offered support to the buskers and that’s fair enough but it’s easy for them. The passer-by can choose to stay and listen to the music or leave. The people working within earshot don’t have that luxury. They’re stuck with it whether they like it or not and that’s not fair either.

I’m not sure though that fighting noise with noise is the best solution for achieving a quiet life, but it is a difficult situation. A bit like having an awkward neighbour.

A bad neighbour can be a problem for anyone. If you live in a detached house, you are less likely to be bothered by one than if you live in an apartment. Having neighbours on either side, above and below increases the chances of being affected by one or more of them.

Loud music, furniture being dragged around the place, dogs barking, and late-night partying can grate on the nerves.

In Mediterranean countries, outdoor living is normal, and a lot of socialising takes place in gardens, balconies and roof terraces and at the weekends in particular, the revelry tends to go up a notch. It doesn’t matter whether it’s 9pm at night or 4am in the morning they carry on regardless.

I have experienced this on many occasions in Cyprus. The Cypriots aren’t big drinkers so it’s not drunken partying. They speak loudly at the best of times, and it often seems as if they are arguing with each other but it’s just their way and in the dead of night their voices carry.

It’s not uncommon, in the early hours of the morning, to hear people sitting outside a property having a conversation with people some distance away inside. The best way to deal with it, is to accept that this is their way of life.

There is no intention on their part to disturb your slumber. They don’t set out to make your life miserable so just get over it and appreciate the quiet times when you get them. The last thing you want is conflict with the neighbours.

Dealing with neighbourly disputes was another feature of policing life and noise was often the issue then too so it’s not a new phenomenon. Back in the seventies, you could be sure if you tried to chill out at a park or a beach in the summer, some guy would stretch out nearby with a radio on full volume, listening to Michael O’Hehir commentating on a GAA match.

They were always dressed the same too. A white shirt with the sleeves rolled up, the trousers pulled up to the knees and a handkerchief, with a knot on each corner, perched on top of the head. They didn’t care who they bothered.

These days, the wireless has been replaced with a speaker connected to a phone by blue tooth and the match has been replaced with loud music, but the result is the same. Anyone can be a busker now and silence is a rare commodity.

7 thoughts on “The world is a noisy place these days….”

  1. I had a good laugh reading this Trevor. A regular local busker sang “knock knock knocking on heavens door “ incessantly and drove everyone mad. We don’t hear him any more as he got his way and died !

  2. Like U say living in an apartment on the Main Street @ buskers below your window absolute nitemare & what adds 2 the Misery is if u have a restaurant below that has an Extractor fan that is switched on around 8 am Wed to Sun & sometimes if U are lucky will be switched off around 6pm but U are upstairs with a Migraine, feeling as sic as anything & U can’t even enjoy the luxury of your bed!
    I have been told by an ex restaurant owner that they were given a choice by HSE put in a SILENT extractor or we close the business.
    To me when an application is made & there are apartments above it should be law & this should be checked to make sure it is abided by!

  3. I know of someone buying an apartment in the city & a few years later they had the misfortune 2 have a restaurant open below them! It was a nitemare as they couldn’t keep tenants ( while they were working overseas they bought it to come home to as a starter) they couldn’t sell for what they paid & it was a terrific loss for them never mind very upsetting

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