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| (Theme
music intro) HOST STEVE CURWOOD: "From National Public Radio [WBUR], this is Living on Earth on a search for peace and quiet. (Music up and under) CURWOOD: This is Living on Earth. I'm Steve Curwood. In the vast developed areas that sprawl between our cities, quiet places are even harder to find than open spaces. Even Walden Pond, Henry David Thoreau's symbol of tranquility, has so many visitors and nearby roads that real solitude is nearly impossible to find there. But Thoreauvian solitude is what Peter Acker seeks. Mr. Acker has crisscrossed New England, collecting natural sounds from places Thoreau visited and wrote about: the Maine woods, Cape Cod, and Walden.We sent producer Kim Motylewski to find out what Peter and the rest of us are up against in the search for the true sounds of nature. (Bird songs) KIM MOTYLEWSKI: At 5 in the morning lots of birds are up but not many people. That's the way sound recordist Peter Acker likes it. He's about to sample the soundscape in Esterbrook Woods [sic], one of Henry David Thoreau's haunts across town from Walden Pond. ACKER: If I can walk out of here with a minute of (laughs) -- of uninterrupted sound from Route 2 and 95, I'll be happy. MOTYLEWSKI: Acker's breath is visible in the dawn light. (Sounds of velcro; other bumps and grinds) MOTYLEWSKI: He plugs in a battery pack and snaps cable together. Then he pulls out a lifelike black plastic head and screws it onto a pole. ACKER: I call him Max. I mean, the technical name is the KU-100, but Max just sounds a lot friendlier. MOTYLEWSKI: Max has microphones embedded in each ear. He hears a lot like a person. ACKER: Now I'm pulling out his rock star wig. It actually helps with the stereo imaging; don't ask me why. It just does. (Bird song amidst shuffling sounds) MOTYLEWSKI: Black and curly. ACKER: I wish I had hair like that. MOTYLEWSKI: Acker jokes, but he works quickly. His morning mission is to record a few peaceful moments uninterrupted by machine noise. He's tried Walden Pond but found it too noisy, so he's moved on to Esterbrook Woods. Acker's goal seems as ambitious as the spiritual quest Thoreau launched in 1845. MAN: (Reading from Walden) I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately. To front only the essential facts of life and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not when I came to die, discover that I had not lived. MOTYLEWSKI: Thoreau often wrote of Esterbrook Country in his journal. Many farmers had pastures, woodlots, and sawmills here, including Thoreau's father. (Footfalls) ACKER: Right now we're going to go down to the -- there's a little marsh down here where the geese hang out. (Breathing heavily) So we're going to go check that out. (More footfalls) MOTYLEWSKI: Peter Acker figures he's got maybe an hour of quiet ahead. He balances Max on his shoulder and walks briskly. (Footfalls; geese honking) MOTYLEWSKI: It's 10 minutes to 6 when we reach the marsh. The sun hovers below the horizon, coloring the clouds violet. A veil of mist hangs over the water. We hear the geese approaching overhead, and Acker jogs over the embankment, stands Max on the ground and begins to record. (Geese honking louder; joined by jet) MOTYLEWSKI: But the honking is soon blanketed by the drone of a passing jet. (Geese honking and jet) MOTYLEWSKI: That must be very frustrating. I mean here we are, this great moment. ACKER: Oh yeah. You know, especially the imagery with -- you had the perspective of the geese flying in from behind you and low overhead; it was wonderful. And then there's the jet. (Sighs amidst honking) Oh darn. (Laughs) MOTYLEWSKI: Acker walks a fine line. He must stay true to this place. He never layers or processes sound on his recordings. But he has to produce something that people will pay to hear. That means no planes, no cars, no motors. Even though as Thoreau notes, engines have breached the quiet here for more than a century. |
MAN: (Reading from Walden) The
whistle of the locomotive penetrates my wood summer and winter, sounding
like the scream of a hawk sailing over some farmer's yard, informing me
that many restless city merchants are arriving within the circle of the
town. Or adventurous country traders from the other side. [Reprinted with permission in my
"The Seasons in Estabrook Country" (1999).] |