
One of the things I noticed when I got back to the UK from Canada last year, apart from endemic racism, cynicism and general despair across the country*, was how it had suddenly become acceptable to play music through mobile phones in enclosed public spaces. How we laugh!
Now don’t get me wrong, if people changed their tastes from below-par techno and hip-hop I’d have no problem. Noise pollution is only noise pollution when you don’t like the, er, noise. Anyway, the point is, it’s incredible how people don’t challenge this (though I don’t doubt that there may have been a period whilst I was away when stories appeared in the Daily Mail about The Degeneration of Our Youth TM).
Take Friday for example.
I went to the library, as you do, and, whilst I was writing an essay on this here laptop, I thought it’d be nice to listen to some music, as you tend not to in libraries. So I plugged in my headphones and typed away in my own little bubble.
Fast-forward 20 minutes. Imagine my horror (come on, try) when I realised – by turning my head that popped a headphone out of my ear (the left one, detail fans) – that I had been playing the music through the speakers, not my headphones. I’d absent-mindedly put the headphone jack in the wrong hole. Even worse, I’d kept turning up the music as I’d thought that it sounded muffled. Because it was.
Even even worse was the fact that no one in the library said a thing. Not one psst, not one stare, not one elbow.
I’m pretty sure not all the twenty or so people surrounding me enjoyed listening to Captain Beefheart. While trying to revise for their final exams. In a library. Of course I was embarrassed, but I was more annoyed that no one bothered to get even a little annoyed with me. You can forget people asking a bunch of 15 year olds on the back of a bus to turn their music down, preferably off all together, if no one will confront me in a public space that is pretty well known for having strict policy on this kind of thing. The rules are on your side people, not mine.
Friday evening I went to the Blue Blazer with David, Andy, their Spanish flatmate (technically my flatmate at the moment) Jesus, Ruairi, and Andy’s friend Lisa. David has gone to San Francisco for a conference so I won't see him for a good while. I tried a Highland Park whiskey which is apparently the best whiskey in the world, though I'm not sure how this is decided upon. Still, it was nice.
*Don’t worry about responding to these comments.